KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 26
Jayhawks blast Mean Green, 37-18
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Monday, October 1, 1979
See story page six
[Image of a hot air balloon floating against a dark sky. The balloon is white with no visible markings.]
Transcontinental flight
The DauVell TransAmerica ballpassed over Kansas this weekend as its crew continued its attempt to cross the United States.
States. The balloon, south of its projected course, passed 30 miles north of Topka yesterday morning. See story back page.
Bostonians to greet pope
From Kansan Staff and Wire Reports Pope John Paul II, after three days of peace for plea in war-torn Ireland, will arrive in Boston this afternoon and will later celebrate Mass in the Boston Columbia an expected 400,000 to a million people.
Boston officials say the city's population could temporarily double during the pope's visit. But they said the people to flock the area to see the pope. This is the first visit by a pope Boston in the city since 1964.
In forceful denunciation of terrorism, the pope declared during the sermon at the shrine, "Murder is murder, no matter what the motive or ends."
The portifit is scheduled to arrive at Logo International Airport at about 3 p.m. and will celebrate an outdoor Mass two hours later. Today has been declared a state holiday.
This is the first visit by a pope to the United States since October 1964 when Pope Paul VI addressed the General Assembly of the Catechism and celebrated Mass in Yankee Stadium.
Earlier at Galway's race track, the pope made a similar plea for non-violence, telling
YESTERDAY, THE POPE appealed Ballybriar race track and later at the Murnane Shrine in the County Mayo near Knock-to-work for peace between the warring factions.
Early today, the pope was to meet with Irish clergymen at a seminary just west of Dublin and to celebrate an open air Mass in Ireland. He will then leave for Boston.
The 59-year-old Polish pontifex made a broad appeal to Catholic youth worldwide, asking them to pray for the young war-armed "How many young people have already warmed their conscience and have subsisted the true joy of life with drugs, sex and violence," the pallid pursuit of mere material possessions"
The first security scare then occurred when a man, reportedly shotting '1 am Jesus Christ,' was in an open area while the police were grabbing by his 30s, was grabbed by police several hundred feet from the palatar altar. Police said the man was not armed, and was taken into custody.
During his week-long trip to the United States, John Paul will travel to New York, Chicago, Des Moines and Washington, D.C.
OF THE THOUSANDS expected to see the pipe in Des Moines on Thursday will be two men in white suits, one at Mount St. Scholastica Convent in Aitchison. The other are sisters, as sisters
They said yesterday that they had waited all their lives to see the none.
Sister Candida is 94 years old and Sister Melania is 93.
250,000 cheering youths "to love you enemies, do good to those who hate you."
"We don't care what we have to do to get there, we just want to see him. Why they could even set us up in those trees near him." "Sister Cindida said."
Since being told three weeks ago that they would get to go to Des Moines, the two
The two nuns, who are of Polish descent,
said they would be willing to sit in tree tops
to see the nontiff.
A niece will drive them to Iowa tomorrow, and they plan to stay with a friend, named Cecelia, who lives in Des Moines.
sisters have not stopped talking about their trio.
Clause could alter exigency plan
"As soon as we found out we started writing to Cecelia." Sister Candida said.
"OH MY YES, we have been writing her every day, asking her when she wants us to go, and helping her live to where the pope will be. We must have sent at least 15 sisters." Sister Melania
"We've also been watching television which is something we don't usually do." Sister Melania said.
Sister Candida said she did not like television, but because the pope was on frequently, it was different.
"Usually we're too busy," Sister Candida said, explaining that they embroidered pillowcases between frequent visits to the chanel.
The two sisters, who usually get up at 4 a.m., said they were determined not to let anything keep them from seeing the Pope.
A clause in KU's definition of financial education leads to a change in what the University sees as the role of its staff. Strinvasa, chapter president of the Association of American University, writes that "the university has not done anything."
"WE KNOW WE MIGHT have a long ways to walk. I think we can make it. But the sisters have already told us if it's too far away they can't see them on television," Sister Candida said.
KU's policy, which was approved by the Regents, says that the release of tenured
Getting to see a papa is a dream the two sisters have had since joining the convent in 1944. Now, 75 years later, there is a good reason that the dream will become a reality.
"I never thought he would come to the United States or that we would get to see him. You see how the Lord provides for us." Sister Melania said to her sister.
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Renorter
Srinivasan said the University should demand an explicit statement from the Regents reaffirming that the "Regents definition of financial exigency would not be used now or in the future to compromise in the guarantees of the KU document."
The Regents definition, approved Sept. 21, says, "It shall be the responsibility of the chief executive officer of each Regents institution, in consultation with appropriate campus groups, to develop a plan for managing the financial exigency by conditions of financial exigency."
faculty is to be used "only as a last resort
after all possible alternatives . . . have in
good faith been examined, and utilized or
rejected."
Srinivasan has said that the Regents are too软弱 in defining what concepts are relevant, so require the University to try all methods of resolving a financial crisis other than academic.
B凯 Kaufman, legal counsel for the Regents, said there was only a minute possibility of KU's definition changing in favor of the Regents.
"The likelihood of that happening is extremely small. I'm reluctant to say nothing can happen, but I'm close to that point."
At a state conference of the American Association of University Professors in Michigan, Mr. Peltz called for resolution calling the regents policy of financial exigency unacceptable, Srinivasan said. KU currently is on its own definition of financial exigency with its own definition of financial exigency.
Friday, the SenEx decided to appoint a See EXIGENCY mage three
SenEx supports Classified Senate
BVJEEF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
The University Senate Executive Committee has given its approvvation to the concept of a College of Engineering. The employees at the University of Kansas, Gerhard Zather, SenEx president, said:
Zuber said, "We sent the chancellor a letter urging prompt and sympathetic consideration to the Classified Senate so in that regard, we gave our support."
However, Zuther said, SenEx still has questions on how the Classified Senate would participate in University governance.
"No other non-union employee organization of this kind exists in Kansas," Zather said. "We are not completely clear whether the would fit in with others in governance."
Evelyn Swartz, SenEx member, said SenEx probably would wait until the new building is completed by Chancellor Arche R. Dykes, and then study how the new body would fit into University Hall.
ZUTHER SAID SenEx was not simply delaying a vote of recognition until Dykes decided whether the administration would grant the Senate recognition.
"We don't think it is up to us to recognize
the Classified Senate until its existence affects our own operations," he said. "If the Classified Senate requested representation then we would have specific action to take."
Joseph Collins, interim chairman of the Classified Senate steering committee, said last week that he had discussed the proposed budget with a administration representative.
The representative, Richard Mann, University director of informational systems, leads a committee appointed by Dykes to make recommendations con-
See CLASSIFIED page five
Group fights for bike trail
By ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Reporter
The O-Keef-Sha Trail Conservation Committee has campaigned since March 1978 to obtain rights to an 11-mile abandoned road right-of-way between Lawrence
To bolster their efforts, the O-Kee Sha committee is sponsoring a 10-kilometer run to draw attention to a Kansas Senate bill that supports the bike trail.
At that time the committee wanted the 106-foot wide strip of land to be converted into a bike trail. They still are working to obtain those rights.
The senate bill, sponsored by Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, would make the land a part of the state park system, as a pilot bleiwage project.
The committee faces opposition from private property owners along the abandoned railroad tracks.
THE RUN WILL BE at 2 p.m. Sunday in Tonganoxie. The money earned from the $6 entry fees will help the committee's labors run efficiently. Hughes, secretary of the committee.
In Season Sports Goods, 833
Massachusetts St., and Morris Sports,
1016
Massachusetts St. each have contributed a
$25 million place man in the
winner's winners of the race.
"It was a great idea to have this run," Hughes said. "Runners who hadn't known about our cause now are supporting it. Our support just keeps growing."
Hughes has petitions with signatures of
2,600 people supporting the bikeway and passage of the bill.
Frank Rice, Tonganoex resident and an opponent of the bike trail, said yesterday, "We own the land. Why don't you people leave us alone?" Why does Harriet Hughes leave us alone?
Last year the senate bill did not get on the floor before the legislature adjourned. It will be brought up in the next legislative session.
The landowners adjacent to the railroad route say state laws grant them the legal authority to develop and support committee says that federal law gives it the right to develop the land into a
He said the land had been used by the railroad as an easement from the farmers to the settlers. He said the law, after the railroad abandons the route the land returns to the adjacent landowners,
Norman Kirkendell, Tonganoxie resident who also is opposed to the bike trail, said the basic issue was the use of private property for public use.
THE UNION PACIFIC Railroad has abandoned the line, and the legal aspect of who has the right to use the land is unclear.
"The railroad says the land is ours. Let them use state property to build their bike trail."
HIRKENDOLL SAID he and several others were forming a group called Landowners of Kansas. In about two weeks they released a news release about the lake treat issue. He said
Kirkdillen said, "I am not opposed to take trails. I just don't trust private property should be taken over for them. I can see that we have great appeal to college-educated neceds."
He said he had several letters from state
leaders, including State Rep. Robin Leach D-Linwood; former State Democratic congressman Martine Keyes; and Sen Beverly Huff, state stating their opposition to the biketrain.
IN MARCH 1978 former state attorney General Curt Schlenker ruled that the right-of-way should go to the landowners. But some say that ruling could be challenged in
Part of the conflict results from differing state and federal laws on railroad abandonment. The opponents cite a Kansas law that prohibits right-of-way returns to the landowners.
Union Pacific officials said that the land belonged to the adjacent landowners.
The proponents cite a federal law, the Railroad Revitalization Act of 1976, which has authorized new railway public domain. The law also states that federal law should take precedence over state law.
However, the issue probably would have to be taken to court to be settled
THE O-KEET-SHA Trail Conservation Committee has support from several organizations, including the Mt. Oral Trail Association of Society of Lawrence, and the Sierra Club.
The propentons would like to have access to the abandoned rail route because much of See BIKE back route.
Band Day participants endure hardships to provide pageantry
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Eighty-one variations of high school band uniforms filled Memorial Stadium with color Saturday, when nearly 7,000 Kaiserslaufer gathered in Kansas musical tradition, KU Band Day.
Somewhere in the mass of musicians stood the 32 members of the South Haven Marching Cardinals, in their red, black and white hats, for the band members, who ranged from sixth graders to high school seniors. They had been awake since 2:30 that morning, and by half-time the RU-North Texas team had been hot, tired and ready to head home.
Most of the members had slept on the bus during the five-and-a-half hour trip from South Haven to Lawrence. South Haven was four miles north of the Oklahoma border.
"Everyone on the bus slept except for three of the boys in the back. They made a lot of racket." one eight grade member of the band said.
"Yeah, I wanted to kill them," her friend, Pam Hadden, said.
THE NOISEMAKERS, sixth graders Tim Turek, Brian Byers and Teddy Barlow, were excited about their early morning bus ride.
"It was fun." Teddy said. "The big kids
all got mad at us because we talked and laughed all the way down. We kept waking them up."
The parade was fun, one young musician said, but long and "kind of boring."
Without or with sleep, the band merengues at the Band Day parade in time to the Sunday parade. They marched from Central Park at Sixth and Tennessee streets to their bus near South Street.
From downtown Lawrence, the bands traveled to the KU campus and filed down the hill into the stadium for a rehearsal of their performance by student hosts from the KU Band.
GUIDING HIS CHARGES, Doug Olesn, Prairie Village senior, answered questions and gave directions to the South Haven Cardinals band.
"Where's the restroom?" one of the band members asked.
"Do we have to wear our uniforms during practice?" another asked.
"No, you don't have to wear your uniforms, just remember, please, to take your music," Olsen replied.
"He's cute," whispered one eighth grader to a gigging friend.
"Crushes. They happen every year with the girls from the bands," Olsen said, shaking his head.
Before the band headed to the field for
"Mr. Cox," one student said, "I left my music on the bus."
the rehearsal, Rick Cox, the band director,
and Carl Parker, a South Haven teacher
and coach, joined their students. They
wrote letters with questions, complaints
and problems.
"You'll just have to look on someone else's music or fake it," Cox replied.
AFTER MUSIC and instruments were collected, the students struggled down the bleachers and onto the field, where they played and played for more than an hour.
Their director just shook his head as they left.
"I like to bring my kids to things like this, so they can hear what a big band sounds like, but there are always problems," Cox said.
Cox and Parker took the afternoon solving problems. A white fur uniform helped them get around. The band members were christy, hot and ready to leave long before the game was over.
As the halftime performance drew near, students began to complain about the heat and of exhaustion.
"Mr. Cox, I'm gonna get sick in a minute," Julie Estes, an eighth grader, said.
See BAND back page
B
Too Hot
Two members of the Belton High School band try to cool off a third member of the band after she collapsed from heat
0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
exhaustion during Band Day halftime activities. Over 250
Arizona-North Texas game Saturday.
---
2
Monday, October 1, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Vance, Dobrynin meet privately
WASHINGTON - Top U.S. and Soviet officials had a surprise meeting at the State department yesterday while President Carter remained at Camp Dane.
Secretary of State Vance and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrytin began their meeting at a p.m. but State Department spokesman David Nail would give no answer.
Carter will address the nation at 9 p.m. EDT tonight. Negotiations apparently had broken down, with the Soviets refusing to budge on Carter's insistence that
When Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Grimkova returned to Moscow last week after meeting in New York with Vance, he gave no indication of softening the stance.
Meanwhile, Vice President Walter Mondale Saturday told the fall meeting of the New England Associated Press News Newses that linking Senate approval of the SALT II treaty to Soviet troop presence in Cuba was "ourageous" and "reckless leadership."
Amtrak court order vacated
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court yesterday overturned a lower court order which would have required Amtrak to continue running its New York-New Jersey line.
Chief Justice Warren Burger signed the order vacating a U.S. Appeals Court ruling that would have required Amtrak to continue operating the National Railway System.
Anikt had asked both the Supreme Court and a U.S. Court of Appeals yesterday to issue an emergency order allowing the rail company to disconnect trains from the station.
Amtrak spokesman Jim Bryant said there would be no immediate appeal of another court order requiring passenger service to continue on three other jeopardized routes, which originate in Chicago and go to Seattle, Houston and Miami.
Japan watches Soviets' moves
TOKYO- Will President Carter wreathe with the problem of Soviet troops in Cuba. The soldiers have become involved in a similar issue on an island just off
According to a U. S. intelligence report, about 2.000 Soviet military personnel recently were moved to Shikotan—one of four small islands off Hokkaido.
Shikatou, 60 miles from Hokkaido, has been claimed by both the Soviet Union and Janan since the Soviets took it over at the end of World War II.
The news of the troops was first leaked to Japanese reporters in Washington. Okinawa's campaign to tighten his grip on Japan's parliament in a general election
Japanese commentators suggested the timing might be connected with the election, especially in view of the fact that the Soviet troops had actually moved in several weeks earlier, part of a buildup over recent months, according to the U.S. State Department.
Senate tries to pass funding bill
WASHINGTON—Many federal government agencies will run out of money to finance their programs and meet their payrolls, but the Senate has approved a bill that would allow them.
However, the future of the legislation is uncertain. The House is in a weeklong recess, and the Senate bill is almost certain to contain provisions the House wants.
The last-minute measure necessary late Friday when the House refused to bend on controversial language attached to an emergency funding measure. That language would have attached strict standards on federal spending, and would have given members of Congress a 3.5 percent pay raise of $2,000 a year.
The Senate would have accepted the pay raise, but the abortion language already has been rejected four times this year by that body. Just before midnight, a federal judge ordered an abortion law to be
The new plan worked out by Senate leaders calls for the Senate to attach the emergency funds to an appropriations bill that already has passed the House.
17 killed in Rhodesian battle
SALIBURY, Zimbabwe Rhodesia—The military command reported, yesterday that 17 persons, including 12 black nationalist guerrillas, a government soldier and four civilians, were killed over a 24-hour period in the latest round of fighting in Zimbabwe Rhodesia.
The continued fighting raged on the eve of the opening of the fourth week of the London peace talks between Patriote Front guerrilla leaders and the rioters, as thousands of people gathered to
Since Muzorewa came to power June 1, warplanes and troops move in at least nine raids against the Patriotic Front guerrilla bases of Robert Mugabe in Mozambique and Joshua Nkoma in Zambia, reportedly killing hundreds of guerrillas and their supporters.
Canal Zone officiallu Panama's
BAILOA, Canal Zone-With beer, fireworks and official ceremonies,
Americans bid a farewell and Panamanians a welcome yesterday to the
Canal Zone.
American-Panamanian treaties signed in 1973 provided for the U.S. Canal Zone to be protected Panamanian territory at midnight yesterday.
The day was marked with celebrations for Panamanian, the occasion was more somber for some of the $3,000 Americans in the zone who were there.
Hundreds of Americans were expected to show up in front of the Panama Canal CSA. NS administration building where CSA Governor Harold Partif was killed, during a fire that burned into the building.
Robert Stevenson, a Justice department spokesman, said he knew nothing of the investigation. However, he said it was a department policy not to comment on the case.
Vesco, bribery plot investigated
NEW YORK - The Department Justice has conducted a secret investigation to determine whether that jail was an alleged罪犯 held by the plant designed to secure U.S. drug trafficking networks.
secretly over the last eight months, centered on whether Robert Vesco, the fugitive financier, had conspired with the North African nation to bribe him. He did not.
Anti-nukes rally in Missouri
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.—About 1,000 opponents of nuclear energy assembled at the Missouri capitol yesterday in the largest anti-nuclear demonstration
The event was organized by Missourians for Safe Energy and several affiliated groups from throughout the state.
serv. Joseph P. Teasdale received some criticism for his mild support of the organization. Although he declined to speak at the rally, Teasdale sent his staff a letter to his daughter, Marina.
Rally organizer Mark Haim said, "Well, as we all know, the governor is running for re-election next year. Of course, he has our best wishes for a very good year."
Weather...
Today will be clear with northerly winds, from 10 to 28 mph and a high temperature of 85 according to the National Weather Service in Tupelo. Low
Tomorrow will be clear to partly cloudy with high temperatures in the upper 70s.
The extended forecast calls for widely scattered showers Wednesday. Lows will be in the 30s Wednesday night and in the 40s Thursday and Friday nights. High temperatures will be in the 80s Wednesday and in the 70s Thursday and Friday.
By DOUG WAHL Staff Reporter
Call for mail-use inquiry delayed
The Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association has delayed a request to the Lawrence Post Office calling for an investigation into possible misuse of the U.S. license by a local advertiser, Coyle Chapman, its consumer service coordinator, said Friday.
Chapman said he had planned to make the request after three Lawrence residents had filed complaints stating they had mailed them and were demanding an apology. Kon Airabraves, but had not received them.
However, the advertiser, who still is selling the product, contacted Chapman Friday and said he had misplaced the orders.
The complaints were filed within the past three weeks.
Chapman then told the advertiser he would not file the complaint with the post office if the orders were mailed.
Chapman had said earlier the request would be made Friday.
Bill Reynolds, customer service manager for the Lawrence Post Office, said if a complaint were made, he would forward it to a postal inspector in St. Louis. The inspector would decide whether to assign an investigator to the case, Reynolds said.
THE KONI ABRAVISH product was the first one to support veritteds that the sander would make refinishing a "breeze" because it was flexible and could fit into molding and spray coating.
The advertiser told Chapman he received orders for the sander in the mail. He usually cancelled the checks immediately and then forwarded them as proof of purchase, Chapman said.
The ad gave a local post office box as a mailing address.
The price of a sander is about $6.
He said when he accumulated enough envelopes or orders, he sent the sanders.
The advertiser told Chapman the contact him today about sending the sanders to the three Lawrence residents who had filed the complaints.
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The advertiser could not be reached at an address he gave Chapman. The Lawrence directory does not list the address.
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On Ring Days only this Lustrium ring will be on sale for the price of $68.95.
The advertiser did not say why he wrote the bad check in the first place, Chapman said.
The advertiser told Chapman he wanted to talk to the Star about the check. He also said he thought the ad was of poor quality and wanted to pay for it, according to Chapman.
THE ADVERTISER also had an outstanding check for $635 for a Koni Abrasive ad with the Kansas City Star, according to Kaiser, general credit manager for the Star.
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sua films
Monday, October 1
FUNNY GIRL
(1988)
Directed by William Wyler, with Barbara Stealsi (in her Ocewin winning role as Fanny Brice),玛萨 Sharif, and Kay Medford.
Tuesday, October 2
REPULSION
(1965)
Directed by Roman Polanski, with Catherine Deneuve as a woman who loathes, yet craves, men.
Wednesday, October 3
THE IDIOT
(1981)
Director Akira Kurosa adapted the work of his favorite author, Dastowon. He was a masterful joyousian transposed to post-war Japan, Toshiro Mihium stars. JAPAN
Thursday, October 4
Forrest Ackermann
in person!
METROPOLIS
this classic German film by Fritz
This German film is the earliest and most
elaborate science fiction movie, made. Includes a rare prologue,
made includes two versions. Plus:
"Science Fiction" film.
"Science Fiction" film will be produced film. Mr. Ackerman will be presented to the films to answer any questions.
Friday & Saturday October 5-6 ANNIE HALL
(1977)
Directed by Woody Allen, with Woo
Alen, Diane Keaton, Tony Roberts,
Carole Kane, Paul Simon, Christopher
Brown, Kevin Bacon, and much
shall McLuhan. Winner of the Aca-
demy Award for the Best Film of the
year and the Preamble "Dream of a
Rare Bifentil."
Weekends show also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 8:30 or 12 midnight and at 2:40 p.m. unless otherwise pre-loaded with 15 admission. No Refreshments.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Treasurer's Training Session
Paid for by
Tuesday, Oct.2 6:30-7:30
Oread Room, Kansas Union
Student Activity Fee
G.P. Loyds
Tuesday Night
is
K. U. ID Night
at
GP Loyds West
All you can drink!
$3^{50}$
GP Loyds West • 925 Iowa 841-8848
Mondav. October 1. 1979
3
Exigency...
From page one
committee to examine KU's definition of financial exigency and determine if it would conflict with the Regents policy.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday that the Regents definition and KU's would not conflict.
"Our definition is within the guidelines of the Regents. I don't see this (altering KU's definition) as a possibility." he said.
However, Srinivasan said he was not sure of that assessment. "One institution can not stand in isolation," Srinivasan said. "What can we do to make it work?" He has a snowball effect on KU as well."
KU's current definition of financial exigency, which was established by the KU bac committee on financial exigency in the 1960s, is that "the KU policy, that says: 'Not later than five years after the official acceptance of this document by the Chancellor, it shall be reviewed by the University administration Committee.'" The University Senate executive committee.
Either group may suggest revisions to the document."
SRINIVASAN SAID, "This needs to be brought out into the open.
"In two years, the document conceivably could be changed. There could be pressure from the outside to change the document. The government will have to the aggrievant缸, or another institution."
University Daily Kansan
Kauffman said Srinivasan's arguments were overstated.
"Financial exigency is not a Greens-wide decision," he said. "The chief executive officer makes the final decision to declare war." He didn't think that a conflict of policies will occur.
SRINIFA SAID, "It's quite possible right now that the two definitions may not match," he added. "But that over a period of time the Regents definition could be used to dilute our provisional."
Folk festival celebrates
Srinivasan said the Regents definition was broader than AAUP's national standards concerning financial exigency.
Staff Reporter
Bv JUDY WOODBURN
Honey bees swarm around the opening of the apple cider press as the sticky brown juice oozed out with every turn of the handle.
Connie Kirkle's hand-squeaked apple cider from the 100-year old cider press was the first in a series of crafts and folk foods that were held at Folkie Festival in Lankester last week.
Folk music from gospel to banjie,卉蒂 foods from sraukert to tacos to Indian fried bread, and crafts from egg painting to blacksmithing, caught the attention of visitors as they wandered from tent to tent in open field at Kansas State Historical
The festival, which attracted more than 300 people yesterday, turned out to be "a much bigger thing than we had expected." Joan Pease, festival director, said.
FLORENCE MARCOUX, who makes hand and laundry soap from scratch, said
she had worked for two days to prepare for the demonstration.
Milton Grundman, Mountdridge, said he had been using the old-fashioned bellow and fellows since 1948. He now supplement his studies with tools, such as acetylene tones, he said.
HIS NOISY AND sweat-evoking task of
Her craft had been taught to her not as a hobby but as a necessity, she said as she stirred the churning white mass of soap. Marcoux grew up in a社屋 in Decatur Churning butter and making soap from and animal fat was a way of life, she said.
Her voice was at times drowned by the hammer he hammered in the trade nearby. The creases in his neck and face were black with the soot that rose from his forge as he
"I haven't bought any Tide for five years," she said, and "looking at the price of those fancy detergents in the stores, it makes me feel just a little smug."
changing iron rods into spikes and horseshoes was in direct contrast to the costumed woman who sat nearby, painting intricate designs on eggshells.
traditional crafts, food
Kepka Hockmann a fourth-generation Czech from east of Wilson, said her egg paintings were based on the old folk designs she had learned as a child.
As a small crowd of people gathered around a quilted demonstration, several women could be murmuring "that's just the way my grandmother used to do it,"
A popular demonstration was the playing of the hammered dulcimer, a stringed wooden instrument that dates back to Biblical times.
HARVEY PRINZ and Lilah Gillett, holding two tiny homemade mailleos in their fingers, began to strike the metal ring of a finger as the Dancer Box 'Dancer' and several classical duges.
Prinz, who has built more than 100 dulcimers from 1973, said he first heard a
hammered dulcer at a mountain heritage festival in Virginia, and has been "hooked" since.
Pease said the festival, which was financed in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Kansas Arts Com. was the first such festival in Kansas.
"Many small communities have their celebrations, but we've never had a statewide forum for folk crafts and music," she said.
BILL PEARSON, a treasure folkstar from Connecticut, was hired to gather Kansas craftsmans and musicians for the festival.
He said the National Endowment for the Arts would fund festivals for only two years more.
"If the people in Kansas want to do this after next year, it's going to have to be supported locally. Nobody's figure out how much the money might come from," he said.
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Attention: Pre-dental Students The University of Missouri at Kansas City
The University of Missouri at Kansas City School of Dentistry is sponsoring a seminar on the profession of Dentistry on Oct. 5,1979 from 10-11:30 am. If you are interested in attending this meeting, please call 841-7128 at your convenience.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanans
editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
the editorial team.
October 1, 1979
Oread downzone vital
The Oread neighborhood a few years ago seemed like a dying animal that was unable to raise itself out of its deteriorating condition.
But now, after careful nursing by a group of dedicated residents, the Oread neighborhood has not only cared for itself, but is showing strong vital signs.
The most recent sign of life was its ability to convince the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission that the city should downzone the northwest section of the Oread neighborhood.
WHAT THAT WOULD mean is that an area north of Memorial Stadium would no longer be zoned for residential high-density use. Instead, the area would be built on land which would mean that fewer fourplexes, more duplexes would be built.
While the lone dissenter at the commission's meeting last week charged discrimination against students because such a decision would decrease housing, downmong would, in fact, be beneficial to them. But it is also a security and the city. No one benefits when a neighborhood is no longer vital, and the
Oread neighborhood, with its high-density residential zoning, had been losing its vitality.
THE NEIGHBORHOOD directly north of the stadium has been characterized by single-family homes. The residents correctly argue that high density zoning has been wrecking the character of the neighborhood and making it extremely difficult to get homes financed in the area.
There will be fewer students in the neighborhood, perhaps, but the downzoning would allow students to find housing there.
It is now up to the Oread residents to make their vitality known to the City Commission when it considers the recommendation of the planning commission this月内. In July, the city commissioners denied a proposal to downsize the entire Oread neighborhood to residential duplex.
But now, working with the planning commission's recommendation, they will hopefully see the wisdom of a new zoning order in the neighborhood that need such zoning.
In the end, we will all reap the benefits of such a move.
Kuhn's punishment does not fit crime
We should have come to the realization in 1968 that anything can happen in the next few years, win the World Series then we should be prepared for anything, and for the most important thing is baseball, umpire strikes and multimillion dollar contracts. But now it's not as clear as it was a year ago.
So there will be a case heard before a major league arbitrator concerning the right of a major league player to speak on the court. The players can pennant races, razor commercials or artifical turf. Bill Lee, one of the best pitchers in the game today, is the man
LEE, a left-hander for the Montreal Expos of the National League, is a so-called free spirit, a man who has his own brand of luck, including junk food, SALT II and nuclear power. He is not the typical Whitey Ford, clean cut-type baseball player. He is a scraggly-hairy, often bearded activist who still doesn't have enough to have won 16 games this year.
When Lee came to Montreal this season after spending 10 years with the Nets, he got to play in the best season ever and almost led them to a divisional championship. But he also got himself in trouble with baseball's major league commissioner Bowie Kukun.
Lee was quoted during spring training as saying that, among other things, he had used marijuana. When the pressure was put on him about such a radical statement he qualified it, tongue-in-cheekly, "I will never be the one he ever used it was in the morning when he sprinkled it over the top of his organic buckwheat pancakes.
KUHN 'DIDN'T LIKE Lee's statements, nor did he like his flippancy, and he fired the pitcher $250 for "conduct" in a game when he made mistakes of the pitcher is tough to understand, especially in our society where marijuana is commonly used and is also illegal.
The question of the drug's health hazards or legality does not even apply in this case, however. The $20 is not even worth it and there is no effect, that Lee has no right to speak
david
COLUMNIST preston
about what he wants; what he thinks is important. It is a gross abuse of the power that Kahn has and it is a violation of his fundamental guarantee of freedom of speech.
LEE APPEALED the fine through the player's association and the case will be heard before baseball arbitrator Paul Pappalardo completed. The case may then go to the courts, depending on the outcome of the arbitration. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a motion against the player's association and a good number of fans. One such fan was quoted in the New York Times as saying, "In 1982, when he didn't begin he started stuffing shirts."
It was what had gone on before this season that probably duped Kuko into the job of shaking up a team couldn't say that he had smoked marijuana. Last year when Kuko voiled the million dollar trades of Vida Blue, he wasn't the only person who was trying to make the trades, Charlie O. Finley, sued the commissioner. The court, however, ruled for Kuko.
Kahn convinced the court that it was in the best interest of baseball to void the trades, and the court agreed. He should not let such success go to his head.
HE CANNOT tell a player what he should say, and a player should have the right to say what he wants as long as it is not slumbered or obscene.
Heshe should not concern himself with the lifestyle and views of a particular pitcher. He especially should not stop his right to freedom of speech.
President Carter and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance don't appear to be willing to take the helm of the ship of state. That much more than he did at Sanders' hands on Cuba, Rhodesia and Nicaragua.
One no these days seems to be sure about who is running America's foreign policy.
Defenders of freedom of speech should not worry about the upcoming arbitration and possible court case. Certainly Lee should win the battle for his $250 and his right to speak out on what he wants without fear of being censored.
So now others, spotting the leadership void, have decided to step in and make their own decision. The Americans are dangerous game that threatens to shatter the already fragmented members of America.
But then you never know. The Mets did win the 1969 World Series . . .
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
DEAR JIMMY...
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO
YOU
PERHAPS THE MOST irresponsible issue in America is American foreign policy is the case of Israel a legislative assistant to Jesse Helms, conservative Republican from North Carolina.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
DEAR JIMMY...
Helms sent Carbaugh to London recently to observe negotiations on a new Zimbabwe Rhodesia constitution. Britain is trying to persuade both Patriotic Front guerrillas and the Sahibs government to end their agreements and agree on a new government structure.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO
YOU
Burton Kirkpatrick
YOU
MILKY MILKY
Bunco
RACINE 19
British officials complained to the United States last week that Carbaugh had thrown a wrench into the works by urging former Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith to take a hard line in the negotiations. The officials charged that Carbaugh advised Smith to "hang on" and refuse to yield to British pressure. But there were certain safeguards for white Rhodesians.
Tribute to Jimmy's 55th
Individualism endangers foreign policy
The British Foreign Office believes that Carrough's advice helped stiffen Smith's stance on the issue. The Smith's intransigence has been one of the biggest obstacles to the success of the plan.
Incredibly, Helms defended the actions of his aide, saying that Carbaugh behaved with "perfect propriety."
CARBAUGH ALSO told Smith, according to the British, that the United States would lift trade sanctions against Zimbabwe Rhodesia by Oct. 1. Smith was apparent as he stated that the pressure, as it meant the end of some of the pressure on him from the American government.
HELMS ALSO defended his decision to send an aide to the talks.
made it clear that the PLO must recognize Israel's right to exist. But PLO officials showed no signs of accepting Jackson's peace message. And the trip wrestened already tense relations between the black community and the American Jewish community.
John
logan
BETTER MOTIVATED, but equally risky, was the Rev. Jesse Jackson's recent trip to the Middle East. Jackson made the trip along with leaders of the Southern Baptist Church and other fact-finding and to try to do some peace making in Lebanon and Israel. The result was thatJackson stirred Palestinians on the West Bank into a fever pitch and angered
With knowledge of all the twisted menialities available in the world today—after Auschwitz, and Munich in 1972, and all the other examples of the propriety of human beings, including the human beings, given enough power and desperation—how can a person in full grasp of a sensibility of other humans begin to rationalize the public printing of a course of decision whether a person can say what he wants to or not? Is it for the good of the country to allow a few individuals, in this case, their unenableable right—at peril to the security of the whole of Fuliv or the state Manheim law- lawyer, Kan.
It is tough enough for the United States to develop good relations with the other nations of the world when there is no one in Washington who seems willing to do it.
That is an incredibly irresponsible attitude. What would happen if every United States Senator thought that the State Department had not acted in good faith, and
But the bad situation can only be exacerbated if other groups or individuals try to step in and do the job The State Department is tasked with helping to secure the ship of state, who a whole crew of ensigns.
Thompson uses the current cynical definition of "national security" (her quotes to that, that national security is "the legal system for a long time." It is true that the Johnson and Nixon administrations' abuse of the term "national security" in using it to use excuse their own dimly it illegal activity has given the term poor press, so to speak.
AFFAIRS
WHERE DO we draw the line between an individual exercising his right to speak and an individual contributing to madness and chaos?
sent an envoy to middle in some distant, delicate negotiations? The world would be in a chaotic uproar.
Dear Melissa, Utopia is not here and now. There are groups of people-politicists (the people) who believe in calculated death, destruction and the matter of group policy. These are desperate people unable to conceive, in their dilemma, an abstract as such—the freedom of speech
To his credit, Jackson urged that the Palestinians use moderation in their efforts to establish a Palestinian state. And be also
The real world, outside of legalistic notions of national security, does yet exist. The idea of maintaining sufficient security for an entire nation is one of which is the First Amendment, of this country from outside physical subversion of American society and protecting our American style in the future.
WITH THIS freedom to speak goes a responsibility. A trust that sets an individual limit on when to speak or not, to be able to learn and grow. Yasser Arafat, et al., access instruction in how to build a hydrogen bomb rings not because it benefits but more, a tad bit, of the insane.
Freedom no excuse for bomb story
I wonder what incubator Melissa Thompson is being educated in that would allow her to use the First Amendment in her work. What is the indication of the Hydro Bomb's construction.
The Press is a conglomeration of individuals, who, no doubt, share all the strengths and weaknesses inherent in each person. The Press is also a journalist decides to print information that could prove directly to promote physical harm to the whole of us he himself. It is his own free speech. His use of his right could promote, in very real and desperate people, the abnormal use or abuse of his powers leading to the deaths of many millions.
Her rationale being that the press has a right to print whatever it wants, wherever it wants under the protection of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution to matter the result or consequence that the expression of that right may bring.
To Thompson may I suggest, spin free of your cocoon and discover what freedom implies.
John Varhevich
Vietnam War veteran
John Yarnevich
U.S. aid to Turkey a Cyprus question To the Editor
1 wish to comment on and clarify some points raised in Mr. Mulitz's letter of September 21, 1974. In response to the letter of September 19 that made some observations on John Fisk's 8 September 1974 letter, Mr. Mulitz
In my letter I indicated, among other things, that no U.S. aid should be given to Turkey or to Greece, and the obligations of the United States, Cyprus and Greece and until she stopped using foreign money.
Unfortunately, I am not confused as far as Turkey's aggressive policy and violations are concerned. The Cypriot people have enunciated these actions for the last five years.
The CYPRUS problem is not 'an affair'; as Mutlu calls it. It is an international problem of invasion and occupation, and it ought to allure freedom-loving and democratic people.
Mutu says that it is a mistake to write about Turkey's expansion policy. It is not wrong, but the country stopped 1963 and 1967 but was stopped by the U.S. and other countries. What her target then to be is "the biggest Turkish Cypriots?" I do not think so. Why does she continue to send Turkish settlers to Cyprus?
In the past history of Turkey one can cite many examples of such tactics—Alexandretta, Armenia, Ibrahma, Tenedes, etc. Had Turkey suddenly wished to restore constitutional order she would have withdrawn after the elected returned to office. However, she intensified her efforts to turkify the occupied area. In some cases, they are claims
I am sorry to admit that I have not missed Fisher's main argument, as Mulls's suggests—that I arrived at certain obvious outcomes mainly from American taxpayers and they should know how those other countries use that aid. If democracy in America goes bad, it will almost 10,000 troops in Cypriot and spend a bell of a lot of money maintaining them? Turkey could have used that money to solve some of her economic and social problems. She disassociated from economic problems and blockades. Surely she does not keep them in Cyprus for the security of the Turkish community—which consists of only 190,000.
HAD DEMOCRATIC Greece any claims to Cyprus, she would not have signed the 1960 agreement with Turkey and Britain for Cypriot independence.
Restoring the independence of Cyprus surely does not mean legalization of the present situation. This is what Turkey is doing, and through her representative, Mr K. Deplash.
THANKS, MUTLU, for reminding me that Turkey violated international laws, too. The United States has authorized United States to violate U.S. laws and human rights, for surely U.S. laws condemn interference in the internal affairs of other countries. In a way, people's right to freedom and independence.
I am pleased to see that Mutlu favors
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
The blame, therefore, is not on the Greek Cypriots, who have sincerely wished for many centuries to reach a lasting peace with their Turkish compatriots.
PROOF OF this is the 1977 Turkish proposals given to U.N. Secretary General Dr. Waldheim, which were rejected.
federation and not confederation, which his government said meant setting up states in Cyprus and, in the long run, double union and thus dissolution of the Republic of
I agree Cyprus would be better off as a free and unified state without any foreign interference. Cyprus belongs to her people.
Maria Hadjipavlou
Maria Hadjipavlou Lawrence graduate student
Iran violates rights
On Thursday Sept. 20, the Kansan printed a letter by Mohammed Zikary, president of the organization, to the university presented a portrait of Khomeni's Iran as a tolerant religious society, with popular backing. This is a mixture of truth and irony, and I would like to explain the distortion.
To the Editor:
Unfortunately, both the American David Preston and the Iranian Zikry see what they would like to see, because of their own cultural background. They see that the Kohmine regime is popular with the Moslim majorities, while Zikry presents the argument that majority views and attitudes of the Moslems are, or must be, simplest simply because they are majoritarian.
IT IS Ziky's view that is socially dangerous as well as distorted, because he particularly fails to tell the truth about the religiously repressive nature of the falacine regime, a repression that I will describe, or be referring to "cultural differences" alone.
Khomeini's Iran is not a religion-tolerant society, and the Kurds are not the only, nor the most sordid, example of the Moslem's religious hyocrissy.
The Bahais experienced severe religious oppression in Iran in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when more than 20,000 Bahais were killed or killed. The religion was officially branded a heresy after an attempt on the life of the Shah, which was motivated by earlier persecution.
THE BAHAL, who number close to ten million in the world, are members of one of the largest independent world religions, and are known especially for their religious tolerance, humanitarian work and non-violent action in revolutionary and partisan politics.
This historical persecution has flared again in the anarchic wake of the Islamic
revolution, which rejects Western culture, ideas and modes of production. However, the second revolution in secession, which involves the attempt to suppress even eliminated Bahais because they are Baheians.
IN THE LAST few weeks, Khomein's Islamic regime has seized all national Bahai properties, and demolished the home of the Bahais. The prime minister is important to the world's Bahas as the Church of Nativity to Christians, or the wailing wall to the Jews, the destruction of this shrine is a fanatic act concurrent with the escalation of escaping violence against the Bahais.
Khomeini's regime has allowed and instigated the widespread seizure and bombing of many citizens and the removal of some Bahias from government jobs. In some sections of the country, literally hundreds, perhaps thousands of families have been left
Statements in the New York Times last spring labeled the Bahais as a "subversive political movement." This is difficult to understand without additional or political status, since the Bahais are forbidden by their religion to join partisan movements in parties, or in general political debates.
OFFICIALLY, Khmeimin has pledged rights for religious freedom and political rights to his students. However, the pronouncements have conspicuously omitted mention of the applause.
These acts are not merely religious hypocrisy, they are apparently part of an entire system of government's physical harassment that, if not recognized and checked, may grow into actual religious hypocrisy.
These events deserve serious recognition and public attention in the United States. One wonders how reliable Zikry's views about Iran are in general, in the light of the facts that "mortality" serts that "mortorities are guaranteed their freedom of a faith" and piously claims that Iran is "not like the West where there is religious intolerance."
Chris Hamilton
Chris Hammon
Columbia, Mo., graduate student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
(USPS S6440) Published at the University of Kansas Daily August through May. Mail copy to Secretary of State, Missouri Bureau of Student Affairs payable to Larry Burger. Second-day class payment at Laundry. Bursary $24 a year to Douglas County and $18 for six months or $58 per semester. Second-day student activity fee $28, paid through the student activity fee window.
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Editor Mia Hookey
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Monday, October 1. 1979
5
Newman attacks language abuses
By TED LICKTEIG
Staff Reporter
KANASA CITY, Mo. — A mail order catalog described an ice cream scoop as an "ice cream transfer space," and a weather station called the Dusner dunstarsur for "significant rain event."
Edwin Newman, NBC correspondent describes these two statements as examples of decadent language usage.
Individuals should stop try to inflate their self-esteem by abusing the language, and instead speak and write understandable. Newman said in a speech Friday night.
Newman spoke to about 1,100 members of the Missouri Bar Association at their 100th annual conference at the Crown Center Hotel.
Newman, the author of two books on language usage and a new novel, Sunday Punch, criticized people who used incorrect words for thinking that those who did were snickers.
"These people said that your heart had to be in what you said. That you had to 'relate' to other people." he said
"Using this fiery dull language makes a person feel self-important. It creates a fence to keep outsiders out. It makes too much noise for people to try to think it out," newman said.
NEWMAN'S TAUNTS brought laughter from the members throughout his 45-minute address.
Newman did not chastise lawyers directly, but exorcized people whose words were considered insulting language is too notorious. We should isolate it and deal with it separately," Newman told us.
A Sacramento weather forecaster, said A. current radar tracking data no longer impairs to this heavy precipitation regime," instead of saying that thundershowers were again in place.
He also said the Times had written about a building by saying "It will be fully completed."
He said the New York Times had written of Green Bay Packers head coach, Bart Starr, "He has instilled a posture of patience in his fans." He brought up a roar of laughter by adding that, presumably, the fans maintained that position while
Newman quote a broadcaster as saying that Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Burt Hooten "has scattered one hit." He said that when he scattered it all over the natural surface.
PROCLAIMED EXPERTS were not spared from Newman's wrath.
Newman preyed on sportscasters, who he said always referred to grass as "natural surface."
Those in education, he said, ultimately were responsible for the decay of the
English language, and most were not doing a good job.
He said a Florida school district called desks, "population stations." When enrollment went down at Santa Clara Calf., school was an accelerated slumline stau-
HE SAID the language was being poisoned by ethnic phrases and by teachers who were afraid to correct the grammatical students, for fear of alienating them.
He said education had reached a point where educators did not think correct grammar mattered.
Contributing to the downfall of the language were the rebellious 1906 and the Watergate era, in which age, experience, memory, mathematical rules were held in disrepute, he said.
He said that there was, however, room in the language for slung and foreign phrases and that he did not expect people to talk like him.
Classified...
From page one
Collins said the administration was concerned that some people would think of the Classified Senate as a union.
ALSO on the committee are Dek Shankel, executive vice chancellor, Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, and Mike Davis, University general counsel.
DAVIS SAID that he and other members of the committee had not studied the proposal enough to cite any specific legal problems.
Mann said his talk with Collins had given him a better understanding of the Classified Senate's objectives.
Student Legal Services are Available . . .
Nichier said that although the recognition of the Classified Seneca needed study, there was evidence being among administrators that all employees form one form of representation in the University.
"We don't want a union," Collins said. "But the administration worries about someone outside the University wondering why their body could be anything but a union."
1) Advice and consultation on any legal matter.
2) Preparation, drafting and review of contracts, leases and other legal documents.
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4) Incorporation of bonafide non-profit student organizations.
5) Documents notarized.
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Alumni Association plans to build additional center
The KU Alumni Association Board approved plans this weekend for a new run of 140 parking spots on Oregon streets, Dick Wintermote, director of the Alumni Association, said Thursday.
The Kansas University Endowment Association agreed three weeks ago to assist KU alumni in raising funds and supporting the new parking lot, for the site of the new center.
"The board approved the report of the Alumni Planning Committee and asked it to continue as a Building Committee," he wrote. "The Board will be by the Alumni Planning Committee."
consisted of topographical studies and test drills of the soil.
The Alumni Association Board also asked the committee to hire an architect and to study the amount of space needed in the new center.
According to Wintermote, no time schedule has been set for the completion of the new center.
"I hope that we will occupy the center by the one hundredth anniversary of the KU Alumni Association in 1888," she knows—the construction might go faster.
Winternote said no cost estimate had been set for the new center.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 1, 1979
Lost running attack found
By MIKE EARLE
Associate Sports Editor
KU tailback Walt Mack was all smiles Saturday after the Jayhawks had just downed North Texas State 37-18, and he had every reason to be happy.
Mack and backfill Harry Sydney both gained more than 100 yards in the game. The last KU bucks to gain more than 100 yards was against Lauren Smith in the 1976 season.
A transfer from the City College of San Francisco, Mack finished the game with 124 rushing and one touchdown. Quate an infield pass, and he scored in which he gained only one yard.
"We get better every week," Mack said. "This is just a start. Our offensive line did a great job. We worked hard in practice all those coaches knew just where we were lacking."
KU's running attack had gained only eight total yards before Saturday's game. In preparation for the Mean Green, Couch Dunn concentrated on the ground game last week.
Mack said the emphasis on rushing was partly responsible for his success.
"You can check out the results." We did a few things in practice, and it really paid off. We drilled on running up the middle and worked on打 holes faster."
Mack was taken out of the game near the end of the fourth quarter after gaining 98 yards. When the KU coaching staff learned he was close to the 100-vard mark, he was
sent back in. Mack responded with a 23-yard touchdown run.
"When I went in, the offensive linemen said "Cmon Walk let's go and we went," Mack said. "This feeling he has is trying to be going to forget it and get ready for Syracuse."
For fullback Harry Syredy the 101 yards gained on 16 carries marked the second time in his career he has rushed for 100 yards. He is now carrying carries in last year's OK to Oklahoma.
"Now we know we can run," Sydney said. "People are going to have to respect our running game now."
"I didn't doubt our ability. We knew it would take time and that we'd have to be patient. Doing it in front of the home crowd was great."
Sydney, who also had 22 yards in pass receptions, was quick to give KU's offensive line credit for his success.
"With those holes they were making I could've run all night." "We put a lot of emphasis on the run this week. Our oftensive line did a bellwax job."
"It helps a lot having six good running backs to go with," Sydney said. "If you get tired, someone on the sideline can take your place. I feel like I had to stay in there."
Sydney also said he was more effective because of the rest he received from substitutions.
"We gained a lot of respect today. We wanted this one for ourselves and Coach Fambourg. I think we can count on our running game."
24
BARB KINNEY/Kansan staff
Drive way
tailback Walter Mack found a hole big enough to drive a truck on Saturday against North Texas State. After taking quarterback Brian Bettek's handoff, Mack used a sled to move Bettek into the end zone for a touchdown.
Jefferson and his speed to escape Gwombie (20) for a big gain. Mack, who had one yard for the season entering the game, finished with 124 joins on 26 carries. The 'Hawks
3
KU's Harry Sydney, the former winger quarterback turned fullback, escaped the match of Green mean defender Lauren Haynes on the way to a 27-yard touchdown run in the second quarter Saturday. Sydney traveled for 101 yards on 16 carries. With Walter Mack's 124 running yard, KU did the first to go over 100 since Nolan Crownwell
Stepvin' out
KU mangles Mean Green 37-18
By TONY FITTS
Sports Editor
The Kansas football team proved the dreary days of the Bud Moore regime are over Saturday with their 37-18 victory over Oklahoma State. Green, breakеng a 11-game loss streak.
The Jayhawks showed they can win some football games both offensively and defensively. KU rolled up their hard yardage in the second half and held out with 485 yards passing and running. In 1976, at the peak of Moore's wishbone attack, Nolan Clemens, Lauwers Smith and others won the game.
Defensively, Kansas held North Texas State to 96 net rushing yards. The Mean Green had been averaging 229 yards on the ground in their four previous games.
"I've been telling the kids all along that if good players will happen," KU Coach Couch brought after the game. "They hadn't found on our until today, but now I know what happened."
"I'm just so happy for a bunch of seniors who have given so much to this program and who have received so little. I hope we're on our way."
KU worked especially hard the week before the game, putting in extra time on the running game after averaging four vards in each of the two previous games.
"We just work our butts off this week on execution," Mike Gay, offensive tackle and co-captain, said. "It was the same game plan as before, we just put it all together."
Kevin Clinton, KU quarterback, said, "We just dedicated this week to the runnings game." We were relied on by the runnings game, but we knew we had to run. Even the I could have runn
Clinton almost needed to run to keep his offensive statistics up. He was bothered by a muscle spasm in his back and missed a number of masses.
"I'm not going to make excuses with my back," he said. "I just wasn't sharp today."
Clinton's ribs were bruised in the fourth
Chiefs block 2 punts, win 24-6
SEATTLE (UPI) -- Ted McKnight scored on runs of 23 and 84 yards and Kansas City blocked two Seattle pints yesterday to win the disappointing victory over the dismounting Seahawks.
McKnight, who finished with 147 yards on 12 carries, put the Chefs ahead 7.5 when he snapped his second pick and unintroduced into Seattle's end zone with 13:49 left in the first half. McKnight's run came immedately after Eedbam, a Houston receiver, attempted punt by Seattle's Herman Weaver.
Walter suffered a similar fate with 11-45 left in the game when M.L. Carter blocked him from passing to Jake Bubbler TD march. The four-play drive was capped when rookie quarterback Steve Fuller hit another first-year player, running back Chase Johnson in the TD pass to give Kansas M.A. 17-46 lead.
the second quarter to account for Kansas City's other success, Efren Herrera kicked field goals of 38 and 20 yards for Seattle's only points.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Dave Reverting to Murray in the midst of litter at the Oakland A to a 8-6 victory over the Kansas City Royals in the season finale.
McKnight burst through a bunched up Seattle defense from his own 16 with 1:27 to can the boat for the Chiefs, who are 3-2.
Seattle was able to move the ball in sports against the Chiefs' defense but could not reach it. The Lions traced 31 yards on the very first play from scrimmage, set up Herrema's first field goal.
The Seahawks, preseason pick to contend for the AFC West crown, are now 1-4.
Rovals lose final and wait for next year
Jan Stenerud kicked a 36-yard field goal in
Dennis Leonard, 14-12, suffered the loss while Brian Kingman, 8-7, was the winner in relief.
Dave Murphy and Dave Chalk hit solo home runs to help the A's to a 4-1 lead after seven innings.
The Royals scored three in the eighth to it 4-1 on John Wathan's two-run triple and Steve Braun's RBI grounder.
The Royals, dethroned this year by California as American League West champs, got a run in the first on Amos Otis' RBI double.
singled to lead off. Two out later, with Wilson running on the pitch, Otts doubled into center to score the speedy Royals outfielder.
Wilson Wilde, who finished the year as the American League stolen base king with 83.
EAST
W L Pct GR
Pittsburgh 39 64 .508
Baltimore 39 64 .508
St. Louis 86 78 .231
Los Angeles 86 78 .231
Houston 86 78 .231
Chicago 82 69 .144
Atlanta 82 69 .144
Kingman was the only pitcher to finish with a winning record for the A's whose final day victory prevented them from tying
| WIN | MILKSHAKE |
| :--- | :--- |
| 4 Los Angeles | 71 | 309 |
| 5 Chicago | 86 | 349 |
| Los Angeles | 86 | 349 |
| San Francisco | 71 | 438 |
| San Francisco | 71 | 438 |
| Atlanta | 19 | 438 |
| Atlanta | 19 | 438 |
NATIONAL LEAGUE
The Royals set an attendance record of 2,261.848 for the season—an average of 28.589 per game—despite playing two less than in 1787, their previous record year.
Toronto with the worst record in the major leagues this year.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
| Elev. | L.F.C. | L | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Alhambra | 105 | 66 | 38 |
| Milwaukee | 70 | 32 | 46 |
| New York | 89 | 71 | 56 |
| Newark | 81 | 18 | 21 |
| Cleveland | 81 | 81 | 100 |
| Detroit | 81 | 100 | 100 |
| Metrorail | Week 1 |
| :--- | :--- |
| *e*California | 82 | 74 | 543 |
| Kansas City | 81 | 79 | 312 |
| Houston | 82 | 76 | 312 |
| Minneapolis | 82 | 87 | 306 |
| Milwaukee | 82 | 87 | 304 |
| Seattle | 87 | 87 | 14 | 14 |
| Seattle | 87 | 87 | 14 | 14 |
| Seattle | 4 | 100 | 34 | 34 |
quarter when he was hit after releasing a pass. The injury is not serious, according to Fambrouch.
END REGULAR SEASON
Clinton played most of the game, but Brian Belthe like reinforced him at times. Belthe missed a key play like the one worn by Houston Oilers quarterback Dan Pastini. KU quarterback coach John Hadl said that the team also had one for Clinton, but that Clinton had decided not
KU got in a few hits of their own on Monday, according to defensive coordinator Tom Batta. The Mean Green got 180 yards and two touchdowns on only five of their own.
"The one thing we have been working or since practice began back in the spring was the idea of having a big play. Batta said. "As long as we let the big play affect us like that, we're going to be happy."
"We could move the 'football'," he said, "What hurt us was trying to get the football. We'd probably not win but I felt like we could throw. We are not going to be hard-bested and stubborn and just playing."
"I was pleased, though, that we stopped the run and forced them to throw. We may
Even though there were some problems, most KU players and coaches were pleased with the victory.
North Texas Coach Jerry Moore wasn't over impressed with KU's defense—when he got a chance to play against it.
Fambrough said, "This is the moment
have given up some big plays on defense,
but we made some big plays, too.
NORTH TEXAS STATE... 6 6 6-18
KANSAI ... 3 10 7 17-37
KU-F1 FUH Ibanez S2
KU-F1 FUH Ibanez S3
KU-F1 W. Sturm Ibanez (Hawksbuck) kick
KU-F1 W. Sturm Ibanez (Hawksbuck) kick
NW-Witte 4 pts from Severnan (kick bucket)
NW-Witte 4 pts from Severnan (kick bucket)
KU-Bittef 1 pts from Hornbuck (kick)
KU-Bittef 1 pts from Hornbuck (kick)
KU-F1 FUH Ibanez S3
KU-F1 FUH Ibanez S3
KU-Mack 25 pts from Newmarch (pass bucket)
KU-Mack 25 pts from Newmarch (pass bucket)
30
It may not be so great next week. KU fayacus Syracuse, a team that has scored 104 points in the last two games, against Northwestern and Washington State. Fam. Baylor, especially with their Al-East quartar buck Bill Hartley, was a team to respect
N. TEXAS KANSA
First downs 17
Rutherford-ats 30
Passing yards 24
Passing yards 25
Passing yards 28
Passing All-Comp-Int. 35-15-14
Total offense yards 156
Offense yards 83-4-3
Fumbles offs 34
Fumbles ons 64
Fumbles on 68
that you cherish. You know it can't last long, but bov, it is sweet."
Clinton was a little less poetic: "It was great!"
Receiving - N. Texas, Harvey 74, Terrell 34-7, Witte
2-4; Kanap, Sakab 34-8, Verberr 34-7, Sydney 22-2
By GENE MYERS
Ruston - N. Texas, Harvey 322, Jackson 6-16 Jones
5-13 Kansas, May 31-24 Seattle 16-10, Hagberg 5-8
Pasig - N. Texas, Stevenum 11-24, Case 2-14, Kana good job getting them out of their game plan."
Defensive front stunts Texans
Snorts Writer
KU's revived rushing game staged a premiere appearance Saturday, but the defense made an unexpected showing.
Leroy Irwin, the free safety with the demonic nickname "Dr. Death," made only one lance in KU's 37-18 win over North Texas State. But "Dr. Death," according to himself and Moon Green quarterbacks by Joe Stevenson, played a standout game.
"Their secondary could be picked apart or shot," said the injured jacket his shoulder on a first quarter hit by Kirby Criswell, said. "That's the weakest part of the defense, except for that one free kick."
"One assist on a tackle, that's all I had to do," Irvin said. "That's just great. I get tired of tackling.
With a good team, the defensive secondary should be the last defense, making relatively few tackles. Tackling is for the linemen and backlineers. Yet, ivir had 21 tackles in KU's ing losses and is 75 yr of the school record, held by linebacker
"Up front they did a great job. I knew they'd finally shut people down."
KU shut the Mean Green down by com-
pense to the line of scrimmage on both offe-
nance and defense, up the rushing attack on offense
clamped down on the Mean Green on
"I've never seen our kids get so intimidated." North Texas head coach Jeff Moore said. "KU simply controlled the line and went right at us.
"We knew we have a size advantage last Monday, but size didn't matter. They were firing on offense and defense and we couldn't stop them. This is our worst day
Controlling the defensive line were
nosecaring, the wizard, who had
nosegumping and noosegumping and six,
Jim Zidm and Criswlend led the backers,
combining for nine tackles with four behind
their own.
"We were stunting a lot and it bothered them," Casey said. "It was a hard game, but they weren't as good as Pittsburgh or Michigan."
"We wanted to concentrate on their running game and make them pass. We did
Casey and company held North Texas State to 96 vards rushing.
Stevenson, Case's backup who was 12-of-31 for 241 yards passing, also was impressed with the KU defense.
"There wasn't a weak point out there," Stevenson said. "I was very impressed with the line. I didn't expect that."
The defense is just as tough as Southern Methodist, but it's not as tough as a 209 winner over North Texas last week). SMU was stronger but KU is more aggressive and has a more complex offense.
Gardner, the 6-0, 260 pound junior noseguard, said the defensive front still has its best day ahead.
"We showed what kind of a defensive team we have," he said. "We gained a lot of respect on there today. We're up and we're going to star that way."
More standout defensive efforts are what Irvin wants, too.
"I'll let Coach Swatman keep the tackle record," "Dr. Death" said, "I want the front line to make tackles from now on."
+UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Weekend Sports Roundup
'Cats slip by 'Hawks again
For the third time in as many meetings, Kansas State squeezed past women's cross-country team. This time, the meet was Friday's Missouri.
KU finished with 61 points, second to K-State's 38. Missouri was third with 67 and Drake fourth with 97.
KState's Cathy Saxon, who won the first two individual titles, won again in Columbia. KU's top finisher was Michelle Brown, a former Illinois star.
KU's placeres were Maureen Fintolini, 10th, Tracey Wong, 11th, Katie Gretchen Bajma, 20th, Kelly Hiatt, 20th, and Pamela Schultz.
Women golfers finish last
The KU women's golf team dug itself into the celer of the Region
Groundball at Wichita last week and never reemerized.
After the first day of competition, Thursday, KU was in seventh place in their seven team tournament. After the final round Friday
Sally White scored scores of 83 and 84 for a 167 total and KU's 95. She finished in first, finished with a total of 898 points 32 behind left-facing Michigan.
KU won this tournament last year, and Coach Sandy Bahan said before the journey she would be disappointed if KU didn't finish in
KU's other competitors on the par 74 Echo Hills Course were
Barb Gooosebee 173, Julie Merwald 176, Sara Burgess 177, Cindy Johnson 177 and Liza Howard 178.
Ruggers defend Kaw title
The KU Rugby club successfully defended its hold on the Kaw Valley Cup in Toucks yesterday.
the troglers, who took the title last year, went 24-1 in three games, recording the best score of the four-tournament. In the first game, KU blanked Pittsburgh 18-4. Steve Merdinger, Jim Bartell, Bill Boyle and Kurt Gozda scored for the "Hawks."
Barrett also scored a two-point kick.
In the second game, the 'Hawks downed Kansas State 14-6.
In the second game, the 'Hawks downd Kansas State. The third game against the Toughee Rugby Club, Score scored the game.
The Rugby State next game is Saturday at home against Emorna State. Game time is 1:39 p.m.
Harriers win dual meet
saturday in a dual meet in Carbondale, Ill.
KU's Paul Schultz won the competition in 26:15
The men's cross-country team sliped past Southern Illinois 25-30 Saturday in a dual meet in Carbondale, Ill.
Other finishes were Tim Gundy, fourth in 26:36; Bruce Coldsmith, fifth in 26:18; Tim Tys, sixth in 26:47; Kendall Smith, ninth in 27:03; Brent Swanson, thirteen in 27:15; Ken Burrows, 15th in 28:31 and David Bauer, 16th in 28:34.
The 'Hawks defeated Southern Illinois last year, too.
Monday, October 1, 1979
University Daily Kansan
7
After 45 years of being involved with KU athletics, Dean Nesmith finally received a game ball Saturday.
Nesmith honored for 42 years as athletic trainer
Nesmith, KU's head athletic trainer, received the garniture for any athletic training she completed at the 42 years old ankles and knees, prescribed whirlpool baths and massage sore limbs as he worked.
He also received a ring from the K-Club, which comprises former KU athletic letter winners, with the inscription, "Performance and dedication."
Nesmith earned his membership in the K-12 football league in 1906, and in football in 1908, he played a legacy on the KKU team from 1933-35 and then a year of professional football in 1906. In 1937 he
"I came here in 1923 to play football and I guess I just haven't had enough money to buy the team." "Actually, I we had great satisfaction, peace and enjoyment in my work. I never get up in the morning and I hate to go out. I always do my work and the young men I work with."
HIS INITIAL interest in athletic training began while he worked on the KU training room under Elwyn Dees in 1937. He had taken two years to finish his work on a degree in education.
"Elvyn and I were roommates and when he left to take a job at Oklahoma State in 1938 I became the head trainer," Nesmith said. "Back then all you needed to do was work with you, didn't we need it or shirpool, just an old barbed wire sort of used."
While some changes have occurred since his early days, Nesmith said that football still is basically the same as when he played.
THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
"There's no doubt that the guys today are bigger and faster," Neumann said, "but the team is so strong that tackling, Equipment has changed a lot and that has helped cut down on injuries. We used to have a lot of trouble with head and face injuries, but better helmets has cut injury rates."
Dean Nesmith
THE EMPHASIS placed on athletics at KU is less now that it used to be, Nesmith said.
In past years Nesmith held several prestigious positions. He was the chairman of the board of the National College basketball team, and a trainer for the 1900 U.S. Olympic basketball
Nesmith said he keeps up with new techniques and improvements in his profession mainly through technical courses, and professional meetings that meet regularly.
Nesmith, who is 65, said he did not know of any active trainer older than he was and added that he did not plan to retire until he was ready.
team in Rome. In 1971 he was elected to the Helms Hall of Fame for athletic trainers. He also served as trainer for the Big Eight All-star team that went to Yurayelova in 1974.
"Today we have modern technology, such as ultra-sound, to work with that we didn't used to have," Nesmith said. "The technology allows a lot better and we trade ideas to just be a part of it."
athletes than anyone else in the athletic department, he said he couldn't list KU's greatest athletes.
Although Nesmith has seen more KU
Neemith said, “But I can tell you the only things that change around here are the faces of people who know me. You need the same sort of personalities and traits in the athletes now as we did when I was a kid.”
"We've had so many great athletes here that I couldn't name all the great ones because I know I would leave out people."
Look for U.S.S.R. on the Student Senate Ballot Oct. 3 & 4
Vote United Soley for Student Rights coalition
On Campus
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
TONIGHT: SIERRA CLUB will present a slide show, "Alaska the Great Land," at 7 in the Council Room in the Kansas Union.
TODAY: WOMEN GRADUATE STUDENTS will meet at noon in Cork Room #1 in the Kansas Union for an International Astronomy COLLOQUY will be at 4:30 p.m. in 332 Mallet Hall. Wesley Unruth will speak on "Elastic Light Scattering in Oxide" in COMMITTEE ON SOUTH INTERNATIONAL International Room in the Kansas Union.
Paid for by the U.S.S.R. coalition
is the ideal coalition
RICHARD EDWARDS professor of art history at the University of Michigan, will speak on "Tno-chi, Painter Without A Style." He will speak in conjunction with Andorium. FACULTY RECITAL: EADWART will perform a cello rectal at 8 in Swarthout Rectal. RECEIVED: Murphy Hall. MURPHY HALL WORKERS Candidate for vice president will speak on "Cuba Today" at 8 in the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. OPERATION 1928 W. 18th St. will meet at 7 in the Center 189 W. 18th St.
IMAGINACTION
Paid for by imagination
remember to Vote Rainbow Duo Terri Robinson & Pam Lewis
KANSAN WANT ADS
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
2340 Alabama 843-2931
15 words or fewer ... Each additional word
one bien three four five six seven eight nine ten
$ean bwe three four five six seven eight nine ten
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
AD DEADLINES
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd, if.
ERRORS
Grass
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 4 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 7 p.m.
FANTASTIC FOOTBALL TEAM
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect injections. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in notice or simply call the UB agencies for a bid of A488.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
aid for by
IDEAL
coalition
041 384
Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. tf
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also roasted, and raw peanuts in the shell. Twelve variety of dry beans, rice, potatoes, pearl corn, pouern, and soups. Every Sunday.
Watch for truck parked at 9th & Illinois, Home of the World Famous (Jawahir Foods) and the Cheese Trucks. Also listed, Holden, Ford and Raw Pretail Tables Also listed, Pretend, and sorghum Every Sunday
Bob Caffarelli, Amy Hassig, Bill Reck and Jan Myers make your question, give them a call at 514-278-3520. Go for it—vote LIMITS 10–19
Schumm study guides. Western Civilization
Now at Malls Bookstore.
Now at Malls Bookstore.
Entry deadline
Entry deadline for
INTRAMURAL TENNIS
(mixed doubles)
is Wed., Oct. 3
by 5 p.m.
in 208 Robinson
Sign up for
INTRAMURAL
RACQUETBALL
(mixed doubles)
by 5 p.m. on
Wed., Oct. 3 in
208 Robinson
Zen practice nightly—6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen minder Seen Zaugh sahn from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21. Call 842-7610 for information. 10-12
Vista Restaurant open daily 11 midnight. Fri. & Sat.
9:30 lt 11:00 a.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
Needed: vote. Why vote for anyone else? The only choice, Mie Pawlowski. independent. 10-4.
Comics, comics, comics. Boch #6. Quantity. Flae Market. Weekends 10-5. 10-3
99
FOR RENT
It's Blue, but the Harbour Lites is a first-class dive so join us for $15 pickup and see cane and botshet between 7 p.m. pool. Join us at The Harbour at the Hardware 1011 Mass. Lake
Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available
ROOMS. Now Available at the SUNFLOWER HOUSE—30 member student co-operative within walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. Evenings, call 842-9821.
FRONTENIR APARTMENTS NOW RENT-
ING. Studios 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished
and equipped with large walk-in closets,
ample parking. On KU XB campus,
wish list numbers call 842-3444 or at 842 Frontenire Road,
address #7260.
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-5679. IF
Beautiful, new 2 bdm, apt. completely equipped kitchen; 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone 853-240-8911.
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom house near Hillett. $173.50 month + ½ low utilities. Call after 5, 841-7188 or 843-7195. 10-1
Apartment for sublease, 1 bedroom at Park 25 on KU bus route. Call 849-7438 or 849-7232. Small, 3 bedrooms house for four. Blocks 733-6087. Rent reasonable. 10-1
A nice two bedroom apt, on bus route. Completely furnished. Call 843-4233. Keep Calming!
A person to share or sublease a size and clean, one bedroom, furnished apt. Walking distance to campus.amps + half utilities. Apt. 211, at 105 Mississippi. Call 835-4749 or 842-6033. 10-4
Beautiful studio apartment for soblease. Fur-
rent. Trainride HTA on BUS route 168
TCalm call now**
CREAM TRANSPORTATION:
Make Marmalade. Paint a cake with cream and maple syrup. Western Civilization Notes. Now you can make use of them! All 14 study guides for $2 for class. 90% off at Town Center or at Town Trier, Music Bookstore & Oral Bath.
FOR SALE
Agerator, starter and generator specialist
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL ACO-
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900 W. 4th. tf
Dressers, picture frames, chairs, small couch.
Dressers, oak tables-Georges, 103-8
Ogden dail?
No.
FOR SALE
Close to campus: one 3 bedroom 2 story house and one base apartment. A183-849-10-5
SunSpees-Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-reflective, clear lenses provide responsible protection. 1031, Mason 841-7720
75 Mustang Fastback Mach I, yellow with AM/
FM 8 track. Good looking car, $3300, 842-829-109
after 6:00.
Noble accordian std. size. Consider trade for 10 speed bike. Foreign and U.S. stamps for sale.
843-7098 2:50 p.m. 10-2
1974 Dodge Colt GT Good condition, orange/black. $195. 843-8948. 10-2
WATERED MATTRESSES, $36.98. 3-year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 833-1365. TF
2 half-fare coupon, American Airlines. Best offer:
841-6256. 10-2
Sharp 1976 Fiat X11/8 sports car. Good gas mileage.
$2300, 841-8055 after 5:30.
10-2
68 MG Midget conv. yellow with AM FM cassette.
Runs on regular gas $950.00; Randy, 84-1
2902
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
1975 Datsun P. U. Best offer, call 841-3585, 10-1
Vivitar 273 Auto Flash Headset, $60.00, after 6:00, $62.85.
* titling flash headset, $60.00, after 6:00, $62.85.
1972 Ford Van. E-200, 302, good condition. PS.
paneling, carpet, new tires, windows on right.
$995. B42-5275. 16-2
1972 Ford Turino, Gold and White. Two-door.
302 V-4. Good car—good price. Call Craig at
842-8800. 10-11
72 Toyo convertible. Be first in town to own
one, 30 to 40 MPG: 1-913-253-9820.
10-4
Public server address system. This CGA-700,
Rockwell Webserver (350) with a 200-watt RMS
watt RMS (350 peak power amp and 10 ft speaker cabinets with 4-12 in each. Also mics with 10-in wavers). A high-end analog system. CGA-1440 - 1-50
10 ft speaker system.
Uniteva bicycle—A year old, was in storage 9 months. Very good condition $120. Call 841-6530.
10" black and white TV set. One year old. $45.00
81-852-122. 10-3
FOUND
Knife and leather case in vicinity of 9th and Kentucky, Sunday. Claim at Wesco Lost and
Guitars: Gibson acoustic B-12. Very good cond-
=beautiful sound, $150 or less offer. Also elec-
tric=good cond, 2nd, lots of fun $33.00 or
best. **B:** 623-9003遇害.
10-30 best.
Found a set of keys by Blake. Call and identify
after 5. 109, 829,6099
10.3
Borzii (Russian Wold) found in front of 10-11. Call 845-312 to identify.
Found Wed. women's ring in Woodruff Auft. 641,837-864,837
Kaplan 641,837-864,837
Ring near 12th and Kentucky-call 843-6980 and identify to claim. 10-3
HELP WANTED
FOUND: Silky grey 5-6 months old female kitten in 150th block of Mass Had injured, now on the mend. 842-1586 Qualified adapter gets user, climbing palm, collar, dish. She will leave you.
Earn as much as $50 per 1000 stuffing envelopes with our circulars. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 45042. 10-16
Part-time dishwashing and counter help, 10-16
in person in person at Border, Bardouil, 1528 W. Darby,
10-16
Adult with own transportation to care for year-
old twins in our home Monday, Wed. and or-
day Fridays morning 7:30-1:30. $2.99 an hour. Call
Mrs. Ruddy M45-3144. tt
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place,
Santa Ana, CA. Available online up to $30 month savings on enrollment available up to $10 month savings with work with adolescent youth preferred. Own work with adolescent youth preferred. Work required. Relevant professional skills work required. Excellent interpersonal skills work required. Child Research is an equal opportunity employer. Contact Mildred Jolly. Achievement Place Santa Ana, CA.
Part-time food service personnel personalized
needs. 15-28 hours per week. Starting pay $3.70
per hour. Must have at least 1 year of supervisory
experience. Must accept 25% of SCHUMF Foods.
Summer Foods. 19.11; Man-B. 6-9; I-10.9
HELP WANTED
Adult with own transportation to care for year old twins in our home or morning offices old twins in our home. Monday, Wed. and wed. June 18-24 40 am on car. Cat. Ruthy Brundy 34134 after 6.
Full-part time; positions available, especially at the University. A good working condition, above min wage, required. Students welcome. Contact Amoreo Mio Cappella at 917-230-8456 or amoreocappella.com; Pike Standard, 8 miles east of Lawrence on I90.
$3.10 per hour if you qualify. No experience needed. You can work for free, unlimited hours, opportunity for an internship. People willing to work and to present themselves in person at the Vivian Restaurant, 127 W. 2nd Ht.
Research opportunity with handicapped and non-
handicapped students, with social interactions in an integrated classroom. Research experience appropriate 16 weeks. Research credit or post-
graduate credit. Please contact Greg Lung, M41-M889 or Mike Burrig, M41-M889.
Wanted - Hard-working, dedicated individuals to the football and track programs at KU. Reqs: Bachelor's in sports education or join a growing athletic program. Benefit from Coach Mike Hill in room 13A1 at the KU Student Union. Contact Mike Hill in room 13A1 at the KU Student Union.
Bucky's life is now taking applications for part-time employment. A应聘者 in person between 10am and 4pm on Mondays.
Several students needed to work part time as charge person at McArthur Park Pinball Arcade. Hours freeze, apply in person Mon, Oct. 20 at 10am. At 10am same building be open.
Immediate openings both full and part-time. All shifts open, flexible schedule to fit your needs. Apply in Person Vitali Restaurant, W27. Wk 6.
Shenanigan's 21 needs bar tenders, walltresses and floor walkers immediately. Contact John at 814-6406 or come to 901 Mississippi.
LOST
*pat-Green Fluid Mechanics Text and Yellow Booklet, Left in upper back outside Union Building*, by Katherine Hobson. Indian bracelet, hot at Lafayette Library reserve 9 (8) $17.50 sentiment. Reward Call 236-642-2255.
Brown leather folding wallet with combination ID's on campus. Need it badly. Call 842-8220. Abbas.
Lost—Thin gold bracelet with initials C J E.
Call 841-8500 10.3
410. reward for lost brown breasten billfold.
Contents can not be replaced. Baby depends on
three medical cards. Call Ms. Mikhail 842-7283
or 831-0890. No questions asked. 10-5
MISCELLANEOUS
THISSING COPYING--The House of Ubiqui's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for黛丝 help in Lawsuits. Let us help you 888 Mass or phone 842-360. The library has 15,977 books.
NOTICE
D. Petruz-MAEI STROM has been watching
Beary for,ay,wheat,watson,will,cure
1941
Vista Restaurant open daily 'til midnight. Fri.
and Sat. 'til 1 a.m. 10-2
Local branch of national software network is working for programme at with least one year experience. Send resume to helpful. Salary commensurate with experience. Register on website www.nationalsoftware.com. Use code 7,022 State Lane, Pearlville, KS 64851.
Enroll now! !In Lawrence driving school, school receive driving license in 4 weeks without highway jatrol test! Transportation provided, drive now pay later. N22-0615. -12
Lawrence Jaykent Baykal Club will need at least 100 adults to compete for the Dauglas County 4-H Fairground. The group will be headed by Major Bob Sawthall, Commander of the program will include demonstration. The public program will include demonstrations. The public program will include demonstrations.
A learning atmosphere for cross-cultural interaction. Tonto and every day on, at Operation Friendship. 7:00 at the Center, 1629. W 19th. (West of Oliver Hall on 190th St.). 10-1
PERSONAL
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Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid 864-5564. tf
TENNIS AND RAQUETBALL PLAYERS. When was the last time you played your first season as a requester in Stars Assn. and Official Stringer WCT Double Players? Very reasonable roles on goal-scoring matches. 10-11
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-ajbounds up to 17 pregnancy. Preventing birth, Birth Control, Tumor Ligation. For appointment at 201 W. 19th St., Overland Park, KS. 481 19th St., Overland Park, KS.
GAY COUNSELLING REFERRALS through Headquarters. 814-235 and KU info. 864-3506. . .
If you are looking for a bar with cheap beer pool and sunny weather, you can really people like the Hatton Lake bars. They offer drinks from 8:00 to 5:30 a day and Friday afternoons for TGIF Newsview and Saturday for the Hatton Lake Get your ship together at the Hatton Lake Bar.
Monotheistic DOCTINE OF Relicrariation in the Torah, the Prophets and the Gospels. Write: The Truth of Islam, P.O. Box 4494, South Bend, Indiana 46211
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Paid for by **AN IDEAL COALITION** vote October 3 & 4!
10-4
WOMEN'S SELF-DEFENSE CLASSSES START-
ING. Sign up in Women's Coalition Office, 116B Union
10-4
Don't put a limit on your freshman year. Go for
I-Vote LIMITLESS COALITION Oct. 3, 4.
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS. Don't just give a gift, send a song! "Songs for every occasion." 841-8515 10-14
MUM Sale-Pairmen Day, Oct. 6 at Union or Stadium. Mum corage $2.75. 10-5
PSCYCH AWARENESS CLASS, learn about the aura energy center, spirit guides and healing Class starts Thursday evening, Oct. 21. Cost for 10 weeks: Call Rev Leesenberg, M432-765-8944.
Caintain Carbo, Gordo, Cowboy Dan. How about
food, turn it up. 8th RVSP. The Dancers. 10-2
DJIWYBDIOTJT--FPA. LASAAEAW! Luv.
Tex. 10-1
Wanting female companion-male, white. Box-
holder, P.O. Box 305, Eudora, KS 60325.
Vista restaurant open daily 'til midnight. Fri.
and Sat. 'til 1 a.m. 10-2
Fairy Tale Thanaya isn't for kids! Learn why
it's Tuesday at the Student Union Room.
9:30 p.m. Want details? Transportation
841-9601 10-3
White, male. Graduate seeks mature female for a happy life together. Write P.O. Box 3555, KC,
KS 6010.
Pearson Tax Service We'll take you anywhere
Getting back in your problem, D. A. C., 10-1
LAW STUDENTS—Git rowdy this Friday! It's
Country Western Swing time at Shiloh's (cin-
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Why do the KU Committee on South Africa support grenades of 3 million South Africa?
26.
Dreamer, Happy 18th! Go for it! Her majesty and the mouse. 10-2
Get a winning reaction with IMAGINACTION.
*aid for by Imaginaction.* 10-4
A. Learning atmosphere for cross culture interaction, Tantie and every day at Operation Pirmidiah 7:00 at the Center, NZW 19:08 of Olive Hill on 19th). 10-1
"GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE! The Drawings OUT of $10. Proceeds to the Architectural Marvell or phone 817-245-3620, Cash or checks to Council's Board at the Christmas Sale! Boards at the Christmas Sale! Sale ends
Army. You may be 21 now but not im98 $85 as old or you are. In college that is as good of a job to have as a student.
*Your six sightings on the 2nd annual JAIYAWH JOG, Oct. 21, 1799. Contact GAMMA PHI BEETA 831-8022 or PHI KAPPA PSI 831-2655 for registration 10-2
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EXPERT TUTORIALS MATH 600-102 call 875-5875. MATH 1130-709 call 875-5875. MATH 1130-709 call 875-5875. STATISTICS call courses: 845-906-96 C.S. 100-600 call 845-906-96 U.S. 100-600 EXPLAIN and SPANISH call 845-906-96 EXPLAIN and SPANISH call 845-906-96
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Usher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 838 Main.
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The Bike Garage—complete professional bicycle repair. Garage specials: "Tune-Up" and "Total Overhaul." Details call 841-2781. 10-23
Tutoring and Consulting available Applied Statistics for Education and Psychology. Related computer applications and technical writing. 842-3031 16-2
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TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TP
] do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
Typist, Editor, IBM PicaElite. Quality work,
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Journalism typographer. 20 years typing/typing-
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MASTERMINDS professional typing F. accu.
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Good condition, used typwriter Prefer office
model: Call Jan. 843-1798 10-3
Female roommate wanted Call Steve, 841-2054 after 5.00
Female roommate to share nice 1 bedroom apt. $10. Fully furnished, phone 841-381. 10-3
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8
Monday, October 1, 1979
University Daily Kansar
Balloon sails near KU on transcontinental flight
From the Kansan's Wire Services
The D'Avinci Transamerica balloon crew, attempting a record coast-to-coast flight, floated above northeast Kansas during its trip, gradually drifted east-northeast.
Steve Shure, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Topokau, Mongolia, visited by about 8:15 a.m. and was sighted by a fisherman at Lake Perry, just east of
Bob Rice, the Weather Service Corp. of Bedford, Mass., said the big balloon was seen over Gaff, Kan., about 48 miles south of Dahlonegger and noon and was heading toward Nebraska.
The four balloonists crossed into Iowa last night, and approached a balloon flight endurance record.
SAILING OVER THE Missouri River 20 miles south of Omaha, the sheer light from the valley border near Burlington, according to a recorded announcement from the flight
The message said the craft could reach the Iowa-Illinois border about dawn Monday.
The Guinness Book of World Records lists the endurance record for balloons as 137 hours, 6 minutes, set by the Double Eagle II in its Atlantic crossing last year.
Hyde said the crew was taking the balloon down to 4,250 feet in hopes of catching an airplane. He got closer getting closer to being on course. He had they flown at between 8,000 and 9,000 miles.
"We're over nice Nebraska far up in the west," said Village, Kite, said in a radio interview before crossing into Iowa. "Just about six miles to the northeast we saw Pawnee and Lincoln."
"WE HAVE PASSED the 100-hour mark and if we can stick it out till tomorrow morning, we will have broken the endurance record for balloon flight."
Aboard the 106-foot-high balloon with Hydre in the 10-foot-square, two-level gondola are Vera Simons, McKean, Va. and Linda O'Connor, both of NBC-TV canned Randy Birch.
The four lifted off Wednesday from Tillamook, On. Friday, they set a long-distance flight record for balloonists in the continental United States.
Bike...
From page one
the work needed to build a bike trail already has been done, Hughes said.
The ground has been graded. Only lime surfacing is still required, Hughes said. She said the resurfacing probably would cost about $2,000 a mile, or $2,000.
Federal funds are available to help with the project, but the project first needs local governmental support, she said.
THE LOCAL SUPPORT has not been easy to obtain. In May 1978 the commissioners for
leavenworth County, where most of the abandonment exists, selected the trail plan.
They listed concerns about vandalism and the long-term maintenance of the trail as reasons for the rejection.
Douglas County commissioners have given their support for the trail proposal, but only 100 feet of the abandonment is in Douglas County.
So the committee has turned to the state legislature. If the state supported the bikeway bill, the trail committee could then seek help to help build the 1-mile bikeway
Uppercut
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is to speak to the University of Kansas Students Tuesday October 2 7:00 International Room
FORMER GOVERNOR
ROBERT F. BENNETT
Other important Dates:
Oct. 6 Reception with Senator Nancy Kassebaum
Oct. 30 Secretary of State Jack Brier
Sponsored by KU College Republicans
Band . . .
"Don't believe her, she just doesn't want to march." another student teased.
From page one
AT THE URGING of her friends, Estes marched during the halftime performance. She didn't return to the bleachers with the rest of the band.
Senior Mark Nickels reported to Cox, "Julie's sick. Linda took her under the stadium after the show. I'm not sure where she went."
JULIE WAS ONE of several hundred people who suffered from the heat at the stadium. He had been treated for heat-related illnesses, H.H. Belo, director of the stadium's emergency crew.
Cox went to look for his students while she supervised the packing away of instruments and members stripped to the shorts and T-shirts they had worn under the heavy
Most of the patients were students in the
Eudora woman killed in Ontario
KENORA, Ontario (UP1) - A pickup truck straddling a railway track in an isolated area smashed head-on into a west-bound freight train Thursday killing a Kansas man.
A police spokesman said the four-wheel drive truck was driven onto the tracks about 50 miles east of Kenora Thursday night and headed eastbound. It was straddling the Canadian Pacific Railway freight train crashed the vehicle, which then burst into flames.
Killed were the driver - 38-year old Bert F, Berger of North Mount Morris, III, and 22-year old Sophia Romette Pickens of Eudora.
"We had aad out one third the problems we could have had. But the kid was more frightened. The kids had light clothes under their uniforms, had a meal before they marched; and we gave him a bowl."
bands, he said, but only four were admitted to Walkins Memorial Hospital. Those four students were brought to the hospital because of illness. He said, and were released by 9 p.m.
After making sure that Estes was in no danger, Cox brought her back to the band's seats, where friends gathered around her to offer comfort and cool drinks.
Assured that their friend was better, the band helped them and the helmets and music and nearly padded to their bus. They weren't able to stay for the fourth quarter because of the long ride.
"Aw, I want to stay and waten the game," a student said as he walked away, giving one last glance to the field and band-filled stadium.
Shoes With The Young Lady In Mind
New Open Evenings
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Come early to
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headmasters
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Spring Rush Informational Meeting
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FEEL THE POWER OF A GREAT BALLET
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No.27
free on campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
10 cents off campus
Tuesday, October 2, 1979
(1)
Amtrak mishaw
The wreckage of a Amtrak train derailment early this morning in Lawrence stretched for a quarter of a mile parallel to Ohio Street. At least 1 persons were killed in the accident
Passenger train jumps track
At least two persons were killed and scores of others injured early this morning when an Amritk train trained in a residential area near Fourth and Ohio streets.
The train, Antrak's Southwest Limited,
on its route from Los Angeles to Chicago,
jumped the tracks and hit a house minutes
after it was scheduled to arrive in Lawrence.
A Lawrence Memorial Hospital spokesman confirmed the two deaths and Lawrence police said that at least 29 others were injured.
Bob Campbell, a hospital spokesman, said the injury total probably would increase.
The derailment at approximately 6:10 a.m. The train included cars from Antrak's Lone Star route, which were picked up in Newton.
Eight of the train's 18 cars were on their sides amid the wreckage, which stretched between the car doors and passenger cars and was carrying approximately 185 passengers. The train was due in October.
Mike Jones, 504 Ohio St., said he was the first person to arrive at the scene.
gine," he said. "The engineer was pinned inside and I helped him out, but there wasn't much I could do."
'I called the police at 6:10 a.m. and was at the train at 6:15 a.m. When I got there, the train fireman was crawling out of the enrolled onto its side. I felt something wet on my shoulder and then looked at the window. I could see a drop off below me. I threw a pillow before crawling out the window, where the damn train because I was aggrited of jeopardy.
According to Officer Ron Run, spokesman for the Lawrence Police Department, 16 damsalled. Olin said a cause for the derailment was as yet undetermined.
Oln said those not injured or slightly injured were taken to the Community Building and could be contacted through the Red Cross.
John Muston, a passenger from Albuquerque, N.M.; said, "I'd been asleep most of the night but I woke up 'fast when the car
Tom Reed, a passenger from St. Louis, said, "I know that they were trying to make up for lost time. We've been having probably all night and the train was really moving."
Police and firemen worked with axes and a chain saw to free passengers trapped in sleeping cars of the train. Several passen-
See WRECK page two
Carter minimizes threat of troops
President Carter told the maou on the issue of the invasion of Iraq, telling troops in Cuba that the controversy "is certainly no reason for a return to the Cold War" and that it should not block American efforts.
From Kansan Staff and Wire Reports
Carter said he had received assurances from the highest levels of the Soviet government that the troops were manning a training unit, and offered no direct threat to U.S. security.
Nevertheless, the president said, "We shall not rest on these Soviet statements alone." He said that the United States was armed with its own military presence in the Caribbean.
The president said a far greater threat result if the Senate refused to reaffirm the Armies Limitation Treaty signed by Carter and Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev in 1980.
IN RECENT WEEKS, Carter had said the IN UNION States would act on its own to change the treaty reached with the Soviets. On one such occasion, he said, "The status issue is not acceptable."
In his nationally broadcast speech last night, Carter said Soviet officials insisted that the brigade was a training unit and not a combat unit. He said Soviet officials had
said they would not change its function or status as a training center.
"We understand this to mean that they do not intend to enlarge the unit or give it additional capabilities." Carter said.
The president also reported assurance that the Soviet personnel on the island would not be a threat to the U.S. or to any other nation.
The Soviet assurances Carter cited were the result of a personal exchange last week between Carter and Brezhnev.
CARTER SENT A message to Brezhnev last Tuesday, it was learned, and the Russian leader replied on Thursday.
Earlier yesterday Sen. Frank Church, Republican, asked the Committee, met with the president for a half hour briefing on Carter's speech. The Idaho Democrat said he thought SALT I could be.
Church said, "I don't think that SALT is scuttled. I believe that a way can be worked out that is satisfactory to the Senate."
Reaction to the Carter address was mixed on Capital Hill, but it was clear that Carter's speech did not change Senate concerns.
Sen. Richard Stone, D-Fla., said he was disappointed that Carter had not won a commitment to remove or dismantle the building. He said it would be separated from SALT II deliberations.
See CARTER page two
Pope opens visit in Boston rain
BOSTON (AP)—Pope John Paul II opened a pastoral visit to his divided American flock yesterday, raising a daunting number of sickened and a dreaded but extacial crowd in Boston.
He had words of praise and friendship but warnings, too, for this rich and troubled nation.
"I greet you, America the Beautiful," the pope told a cheering throng in Boston Common in the first major address of his presidency. He told everyone that the pope is your friend.
He hailed America as a free and generous land, but said its youth was being lured from religion to the escapes of sexual pleasure, drugs, violence and indifference.
"I propose to you the option of love, which is the opposite of escape," the postfilled said amid a downpour that had turned the historic common into a sea of mud.
As many as 400,000 people crowded the park, waving flags, banners, handkerchiefs and whatever else was available as well as white and gold, raised his arms in blessing.
FIRST LADY Rosalynn Carter also welcomed John Paul II for the week-long tour that will take him to New York City,
Philadelphia, Dres Moines, Chicago and Washington. She had invited the pope to visit when she talked with him last May at the Vatican.
"We welcome you to our country with love," she told him. "We Americans of every faith have come to love you in a very special way."
The pope replied in his deep, thickly accepted voice: "It is a great joy for me to be in the United States of America . . . to greet all the American people of every race, color and creed. I come to you, America, with fondness of friendship, reverence and peace."
"I come as one who already knows you and loves you, as one who wishes you to fulfill your noble destiny of service to the world."
John Paul closed his statement by quoting from "America the Beautiful."
AMONG THOSE the welcome the people were Boston's Cardinal Humberto Medeiros, Massachusetts Gov. Edward King, Boston Mayor and Mrs. Kevin White, U.S. House Speaker and Mrs. Thomas P. Moore, Ohio Governor John W. Merrick, and Mrs. Edward Kennedy, 10 U.S. cardinals and four Canadian cardinals.
Lone Star chugs on 'final' run
Staff Writer
Bv DOUG HITCHCOCK
The last scheduled run for Amtrak's Lone Star passenger train was booked solid when it departed from Houston at 7:40 a.m. Sunday.
Two hours and 50 minutes later, the Lone Star backed into the station at Houston, its route to Chicago blocked by a derailed freight train.
At 1:30 p.m. the train again attempted to make its last run, this time successfully.
Besides the usual nine cars full of passengers, three additional cars carried Oklahoma University football fans home and away on Friday, against Rice University in Houston.
"The Football Special" consisted of two extra coaches and a lodge car. The juglant fans had been drinking in their booth, so the train was forced to return to Houston.
THE TRAIN moved through Houston' industrial areas on tracks normally used for local freight service. The red and blue striped streamliner pulled slowly through blocks of weatherboard warehouses, past blocks of metal and factories and lumber yard sacks.
Houston's futuristic skyline frequently was blotted by the aging brick facades. Soon the train began to run through residential neighborhoods, past small grocery stores where groups of kids learned how to tie their shoes and sipped on bottles of soda soap.
"Amtrak, oh Amtrak, you might get there but you'll never get back," they crooned.
Drawn by the ruckus, a porter pushed back the singers and closed the window.
The singers chuckled appreciatively and agreed that things today were sarcintly the same as they used to be. When the porter came in, he opened the window back up and started singing again.
"You shouldn't stand that close to the windows. These folks around here'll throw bricks at you," he said. "In the old days, they would bury them. We throw bricks at em. We watch it."
As the train reached the Houston city limits for the second time, the engineers opened up the throttle. Soon, the Lone Star was averaging 80 miles per hour across the city.
THE LONE STAR rolled into the Fort Worth worth at 7-40 p.m., more than five hours behind schedule. Several passengers were on the bus and we make connections for a quick flight home.
A lounge car and two coaches, which were added to Sunday's train in Fort Worth, were built prior to World War II.
EQUIPMENT USED on the Lone Star was purchased from the Santa Fe in 1970, when Amtrak was formed by Conness.
However, many passengers did not seem
*Passenger trains could be rollin',
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*That where Amtrak could gain
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special again.
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to care that the train was late. They were riding because they loved trains and the road. The train ran end of a noble passenger train, one from the Santa Fe railroad's old fleet of crackers.
"That's where Amtrak is missing its chance. It needs to include all those special amenities. Things like dinner chimes are what made the trains special to ride on. Now, they don't look much different inside from an airplane and the same for the train. There's a lot more room on the trains, but they look like airplanes now.
Read said, "In the old days, porters went through the train ringing dinner chames. There was a man who walked through the train selling newspapers, magazines and
The service on the Texas Chief was more personalized than that on the Lone Star, according to Bob Read Jr., proprietor of the Cimarron Railroad Museum in Cupertino.
Originally established in 1948, the Lone Star, once known as the Texas Chief, ran from Chicago to Kansas City and Lawrence, south to Houston, finally ending there.
He said, "I'll have to go back to freight service, I guess. But when you walk through this train you have to realize that it runs rear capacity all summer long. In the spring, you can just leave it in summer. If they had added cars to the train, we could have increased ridership enough to justify keeping the train on, even at Amtrak rules. But they did not give us any extra cars and they ended up turning the train into a canceling it for its ridership being too low."
Leck had worked the last five years as a traneker on the Lone Star. Under new commission, he was sent to cellation, his job was abolished when he reached Purcell, Okla. early Monday
according to Wesley E. Leck, brakeman on the Lone Star.
Bob Turner, a passenger from Mt. Rainier, says that they've cut the trains off just when people are starting to realize their full potential. I’ve ridden this train a lot and I know it’s not easy for them to people this summer than did before. I guess that doesn’t mean much Amtrak’s
Several lawsuits were filed to halt the
John Mann Gardner II, McGregor,
Texas, led the association of Interested
Rail Passengers' movement to halt the
Lone Star's cancellation. The association's
suit was consolidated with suits filled in
by former railway personnel in Tennessee when
This issued the order.
cancellation of the Lone Star and two other trains the North Coast Haithaw and the Floridian. Friday, Judge Frank Theis of the U.S. District Court in Wheiss issued a temporary restraining order protecting the three trains from immediate cancellation. The order lays for 10 days and then the order to renew it indefinitely.
"If Amtrak had taken care of legal details like filing environmental impact reports and holding public hearings along the way, it would have a tougher time getting the injunction."
The plaintiffs in the joint suit claimed the Department of Transportation and Antitrust are hearing or submit environmental impact statements before deciding to cancel the contract.
GARDNER SAID, "The Department of Transportation's lawyer at the Witcha bearings didn't have a leet to stand on.
Amtrak said that President Carter's signature on an Amtrak reorganization bill allowed for elimination of the three transits, the railways' second largest. That That's order conflicted with the law.
The reorganization bill included a reduced operating budget in anticipation of the train schedule cuts, allocations for maintenance of existing equipment, allocations to subsidize state supported railroad services for elderly and handicapped passengers.
"These people down here, like me, use the train frequently." Ginger insisted. "Canning the train would seriously hurt some people here."
See AMTRAK page two
At least one passenger aboard the Lone Star disagreed with Gardner.
Tom Beard, Chicago, said. "This has been a bell of a faace. If they can't run it, they're gonna fail." He shouldn't run it. It's a waste of everybody but you can make it work with the trains. I do. I ride the Lone
MORGAN HARRIS
Last ride
Emery Bowser lost his job as a sleeping car porter on the Lone Star as a result of the cancellation of the Amtrak route. Bowser first worked as a worker in 1942 for the now defunct Amtrak Railroad.
---
2
Tuesday, October 2. 1979
University Daily Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Panamanians celebrate control
BALBA, Panama—The Panamanian flag was raised over the former canal zone yesterday. Hundreds of thousands of Panamanians marched in to watch the parade.
There were no reports of the violence some U.S. residents had feared, as a quarter of a million Panamanianians surged toward a zone airfield for a transfer ceremony attended by Panamanian leaders, Vice President Walter Mondale and some Latin heads of state.
The 10-mile-wide by 50-mile-long canal zone, whose existence ended at midnight Sunday, had divided Panama in half.
Under the treaties President Carter and former Panama Chief of State Omar Torres signed in 1977, the zone government also went out of existence and the islands were occupied by a military force.
Man kills ex-wife then himself
LEAVENWORTH-An KI Paasa, Texas, man shot his ex-wife as she sat at her in a Leavenworth office inventory and then shot himself while she was sleeping.
Witnesses that McCreedy walked through the front door of Ed Reilly & Sons, i.e. where Ms. Mts was office manager, approached his ex-wife's desk and
Nancy Macy, 37, of Leavenworth, was shot four times in the head by a man who had been driven up an ex-husband. Ronald McCready, authorities said. They were at a high school in Napa Valley.
Witnesses said McCready shouted, "Are there any other heroes?" and then turned the revolver on himself.
Mez. Mitzel and McCreedy were both pronounced dead at the scene, said Sgt. Miten Boyle, of the Leavenworth Police Department. No motive for the attack has been revealed.
Senate votes to cut pau raises
WASHINGTON—The Senate overwhelmingly passed an emergency measure yesterday designed to keep the government functioning and to revoke a 12.9 law that restricts the use of government funds.
The approval, on a 77-vote, put new pressure on the House to return from its week-long recess so that congressional action can be completed.
back to work—an action House officials said would not happen until next week. The House wants stronger language on federal funding of abortions than in the past.
It also wants the 12.9 percent pay raise scaled back to 5.5 percent. But the senate bill would cut it back if necessary and for $22,000 (bureaucracy).
KC,firefighters revive talks
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A potential showdown between the city and local 42 of the International Association of Firefighters was averted last night.
The firefighters, involved in a lengthy contract dispute with the city, canceled a work slowdown set for 7 a.m. this morning and agreed to return to the
The slowdown was called off after the city council passed a resolution at the name of Mayor Richard Berkley. The local's executive board met for two hours on Monday to discuss the situation.
A slowdown would have terminated an interim agreement reached between the city and the firefighters last April after the union's three-year contract expired. Firefighters planned to respond only to fires and other emergency calls. Other routine duties, such as inspections, would not be performed.
The dispute between the city and the firefighters' centers on the length of work shifts and work weeks.
St. Mary's police force quits
ST. MARYS- Under fire from a small group of citizens who claim they are over-protected. St. Mary's four-man police force is not nursing.
In two weeks, the small northeastern Kansas town will be without protection after what town officials say has been weeks of harassment from immigration.
Three policemen, including police chief Les Hutchinson, resigned Sunday. The only officer on duty has given the city commission his two-week notice.
City Attorney Jim Morrison said citizens had falsely accused police of assaulting citizens, had followed them around taking notes and photographs when they were in the street.
Until the town decides to hire more policemen or lease police
carrying supplies, the Wawatomwah county sheriff's office will be on call in case it is needed in St. Mary's.
Haysville man pleads not guilty
MARION - Timothy Newfield, charged with first-degree murder and a variety of other charges in the shooting of State Bank employee Katie Miles, also charged with all counts.
The 18-year-old Haysville man also is charged with felony murder, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated robbery and aggravated burglary in the
Marien County District Court Judge George Scott scheduled the trial to begin Dec. 17. Scott said he would onration a motion for a change of venue for the trial.
Gold price sets record again
The price of gold rose to a record $14.50 an ounce in New York yesterday as the declining U.S. dollar was kept from falling last year's low only by a recent rise.
Gold closed at $14.25 in London, although trading was as high as $14.75, and ended at $14.80 in Zurich. It was the first time gold slaved above $40 in Europe.
In New York, prices kept rising and climbed as high as $419 an ounce before slipping back to close at $415.50.
Chrysler buys industrial robots
DETROIT—With 27,400 employees on indefinite layoff, financially troubled CDER Corp. has purchased at least 90 industrial robots from a Connecticut company.
The $6 million purchase is reported in this week's edition of Metalworking News and was confirmed by Chris Speller spokesman Bill Steinem yesterday.
*They (the robots) don't displace people.* he said. "We've had them in other places, we have jobs that don't exist because due to deaths and retirements of workers, we just move the people to other jobs."
The new robots are headed for Chrysler assembly lines at plants in Detroit and Newark, Del. Metalworking News said.
Weather ...
Today will be午晴 with high temperatures in the mid 70s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be southeasterly at 5 to 15 mph.
Tomorrow will be clear to partly cloudy with high temperatures reaching the mid 78s.
The extended forecast calls for a warming trend. High temperatures will be in the mid 69th to low 70th on Thursday, warning to the mid 80th to low 85th on Friday.
Carter . . .
SEN. JOHN TOWER, R-Texas, sait, "I don't think the president is doing anything to show that we mean business . . . I think we want to be kind and patient and I am very low. We must be reshassed."
But Senate Democratic Whitman Alan Crandall praised Carter's approach, saying that the issue "points up the urgency of Senate ratification before the end of this year."
Senior Sen. Bob Dole, who has been critical of Carter's actions on the Cuba issue in the past, said the president had not gone far enough.
Kansas' Republican senators reacted coolly to President Carter's 20-minute address.
And Sen. Nancy Lancey Kassebaum, who has said she will announce her position on the SAIT II treaty soon, said that the steps she took to achieve the goal but that they should have been taken sooner.
Roy D. Laird, professor of Soviet and East European studies, said he thought Carter was "window dressing" in an effort to help his standing with the American public.
CARTER'S SPEECH also received mixed reviews from two KU professors.
"Because of faults in his leadership," Laird said, "Carter allowed others like Frank Church to get out in front on this matter. Now he has to play catch up."
R. Ron A. Francisco, assistant professor of Soviet and East European studies, also said he thought that Carter acted to bolster his image and the image that of the 2,000,3,000 troops in Cuba was no threat to U.S. security.
"This is just an example of the military game played in international relations," Francisco said. "It is a matter of symbolism."
Wreck...
Nearby residents emerged from their homes to help passengers who were not seriously injured.
gers were carried away on stretchers and emergency medical help was given at the scene.
Mr McCain, owner of the house that was struck by the derailed baggage car, said he was awakened by the crash and at first accidental had thrown a rock through his window.
From page one
"I could bear a man talking in the end of the car next to the house. He said he was trapped in there so I went and got a police-man."
"There was this tremendous crash. I could smell dust and like that and I got out of bed," McClain said.
McClain, who lives just 40 feet from the Sante Fe Railway tracks, said, "I wondered for years what would happen if they had a train wreck.
Amtrak . . .
From page one
Star a lot. But I have to be at work by Tuesday and at this rate I may not make it."
COM
ALTHOUGH THEM'TS restraining order prohibits ATRI从清除 the Lone Star, service along the line was to be allowed, accordingly, according to members of the train's crew.
The last official run of the Lone Star stopped in Lawrence shortly after 11 a.m. yesterday. It had been due to arrive at 2:05 a.m.
Granada
Downtown 843-8788
The version of the Lone Star which
THE BEST FROM HOLLWOOD
COMMONWEALTH
THEATRES
Varsity
THE SEDUCTION OF JOE TYNAN"
Eve. 7:30 8:40
Sat Sun 2:30
"MONTY PYTHON'S
'LIFE OF BRIAN'"
A phone call to the Oklahoma City Depot, at 12:25 a.m., was answered by a woman who said she scheduled to have been closed Monday because Amtrak intended to cancel
Hillcrest
However, Amtrak employees who however the corporation's toll free number said train number 7 was running 2 hours after the announcement and 100 miles south of Fort Worth. However, officials could not give information about the train or the number of passengers it carried.
The Lone Star was no longer listed on Amtrak's reservation computers as of yesterday.
1. "THE MUPPET MOVIE"
Atrk clans at Lawrence and Topela stations were unable to give information about the attack. The day's Lone Star. Both clans said the train, remembered four as of midnight yesterday.
departed from Houston yesterday at 7:40 a.m. included only two coach cars and club car. Station on the route were tickets that were available only on board the train.
Eve. 7:15 & 9:15 Sat Sun 2:00
2. "SEX & VIOLENCE"
Eve, 7:45 & 9:35 Sat Sun 1:45
B. CONSULTANT: AIM GROUP
Eye 7:30 & 9:45 Sat Sun 1:30
Eve. 7:45 & 9:35 Sat Sun 1:45
3. "CONCORDE: AIRPORT '79"
Cinema Twin
1. "ANIMAL HOUSE"
Fri 7:30 & 8:30 Sat Sun 1:30
2. "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS"
Eve 7:40 & 9:40 Sat Sun 1:45
24 HOURS
Music Information
MOVIE INFORMATION
TELEPHONE 841-6418
Tuesday, October 2
REPULSION
(1965)
Wednesday, October 3
Wednesday, October
THE IDIOT
(1951)
sua films
Thursday, October 4
Forest Ackermann
in Person!
METROPOLIS
Director Akura Kurosawa adapted the work of a favorite author, Dostotsev. To meet his jealousy transposed to post-war Japan, Toshiro Mihime starrs, japan
Directed by Roman Polanski, with Catherine Deneuve as a woman who loaths vet craves men
This classic German film by Fritz Lang is one of the earliest and most influential works made. Includes a rare prologue, an adaptation of "Science Fiction Films," a KU-produced film. Mr. Ackerman will be answering any questions.
Directed by Woolly Allen, with Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Tony Roberts, Carol Kane, Paul Simon, Christopher Hawkins, and Michael Shall McLauan. Winner of the Academy Award for the Best Film of the Decade for "The Potter's" Dream of a Rarebill Friend.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekends show also in Woodcutt at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise given by 19:15 admission. No Retirements.
Friday & Saturday
October 5-6
ANNIE HALL
Klaus Kinai plays a power-driven
character who dreams of stealing an
enormous amount of money mid-1500s. Werner Hertzog has
worked in “Vincent Canby, New York
Millionaire,” and “The American
Woman.”
Sunday, October 7
New German Cinema:
AGUURE, THE WRATH OF C
(1973)
VOTE
TOMORROW
Funded by Student Senate
Hardee's
ROAD RUNNER
His sport is racing.
His restaurant is Hardee's.
OK, RUNNER. ILL BET YOU BREAKFAST.
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WHAT'S THE BET?
I SAY HARDEE'S BISCUITS ARE BAKED FRESH, HOMEMADE.
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HOW'S THAT SMELL?
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THEN WE FILL THEM WITH SAUSAGE, HAM, OR CHOPPED BEEFSTEAK.
GOOD AS THEY ARE EVERY DAY, THEY'RE EVEN BETTER WHEN SOMEONE ELSE BUYS!
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OK, RUNNER, ILL
BET YOU BREAKFAST
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Hardee's
WHAT'S THE BET?
I SAY HARDEE'S BISCUITS ARE BAKED FRESH, HOMEMADE.
ERNIE HERE SAYS THEY CAME FROZEN IN A BIG, COLD TRUCK.
COME SEE FOR YOURSELVES.
WE BAKE OUR BISCUITS FRESH FROM SCRATCH EVERY MORNING.
E. Fletcher's Road Software, BIL, 1977
GOOD AS THEY ARE
EVERY DAY, THEY'RE EVEN
BETTER WHEN SOMEONE ELSE
BUYS!
University Dailly Kansan
Tuesday, October 2, 1979
2
Speech graduates help stutterers overcome silence
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
By HAROLD CAMPBELI
Staff Reporter
The teacher asks Bob his name
Instead of answering immediately, Bob's lips tense and no sound emerges.
After a moment of silence, the teacher says, "Now, when I lower my pencil, say your name."
When the teacher lows his pencil, Bob hesitates slightly on the first "b" "Bob," he says, grinning widely after he completes the
The teacher, Jim Lingwal, director of the KU department of speech pathology and audiology, supervises a every Tuesday for five KU students for five KU students like Bob who stutter.
Five speech pathology graduate student clinicians help the students individually with their speech problems.
Bob said he had hated stuttered for as long as he could remember. "I've always accepted the fact that I stuttered," he said. "At times, however I wish I didn't."
HE SAID THAT SOME classmates in
grade school had made fun of his shuttering but that this had presented no obstacles to overcome it.
"I try to become aware of steps I need to take to control my stutter," he said. "My main problem is that I go too fast and I need to slow down my speech."
He said that the KU program was helping him overcome his speech problem by showing him he was not the only person who stuttered.
"Knowing I wasn't the only one in the world who stuttered helped me to get help," he said.
Bob said that he got his first therapy for stuttering in high school.
The program here is under the super-
director's department. The course is de-
pthopathology and audiology to the KU speech
and hearing clinic. The program also
sponsors classes in in-print reading and hearing
THE 60 UNDERGRADEATE and 64 graduate speech pathology and audiology students also conduct stuttering and lip
reading clinics during the day, according to Lorraine Michel, director of the KU speech and hearing clinic.
Although the weekly classes are important, Lingwall said students monitoring their own speech were the foundation of the program.
"We have them call friends first because it builds their confidence." Linewalk said.
For example, the five students who stutter tape record their speech and count the number of letters they say in the week following classes. They then report their progress to a student clinician at the school.
Another method clinicians suggest to help the students outside class is use of the telephone to call friends and strangers.
HE SAID THE students called businesses on the phone after they developed more confidence to ask for information.
To help the students in the physical aspects of their speech problem, clinicians individually instruct each student during the 1/3 hour class time in a small booth.
Formula funding will need almost nine lives this year in order to survive as the basis for figuring fiscal 1981 budgets for Regents institutions.
Don Smith, Carlin's assistant press secretary, said Friday, "Carlin thinks there is a lot of merit to form funding. It allows us to produce material that responds, it can be used in a pushback."
The concept will soon go before Gov. John Carlin, who will begin hearing bearers in November. Whether Carlin will accept formula funding is questionable.
"But formula funding also has some problems. Last year, the governor didn't recommend adopting it because he said schools would be 'chasing the average.'"
Staff Renorter
Formula funding compares Regents institutions to peer schools, those with similar programs and enrolment figures. Past enrolment figures on enrolment figures of peer universities.
CARLIN DISMISSED the concept last January in his State of the State address as a “bennchmark” to be used only as a starting point to finance budgets.
The fiscal 1981 budget was submitted Sept. 15 to the state budget director, who will pass it to Carlin. The budget then will be sent to the House and Senate Ways and Measures committees, to the House and Senate committees and finally back to the governor.
The Regents based the 181 budget on formula funding. That action was boosted Thursday when the joint Ways and Means
By TONI WOOD
Committee voted to commend the Regens for developing the funding system.
Formula funding faces stiff tests
JORDAN HAINES, Regents chairman,
said, "The committee was supportive of the concept of formula funding, and that will be achieved at the success of higher education in Kansas."
Glee Smith, chairman of the Regents Budget and Finance Committee, said, "Formula funding is a matter of policy for the Board of Regents.
"The legislators were in a position to examine and study the policy, but not to adopt or reject it."
Martin Rein, a member of the legislative research staff for the committee, said, "It was not an issue of adopting or rejecting it. It was a question of the use of the data."
"The Regents submit the budgets with a tremendous amount of data. The committee opted for the proper use of the data when it's deemed appropriate."
CHANCELOR ARCHIE R. Dykes said yesterday that although the committee's counsel for the firm, Michael direction, he thought that formula funding probably would not be used to figure the costs.
"The legislators wanted to see more refinements in the funding formula before approving it," Dykes said.
The Regents budget recommends an increase in faculty base salary of 1 percent, along with a 1 percent increase for promotions and a 2.5 percent increase for
benefits such as health insurance and retirement plans.
At Thursday's Ways and Means Committee meeting, Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, moved that faculty base pay be increased by 9 percent.
notice where their air stoppages were, whether in the voice box, in the back of the mouth, behind the teeth or at the front of the mouth.
Besides helping stutterers with the physical problems associated with stuttering, the program also strives to help its students overcome the mental problems.
THE VOTE ON the motion was 6-4, and Rep. Michael Hayden, R-Awood, the committee chairman, cast the deciding vote against the salary increase.
Dykes said the committee's action should not be a serious disappointment to faculty members.
The concern given faculty salaries by legislators is most encouraging. "Dyke said, 'This is the first time that the subject has been discussed this early in the year.'"
T. P.R. SIRVINASAN, president of the KU School of Engineering, University Professors, and regulators probably wanted to see the official cost-of-flying report for 1975 before deciding on a plan.
Reine Haines said Berman's proposal might have been premature because President Jimmy Carter's cost-of-living guidelines had not yet been announced.
"The fact that half of the committee was willing to vote for a 9 percent raise this early is very encouraging." Srinivasan said.
Carter is expected to release the guidelines in October.
At the Sept. 21 Regents meeting, Dykes proposed that faculty salaries be increased to automatically conform with Carter's guidelines.
For example, some students that stutter might isolate themselves from others because they would fear the embarrassment of being misunderstood and would fear not being accounted for by others.
Teaching methods and topics vary with each clinician.
The Regents voted to wait for the release of the guidelines before making such a decision.
For example, during a recent class session, one clinician asked her student to make up three sentences from pictures she would show him.
A second clinician drilled her student on a list of words and a third clinician asked her student to make more phone calls during the week.
Observers can listen to the instruction in observation rooms next to the booths.
teachers if a stutterer is unable to adjust mentally to his problem," he said. "If we send a student out of this class without a permit, the student would be like throwing an ice cube into hell."
The 12-week program, starting in mid-September, is based on the department's assumption that students can overcome their speech problem, Lingwall said.
HOW A STUDENT in the program reacts mentally to his speech problems is crucial to the program's success. Lingwall said.
"Speech pathologists used to be more concerned with finding a cause for stuttering than with correcting it," he said. "Now, we are more concerned with the opposite, helping stutterers."
FREE
CROSS
COUNTRY
SKI CLINIC
at
SUNFLOWER
SURPLUS
Wednesday Oct. 3
7:30 P.M.
"The deck is stacked against us as
- Demonstrations of ski technique and waxing by Steve Rieschl
V
- Movies
- Helped to start the first ski-touring certification program in the United States. Also served as Chief Examiner for two years.
- Originated and directed the Vail Touring School. (nine years)
- Published a Sports Illustrated Book, "Steve Rieschl's Ski Touring For the Fun of it."
- Refreshments
- Steve Rieschl is an instructor of both ski touring and alpine.
- Chosen Captain of the 1962 World Championship Ski Team.
ONE STUDENT had to repeat words his teacher knew were hard for him: "Shave, shave, shave—oak, oak, oak—bat, bat, bat," he said with little problem.
lawrence, kansas 66044
408 SUNFLOWER SURPLUS
massachusetts street
Lingwall said that no cause for stuttering has been found.
804
The clinicians also told their students to
-
ATTENTION!
student senate elections
START TOMORROW
★
VOTE AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS:
- Jayhawk Blvd. Information Booth
- Fourth Floor Wescoe (West End)
- Robinson Gym (Main Floor Lobby)
- Union Lobby
8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Paid for by Student Senate
POLLS OPEN WED. & THURS.
IDEAL coalition
Kurt Wiedeman
Beau Peters
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Sara Simpson
Laurie Griffith
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Lynn Bradford
Secretary
Kim McCroskey
Senator
John Adams
Senator
Senator
Senator
paid for by an IDEAL coalition
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanans editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
October 2,1979
Fire site is eyesore
Fire. Lawrence knows it can strike without warning, leaving ravaged property and ugly scars.
Most recently, the Sept. 20 fire at the 700 block of Massachusetts St., which caused an estimated $201,000 worth of damage, has left the crumbling shells of the Burn Awing Co. and Freeman Real Estate buildings.
Now, what is visible to anyone passing through downtown is the unsiglyph remains of these businesses, its own red sticker of condenation.
Excavation of the debris was halted last week, apparently because of a problem in determining who would pay for removing the rubble.
With the cause of the blaze as yet undetermined, Larry Stemmerman, fire department lieutenant and head of the Douglas County Arson Squad, has said little progress has been made in removing the rubble from the site.
Meanwhile, Bob Gould, whose architectural firm owns the condemned Burk Awning building, said yesterday that its management team had Development, had bought the charred
buildings at 700 and 710 Massachusetts St.
He now says excavation will resume in the next few days. Indeed it must.
More importantly, Gould and those responsible for clearing the site should not allow the remains of the buildings as an eyewear and a safety hazard.
A new precedent needs to be set. For more than a year and a half, the debris from a two-fatality fire in December, 1977, at the southwest end of the same block was allowed to detract from the downtown area. Only this summer was the last of it cleared and leveled to a vacant lot.
It is hoped that the owners, who showed much enthusiasm in their original plans to remodel the building, were also encouraged in fitness and citizenship in the clearing site.
As Lawrence moves toward understanding the importance of a vital downtown, we cannot afford to let this scar laser as a sign of this disaster.
Kansan photos get contrived criticism
There is a point in life where sensitivity turns into raw nerve. The line separating the two is faint and easily missed by our hand to protect us from our own ignorance.
The latest people to cross that line in the heat of their zeal are those who claim to have found sexual stereotypes in some Kansan photographs. The comments are based on a criticism. Instead, protesting about sexism seems to have become a hobby.
It's quite possible to find whatever you're looking for in nearly any place you want. It appeared to be a picture of a girl standing, arms akimbo, with a football on the grass between her legs. It could have been just a picture of a girl sucking to the female population. Or it could have been just a picture of a girl football on the grass between her legs.
It is, as the well-worn phrase says, all in the way you look at things.
The photo showed an attractive woman trying to hit a tennis ball with a tennis racket. Her T-shirt said, "It's not how you play the game, it's how you look." She wore a black dress and her blowing hair; the rest of her face was caught in a goofy expression.
In reacting to this photo, one letter writer said, "Some men and women confuse the identity of women today with the identity of a certain rigid standards of appearance."
The phone calls received by the staff about the football picture indicated some people thought it was sexually degrading and insulting to the female population.
melissa
thompson
According to the cutline under the
The events of the past few weeks have put this reaction in a different light. The fact that it was discovered after blossom on the editorial page in reaction to another photo that had run through the press is puzzling.
COLUMNIST thompson
photo, it was intended to be a visual and verbal pun. The woman obviously was going to miss her shot because of the hair in her eyes. "It show you look" . "Get
The pun's obscurity is not really an issue, but rather the definition of sexism is important. The word defines sexism as any arbitrary stereotyping of males and females on the basis of gender.
But, according to that letter writer, sexism is a confusion of identity on the basis of body appearance. Both of these definitions are highly subjective and rely on the perception of the person who is sexing or labeling a sexism of sexism to something or someone.
And the people who are finding fault with these photos are saying that they perceive the photos to be seismic. Maybe they are crying wolf instead.
Fighting sexism is a valid and necessary goal in a society where roles have been constantly changing for the past 15 years.
And in this transitional state, it has been essential for the printed word (or picture) to discuss the reasons for the decision and the direction that it is moving.
Amid protests against sexual stereotyping in the worlds of business, politics and education have been successful—to varying degrees.
But these protests were successful because injustices existed; they were not minor as the Kansan photos.
People who are tempted to cry "sexist" and point finger at less-than-worthy targets should save their breath. They will be less about, their argument loses strength.
In search of a solution for the current industry shortage facing the United States, power plants are increasingly toward coal, electricity and nuclear power, and less town solar power, wind power and offshore wind.
Government ignoring energy options
Government officials are giving little consideration to these alternative energy forms. They say that these sources have not been developed in the past, but that is their real reason?
Solar power can be a very cheap and feasible source of energy for the nation. It is abundant and there are no controls over it environmentally sound and pollution-free.
And wind power count be used as a major source of energy. Although it hasn't been fully explored, the potential is there, and it cannot be overlooked or ignored.
The use of biomasses for energy also shouldn't be overlooked. Biomasses can be converted into methane gas—a natural gas—and used on a large scale by utilizing an existing natural-gas pipeline. It also would provide the source of energy and environmentally advanced energy. Yet it is too at the bottom of the list of energy alternatives being considered.
John COLUMNIST fischer
All of these various forms of energy can be very efficient, cheaply produced and cause little strain on the environment. Compare this to the inefficiency of burning oil, the high expense of nuclear power and the effect of striping on the environment.
But why haven't these forms of energy been considered more by government officials? And why haven't they been further developed?
One can only speculate that it is due to the power of special interest groups, or more specifically, the power of major business companies in coal or oil and utility companies.
Both of these sectors have a lot to lose if these other forms of energy were developed. We can imagine that we would because these sources of energy don't involve them for production, refining or storage.
For example, many coal-mining companies and electric companies would be greatly affected if the government decided to use methane or the sun as the primary energy source in industry. Neither of these sectors would be involved much, in the production of these energies.
Consequently, with their survival and increased productivity, utilities have supported the use of nuclear power and coal -burned to produce electricity - as the sources of tomorrow's energy.
And at the same time, they are too tough or downplaying the use of force to have anything to give them. They have nothing to gain. It all sounds like a conspiracy to scream the nation over in the name of it.
Although some of these businesses and utilities have built in systems with solar energy or other energy forms, consider for a moment their results. Usually they are contradictory to each other.
This could be an attempt by these groups to create a bad public image for these alternative sources of energy so that the public
will "realize" that they aren't feasible. And this could be an attempt to make the public believe that coal, which is a limited energy source, can be used for other alternatives to our energy shortage.
Also, big businesses and utilities have bought patent rights for devices that might have a tremendous effect on their business if they were mass produced.
An example of this is General Motors. It bought the patent rights from people who run engines or engines that run on different types of fuel, but you never hear them call a car engine.
It is time the government officials look out for the best interests of the country and its people rather than the interests of big business and its profits. This "What Is-Best For The Country" attitude can only lead to our country, an oil economy, and otherwise.
Government officials need to seriously consider the feasibility and importance of these alternative sources of energy, instead of being greeted by big business to ignore them.
GET THE POPE OFF THE MALL
-MADALIN M. OHAIR
GET THE POPE OFF THE MALL
MADALIN M. OHAIR
© 1979
Bureaucracy blocks Liberals' goals
Rv CARL LEVIN
N. Y.Times Special Features
WASHINGTON—Liberal members of Congress—because liberals increasingly are becoming former members of Democrats—are trying to shed their political label.
Changing labels, however, does not change the plight of librarians. That plight springs from the fact that the simplicity of conservative rhetoric is often more conducive to the current resonance of American thought than is the complex rhetoric of librarians.
Liberals thought their identification of the immorality of the war in Vietnam produced our withdrawal. In reality, it was the appeal to the United States to the will to win-to-bomb them to their
knees—then let's get out") that caused the war machine to knock and miss.
THE LIBERAL plight also springs from the eternal internal arguments about who has the greatest degree of ideological authority. The American 44/100 percent pure—but that does not mean that they will float in the bath water of American politics. And we do not help their efforts to keep their heads above the concretely social line when we focus on the 36/100 of a percent.
When libermails sat back, because Hubert Humphrey was not pure enough, they allowed this country to be polluted by the corruption in politics of the Nixon administration.
It is time to put aside these ritualistic acts of self-immolation and rediscover our common values. In that process, we may
IN OUR QEIR to safeguard our achievements, we institutionalized them. The policies that we produced spawned new federal departments and regulatory agencies, an administrative branch with power arising from its control over imprisonment and, more significant, from its exclusion from the mathematics of our system of checks and balances.
People who care about their communities are upset about the way that power affects them. In response to our goals of our programs, they have begun to reject the claim that our programs have made a difference.
find out why the liberal movement has lost control over the emotions of the nation.
People have a right to reject that claim when programs waste their money, belittle their efforts and insult their integrity.
Column miscasts Nader as leader
To the Editor:
I've said it before and I'll say it again: America's desire for a strong leader is a sure sign of our own weakness, of our reluctance to formulate our own stand, answer our own questions, we expect *leaders* to do our thinking for us. And Lym Bryczyski, while one of the most perceptive and in-depth voices on this issue, is as guilty of that weakness as anyone.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Ralph Nader is not a leader. He spent an early evening telling us what students are doing in their Public Interest Research program. The research, he says, is the best possible refutation of the John Birchers' claim that the PIRG groups are Nader's tools to advance his own power. They are not his, nor does he tell them what to do. Nor does he encourage them to disclose facts that others leave hidden.
Yes, I am, we do have the problems. We don't need anyone to tell us what they are. What we do need from people like Halpah is to make sure that we don't cause of those problems. As Nadel pointed out, ignorance is the underlying cause. Another is our inherent sylvestry to investigate those things that raise our suspicions and to understand consciousness raising is all about. The only
The ultimate reward of this solution is a savings of $3,500. With our consciousness raised, we won't have to ask Nader back to raise it again when new problems appear.
The only "solution" Nader did offer was, sadly enough, ignored both in Byzacyn's column and in the front page report that appeared the day after the speech. That solution to reform our educational system, to study in a class, to study lounge with highlighters and textbooks in hand, students can exercise the investigative methods we acquire in the classroom to tackle the problems that face all of us as citizens. Then, who knows? We can move back into these textbooks axiom to gain more insight into those problems we can't solve.
way to "progress beyond the consciousness raising stage" is to make Nader's method of investigation a part of our daily lives.
Provo, Utah, graduate student
Gregory Halbe
Nader story needed deeper coverage
To the Editor:
The staff of the University Daily Kansan should be recognized by the student body for 14 priorities on campus affairs.
Nader, who spoke for more than two hours, discussed several major issues that concern most people today: energy and education, to name two. The over-capacity of the conference hallroom to hear them tends to show that education at KU share these interests and concerns.
I refer to a comparison of two stories: Ralph Nader of Sept. 25 and the feature story on intramural football of Sept. 26.
The Ralph Nader lecture was an event that attracted perhaps the largest audience in recent memory with the exception of the events here at the University of Kansas.
1 FOUND IT interesting to see that one local newspapers, the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, the Topeka Capital-Journal
THE MOST ironic point is the fact that M. Hollowell, besides writing the story about the war, has told us this a possible precedent for newspaper staff members to discuss themselves full
In contrast, Amy Hollowell regaled us with a full-page story with very dramatic photographs discussing her views on an intramural football game.
In all likelihood, it is very possible that M. Hollowell's story was severely cut by her editors. So, perhaps the blame should not be placed with her.
However, the editors of the Kansan and their decisions on what gets printed should be public. Should the public get an opportunity to read more about the rare, special occurrences in history by Raiph Nader, or about a newspaper staff member with no psychic or an annotator for the book?
and the Kansas City Star-Times devoted lengthy copy to Nader's speech and visit. The Kanans seemed hard pressed to get the attention they needed, but, it did have a very nice photograph that was larger than the space used for copy, even with the reporter's advantage in size.
Lawrence senior
My fear is that the programs I so strongly support are going to be doomed—not by a law in intent but by a flaw in implementation. I am exaspected to be exhausted by the battle to say what is good
I COME from a traditional liberal background: created by the New Deal, molded by the Civil Rights movement, fired by President Richard Nixon, the anti-war movement and seasoned by local politics. That background encouraged me to work with the federal government. But instead, I ended up fighting it because it would become more important than my people.
To prevent that we must regain control of the way government runs, re-establish our mastery of detail and reaffirm our commitment to helping people.
And after that battle, the federal rules and regulations and programs still stood strong. The city continued to decline; the local communities were in the neighborhoods continued to deteriorate.
We can adopt sunset and legislative veto provisions that will force Congress to reevaluate programs and return accuracy for regulations to elected officials.
that the fight may no longer seem to be one we can win.
IF THIS feeling grows, then the law will have been proved right. They will be able to do more than dismantle our goals. They will be able to gult our goals.
The alternative is to watch our opponents build public support for abandoning the liberal dream.
The keepers of the dream today are the people who can make the dream work. If we want our children to be more supportive, sink our social programs it can only be because we fear that we cannot get support for them.
We can correct those methods. We can refuse to rationalize failure because our task is hard. We can refuse to accept arrogance because the task is inefficiency because our task is hard. We can refuse to accept arrogance because the task is inefficient.
If we are to mobilize support for our visions, then we must administer our programs with the common sense that conceived them.
CITIZENS HAVE not turned their backs on our goals. They have had their stomachs turned by some of government's methods.
Carl Levi is junior Democratic senator from Michigan. This article is based on a recent speech to the Americans for Democratic Action.
KANSAN
US$ 650,000 (published at the University of Kansas Daily August through May) must be paid and Thursday's fee must be paid by July 31. The student fee is $750 per semester or $900 for each year in Dundee County and $1200 for each year in Lethbridge County. For six years ($840 per year) a $1,000 deposit is required.
almaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily, Kannan, First Hall, The University of
Tampa.
1
Editor Mary Hoenk
Managing Editor
Nancy Dressler
Editorial Editor Mary Erst.
Business Manager
Cyrthia Hay
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
6
Tuesday, October 2. 1979
University Daily Kansan
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 2, 1979
7
KU students learn to fly
By JENNIFER HOLT
Staff Reporter
It all started with Icarus, who, according to Greek mythology, ftoo close to the sun with his wings of wax and plunged to his death in the sea.
Thousands of years later, Oville and Wilbar Wright had much better luck. And today, whether they are at the Lawrence High School or in downtown, many KU students will learn to fly.
"It's something I've always wanted to do. I give Gilberto Berti a basketball junior. I give it to him and now I'm going to take my time getting the license. I want to finish lessons by this time."
Some students enroll in the Lawrence Flight School for a career in flying while others, like Brito, want just to learn to fly, according to Gordon Bearss, a flight in-
Nearly 50 percent of the flight school's students are KU students.
beginning of the year to finish up by Christmas, 'he said,' or start in January to take care of her family. He qualified so they can fly their plane."
Bearsrs said it took about 65 hours to get a pilot's license.
money they have," he said. "I've had students finish in 35 hours and some who have taken more than 100 hours. It matters to me how long it takes them as long as possible."
William Lewis, Alton, III. ill treatm, hopes to finish the program before Christmas. He started taking lessons at home before he came to school this fall, he said.
"I've always been interested in flying and I can't want to get the license," he said. "I have about 20 to 25 total flipping hours to go
before I finish, and whether I get the license before Christmas will depend on the weather."
Steve Mikinski, Kansas City, Kan., senior said, "I don't intend to on fly in a career; I just want to fly for pleasure." he said.
Mikinski said his brother and a friend, who is a Kansas City flight instructor, first interested him in flying.
Flight school students must rent an airplane for one or two hours and hire an instructor for lessons.
The cheapest airplane rents for $22 an hour on a plan called wired cost, which pays for the gas and maintenance of a premium plane like the Cessna 125 rent for $8 an hour. The instructor charges $12 an hour.
To get a private license, one must fly approximately 20 hours with an instructor, 15 hours alone and take written, oral and computer training from the Federal Aviation Administration
The fee for the PAA examiner if $40, and the flying test may take as long as an hour, a Municipal Airport employee says.
Getting a commercial license is next. The pilot must be tested to see if he can fly solely by instruments and control more than one engine
Students and instructors said flying was easier to learn than most people thought.
“It’s a lot like driving a motorcycle,” Bearss said. “It’s not the difficulty, but putting all together in one concept that throws people. New students are usually nervous when they start. Well, I’ve never one whom I didn’t think could learn to fly.”
Brito said, "Flying is so different from anything I've ever done before that there is no way I can compare it to anything."
Bearss said that although many people
"Women may be slower in some cases because they're not as aggressive," he said. "Most men are brought up with electronics, with electrical trains. Then they become mechanics or hold jobs of that sort when they're older, but girls frequently are brought up with dolls and toys."
thought women had a more difficult time learning, each case was different.
He said he thought women were more dexterous and coordinated.
Vicki Rubin, Prairie Village freshman,
rents an airplane at least once a week
She said she started flying in the summer of 1978 but did not get her license for eight months because she was not old enough.
"My dad always has flown a plane, and seen that summer he asked me I wanted to travel. He told me to take me about eight months to get the license. That was on my 12th birthday, and we didn't have a car."
"The first time I soiled the most memorable," she said. "I was really nervous and kept getting on the mike to the control tower to talk to them."
She said she got lost once on a cross-country flight by forgetting to reset her commass over the Ozark mountains.
She then had to fly around in circles until the radar could set her on the right course again.
Lewis said his favorite flight "was the time I faint at sunset at 3,400 feet and saw the sun reflect off the St. Louis Arch. It was a beautiful sight; the air was clear and nice."
Both students said they weren't afraid of crashing.
It really depends on the plane. "Lewis said, 'but I feel I can handle any situation. It might get a little worried daired a 60 degree bit other than that I would be confident.'
cessna
Pre-flight check
Season ticket sales down
Football season ticket sales apparently are the lowest they have been in the last six years, preliminary figures released by the KU athletic department viewed, showed.
Although the final totals are not in yet, Nancy Welsh, ticket manager, said approximately 20,000 public, faculty/staff and alumni came to campus for the season of 22,268 season tickets were sold last year.
Gilberto Brito, Wichita junior, checks the wing flans before his second living lesson at the Lawrence Municipal Airnort
Because of the interest shown by students since last Saturday's game, the athletic department decided yesterday to offer
"I was boping that we would sell at least 10,000 student season tickets this year, but we sold only 7,000," Welsh said. "However I still bought the student tickets after last Saturday's game."
season tickets to students for the remaining four games. The tickets to the Webb auditorium and the ticket office in Allen Field House. The price of a student season ticket at the beginning of the season.
Welsh said nearly 13,000 public and faculty/staff season tickets were sold this year. A total of 13,566 were sold last year.
Welsh said she thought the lower demand for tickets this year was caused by the performance of last year's football team plus other influences such as inflation.
Season ticket sales this year look as if they will be the lowest since 1973 when only 20,432 season tickets were sold. The highest total in season tickets was 1976 when 24,588 season tickets were sold.
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8
Tuesday, October 2.1979
University Daily Kansan
Quarry worker's road not rocky
By BRETT CONLEY Staff Reporter
As Steve Stevens plots his dust-cover Chevy pickup truck past mountains of gravel he lists the names and uses of each type of rock that Hamm Quarry produces.
"Well, that is CM-7 which is mostly used for cover material, and this right here is a bit different," Stevens draws. "That there is SAX which basically just unwasher SAX and over there."
Stevens has been in the quarry business for nearly fifteen years, and, as forensmen for the police department, he is in charge of the entire operation from plashing and digging to crushing and breaking.
"The whole process just comes by experience," Stevens said. "There's a lot of it."
trial and error and eventually the type of rock you want to make come out, but you'll get fooled sometimes."
THE QUARRY produces more than 2,000 tons of rock and gravel every day for asphalt, petroleum processes and concrete.
A newcomer to the quarry has difficulty telling Stevens apart from the fourteen other men who work for him.
A chalky white dust covers his hunting boots, faded blue jeans and demin work shirt, as it does all the workers in the quarry.
"We've got 160 acres we're working on at our location in Lansing, ledges - Platmouth, Leavenworth, and Toronto," Revenes said. "The top level is 18 feet from the water, only 21 inches on the ground, so it's fine for the lawn."
Shoes With The Young Lady In Mind
At J. J. Angela's
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Until 8:00 Mon-Thursday
Holiday Plaza
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**WE BLAST ABOUT every other day.**
First we have to drill the holes, then load them and then shoot them. But we have to wait until after five 'o' clock to shoot so
KLZR
106
"We usually load about a thousand pounds of explosives, depending on the condition of the airplane. But because we delay the charges by a few milliseconds, so it's more like a loud explosion."
everyone who lives around here can be notified.
"People always say to me, 'Wow, you work with dynamism. Isn't that dangerous? But, you know, it is not any more dangerous than it was. It got to be careful with how you go about it."
AFTER THE ROCK is blasted it's loaded in Caterpillar dump trucks, Stevens explained, and taken to the rock crusher where it is ground up.
Then the rock travels down a maze of convevator bites to more crushers. The rock eventually reaches the bottom of the hill for size, consistency and chemical content.
"everybody likes rock but nobody like
quarries." Stevens said. "When we're done
here we will have to reclaim the land, and
we will be able to farm it, but it will
will look all right."
By mixing the three types of rock Hamm mines, Stevens produces gravel suitable for road-building.
"THEY NOT MY Worry because getting out my car is not going to do the job that I did with my coyote good crew now, but I can tell you good help is hard to find. It’s hard for anyone who can do it."
"It's hard to find anyone who wants this type of job anymore. Practically everything you need is in your back up somewhere, and it has to be done with a dirty type label. You have to do it, and it has to be done.
"I was taught to do the best job you can wherever you are, but I've hired a lot of guys that are only here for quitting time and the paycheck."
AS STEVENS SWERED to avoid two dump trucks on his way back up the hill, the rock crush and conveyor belts came to a stop only a minor breakdown, Stevens said.
"The way you learn to fix this machinery is to just watch someone else do it, and if you have ever to work on it you just try to do it the way they did it."
"We average a major breakdown about once a month where we have to be shut down anywhere from one to three days," he said. "We just get everybody on work it."
The quarry workers managed to get the conveyor belts and crushers running again after only 15 minutes.
Stevens climbed back in his truck and headed back down the hill past a truck watering roads to settle the billowing dust.
"RIGHT NOW WE are getting ahead on most of this because this machine there will be hard to get into. We have hard to run the machinery," he said. "It's too much movement around in here the time."
"it's sort of company policy not to start anything if it's ten degrees or colder, so we just try and repair the machinery for a couple of months. When the wind is from the north and it near zero, though, it hard to find bolts and tap as apart the machinery."
After checking in at the weight house near the front gate, Stevens climbed back in his truck to head back up the hill again.
"It's not much of a job to write about," Stevens said, "It's just something that has got to be done."
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We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students
A POPULAR LINE OF
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
1 TABLE OF PUBLICATION
Repeated by D. W. C. HALL
DESCRIPTION
DATE OF FILMS
The University Daily Kansas
September 6, 2019 - 17, 2029
University of Kansas - Lawrence, Kansas
June 8, 2019 - 13, 2029
University of Kansas - Lawrence, Kansas
13 III VOLUME 4
11th Print University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas Douglas County 64045
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Bnei Brith Hillel presents
a Delicious
Deli/Coffee house
Sunday, Oct. 7
Eat & Enjoy entertainment
6 p.m.-10 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive (Across from Hircrest)
Hillel members $2 Guests $3
Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Now Comes Miller Time AT THE HAWK Tuesday, Oct.2
Miller & Lite Bottles
—plus— Only
Dozens of Beer Signs 45¢
to be given away (reg. 70°)
during the night!
Lowenbraugh bottle 65 $^{\circ}$
Meet MILLER-LITE Distributor and Brewery Reps! Come Early to Get a Seat!
Meet MILLER-LITE Distributor and Brewery Reps! Come Early to Get a Seat!
EAGLE
It could only happen at . . .
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
"A Campus Tradition Since 1920"
A. B.
Rock men
CHRIS TODDIKansan staff
Steve Stevens, Hamm Quorum foreman, points out the different rock types in the quarry to crane operator Roy Frater. Stevens and Frater are standing in front of a 40-foot-high wall.
Vote United Soley for Student Rights coalition
Look for U.S.S.R. on the Student Senate Ballot Oct. 3 & 4
Paid for by the U.S.S.R. coalition
IMAGINACTION
is the ideal coalition Paid for by imagination
The Commission on The Status of Women will be having a meeting, Thursday, Oct 14 at Watkins Scholarship Hall.
- Additional lighting and blue phones on the university campus.
Topics to be discussed are:
- Escort service
Your interest and support will be welcomed. For further information contact
The Commission on the Status of Women 864-3952
or The Emily Taylor Women's Center. 864-3552
FREE COKE
Now's your chance to meet your senators!
Wednesday October 3rd
in front of Flint Hall 11:30 am-3:00 pm
Student Senate's
Open House
Also:
Freshman Elections & 6 Nunemaker senate seats
paid for by Student Activity Fees
Tuesday, October 2, 1979
Homecoming concert still in limbo
Rv AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Reporter
Although an act has not yet been scheduled for the KU homecoming concert Oct. 27, Duke Divine, director of Student Union Activities events, said news that the duke would give up the search for a band even though the date was less than a month away.
Divee said that it was too late to schedule a show in Allen Fold House, but that he thought he still had time to coordinate a "bia name" in Hoeb Auditorium.
Dine said that he had never experienced such difficulties in booking an act and that he was becoming discouraged.
He attributed his problems this year to a slump in the music industry in general and to a RU policy that prohibits the suspension of speakers, from the ceiling of the Field House.
Bands usually tour to promote an album, he said, and at present the recording industry is slow because consumers are not spending as much on albums anymore.
"THE ONLY SHOWS that are big enough to record and tour aren't going to stop at schools." Divine said. "They'll go the major cities where the audiences are
Less prominent groups that KU normally would attract cannot afford to tour at this
Curtis Reinhardt, manager of the Lawrence Opera House, which regularly features national recording artists, said he had not had trouble booking acts.
time, he said, and groups that play to smaller audiences would not sound right at Hoch Auditorium or the Field House.
"I've had better luck with acts promoting albums this year than ever before," he said. "There are tons of acts out there."
Reinhardt said SUA's policy of coordinating shows only through an outside promoter was "too much trouble, too much tape," for most acts to want to deal with.
"SUA JUST DOESN'T want to take the risk of backing a show. That's why there's
been an under abundance of concerts at KU the past few years," he said.
Divine said many area schools worked through promoters, primarily to "keep from getting ripped off" by bands.
Divine was optimistic about his prospects for booking a homecoming act.
MYRON MOLZEN, acting special events manager at Kansaun Hospital in Kamla Nagar, all of its own. Molzen said he had given his up search to find an act for the K-State homecoming event.
"We can put things together real quick," he said. "I'm not going to give in like they did at K-State. There will most likely be a show in Hoch Oct. 27."
Oread association delays downzoning action
The Orcad Neighborhood Association decided last night to have its board of directors meet in the city council chamber for a recall election of three city commendations and a city-wide referendum on
The question of a recall or referendum was brought up at the association's September meeting; City Commissioners Bob Schumann, Ed Carter and Dion Binnas were among those who commissioned had voted in opposition downzoning the Orland neighborhood.
The proposed downzoning would be from residential high-density to residential duplex.
The Oread association made its decision
after discussing the legal aspects of the two alternatives and the possible effects each action would have.
Association president Tom Gleason outlined parts of the Kansas statutes relating to holding a recall election.
Among the statute's regulations are stipulations that only two commissioners can be recalled and that at least 40 percent of all city election members must sign a reall petition.
About 1,600 signatures would have to be obtained, Jerry Harper, association member said.
Nan Harper, association member, said she thought the association should consider the possible negative effects of a recall.
"WE WOULDN'T want to do anything extremely antagonizing to the city," she said.
She also said the recall could diffuse the goals of the association by drawing attention away from other causes, such as the neighborhood anti-crime program.
The group decided that the recall action would be premature. Members decided to send a letter to Mr. Gorsky, who authorized the downsizing of Area One of the neighborhood, which will be done at the Oct. 10 deadline.
The city planning commission recommended last week that the city downzone Area One, which is bounded by Ninth Street on the north, 11th Street on the south,
Missouri Street on the west and an alley between Mississippi and Illinois streets on the east.
CITY COMMISSIONERS CARTER and Schumm have said they would consider downzoning individual sections of the neighborhood.
The referendum proposal was placed under advisement for reasons similar to the recall proposal.
Gleason said a referendum would require signatures from 25 percent of the total voters in the last election.
But the association decided that a letter should be sent to the city commission reaffirming the opinion that the entire neighborhood should be downzoned.
Ten HOPE award semifinalists selected
Ten seminarians has been chosen for the 180's HOPE award, nominated in the 1984 year nominated by KU seniors last week, Mike Webb, co-chairman of the HOPE award committee, said.
The semifairies are: William M. Baillour, professor of physiology and cell biology; Robert Benjamin, professor of biology; Mark Foster, Cigler, associate professor of political science.
science; David Dary, associate professor of journalism; Allen Ford, associate professor of business; Miriam Stewart Green, professor of music performance; Frank Gurkier, lecturer in occupational therapy; Louis F. Michel, professor of architecture and urinary medicine; Robertson, associate professor of music history; and Lee Y. Younger, professor of journalism.
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presented each year by the senior class.
Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry,
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Webb said the HOPE award committees would follow the policy of past committees to make award winners ineligible for five years. And she had insisted that seniors answering a questionnaire had agreed that the number of times a faculty member could win the award should be
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Final balloting will be Oct. 25-26.
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Rainbow Duo
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Paid for by Rainbow FR./SOPH. Student Senate Elections Oct. 3-4
Spring Rush
Informational Meeting
October 4
Woodruff Auditorium
Kansas Union
7-8 pm. 8:15-9:15 pm.
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University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Three burglaries and a theft from an auto were among crimes investigated by the Lawrence police during the last several days.
Two Lawrence men were arrested Friday for entering a building at 832 Firefight Dr., after witnesses reported they had seen someone leaving the apartment with a絮ferry Sunday.
The stereo was later recovered at an apartment at 524 Fireside Dr., police said.
Witnesses told police they saw a man carry a television set out of the apartment and into get a cab. Police said they stopped the cab at 6th and Mississippi streets and arrested Terry J. Whitford, 242 Fireside in summer,Junner, Minola Hall, Haskell Junior College and Juvenile also was detained at Douglas jail in connection with the incident.
Both men are being held in Douglas County jail in lieu of $3,000 bond on one count of burglary and one count of grand larceny.
IN A BURGLARY at Jayhawker Towers,
1603 W. 15 St, Greene Sligd, Shawnee
equipment, clothes and cash sometime
during the weekend, police reported. Police
said there were no signs of a forced entry
from the property.
IN ANother BURGLARY, Greg Messer, Stanton, Iowa, lomophone, lost $50 worth of store equipment after intruders breached the building on Friday of his apartment at 1434 Temessee St. There were no signs that force had been used in the attack, which occurred during the weekend, police said.
TWO 19YEAR-OLD Topkai residents were arrested Sunday after an off-duty Lawrence officer police saw the two take a boat and then went inside. The officers in the let of the lT 1 Food Store, $28 Iowa ST.
VOTE ANARCHIST.
After the officer saw the two take the savings account book and return to their car he approached them and asked if they were armed. The officer drew his gun when he thought one of the suspects may have been reaching for a weapon in a bag or under his police said. However, no weapon was found.
Paid For By
MARK T. PARKER
ANARCHIST candidate for Student Senate.
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10
University Dally Kansan
Tuesday, October 2, 1979
Divers aim for form with first year coach
By JERRY FINCHER
Snorts Writer
Divers don't make much of a splash when enter the water on a peel. They use a siphon, a tube filled with a splash and all go unnicted, even though they are a winning ingredient in KU'S swimming
Although there are only nine dives on the men's and women's swim teams combined, they hope to be a big factor in this season's meets. The dives practice (three a day) is part of the year diving season Ron Walker in preparation for the first meets in early November.
KANSAN Sports
Walker will be working with men's swimming coach Bill Spahn and women's coach Gary Kempel. Walker came to KU to teach a team of young teaming teams at Tulare, Calif., for seven years.
"It is an ideal operation," Kemp said. "Bill and I know very little about diving and we need a coach who's going to be here all the time. Last year's coach commuted from
"We need somebody on a consistent, day-to-day basis. Ron's doing a fine job." It a learning process, but I expect it to be a big plus for our diving program."
Walker said he was pleased with the talent of the six divers on the men's sona.
"It's great to have that many quality divers," he said. "Senior leadership will be provided by Kurt Anselmi. He the one who is ooine to help the team the most."
Anselmi qualified for the National Collegiate Athletic Association finals last year and placed 28th.
"It's nice to have someone to depend on who always going to be here," said Anselmi, the only senior on the squad.
Amelia's goal this season is to win on both the one and three meter boards in the women's 100-meter finals of national nations. "I've never had to do as much as I'm doing now." Amelia said. "I hope it works."
"Walker's knowledge is going to be an asset to the team."
KU has two other divers returning from last season. Walker said he expects sophomore Brian Wink and junior Tim Waugh to do well again this season.
"Waugh placed real well last year in dual meets," Walker said. "He has a chance to take the place of last year's seniors."
Three freshmen, Mike Chenoweth, Jim Wharton and Ben Spencer, round out the men's team.
Although the men's diving squad can look to Anselmi for leadership, Walker said, seniority is lacking on the women's team.
The only experienced divers are Paula Wehner and Patti Muehlberger.
Welmer finished sixth in three-meter diving in the Big Eight Championships last season.
Paula has a goal of making the top three in the conference," Walker said. "I expect her to finish high."
Muellerhuber finished eighth in one-meter competition at the conference meet last season and was in the top ten on both boards.
"I expect her to be in the top five or six this season," Walker said. "The girl are all ready, but I think we should program. I think it's great they do well as freshmen. That means they should imple-
Freshman Diana Woods is the lone addition to the women's dying team. She was a Kansas state champion last year at Shawnee Mission Northwest High School.
"I think this diving team can go a long way," Walker said. "I really am anxious. This season's going to be real intense, more than any other season."
N
Daring diver
Patty Muehlberger, member of the KU women's diving team, practices during a workout
in Robinson Natalator Muehlberger finished eighth in one-meter diving competition at the Bie Eicht Championships last season.
Clinton, Sydney miss 'Hawks practice
it was uu-shot-night for the KU football team's practice. Gasson Dillon famously said he had a touch of the flu, and as a precautionary measure fu shots were taken.
Quarterback Kevin Clinton and fallback Harry Sydney missed practice because of minor injuries.
"Clinton's arm is a little sore," Fambrod said. "He'll be all right, he's resting today and if he's not ready we have other people that can play."
'Sydney is all right.' He was hit in the neck in Saturday's game. Right now he's on an
ice cream diet. It's hard for him to swallow, but he'll be all right."
Fambridge said Russ Bastin, who hurt his ankle earlier this season, was red-shirted.
Aside from the injuries and flu shots, Fambridge said he was concerned about RU's next opponent, Syracuse, and in return asked their quarterback Bill Hurley.
"Bill Hurley is the finest quartermate I've seen in a long time," Farnham said. "Anytime a football team scores over 100 points in two games, I don't care who its
against, you know they've got an explosive offense.
"From the films that I've seen, he's just fantastic. He reminds me of Jack Midren, who used to play at O.U. He's the same type of individual."
Mildren operated Oklahoma's potent washbone offense in 1971 and earned All-American honors in leading the Sooners to a national championship and a Sugar Bowl victory over Auburn.
In last Saturday's game against Washington State, Hurley led Syracuse to 32-25 rush. He ran for two touchdowns and passed for another.
AP Top Twenty
1. So. California (F) 40-0
2. Albany (14) 36-0
3. Oklahoma 34-0
4. Texas 1) 26-0
5. Nebraska 30-0
6. Kentucky 30-0
7. Washington 30-0
8. Florida State 40-0
9. North Carolina 34-0
10. Michigan 31-0
11. Purdue 31-0
12. Arkansas 31-0
13. No. Carolina State 40-0
14. Missouri 31-0
15. Mississippi 31-0
16. North Carolina 34-0
17. Tennessee 34-0
18. Michigan State 30-0
NU QB player of week
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -- Tim Hager, KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -- Tim Hager, the man named the Big Eight Offensive Play of the Week yesterday following his 212-yard passing performance in the Cornhuskers' victory over Iowa.
Hager completed 14 of 22 passes, including touchdown strikes of 11 and 78 yards to tight End Junior Miller, to甜北 Nebraska from a 144 first quarter deficit in his first start assignment. No 1 quarterback left missed the game with an ankle injury.
Hager lettered as a junior in 1978 but had an atrocious spring to fall behind Quinn,
Mark Mauer, Bruce Mathison and Steve Michaelson at quarterback.
"Since I got myself down there to begin with," explained Hager, "I figured I could get myself out."
Hager came off the bench in the second half a week ago to lift Nebraska to a 24-21 victory over Iowa and after his showing against Penal St. Osborne announced he would again be the starting quarterback this week against New Mexico State.
"I guess I'm supposed to be the maestro," said Hager, "but really, I just feel like one of the members of the orchestra."
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COLUMBIA CITY, MO. --- A group of young musicians from the Columbia City Youth Orchestra are working on a piece of music called "Brave." The orchestra will be playing at the Columbia City Chamber Music Hall in Columbia City, Mo., from March 12 to March 17.
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Interim videotape rules approved
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Renorter
Interim guidelines for videating university public events has been approved by the National Video Management videating policy can be developed, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said.
The interim guidelines give the University Police Department the right to videotape any public event, and to use the evidence for criminal prosecution if needed.
The University of Kansas had purchased videotaping equipment after former Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin's speech was disrupted April 6. The University was not able to identify the offenders then, but has received demonstrations since the Rabin incident.
The Human Relations committee, a committee of the University Senate Executive committee, is currently opposing the permanent videoding policies.
The interim guidelines state that the right to videotape a public event "will be exercised with discretion" and that videotaping it out in an open and non-scene manner.
"We will be using it when a large group is involved and where there is some indication historically or from current information that problems may arise." Mullis said.
The videotaping of public events has been controversial.
The Association of American University
Professors adopted a resolution May 6, which said: "The Chapter is uniquely opposed to videotaping by University for purposes other than instruction."
"This opposes . . . the use of videotaping as a tool in 'freedom of expression' situations, whether pursued in the name of political justice or for appropriated appropriate tool for University authorities."
T. P. SKRINVASAN, chapter president of the AAPU, said yesterday that he did not understand the reasoning behind the interim guidelines.
"The University has functioned all these years without this policy," he said. "I do hope that the standing guidelines will not entrap us in not instructing purposes."
"These interim set of guidelines were made for police use until we develop a policy," Shankel said.
Mullens said that the KU police used the videotaping equipment at KU's football game Saturday, but only during "isolated incidents."
THE FIVE INTERIM guidelines state:
- videotaping capability is an important part of the University security procedures.
- The University retains the right to videotape any public event, but this right will be exercised with discretion.
- Videos of such public events will not be used by University Police for training purposes.
- Any videotapes that the University does not anticipate using as evidence in criminal proceedings will be erased.
Tuesday, October 2, 1979 11
Minorities to plan careers at fair
Minority students will be able to learn more about their careers during a career conference and job opportunities for be held Oct. 25-37 at the Kansas Union.
University Daily Kansan
Leslie Turner, coordinator of special objects for the Alumni Association, which is one of many programs that most students would be able to meet at the fair with representatives from various organizations.
students that the companies represented were of interest mainly to engineering and
business students," Turner said. "But this year, I think there will be more of a balance."
she said representatives from the Menninger Foundation, the Peace Corps, VISTA and the Kansas Department of Adjutant General, already had accepted invitations to her.
The conference, organized through the Black Alumni Committee of the Alumni Association, also is funded by the KU Enrollment Student Organization and University offices.
TODAY: College of LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES ASSEMBLY, will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: FICTION CLUB meets at 7:30 in Parlor A of the Union, VISITING ARTIST SERIES will feature the works of Michael J. Saworth in Racquet Hall, Murphy Hall,
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TOMORROW: WEDNESDAY FORUM is on "Cuba," by Howard Handelman, an American University Field Service
representative, at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread. Kansas Association of SECONDARY SCHOOL PRINCIPALS will discuss "Stress Management for Students" Carl Candol, KU will speak at 4:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Room. Entry deadline for INTRAMURAL MIXED DOUBLES TENNIS AND RAQUETBELAT is 5 a.m., 280 Robinson. CLUB SING MEETs at 7 in the Parties of the Union. Albert Kerger will give a CARLION RECIAL AT 7 p.m.
Renowned Kansas pianist to perform recital tonight
James River, nationally known Kansas pianists, will give a rectal at 8 tonight in Swarthout *Rectal Hall*, Jack Winerock, professor of music, said yesterday.
Rivers, who hails from Topeka, is one of the most notable pianists in Kansas, Winorek said. Rivers has played through the state and in many cities around the
Rivers also performed at the Four Freedoms Award banquet in honor of President John F. Kennedy.
Rivers is the artist in residence and chairman of the piano department at Washburn University, Winerock said.
"We've had people from Lawrence driving to Topeka to hear him play, so we decided to invite him to play them." Winerock said.
Rivers will perform several classical works, Winerock said. The pieces will include Brahms' "Images," and Liszt's "Two Polish Songs."
KUAC to hold its first meeting since merger
The Kansas University Athletic Corporation will hold its first meeting of the school year today at 4:30 in the Southeast Lounge of the Satellite Union.
It will be the first KUAC meeting since the women and the women's athletic merger is being reconstruct this year because of the merger, which has reduced its membership from 21 to 15
The number of faculty positions on the board have been reduced this year from seven to five, student positions from four to three, and new positions in three and three alumni positions from six to four.
This year four committees comprised of KUAC members will deal with separate areas of the athletic department. The four committees are the finance committee, the facilities committee, the tickets and ticket committee, and the academic/scademic support committee.
Other changes in the KUAC this year include requirements to meet more frequently—at least once every two months, and that more active in the affairs of the athletic
Del Brinkman, KUAC chairman, said that there were no definite agenda items scheduled for today's meeting, but that members would discuss ways in which the KUAC could become more involved in training and in improving the athletic program.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
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AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect '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 by calling the UBIM business office at 413-820-6378.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864.4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Also selling wooden creates. Herb Altenbernd. tt
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also roasted, salted, and raw peanuts in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry bean fruit, almond, pear, honey pot, apple, and sorghum. Every Sunday.
Wednesday Night!
Rock 'n' Roll from England
with
THE ONLY ONES
with Lawrence's own
The Regular Guys
Only $3.90
Dorms open at
8:00—show at 9:00
at the door.
$2.50 7pm. Show
Chub Mem.
open at 10am
- show at 10:00
Glowworm
Open House!
Watch for truck packed at 9th & Illinois. Home
warehouse of the local food foods and the
bakery. Also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
slices also served, Roasted and Raw Pumpkin
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Call for concert Info. 842-6930
Zen practice nightly - 6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Sean Wenzum from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21. Batch 862-909 for information.
Needed votes? Why vote for anyone else? The only choice, Mike Pawlowski. Independent. 18-4
Comics, comics, comics. Booth #6. Quantrill's
Flick Market. Weekends 10-5. 10-3
paid for by an IDEAL coalition Oct. 3, 2014
Benefit Garage Sale - 9-4, Sat. Oct 6 at 7th and 8th, to Alabama, to Support Scabber Anti-hike occupation. Duration of sale will welcome. Sponsor Natural Guru Alliance and Inadie Free Kanas
INDEPENDENT THINKERS, your representative is here. Vote PTACK for Student Senate October 3 and 4. 16-4
Suf dancing 8:00 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4, community building, 11th and Vermont. No experience necessary. Public invited. 841-5763 or 841-5496.
MUM SALE-Parents Day Oct. 6 at Union Stadium
MUM corsage bury 275 Lambia Signs 10-5
It's Tuesday and The Harbour Lites is still in first-class draw. Toulouse's tonight is $1 pichler and diecamp and bettle between 7-10 am. Get a cab and drive to the Harbour Lite in Massachusetts.
FOR RENT
Vista Restaurant open daily 'i'll midnight. Fri & Sat. 'il 1:00 a.m.
10-2
FRONTIER RIDE APARTMENTS NOW REITING
from $179.00 to $249.00. Two-family room,
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or call 844-244-0634 or see 844 Frontier Ride.
Rentals: 844-244-0634
ENTERTAINMENT
Beautiful, new 2 bdm. apt. Completely equipped kitchen. 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone 863-9579
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 833-9579. ff
Room Now Available at the SUNFLOWER HOUSE - 20 member student co-operative within walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence, Evenings, call 843-9421.
FOR SALE
A nice two bedroom apt. on bus route. Completely furnished. Call 843-4251. KeepCalling!
Aartment for subleave, 1 bedroom at Park 25.
On KU bus route: Call 842-848 or 842-523. 10-2
A person to share or sublease a nice and clean, one bedroom, furnished apt. Walking distance to campus: 355 + half utilities. Apt. 211, at 1015 Mississippi. Call 834-7947 or 842-6035. 10-4
Close to campus: one 3 bedroom 2 story house and one basement apt. A183-8190 10-5
FOR SALE
Two-bedroom basement apartment, $160 month,
utilities paid, + $100 deposit. No pets. 842-642-
or 842-666. 10-4
SunSpecies - Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF
1974 Dodge Colt GT Good condition, orange/b
black. #1450. $935.849-8348.
1D-2
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Make $kake! To use them, just follow the instructions to use them -1) As study guide, 2) For student research, 3) For presentation, 4) New Analysis of Western Civilization in town Crier, Mall Bookseller and Oure Book store
Alternator, starter and generator specialties.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-869-3000, 390 W. ehf.
trunk.
Dressers, picture frames, chairs, small couch,
oak tables, oak tables-George's, 103-8
Odent daily.
WATERBED MATTRESSES. $39.98, 3 year guarant-
tee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-136, UR-
CE.
75 Mutant Fastback Mach. I; yellow with AM/AM
75 Mutant Fastback Gooing car, $330; 10-3
after 6.00.
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Purch. Mopeds.
Rick's Bike店, 1033 Vermouth, 841-6424. TF
1972 Ford Van, E-200, 302, good condition, PS,
paneling, carpet, new tires, windows on right
899, 892-5275. 10-2
alcohol accordion std. size. Consider trade for 10
nosed bike. Foreign and U.S. stamps for sale.
843-7698 at 5:50 p.m.
10-2
280-Z, 1 owner, only 4500 miles. Good as new.
A C. A. FM STM, tape deck, and 3-speed.
Call 864-3748 8 a.m.-p.m. 10-5
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Powder public address system This CGA-7901
Standards Perfect for installed audio and
s
1972 Ford Tortoise. Gold and White. Two-door.
302 7-8 Good car—good price. Call Craig at
845-880-788.
2 half-fare coupons, American Airlines. Best of
fer. 841-3296. 10-2
10" black and white TV set. One year old. $45.00.
Call 841-8322
72 Towe convertible. Be first in town to own
30, to 30, MFG: 911-633-8789.
15
Ten speed bike. Small frame. Save gas at a good price. Best offer. Call Suiton 814-269-108-
Guitars: Gibson acoustic B-12. Very good cond-
–beautiful sound, $150 or less. Also offer. Electric
–good cond, good 21, lots of fun $30.00 or best
–offer. Call 92-302-300 nights.
Univegna bicycle—A year old, was in storage 5 months. Very good condition $129. Call 814-6530.
Toyota, 1972—stereo, good condition. Also Sony FX310. includes 3" TV, AM/FM, tape rec. 164-8483 or 164-8485 Giorgio.
21" B.W Zeroth console TV with remote. Dual
screen. 812-2850 after 5.5 months or best offer
1979 Trans Aman, Aqua blue 400 engine. Power steering, lt wheel, cruise control, rear window defroster. AM/FM cassette tape T-ops, automatic $8,350. BK 482-7272. 10-3
Found Wed. woman's ring in Woodruff Aud, Call 841-8527 or 864-4131. 10-2
FOUND
Ring near 12th and Kentucky—call 843-6980 and identify to claim. 10-3
FOUND: Silky gray 5-6 months old female kitten in 1500 block of Mass. Had been injured, now on the mend. 842-158. Qualified adopter get free zip, climbing pole, collar, dish! She'll love you
HELP WANTED
Adult with own transportation to care for year-old twins in our home Monday, Wed., and/or Friday morning 7:30-1:30. $2.00 an hour. Call Mr. Rudyds 843-3114.
Earn as much as $50 per 1000 staffing envelopes with our circulations. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS. Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 45042.
10-16
Part-time ditchwashing and counter help 11
and cleaning up after meals in person 10
at Border Bandido, 1328 W. Bird 29
Bureau of Child Research, Achievement Place,
Brantley College. Available live on £800 monthly.
Available work with adolescents youth preferred. Own
work with adolescents youth preferred. Own
work required. Excellent interpersonal skills
work required. Excellent interpersonal skills
excellent for Child Research in an equal opportunity
environment. Certified Mildly Injured. Achievement Place
Brantley College.
Adult with own transportation to care for year old twin in our home morning or afternoons old twins in our home Monday, Wed. and Sat. 9am-5pm on Wed. 4:00 am-8:00 am CTF Rhodia 8431-314 after 6
Part-time food service personnel personnel needed. 15-25 hours per week. Starting pay $3.70 per hour. Man at laket and key supervisory position. Must have BS in Nutrition, Schum Foods, 719). Mats-6 S-8, 10-9
Research opportunity with handicapped and low-impact children. Work with special social interactions in an integrated classroom, providing approximately 10 weeks of research credit or post-dissertation research. Great long. 841-889-8888; Mike Burtte, 325-658-2888.
Immediate openings both full and part-time. All shift open, flexible schedule to fill your needs Apply in person Vista Restaurant, 1527 W. 6th
$3.10 per hour if you qualify. No experience necessary to part-time. Free uniforms, shirts, ties and jeans. People willing to work and apply themselves. If you wish, please contact us at Restaurant, 127 W. 6th St. 10:12
Bueky's drive-in is now taking applications for its 10.5' drive-in in person between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. Bueky's drive-in, 212 W. 7th St., in New York City.
Full-part-time positions available—especially in the areas of data science, information technology, above, below, min wage depending on experience. Apply online at Amore Biotech 185-135 or apply directly to Amore Biotech. pike standard, 6 miles east of Lawrence on Interstate 40.
Wanted: Hard-working individuals to help track programs here at KX. This is a good opportunity to grow athletic program, be traveler. Contact Mike H in room 1341 at the Travel Center. Mail resume to KX Academy.
HELP WANTED
Concessions Vending night weekend maintenence day & 4-8 hrs on or off 5th or 6th year round (100) 6-9 hrs on or off 7th year round (12
COOK 10 a.m. - 2:30 or 3 p. m. M- pome weeknight when KU is its session and off during KU dinner at the general restaurant cooking. Apply in person at the Opportunity Action Manager office. Employer:
THE MOVFEE-BEERS BAND is now holding auditions for the male vocalist cockade, vocalist guitar, vocalist roadie. Serious individuals only Call 822-645-8331, 843-0331, 841-0331.
Shenanigan's 21 needs bid tender, waitresses
Bradford's 40 needs bid tender, Contact Jobo
844-635-6494 or come to 901 Michigan Ave.
The Department of Microbiology, University of California, Berkeley, seeks a Research Assistant to begin on or after October 1987. Reqs: Master's degree in biology, chemical, immunochemical and in vitro rail control, or equivalent experience in Microbiological research. The appointment will be for a minimum of six months, commensurate with education and Hasson's 641-537 or 643-441. AnEqual Opportunity Employer and women of all races and persons with disabilities may apply.
DRUMMERS Thumbs auditioning--days, call 842-0191 ask for Steve or 812-254 ask for Marty, call 841-7677 ask for Kevin. 10-8
LOST
Lost-Green Fluid Mechanics Text and Yellow Notebook. Left in open pocket outside Union Bookstore. Call 845-830-6800 at 5 p.m. 10-2
Indian bracelet, lost at Waton Lake Library, retrieved 19.9. Seventh-century reward. Returned. 6230
10-2-12
Lost- Thin-gold bracelet with initials C J. E.
Call 841-8509 10-3
$10 reward for lost brown organizer hilbald.
Contents can not be replaced. Baby depends on
the medical cards. Call Mrs. Michail. 842-7282
or 843-6900. No questions. 10-5
Last set of keys on key ring with large brass
"E" attached. If found call 814-9018. Reward.
Lotte-71-58 calculator in Learned, either room
2061 or 4009 Thursday, 9:27 Call. 811-8570
or 842-7457 Beward offered. No questions asked.
Butterfly key chain, with 6 keys lost in front of Wesco 9 277. Call 844-1619 after奖励. Wear: 10-4
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS BINDING COPYING -The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their bindings and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you #89 M8 or phone #426-3101. Thank you.
NOTICE
Vista Restaurant, open daily 'til midnight. Fri.
and Sat. 'til 1 a.m. 10-2
Enrol Now! ! In Lawence driving school; receive driving license in 4 weeks without highway patrol test! Transportation provided, drive now pay later. 842-6015. 10-12
Lawrence Jayhawk-Kennel Club will need at least two years of experience with the Douglas County H-4 Fairground by master by Major B. W. O'Neill, Commander of a program with the Douglas County Fairground. For further info call 842-301-6150.
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 841-5564. **tf**
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control, Coupling Tubal Ligation. For appointment. Oncology. Outpatient. 480-3641 109th St. Overland Park, KS
TENNIS AND RAQUETTE PLAYERS. When playing tennis, a raquette requires request of David Bell 845-720, Member Specific Assumptions. Asum and Official Stringer WCT Doubles. Very reasonable rules on good play. 10-11
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Heart-
quarters, 841-2345 and KU info. 8641-3506.
Only $3.00
at the door;
$2.50 7th Spirit
Club Mem.
Wednesday Night!
Rock 'n Roll from England
with
THE ONLY ONES
with Lawrence's own
The Regular Guys
THE ONLY ONES
HOUSE
Doors open at
8:00—show at 9:00
Newton
Doorhouse
Call for concert info. 842-6930
If you're looking for a bar with cheap beer, pool or wood-fired pizza, you probably can't be a crazy people like the Harbour Hotel in New York City. But Friday afternoons for TGIF New York, where The Harbour Hotel Get your ship together at t
Monotheistic DOCTINE OF Reincarnation in the Torah, the Prophets and the Gospels. Write: 'The Truth of Islam, P.O. Box 494, South Bend, Indiana 46244'
PERSONAL
Paid for by **AN IDEAL COALITION** vote October 3 & 4F 10-4
WOMEN'S SELF-DEFENSE CLASSES START-
up in sign up in Women's Coalition Office, IU.
Caintin Carbo, Gordo, Cowboy Dan: How about food, fun, the 5th? RSVP: The Bruins. 10-2
PRINGLE *WARNERIES* Class learn about the aur energy center, center妙 and index学. Class start Thursday, evening, Oct 11. Cost $10 for 10 weeks. Call Ree Lesnard, 866-754-2391.
MUM SALE - Parents Day, Oct 6 at Union or
Stadium; Mum camion $2.75.
10-5
Vista restaurant open daily 'til midnight. Fri.
and Sat. 'til 1 a.m. 10-2
Dreamer, Happy 18th! Go for it! Her majesty and the mouse.
10-2
Whits, male, Graduate seeks mature female for a happy life together. Write P.O. Box 3355, KC,
KS 60103. 18-5
Fairy Tale Theology isn't for kids! Learn why 7 p.m. Toddies at the Baptist Student Union, 1629 W. 19th. Want details? Transportation? Call 841-8001.
Get a winning reaction with IMAGINACTION!
Paid for by Imagination.
10-4
Why does the KU Committee on South Africa support genocide of 3 million South Africa?
Offer a one-word or short sentence.
"CONG. OUT OF BUSINESS SALE!" Drawing from 200 Proofs on the Architectural Murals by phone #863-5211 Cust of checks payable to Markey or
SOK—Happy 20th Birthday—Looking forward to many—Love Me! Buddy. 10-2
Father Time. May we always remember the lightning night. Happy Anniversary Mother No-
LAW STUDENTS—Git rowdy this Friday! It's
Country Western Swing time at Shiloh's (c/o
2-1-2!)
18-5
Michael. Glikillek Geburstung! Did you get your blue bows? Love, Cindy. 10-2
**NURD.** It's great to be back together again. A month without you is torture, but just a day when you make up for it. You're the greatest-1 love you Comy. **10-2**
Join us in singing the Glory of God with the West Side Presbyterian Church Choir, 1124 Kasidol. For more information call 843-1542 or 842-0236.
JOBS ON SHIPS American, Foreign. No experience required. Excellent job. Worldwide travel. Summer with airfare. Send $300 for information regarding flight. Mail 812-509-4959. Washouge, WA 98052. 10-17
SERVICES OFFERED
**EXPERT TUTORING** MATH 609-102 call
7583. MATH I TUTORING STATISTICS STATISTICS
7583. MATH I TUTORING MATH 609-102 call
7583. PHYSICS 400-600 call 843-903 ENGLISH
AND SPANISH 400-600 call 843-903 ENGLISH
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $200 for your
308-page catalog of college research. 10,250
topics listed. BOOK 502KXL. Los Angeles, CA.
90255) (213) 477-8226. 11-7
SPANISH TUTORING. Experienced teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108,
109, 111, 112, 116. Call 841-2467. TF
The Bike Garage--complete professional bicycle repair. Garage specialty--"Tune-Ups" and "Total-Ovation." Details call 841-2781. 10-22
Tutoring and Consulting available. Applied Statistics for Education and Psychology. Related computer applications and technical writing. 842-3303 16-2
SERVICES OFFERED
I do damned good typing. Peggy: 842-4476. TP
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-1980. TP
TYPING
Do it once ... right Straight Arrow Auto Service. Quality repairs on most domestics and imports. Socalizing in Flat, Honda and Toyota.
9.208, EJ 831, 843-2442.
10-7
Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Themes, dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127. TF
Journaym typographer. 20 years typing/type-
setting experience. 4 years academic typing;
thus, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest
Sectile equipment. 82-1484. TP
Experienced Typid-stem papera, theses, misc. electric IBM Solicet. Proofreading spell corrected. 843-854 Mrs. Wright. **TP**
Experienced typist—Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 843-5910. TF
Experienced, typist—theses, dissertations, term papers, mile. IBM correcting selections. Barb 84-3138; evenings 82-230. **If**
All kinds of typing expertly done. Fast, accurate service, low rates, 845-3653 evenings and weekends 10-2
I would like to type your term papers, thesis,
dissertation, etc. Reasonable rates. Karen. 842-
3322 10-4
Named some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Clady at 863-8544, 4 p.m.
Contact Andy at 863-8544, 4 p.m.
Will type pages, book reviews, etc. 861-8540
10-2
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct. Selectric. Call Elin or Jeannain, 841-2727.
MASTERMINDS professional typing fast. Fast, accurate. Spelling, grammar corrected. Cfi 111-2731.
Roommate roommate to share nice 1 bedroom apt,
$110. Fully furnished, phone 841-8390. 10-3
Good condition, used typetype. Prefer office model. Call Jan. 843-1798. 10-3 Female roommate wanted. Call Steve. 841-2054 after 5.00
WANTED
Need to buy THIS WEEK—Used bird cage for
Wanted: Counter help day and night. Kentucky
Fried chicken: 842-312-618, 58 W 2nd St. 10-5
Typewriter table in good condition, call 842-
4544 after 5 p.m.
Need mature roommate to a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. Bus stops in front, have a pool and laundry one back away. $55 plus utilities. Please call between 6 p.m., 8 p.m., 10 a.m.
Need to buy THIS WEEK—Used bird cage for two hamsters. K64-864-653. 10-8
Motorcycle trailer. Standard size automotive wheels on any. Any condition considered. Mon - Tues. Fri - Sat. 10am - 6pm.
VANTED for immediate occupancy. Student
inmate seat. VOTE FOR ALAN PTACKE 10-4
Jazz Band
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansa.
Classified sells it. Just mail
in this form with check or
ordertail Hall. Use our rates to
figure costs. Now you've got
it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Thursday 5 pm
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here: ___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.03 .03 .04 .05
3 times
$2.50
03
RATES:
15 words or less
2 times $2.25 .02
3 times $2.50 .03
**WORDS WORTH**
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
DATES TO RUN:
NAME:
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
12
Tuesday, October 2, 1979
University Daily Kansan
This Weekend Take Your Parents To A Campus Tradition
New Members
Always Welcome
STUDY BREAK!
Special Prices
TONIGHT
10-11 pm
Mingles
Disc
Rn
Intimate
Environment
MINGLE TONIGHT!
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat & Sun 6 pm - 1 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th 842-7O30
Plastic
TUBE & BEAD
CURTAINS
$5.00
Reg. $15.00
36" x 72" • Assorted Colors
HAAS
IMPORTS
1029 Massachusetts 843-0871
HAAS IMPORTS
1029 Massachusetts 843-0871
--tuesday Nights at the
Flamingo Club is Ladies Night
50° Drinks for ladies all day and night.
501 North 9th Open memberships available
Open 11 am-3 am
Campus
Holeaway
THE HIDEAWAY
The Campus Hideaway began in February 1957, featuring five kinds of Pizza and Coke. The menu has been expanded to include an unlimited choice of Pizza combinations, Spaghetti (5 kinds), and other Italian and American entrée.
To enhance bare walls and atmosphere over the years, artworks have been purchased -from coast to coast-at art shows and through personal consignment. All the art pieces are part of the Hideaway's private collection and number about 100 (oils, prints, watercolors, and sculptural reliefs). The stained glass was acquired when a church, built in the 1890's, was razed in Central Missouri.
The Hideaway's philosophy has never changed-the best food for the best price in a pleasant, warm, and unique atmosphere.
106 N. Park
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
843-9111
Bath time!
robin's nest
Bath & Kitchen Shoppe
212F07 West 25th 841-3330
Remember:
A 10% Discount
On Everything In Store
Holiday Plaza
Next to General Jeans
841-3330
Mon-Sat 10:00-6:30
Discount Exclude Sales Items
Thursday 10:00-8:30
Western Store
**SHIRTS:** Snap Front and Sleeve Yoked Shirts In Plaids or Plain
FOR THE REAL WESTERN WEARER
H
JEANS: LEE & WRANGLER
Check Our Boot Selection --Biggest In Town Bring this ad for 15% off.
HATS:
Western Jeans From $13.20 to $15.75
By Betson and Miller
RAACH BRIDGE SHOP
ENGLISH WESTERN WEIRDER HORSE AIDS
lokdy Plaza - 25th & Iowa - Lawrence, Kansas 842-841
"Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence"
P E T S T E P
P E T S T E
Reg. $40
SALE $36
Free Frisbees on Petstep Frisbee Day Sat. Oct. 6 Free without Purchase 4-6 p.m. Free All Day with $2.50 Purchase Malls Shopping Center, 23rd & Louisiana
Available at the Kansas University Bookstores Kansas University and the Satellite Union We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
scientific and statistical functions
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
GIVES YOU WHAT YOU WANT
WHEN YOU NEED IT
The Texas Instruments TI-50
-2 continuous memories
— slimline and beautifully designed
TI-50
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
A B C D E F G H I J
K L M N O P Q R S T U
V W X Y Z
下
BEST SELLING MARKETPLACE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
Special
Receive a free Canson Mi-teintes paper pad with the purchase of any Rembrandt pastel set!
pen&inc.
art supplies
0123 vermtown 8411777
Rock, Disco, Jazz, etc. Large Selection of Paraphernalia
Guaranteed Used LP's
$2.25
15 West 9th 842-3059 We Buy Records
RECORDS
ACME cleaners 3 Convenient Locations
Hillcrest
Malls
3 Convenient Locations
843-0895
- 843-0928
Saturday Service - In by 9 - out by 4
LOVE
on Most Dry Cleaning
10% Discount
Items for Cash and Carry
Downtown - 843-5156
LION
MANE TAMERS
841-0906
10th and Mass.
Introducing
Linda Hinkle — perm and color
Berniece Garber — men's and women's
Dee Williams — hair design
$3.00 off
men's or women's
hair design
$5.00 off
with this ad—expires Oct. 8
$5.00 off
perm or
highlighting
USED CARS
THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
THIS WEEK'S S
1978 CELICA ST 5-SPEED
1978 CELICA GT LIFTBACK AUTO
1978 CELICA GT LiftBACK 5-SPEED
QUALITY
you expect it...
your get it!
Stereo Radials 31,000 Miles
A/C. Stereo Radials
P/S, P/B $1,688.00
P/V, P/B $1,688.00
Lawrence Toyota Mazda
Lawrence Auto Plaza 842 2191
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 10 cents off campus Wednesday, October 3, 1979
Federal team inspects derailment
RvMARK SPENCER
Staff Reporter
A team of 11 investigators from the University of Alabama arrived in Lawrence last month to try determine why an Antrik train detailed yesterday, leaving two men dead and scores wounded.
Officials at Lawrence Memorial Hospital had 69 persons had been treated after 16 cars of the 18-car train, carrying 182 passengers, jumped the tracks at about 6.10 am yesterday near Fourth and Ohio State Universities. The war was the second most in Antrik history.
The worst accident claimed 11 lives in a high speed crash at Toni, Ill., on June 10, 1971 the year Amtrak service was created.
Twenty persons were held overnight at Lawrence Memorial. Five of the injured were in intensive care and two required surgery.
Robert Charles, 61, of Omma, a bartender on the train, and T.R. Siegh, 39, of Chicago, a sleeping car porter, were killed, officials said.
The Federal Railway Administration in Washington yesterday confirmed witness and railroad officials said was running late, traveling in excess the 30 mph speed limit.
THE TEAM OF NTSB investigators, which includes Elwood T. D. Driver, vice chairman of the team, has held an interview at the time last night, said Brad Dunbar, a member of the team.
A total of 25 to 30 federal and local officials will be involved in the investigation, he said. The investigators will concentrate on mechanical, operational, track and human factor aspects of the accident.
Five railroad safety experts and a human factor expert are included in the team, which hopes to have a preliminary report by midmorning today. Daquar said.
The Federal Railroad Administration said speed record devices in the train's three engines showed that the train was traveling at 18 mph when the derailment occurred.
HOWEVER, H.R. BIR, regional director of the FRA, said the tapes had not been double checked to determine their accuracy.
The Kansan obtained a photograph of the speed record device located in the first engine of the train (see back page). A gauge mounted on the wheel showed a speed of 93 mph.
A spokesman for Chicago Pneumatic Tools Co., which manufacture the gauge, said the needle locked when an accident occurred.
"Once the accident has happened and the train stops, there is no reason for the needle to drop." Robert Rook, sales engineer for Chicago Pneumatic, said.
See stories, photos back page
"Once in a while, the needle sticks," he said. "But it never shoots up and sticks."
Bird also said that he had encountered instances when the needle on the speed indicator had stuck.
BUT HE SUGGESTED that the needle might have become stuck in the 90 mph zone, immediately preceding the 30 mph zone where the train crashed.
Bird said he did not think the train could have been traveling at 93 mph at the time of the accident. If it had been, he said, the crash would have been much worse.
While the FRA's investigation strategy was being planned, work crews struggled to right cars and engines that crisscrossed nearly 200 feet of girdled track. The crews began replacing the track section by section, working west along an area stricken
Officials said they hoped the area would be cleared by today.
More than 20 organizations, including Lawrence and KU police, the Lawrence Fire Department, the Kansas Highway Patrol
and area ambulance and rescue units. assisted in rescue operations.
FIREMEN, POLICE and citizens worked to free passengers and crew members trapped in the cars. Area ambulances, taxis and buses transported the injured to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and took them home. Lawrence Community Building, 15 W. 11th.
Buses took passengers from the Community Building to Kansas City, Mo., where arrangements were made for them to proceed to their destinations.
the engineer of the train, identified by an official contractor, was in stable condition. Lowered Memorial last night. Bird said doctors had not indicated when Graham could be interviewed.
"It is my understanding that some of the crew may not have traveled the route before," Bird said.
THE DEREALED train, bound for CHICAGO that had been connected in New York one train, the Southwest Limited, originated in Los Angeles and the other, the Lone Star,
The Lone Star was to be discontinued Monday, but a federal judge in Wichita issued a temporary restraining order last week that kept it running.
Anti-racists seek march approval
Rv.JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
Organizers of a Homecoming Day anti-racism march from the University of Oklahoma to the White House, ask KU administrators and the Lawrence Police Department to approve their pro-racism initiative.
The proposed committee is jointly sponsored by the International Committee Against Racism and the progressive Labor Party, a Marxist-Leninist organization.
Paul Shawalter, incAR member, said yesterday that the march was scheduled for Oct. 27 to commemorate the 120th anniversary of slave-slavery raid on Harper's Ferry, W.Va.
Ann Eversole, director of the office of student organizations and activities, said
Showalter said he would meet with Richard Stanwick, Lawrence police chief, to discuss the protest. He said he would meet later with KU officials to secure permission for the protests.
her office had not been contacted by INCAR or the Progressive Labor Partv.
"If someone just wants to walk down the sidewalk," she said, "he doesn't need our permission. It depends on whether they want to walk under KU Police Department in their parquet."
Mike Wilden, Lawrence assistant city manager, said the marchers also had to obtain approval from the police department and have a driver assigned to design disrupted homecoming activities.
Eversole also said that the route selected by the marchers could have an effect on the administration's decision. Officials in campus are advised that university students would have to be consulted, she said.
10
"THE MARCH will start at about the same time as the football game," he said.
some time as the football game," he said. Shawater that at least 100 players from the Midwest to participate in the march. The organizers hope to attract 200 more marriers from the U.S.
Helping hands
Rescuers lower a seriously injured passenger to safety after an 18-car Amtrak train dared near four Ohio and Illinois streets yesterday. Two persons were killed and 69 injured in the second worst accident in the history of Amtrak in terms of fatalities. More than 20 organizations responded to the accident.
RICHARD B. HOPKINS
Whitey Herzog
Herzog's firing elicits criticism
"They're not renewing my contract," said a pale, shaken Herzog moments after emerging from general manager Joe Lester. "And it was for the good of the organization."
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Whitely-Zerog, who guided the Kansas City Royals to three straight division championships, will play at the club braced for a critical of criticism.
The ticket office said that within an hour of the firing, 44 people had called to cancel tickets for George Brett and including all-stars George Brett and Darrison Porter, bitterly denounced the
Herzog has long been one of the most popular men in Kansas City, and reaction from fans and players was swift.
Herzog, 47, was hired in July 1975 to replace Jack McKeen and inherited a few of his grandchildren. The Royals immediately came together and finished second that year to Oakland in the season.
They won the division title the next three years, each time losing to the New York Yankees in the American League playoffs.
This year, with pitching efficiency at its lowest point since Herzog arrived, the club finished three games behind California.
Burke said firing Herzog was the most agonizing decision he had ever made and the one that brought his opinion, it was not a result of personality conflicts between Herzog and owner Burke.
"It's been a good four and a half years," said Herzog, who has made his home in nearby Independence, M., since 1899. He had the bad idea where he would work
"I know the fans will disagree because they don't know the reasons why I did it. And the reasons, I will not discuss. I felt it was time for a change."
"There comes a time when you have to make a decision," he said, refusing to explain why Herzog was fired.
"It's easy for people who don't know the tests to criticize," he said. "I know that by knowing the tests, I can be wide open for a ton of criticism. But I'm not going to do anything to hurt Wilshtey."
The Royals said they had not interviewed anyone for the manager's job.
"I'll just go home and wait for somebody else to get fired. I guess."
Burke said he thought many of the reported rifts between Kauffman and Herzog had been blown out of proportion.
Brett said, "I think he got fired because of being a bad manager. I think he had to learn how to handle him between him and Burke or between him and the owner. I don't think you can find a job."
An angry Porter said he hoped Hergert would go to the National League. "I'd hate to have that guy managing me," he said. "I've got anybody who can do as good a job."
Burke said he thought Herzoe had been a good manager. "I think Whitzle was a good manager," she said. "I also think of lot of things happen to you because of circumstance." I love to help you.
"I've agonized over this one. We delayed it a year, and now if we delay it another year, then another year . . . Well, it was too much," she said. "I don't want to take the easy way out.
"I told Whitey when he left here I hoped he would find something very quick, and I said my friend would always be open to him."
Burke said he hoped to be able to help Herzor find another position
"I think the people close to the situation know why I did it. I'll just take the brunt of the attack."
Bennett eyes Senate seat
Robert B. Frennett, former governor of Kansas, said last night that he would "take a serious look" at running in 1980 for the senate seat now occupied by Sen. Robert
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Bennett was in Lawrence to speak to about 50 college Republicans at the Kansas Union.
"Let's put it this way," he said. "I've been in government for nearly 25 years. I would say having served in government that long is like the old horse that used to pull the cart."
"Once you get retired involuntarily, every time you hear the fire bell ring, you get all excited, stop eating, want to set something on your back and run down to the fire."
Some of Bennett's campaign funds from his 1978 gubernatorial race are still intact. He said the money was being used "by bit 'bit," but "had not been spent completely."
"I still have the desire for public service and will serve that desire in any way I can. I intend to keep all my options open."
BENNETT SAID he would consider running for two public offices.
If Dole decides to abandon the Senate race in favor of the presidential race, Bennett said, he might run for the position.
A. L. BALDEN
But if the 1980 option is not available.
Robert F. Bennett
Bennett said, he will consider opposing Gov. John Carlin in a 1982 gubernatorial rematch.
Bennett declined to comment on Carlin's performance as governor during the past year.
"it's far too early to judge the current governor's action. I will not at this point judge or prejudice him. But I might in the future."
Bennett talked about the Republican Party in general, saying it had suffered by not actively recruiting minorities.
Bennett also declined to predict who would win the Republican presidential primary, but said later he would support Dole as late as the senator was in the race.
"As the stereotypes we have allowed ourselves to be, we have ignored groups of minorities and allowed them to presuppose that they were not welcome.
"Historically, the Republican Party has turned its back on labor. We have presupposed that the laboring man is a Democrat
"That is not true. Labor has survived because we have a good free enterprise system."
HE SAID labor groups were beginning to realize that their jobs depended on free trade. The unions, United Auto Worker's a recent request to the federal government for a loan to Chrysler
"As long as we are stereotyped as the rich, affluent and plump," said, "as long as we are black and laborer. Protestants not Catholices, whites not blacks and Chicanos, then it is sort of difficult to expect individuals who really need to move in our space [of flag and help carry our banner]."
Pope decries war and poverty before New York's affluent, poor
NEW YORK (AP) - Pope John Paul II is expected to address the nation's Nations to Harlem and the South Brooklyn yesterday, speaking to statement and street crowds alike about the war and war crimes.
At the United Nations, the pope pleaded for the elimination of war itself rather than just a reduction in the arms used to provoke confrontation.
He gave his cautious backing to the SALT Treat it but criticized the world's superpowers for resisting "concrete proposals for re-dismantling" by building up their bases.
The most comprehensive speech on international affairs of his year-old papacy was delivered to 152 representatives in a United Nations General Assembly. The pope stressed that world peace could be achieved only through the enforcement of human rights.
Tucking the Middle East conflict for time in such explicit terms, John Paul II recognized that agreements between Egypt and Israel, but retattered Vatican policy that "a general agreement could not be reached."
JOHN PAUL, spoke from the same black marble podium where his predecessor, Paul VI, stood 14 years ago to urge "No more wars. Wars never again."
include the consideration and just settlement of the Palestinian question."
Later, at New York's St. Patrick Cathedral later at 10,000 people greeted him, many of whom were in poverty. In poverty-striken Harlem, he urged his mostly black audience to be "messengers of love."
"IN A SPECIAL way my heart is with the poor, with those who suffer, with those who are alone in the midst of this teaming
John Paul backed the late pontifix' request that Jerusalem be turned into an open city, a rejection of Christians, Moslems and Jews. But he made no reference to Israel's takeover at the city.
THE ONLY OTHER specific mention of world conflicts was his voicing of a hope for peace, "The United Nations territorial integrity" of Lebanon and a reference to the Vatican's active role in year reducing armed conflict between Israel and Hamas in the two predominantly Catholic countries.
metropolis," the pontif' said beneath the vaulted ceilings of St. Patrick's.
The pope also visited the largely Hispanic South Bronx. His last duty was celebrating Mass before 70,000 at Yankee Stadium.
THE POPES DAY was touched by the American poet Robert F. Shakespeare, a latter yesterday sang the pope's life was in danger, police raided a house in Elizabeth N.,2 and found a semi-annual meeting.
A regional alert was issued for a Spanish-speaking man identified as Alfonso Roberto Gustave, 36, a truck driver who reportedly lived in the apartment. New York City police said he was thought to be connected with the attack. The armed The Argued Front for National Liberation.
Michael McDonnell, FBI spokesman, said the letter told police to check a house at 1082A Madison Avenue in the northern New Jersey city.
"The pope, his life is in jeopardy," McDonnell said the letter read. "Check out this address."
The FBI refused to give more details about the letter because they said it was evidence.
---
2
Wednesday, October 3.1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansan's Ware Services.
U.S. troon counter lambasted
The Soviet Union lashed out yesterday against military moves to offset Soviet troops on Cuba, charging that Washington was seeking to escalate "gunboat战" on the island.
In the Kremlin's first detailed comment on Carter's Monday night broadcast address, Tass, the official news agency, said that the president and his advisers had been seeking to exploit "a myth that they themselves created" to exacerbate tensions and press for bigger military outlaws.
Carter announced in his speech the temporary stationing of 1,500 marines at the U.S. base at Guantanamo in Caba and creation of a new permanent joint task force.
In other reactions to Carter's speech, two of America's most influential allies, France and West Germany, said that the Cuba issue was not so important that it would be ignored.
Debate over the troops' presence has delayed consideration of the ALF agreement signed by Cartier and Soviet President Leonid Levin. Breezhvai in Vienna.
SALT II faltering in Senate
WASHINGTON—Republican leaders in the Senate said yesterday that the SALT II treaty could not be ratified now, partly because President Carter has failed to separate the pact from the continuing furor over Soviet combat troops in Cuba.
The Senate's Democratic leadership, however, fought to save the treaty, saving Carter has succeeded in demonstrating that the presence of 2,600 soldiers in Cuba in no way overshadows the importance of a treaty to control the nuclear arms race.
The debate over ALT II continued despite Carter's effort in a nationally broadcast speech Monday night to separate the issue from the Soviet troops in
In his speech, Carter said that he had not won agreement from the Soviets on changing the status of the Soviet troops and that he planned to increase U.S. involvement in the war.
In the Senate, Republican leader Howard H. Baker of Tennessee said he found Carter's response to the Soviet troop issue "disappointing and inadequate" and said his count showed SALT II would attract less than 60 votes if a final vote were held now.
The votes of 67 senators are needed for ratification.
Broken pipe vents radioactivity
RED WING, Minn. — A steam tube at the Prairie Island nuclear generating plant here ruptured yesterday about 2:30 p.m., spawning radioactive gases into the atmosphere for 27 minutes, a Northern States Power Co. spokesman said. However, the amounts were so small that they could not be detected outside the facility.
NSP spokeman Wayne Kaplan said that a general emergency had been declared at the plant, 28 miles southeast of Minneapolis-St. Paul, after the ruptured tube allowed radioactive gases to be released inside the plant and into the environment.
Kaplan said one of the two generators was shut down immediately after the small rupture was detected, but the second unit continued to operate under the same system.
Storm ends balloonists' hoves
SPENCERVILLE, Ohio. The flight of the气缸半胱装 balloon, Daini Vincel Trans-America, ended abruptly early yesterday after it was pelted by rain, snow and ice, and threatened by lightning, said Rudolph Engelman of Roulet, Colo.
Chief pilot Vera Simons, of McCleane VA., suffered a broken leg during the balloon's emergency landing in a soybean field here. She underwent surgery to repair her knee.
Engelmann, along with Fred Hyle, an eye surgeon from Prairie Village and NBC cameraman Rundy Bird, suffered only bruises.
The storm, which Engelmann called "a fluke," ended the hopes of the four balloons to complete the first non-stop transcontinental flight across
While waiting for word on Simons' condition, Engelmann said he would not attempt the journey again.
Rock Island payments outlined
WASHINGTON—The Interstate Commerce Commission yesterday sought to clarify which expenses the federal government would pick up in support of the Kansas City Terminal Railway Co.'s takeover of the strikebound Rock Island railroad routes.
In letters to railway President V.E. Coe and to Fred Kroll, head of the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerk, the ICC said that the company would be expected to pay health and welfare benefits to Rock Island employees due to their strike, as well as during the 80-day period it will be operating Rock Island lines.
The ICC directed the KCT to take over Rock Island routes in an emergency order issued Sept. 26, and has been working with railroad representatives on the
Railroads directed to provide service along another railroad's routes are compensated by the federal government for any losses incurred.
Meanwhile, T. Scott Bannister, a lawyer for the Iowa Department of Transportation who has been representing the DOT in liquidation hearings on the Rock Island, said William Gibbons, trustee for the bankrupt Rock Island Lines, had obstructed the way toward reservation of services.
Bannister said Gibbons had continued to raise questions and objections during discussions by union and management on resumption of service on the Rock Island and also had hampered the transfer of management duties by withholding important management information.
Jurors screened in fraud trial
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Jury selection began yesterday in the trial of 11 men associated with the bankrupt Progressive Farmers Association who face charges for stealing millions from the bank.
Attorneys spent most of the day questioning 61 prospective jurors from whom 12 jurors and four alternates were to be selected.
Two more defendants were removed from the list of those facing trial, leaving only 11 of the 22 persons originally indicted by a federal grand jury last
Federal authorities say PFA and its satellite cooperatives bilked about 20 million from investors in 11 states through cooperatives in Missouri, Oklahoma,
The government dismissed charges against William F. Suekandan, 57, of Springfield, while former state representative Paul Canady, 39, of Springfield, pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy to violate racketeering laws. As part of the pled-garbage arrangement, a charge of violating securities law was
Defendants in the upcoming trial include PFA founder Russell Phillips, 47 and three PFA principals Durance Chouder, 38, Bard Kleedso, and Donald E. Klein.
Phone companies face inquiry
TOPEKA- The Kansas Corporation Commission announced yesterday that it would begin scrutinizing telephone companies in Kansas to determine whether they are complying with state and federal laws.
Depending on the staff findings and the responses from the companies, the KCC will decide whether to hold hearings and draw up a "consumer bill of rights" for telephone utilities, which would spell out a uniform code for billing practices, security deposits and service cutoffs.
The KCC said current policies varied greatly from company to company and often were not specific enough. KCC has ordered its staff to study the practices of other companies.
The KCC staff is to complete its study and draft a set of proposed standards by mid-November. Telephone companies will be given 15 days to file responses.
Weather
Today we will be sunny and cooler with temperatures in the 70s, according to the national earlier service in Topeka. Winds will be mild and temperatures will defer from morning to evening.
The extended todes for Friday through Sunday is dry and mild with highs in the mid 70s to mid 80s and lows in the 40s.
Arab prof faults U.S. companies
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
Americans should complain to their oil companies, not to other oil-producing countries, about fuel costs, a professor from Detroit of Damascus in Syria said yesterday.
Houssan AJ-Khath, professor of modern Arabic literature and criticism, told several KU professors at a meeting in Wessex Hall where he did not overcharge the United States for oil.
"The money Americans pay for gasoline goes to their oil companies and to Arab countries." This is a clear reference to the Middle Eastern countries for each barrel of oil is paid by the oil companies and is used to purchase gasoline.
According to U.S. government statistics, the current base price for oil is $2.50 a barrel, but countries like Libya and Iran charge more than $2 a barrel.
"Middle Eastern nations are now becoming aware that industrialization programs will be needed for their countries to survive the time when oil runs out," he
Al-Khabit said countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait used their profits to develop industry for when oil supplies become depleted.
However, Syria, according to Al-Khabit, uses its small profits to develop agriculture.
LAST YEAR Syria exported about 3,500 barrels of oil; Saudi Arabia exported more than three million.
KU is the third American university Al-Khatib and his wife, Muna Lalib, have visited in their week-long tour of the United States.
Kuwait expects its reserves to run out in the late 1980s, he said.
He said that despite increased oil profits, Mideastern industrialization would develop slowly.
Al-Khatib said they had visited D.C., and would go to Princeton University today and Harvard University later this week to learn about America and its culture.
Western industrialization with Western imperialism.
"The Middle East is in a paradoxical situation," he said. "On the one hand, Arabs want a degree of industrialization and the other that go with it. But the memory of colonialism by European countries and an Islamic religious fervor will make rapid industrialization."
"The Iranian Islamic revolution has pulled over into other Middle Eastern countries where the materialism and wealth would keep deep religious Moslems from wanting in order to
"Middle Easterners tend to think of the spiritual crisis of the West. Moslems think the West is a victim of excessive materialism."
"Middle Easterners tend to equate
"Missles will have to become more practical in their beliefs. The Middle East cannot afford to regress to the Middle Ages."
Al-Khatib said he thought his fellow Moslems should allow industrialization, though.
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This classic German film by Phi-
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Forrest Ackerman
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Wednesday, October 3. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Wild West to be theme of parade
3
This year's homecoming theme will be "Kansas—The Real Wild West," by unanimous approval of the 13 members of the KU homecoming committee.
The theme was chosen from more than 30 entries submitted after a contest sponsored by The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill B. J. Pattie, Alumni Association associate director and member of the homecoming committee.
Song titles, movie titles and current events were all suggested.
Greg Schnacke, senior class president,
said this year's homecoming weekend,
begining Oct. 26, renewed tradition at KU.
"Since the riots in the 60s, tradition across the nation went right down the drain," he said. "Now there is not one trade union." Mr. Keru said KU. Perhaps homeschooling will be a start."
A parade down Jayhawk Boulevard will begin the homecoming weekend.
The parade is a result of 10 years of training, and he expects to be a giant success. But in five years, the tradition we set this year will have grown. That will be
The parade will begin at 5 p.m. on Oct. 26 at the Chima Omega Fountain. At 8 a.m., the marching band, ministrators, band members, football players, cheerleaders and mascots will begin the parade.
Floats must pass safety inspection, he said, and packets will explain how to build a mobile float.
Entries will be judged in categories that have not been determined yet, Schnacke said.
Del Shankle, executive vice chancellor,
a Del Shankle alum, did not mention that there was a problem with parking at the parking lot behind the Kansas Union, he needed to check with security and parking authorities.
Schmacke said, "If the parade ends by the Union, it will give everyone interested a chance to see all the floats."
A student-organized fair, an alumni reception and speeches from KU officials are planned for the end of the parade.
A nationally known lecturer will speak in Hoch Auditorium Friday night, Schnacke said.
'We still don't have a contract with the speaker we have in mind. We have to work out a schedule with the speaker, but who it is.'
Paul Gray and the Gassight Gang, a jazz band, Claud Williams and Hay Earhart will perform on Oct. 27 at 9 a.m. in the Satellite Union. Admission is free.
exactly is still unclear. We just don't want to release any names until we know for sure."
Before the football game between Oklahoma State University and the University of Kansas, the winning floats will parade around the stadium track.
Homecoming Day might end with a performance at Hoch Auditorium Saturday night. Almost all of the guests, confirmed, Duke Dive, director of Student Achievement said, he still was trying to hire a band.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
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TODAY: WEDNESDAY FORUM is on "Cuba," by Handelman Helmandan, an American University Field Service representative, at the ECM Center, 1204 N. 15th St., Chicago, IL. SCHOOL PRINCIPALS will discuss "Stress and Stress Management for the Principal." Carl Candiol, KU, will speak at 4:30 p.m in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Entry deadline for INTRAMURAL MIXED QUEBELLETA is at 5 p.m., 282 Robinson.
SALE $190.00
TONIGHT: SAILING CLUB meets at 7 in
the Partiers of the Union. Albert Gerken will give a CARILLON RECITAL at 7.
TOMORROW: THE UNDERGRADUATE ANTHROPOLOGY ASSOCIATION is spawning a lecture by Felix Moon on the topic of *Anthropology Definition*; at 3:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union, GERMAN CLUB will have a hoffeefee at 4:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union, COUNTING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. AURH will meet at 7:13 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. AURH will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union.
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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.
October 3.1979
Carlin helps elderly
Elderly people often are taken advantage of by our society, and their rights as fellow human beings repeatedly are ignored. They are a frequently forgotten minority that has to live with inadequate social care programs and a government seemingly aloof to their problems.
But in recent years, some government officials are becoming more aware of the plight of old citizens and young people; they might fire under various agencies.
Last week, Gov. John Carlin lit up those fires. Charging the state government with ineffective government demanded dramatic policy changes.
"FOR TOO many years, the state agency charged with regulating the nursing home industry (the Department of Health and Environment) has taken a tenient posture in carrying out this responsibility," Carlin said.
"The state has failed to use the statutory tools already available to improve the quality of care provided our elderly in nursing homes."
Carlin outlined a five-point plan of fines, non-renewal of operating licenses and withdrawal of state
financial aid for nursing homes which violate state codes.
BUT THE MOST important point in the governor's plan is possibly the proposed and badly needed strengthening of the Department of Health and Environment's power over nursing homes.
The agency is marked by a weakness rooted in its time-consuming paperwork and bureaucratic regulation.
The governor said he wanted new laws passed by the Legislature to make it easier for the state to fine owners of substandard nursing homes and to give the agency more power in the issuance of permits and licenses.
These changes, if effectively implemented, could mean safer and more humane living conditions for elderly people who are at the mercy of nursing home owners for their safety and well-being.
Carlin's action is to be applauded, not only for its potential benefit for older citizens, but also for the governor's ability to see the state's ineffectiveness in fulfilling its responsibilities to all citizens. Rather than ignoring that ineffectiveness, Carlin quickly stepped in and made demands that could quickly help our deprived elderly.
A friend returned recently from a visit to his home in update New York. He was sad and a little bit angry about what was happening at the Olympics games in February.
"It brings a lot of money into an area that has been economically depressed for a long time," he observed. "But I question who is going to benefit it by."
"It it sure isn't going to be the ordinary people who live and work there."
Olympics may churn Lake Placid
While the haveves double or triple their assets with the millions of dollars that will be spent in the area, the havezs will find that they can keep up with the ensuing expenses.
HE WAS talking about something a lot of people in Lake Placid have already discovered--that those who have the least stand to lose the most.
stany have already felt the pinch, as landlords harden their hearts at the prospect of the dollars they can make.
Two women living in a $250 - month Lakes
Placid apartment were given notice—the
landlord had found someone willing to pay
$4,000 for the month of February.
THE OWNER of a photo supply store on the town's main street was told to pack up his inventory—he couldn't afford the sky-rocking rent.
Two young women, living in a cabin 50 miles from Lake Pleacid, decided to move after the landlord suddenly jacked up the rent by $100 per month and expected to expect an annual rate in January.
Part of the problem, ironically, is the $49 million complex that was built to house the Olympic athletes.
Faced with a Congress that balked at the idea of spending millions on a building that would be useless after the Olympics, Lake Pleich promoted workers out a com
THE OLYMPIC Village would be designed to be a minimum security prison after the games, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons would foot the bill.
But the white elephant that Congress tried so hard to avoid has become almost that
Soviet meddling in Afghanistan represents a no-win situation
It sounds like a very familiar story.
A corrupt dictatorship is battling for its life against a popular rebellion. The guerrillas are wily and tough. They control most of the countryside. Nothing moves on them.
But the dictatorship is the client state of a superpower. That superpower wants to see the present government remain in office for another decade, with amounts of troops and weapons into the country.
BUT THE army is inep and morale is bad. The guerrillas keep gaining ground. They move up the army and show them how to suppress the revolt. Then the advisers start getting killed in action and the revolution starts sent in, and more weapons. They are still not enough. Finally, combat troops go in, and the guerrillas mired in a bloody, vicious guerrilla war.
Vietnam and the United States? No, the revolution is in Afghanistan and the super-power is the Soviet Union.
John COLUMNIST logan
THE GOVERNMENT of Afghanistan has used ruller force in attempting to crush the revolt, including the use of machine gunning and machine gunning of villagers
For more than a year, Moslim rebels in the country have been fighting against the government. So popular is their support that they controlled half the country within a week.
thought to have rebel sympathies. Those tactics are thought to be inspired by the Russian advisers.
But the tactics have backfired, almost all of the populace now supports the guerilla tactics; they have also been insured by the defenses of some units of the Afghanistan army. An entire brigade went over on the rebel side last month, but not before it murdered its Russo-Turkish allies.
Already more than 100 of these advisers have died in the fighting, some reportedly skinned alive or hung on meat hooks. And the revolution is still gaining ground.
SOME ANALYSTS now believe the Russians are willing to send in combat troops to crush the revolt. Already the Russian-backed forces have airbase near the Africanian capital, Kabul, and it is reported that Russians plot most of the country's bombers and helicopter
Russia cannot afford to let the Afghan-
istian regime go under. If it does, it would establish another Islamic republic. Mr. Putin fears that the 30 million Moslems now living in Soviet Central Asia might start their own insurgency if they saw the success of Islamic uprising in Afghanistan.
THE KREMLIN also has its prestige on the line. It has committed itself to support to the beleganted Khalsa (People's Party) in power and to promote the second-in-command of the government gunned down the leader last month to take over the government, the Soviets didn't want to leave the country, but that to do so might topple the new government. Instead, President Leonid Breshnev and Premier Alexei Kosygin sent a telephone message to their congratulations on his "election."
success for the Russians would prevent the United States from using that country as a listening post to watch Soviet military and nuclear arms activity. The United States has been searching for such stations in a monitoring station in Iran last year.
At the same time, the Soviets have very little to gain. Afghanistan might be used as a base for insurgent operations against Islamic State and locked-in nation holds little strategic value.
But Kremmlest preage would be seriously damaged if it had to send combat troops into a third world nation, much as the reputation of the United States was. The war in Afghanistan, like other bat troops appears to be the only way of saving the present government.
lynn COLUMNIST byczynski
even before the games have started. No one wants to stay there for three weeks. And quite a few nations' Olympic committees are moving into town to find other accommodations.
The Norwegian committee has rented two houses for $30,000 for its three-week stay. The Swedish committee has found four houses, at a rate of $22,000. And on so.
ONE CAN hardly balance the athletes for exercise, so they are designed to hold 500 pounds except expected to house 1,400 athletes. The rooms are 10-foot by 7-foot, with bank beds and 15-25-foot stairs.
The Olympic Village, many nations have cried. is an insult to the athletes.
But the games will be brief, and the competitors' discomfort will be minimal, compared to the problems the prison will cause for the lower-class people it will
It will be the young first-offenders housed at the prison who will suffer for the strings that were pulled in Congress to get funding for the Olympic housing complex.
MOST OF the prisoners in the minimum-security program will be from New York, Boston and Philadelphia. They will be urban perversed by rural whites—another Atlasite.
But, worst of all, the prisoners will be a夹
home-from-about 300 miles. And for them they
friends, 300 miles is a long way to travel for
a visit—especially on the one bus a day that
will take them to work.
Lake Flack booster are, nevertheless,
smiling in delight, pointing to the 200 jobs
that construction of the prison and the
Olympic facilities has brought to the town.
FOR LAKE PLACID, that is a big deal—it brings the town's usual 20 percent unemployment rate down to national levels.
But what happens when the games are over and the building boom dies? The jobs will be back at square one, except that the 'ingering inflation may leave them in worse condition.'
Lake Piacak may enjoy a revival as a playground for the Northeast's well-to-do. That what 56 percent of the town's people did when they voted in 1970 to host the names.
It was a big gamble, for even the rich. For those who don't have any chips to lay on the table, the gross commercial spectacle of the Olympics is sure to be a losing game.
POWER
The Visual and Creative
Contributed by L.A. Times Syndicate
1971
Youth culture denies joy of aging
Rv ALLEN M. WIDEM
N. Y. Times Special Features
WEST HARTFORD, Conn.—We all like the feel of a brand new dollar bill, the smell of a fresh-minted penny, the look of a just-delivered car, the sharpness in styling of a newly-arrived jet. We smile宜 watching a toddler seek to balance an ice cream cone amid a proliferation of clutter. We're "newness" oriented as we learn to interact with like men everywhere, we loathe to talk of illness, of pending death.
There's something uncontrollable, to the average person, of the sidelining effect of illness, and there's a saddening sense of permanence in death, and we seek to think young, talk young, whenever. Wherever we'll cheer space exploration, watching entrained at 12-inch, black-and-white suits or a super-deluxe floor, we'll see humans as anxious to look ahead, at least look ahead to the immediate future.
WE DON'T want to hear of the grim days of the 1930s Depression and "Brother, can you spare a dime?" But we grasp the antics of the international social set, dutifully chronicled in the media. The grief was shared with an unspoken satisfaction and does not like to talk of illness, of pending death.
" our country's entire marketing process, as designed and developed by the so-called 'Mad Ave.' (and Madison Avenue is not "mad"—as its cynics may contend but, rather, sales-oriented, and if selling means implying youth, youth, youth in lipstick, in clothes, what have you and what say you, why, then, so be it), can indeed "move" products at a pace never envisioned by America's fledgling marketing apparatus down through the centuries, its to-be-lauded credit—and commendation-of the marketing process.
Cults spring up, magically, almost overnight in the demise of a James Dean, a Marilyn Monroe, a Rudolph Valentino.
W ASSUME lifelong habits as we achieve maturity and we seek to pay our bills, cloth and feed our families, knowing the while that each passing day brings us more understanding, more comfort, more assurance. We listen, we listen more, because no one has all the answers all the time.
Our children are growing in an enormously technical world, where data processing is a fixed component of the economy, and mention of a Studekadeber or a Hudson gives a faint glimmer of hope. We have already seen that great glories, respect the present, and gaze with awaive into the future.
We'll watch a television news anchorman, immaculate in garb, careful in pronunciation, and come to the conclusion that if we speak in English with confidence, we're another youngish man, immaculate, precise in speech, and there's a frightening atmosphere of a never-never land that gives serious consideration to what I believe, William Powell or some other person. You can probably live there, living in California: "Someday you'll wake up and you're 75."
BUT NONE of us wants to be 75, or even 65. We want to be pre-middle-aged, earning a handsome salary, enjoying a brisly paced lifestyle, forever. We don't want to think of the aging process—it's supposed to happen to the other guy, remember? And we don't want to read of terminal illness or anything that'll disturb our process because of our ingrained worship of the youth syndrome.
We can quote the pundits, can re-read the humor, but deep down, we think of the clock ticking on and the need to understand, if not accept, the lifelong count of happiness that is tempered with the harshness of the everyday court.
Allen M. Widem, who was amusements editor of the Hartford,
Conn, Times for 28 years, is a writer.
Meters in O-zone raise questions
To the Editor:
This letter concerns the placement of parking meters on the O-Zone parking lot. A few questions need to be answered regardi- c this move.
1. Who authorized the placing of meters in O-Zone?
2. Were any groups outside traffic and security consulted and when?
3. Was the placement of parking meters announced in advance? If so, where?
9. If you pay 20 cents for one parking cost 80 percent, from 40 to 70 cents a day, for people who work at the University?
As a student paper, the Kansan should look into this matter closely. It would be a service we all would apreciate.
Sorority football story self-indulgent folly
Ronald DeSoignie
Topeka graduate student
and 12 others
To the Editor:
I think the story wouldn't be so bad by itself—and, it being a personal account, it's
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
But I just wanted to see some pictures of what but-actually-petite netman, the hard work that goes into it. (I'll go with "and" (especially) the never-a-hair-out-of place quartackhurt that were all so intriguing.)
appropriate for her to picture herself. Once.
May be twice. But as the main point of
interest in all five photographs? I think it
would be great if someone else decided to
do a story on her - but for her to decide to
a story on herself. And what about the other
story? What would she do if her
sorority had lost the game? What then?
Would Anv have written a story?
Harrisburg accident leaving effects now
I'm sure her house is pleased with the light spotlight camera that she uses to show the faces of her fellow students who are beloved pride. And she certainly has some nice photographs for her scrapbook (good work) and for her class.
We're talkin' you know what I mean?
Phil Thompson
Topeka senior
letters
We're talkin' you know what I mean?
To the Editor:
The current debate regarding nuclear power, which is being held through the University Daly Kansas and in much of this country, involves both facts, and its pseudo-science.
I wonder how many people who spout off with this information have actually talked with people in Harrisburg as I have done. There were people hurt. Five women in an apartment building, two of whom menstruated off cycle during the first days following the "accident." I have a friend in Harrisburg whose hair is falling out, whose sperm count is getting lower and who is suffering from the first spontaneous nose bleeds of his life—all of this since March 20.
supposedly scientific understanding of the issue.
tanner is experiencing swelling, which had not occurred before March 28. A friend tells me that many people are in psychological counseling and result of their recent traumas concerning Three Mile Island. Many of these people are involved in psychological counseling at the clinic where he is employed. But perhaps the most mind are not to be considered as hurt.
For instance, we have those who say that on our own part during the Three Mills incident, they were going on as there is still melting of the core—and we have those folks who say that in their own part there is not melting.
I am experiencing trauma concerning the Wolf Creek plant. The documents spelling out the safety violations there fill three thick piles of concrete. You can assure you that if that plant ever goes on
line, I will have to leave Kansas, just as 120,000 persons left the Harrisburg area out of fear, according to the Pennsylvania State Police.
Do any of you know that there is no quality control for the ultimate heat sink at Wolf Creek, nor has there ever been? That question may be one of the mind are not to be considered as hurt.
Lawrence graduate student
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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Footnote: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65043
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Wednesday, October 3.1979
5
University Daily Kansan
New committees to aid KUAC
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation athletic board yesterday outlined its responsibilities and goals for this year.
Del Brinkman, board chairman, said in dealing with the problem that he became more involved in dealing with problems facing the athletic department through four new committees he had set.
"In the past most of our work was just a reaction to things brought to us by the clients. But now we have joined "With the new committees we hope to involve the board a bit more and get some more input," she said.
The four working committees set up by Brinkman are a finance, a facilities, a marketing and a financials scholastic/academic support committee. Brinkman said each committee chair will serve for the entire term.
The committee chairmen also will be responsible for conferring with committee members and working with them on all issues pertaining to the full KUAC beard, Brinkman said.
Marcum told the board that it would have to look into what could be done to boost football ticket sales at KU Student Union by about 7,000 this year, he said.
women's athletics and trying to contain the exaggerated emphasis that could be placed on intercollegiate athletics.
Dykes said inflation was a problem faced by all universities and Title IX guidelines were a problem because they did not know what will be required of them.
Student season tickets for the remaining four games will be on sale the rest of the week at a cost of $19, he said.
Dykes also said athletics must remain in perspective at universities and not become "the tail that wag the dog."
meeting with Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, to discuss issues Marcum thought were important to the athletic department.
"We've certainly gone far beyond the requirements of our team; we had to as far as spending is concerned. 'We will continue to put more resources into women's athletics as they are."
Chancellor Arche R. Dykes told the board that the three main concerns of athletics were inflation, Title IX guidelines calling for equal funding for men's and
The KUAC athletic board is still a 21-member board, not an 15-member board as reported in yesterdays' Kansan. The 15-member board proposed a proposal that was defeated last year.
The ballet is one of the best and most expensive programs the concert series has offered, and it has become a hallmark. Stuhl, professor emeritus in music performance and coordinator of the concert
performed in cities across the country. Stuhl said. Tonight's performance will include Johann Strauss' "Graduation Ball," a rock by Steve Van Dyke and Stevenson's *Paste De Doe Des*.
"This is one of the three largest balticlets in the country," Stuhl said. "We could buy some balticles for what it will cost us to set up the stage for this one."
Stevenson has been the artistic director of the ballet since 1976 when he left the Chicago Ballet.
Advance tickets for the public for $5, &$4 and $4, student reserved tickets for $1.50 and student general admission tickets for $1 are still on sale in Murphy Hall.
Houston Ballet opens concert series tonight
The concert series will present the
Theater Chamber Players from the Kenne-
dery Center for the Performing Arts in
New York City, the pianist, pian-
will be featured on Oct. 14.
Independent Candidate for Student Senate
GAEBE
The Houston Ballet will begin the first of four performance areas at 8 p.m., and then travel to Kansas City, Mo.
One of the largest ballets in the nation will open this year's KU concert series tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
Don't say "Maybe" Vote for
Paid for by Lauren Gaebe
The ballet, directed by Ben Stevenson, has
WLZR
106
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16
Buy a powerful TI slide rule.
Available At Fortoday...and tomorrow
KU
Jayhawk Bookstore
KU
1420 Crescent
VOTE TODAY
Paid for by Student Activities
MASS. STREET DELI
941 MASSACHUSETTS
Cheese Cake
50¢ reg. price $1.00
No coupons accepted with this special
offer good oct. 3-5
No coupons accepted with this special offer good oct. 3-5
6
Wednesday, October 3. 1979
University Daily Kansan
'Streamers' depicts jarring reality of fears, sadness in Vietnam War
"Streamers," by David Habe, Presented by the KU William I Theatre Series, 8 p.m. Oct. 2 through 7, William I Theatre, Murphy Mall. Harried by Djem Graves with Directed by Toni Nayler. Lighting designed by John R. Cullen; costume designed by Reeza Franceschi.
By RHONDA HOLMAN Entertainment Editor
The agony of the Vietnam War might seem a well-worn theatrical and cinematic subject to some, but KU's production of "Streamers" is anything but tiresome.
Babe's drama is set in a Virginia barracks in 1965, before the war had become a national emotional issue and before she was able to talk. Asia knew exactly what to expect.
The play focuses on what happens to three diverse roommates who have found common ground in their fear of the future when
KANSAN Review
a troubled transient just out of basic training enters their lives. He first shows them excitement and then causes them tracedy.
A streamer, it is explained, is a parachuting soldier who's clute fails to open, streaming twisted and useless above all the water, and his weakness applies well to the men. They seem caught up in the twisted will of the military, with nothing to protect them from a fall into the bloody war. The men's restlessness and confusion are so great that homosexual love and senseless violence
Graves, Lawrence graduate student, has made the most of both the comical and gruesome moments in the play and he
brings the audience close to the sadness of the men.
The cast is uniformly excellent.
Gary Cress Bayles, Aitchison freshman, as the tormented visitor from “P” Company, seemed to be batting a honeous vise to the king and ultimately believable in his knife-wrapping力
Craig Siah, Lawrence junior, was superb in the role of Billy, the college boy next door who is frightened by the ideas of homosexuality, jungle combat and his own
LeWan Alexander, Junction City sophomore, also was moving as the black who has gone beyond his color in his friendship with Billy and Richie.
New Members
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MINGLE TONIGHT!
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From 8:30-9:30 pm TONIGHT
Mon-Fri 4 pm-3 am
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Kevin Keating, Great Bend graduate student, seemed a bit hesitant in his portrayal of Riche, the homosexual who grows apart from his friends.
Naylor, San Antonio, Texas, junior, has draped the army in green garpach fabric that adds to the penned-in feeling of the barracks.
They're called Ambidexter. Wear them with your suit. Or wear them with your jeans. Traditional styling, natural leather. Goodyear welt construction and genuine rubber soles. Their laid-back good looks add style to whatever you're wearing. Ambidexter. The shoes that go both ways.
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Dou Weaver, Marietta, Ga. junior, was too clear-headed in his attempts to avoid the obvious drunken stunner of Sgt. Cokes, but was moving in his final monologue.
A
Complete
Line of
Levi
Socks!
"Streamers" takes a new pre-combat approach to a subject that has been haunted by the violence of slavery. Graves and his cast should be commended for bringing the human drama to KU in a way that is unforgettable.
Jun
James
Monat Tel. 1-866-
844-4450
1002 Massachusetts
address
2545 Iowa - 1835 Mass.
DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER
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OUR PRICES TILL
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US OUT.
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LADIES, TONIGHT IS YOUR NIGHT SO
take
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take
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For You Personally From
This beautiful brilliant ring Only $68.95
Don't Miss This Special Offer!
VISA
master charge
Oct. 4 & 5
Nov. 7 & 8
AT THE KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
AND THE SATELLITE UNION
On Ring Days only this Lustrium ring will be on sale for the price of $68.95.
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
NEW YORKER
THE NEW YORKER
TWO FREE MEAT OR GARDEN TOPPINGS
with the purchase of any size pizza
Pizza
no coupons accepted with this special
offer good Oct 3 to Oct 5
1O21
headmasters
... for all your
hair care needs
843-8808
809 Vermont
Have some fun place a personal ad in the Kansan Classifieds
Get $55 Worth of Calculator Power Free!
Programmable 58C
1. DEATH RECORD MEMORIAL CENTER
Free Software From Texas Instruments and The Kansas Union Bookstores
The T1 Programmable 58C
Features 480 Program Steps
Or 60 Memories or any
combination.
It Also Has TI Constant Memory Feature That Retains Your Program Even When The Calculator Is Turned Off. Plus Plug In Programmed Modules
You Get:
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$20 value
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(From Kansas Union Bookstores) $35 Value
When You Purchase A 58C For $125
Similar Savings On TI-59 Also
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YOUR QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
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We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
---
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 3, 1979
7
City denies variances
By ANN LANGENFELD Staff Reporter
Seven requests by local businesses for sign variants were denied by the City Council in its regular meeting. Three requests were approved and one was tabulated until next week.
Three of the businesses whose requests were denied were given one year to replace their nonconforming signs.
These businesses, the Virginia Inn II, Glenwood Center, 23rd and Louisiana streets, and Henry's Drive-In, 1117 W. Sixth St., have signs that exceed the maximum allowance.
Businessmen also argued that their businesses had been in existence before the ordinance was written.
Ed Pociejewski, owner of the Virginia Inn, told the commissioners that replacement of his sign would cost $5,000 to $8,000.
Commissioner Ed Carter said he would like to give the three businesses a variance based on a grandfather clause because they had been in existence before the ordinance was written. He was the only commissioner to vote for the
Corbet Collins, owner of Henry's Drive-In, said a smaller sign would not give him a competitive edge with the other fast food店. "It's an investment in businesses," Colonel
sanders Kentucky F Fried Chicken, 658 W. 23rd St., Independent Coin Op, Ninth Ave. streets and Tabbell Bldg, 1468 W. 22nd St., to remove their nonconform signs.
Taco Bell and Kentucky Fried Chicken each have three wall signs. The sign ordinance allows only two wall signs.
These businesses were given less time to make sign changes because they will be altering their signs rather than replacing them.
Independent Co-op is in violation of the ordinance twice because it has a roof sign and two signs on one wall that exceed the maximum square footage.
Several businessmen said they did not know about the sign ordinance until two weeks ago when they saw them on the news, then they were not in compliance with the ordinance. Businesses are to be in compliance with the ordinance, passed five years ago, by the end of March.
Clark said that ignorance of the law was not an excuse for noncompliance.
capability of an apartment. Standard Mutual Life Building, Standard Vermont streets, Travelodge Motel, 810, Iowa, and a new printing company. Standard Mutual Life building were given variances for their signs which did not face a right way of the signs. The face signs were standard.
FRESHMEN..
Vote
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Elect X David Adkins, President
X Jim Brull, Vice-President
X Mary Kay Eckberg, Secretary
Mark Sachse, Senator
Responsible, Proven Leadership! Vote Today!
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cover charge $3 includes free beer until midnight
501 N9th
(memberships available)
MALTS & SHAKES
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Edwards, a doctoral candidate at KU in speech communications and human relations, said he hopes to have a program that offers affirmative action programs at KU by making students more aware of their employment rights and of the services offered by the office of affirmative counseling.
Michael L. Edwards has been named acting director of the office of affirmative action for the 1979-80 school year, Delaware's executive vice chairman, said yesterday.
Edwards, who was previously coordinator of the Basic Institutional Development Program at Donnelly College in Kansas City, Kan., will serve as acting director until
Shankel said Edwards was replacing Clerance Dillingham, professor of social welfare, as acting director in the absence of Director Bonnie Ritter. Ritter is an a year's leave of absence while teaching at the university. She will resume her position next August.
Head of affirmative action named
"I plan to meet with many different student organizations," Edwards said. "This way, we'll be able to find out just what students are facing and deal with the problems directly."
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By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
EDWARDS SAID he thought the office of affirmative action could do a great service to students by making its research staff
available to University groups, such as fraternal organizations.
Edwards, a resident of Kansas City, Kan., said he had worked with federal, state and local agencies to develop affirmative action policies while at D.C. Edwards all served as director of
MATTHEW BOWMAN
He received his master's degree in speech communication and human relations from
Michael Edwards
A
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Edwards said he had observed a need to promote the employment of minorities, handicapped persons and women at KU.
KU in studies. He taught courses in African studies and his major at KU, served as a research assistant in speech communication, and tutored for tutor for Supportive Educational Services.
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"THE UNIVERSITY has made great progress that the people in my department and elsewhere have included members of these groups in employment, but there always a way."
starting Oct. 3
Edwards said that because he had been recently hired as director, he was not prepared to outline any specific plans for the office.
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He said the office of affirmative action would be concerned with the ability of minorities to retain their positions once they were hired.
Come See Lois Doane or Susan Copp
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843-3012
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8
Wednesday, October 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Thies looks to spring competition
By PATTI ARNOLD
The yearlong drought is almost over for KU tennis player David Thies.
Now at his third university in three years, Theis is Ineligible to play tennis until the spring semester. He is practicing and playing tennis during summer but is eager for the spring season to start.
"Some teams just want to play our best people now and don't care if its exhibition or not, he said." But there are some teams that don't match that score and match that doesn't count in the team score."
Thies went to Clemson University,
Clemson, S.C.. after he graduated from
IMAGINACTION is the ideal coalition Paid for by imagination
Shawnee Mission East High School in Prairie Village, but left the next year.
"It just wasn't working out at Glennon. There were some personal conflicts with the coach there," he said.
From Clemson, he went to East Texas State University, but left after a month there. He enrolled at KU for the second semester last year. Under NCAA transfer rules, he was granted an all-time. He does have two years of eligibility left after this year.
KANSAN Sports
It was tough to go through negligency, he said. "I lost track of my goals this summer, and last spring hurt me. The teacher was very strict in the practice and to see what other teams look like."
"I'm a lot more enthusiastic about this season. I enjoy working now that I'm working toward something. It helps a lot."
Thies is working toward winning both the Big Eight singles and doubles titles this year and qualifying for the NCAA tournament.
There's not that much to stop me from
"We have a strong team. There's a lot of intra-team competition. I think that's good. Everybody has to work hard to keep their positions.
"We could win the Big Eight if everybody played well. It would come down to the doubles play. That is an important part of our overall success.
"In doubles, your partner has to complement you and you have to complement him. If he makes you look good and you make him look like a fun man. Then it's a thinking man's game."
A professional career is definitely on Thies' mind.
"I've thought about it a lot. There are a lot of good players, but I'm planning on playing for a short period of time. I'll give it a go, and I will play the summer after I turn with college.
Thies said he planned to stay at KU until his two years of eligibility were over.
"I don't see any reason not to stay here. I just hope it doesn't take me that long to win the Big Eight. Our last two Big Eight games were in years, but I don't want to wait that long."
Spikers to play WSU,NU tonight
The KU volleyball team will face one of its toughest tests of the season tonight as the squand travels to Wichita to face Iowa State. The university and the University of Nebraska.
pairs of victories tonight would help KU, which lost to Nebraska in Lincoln last week, in its quest for a berth in the regional playoffs.
Coach Bob Lockwood said that although KU was playing fine volleyball, the Jaya hawks might have a tough time in Wichita.
Lockwood said that one of the team's major weaknesses was its ineffective use of the "bump," or the return of serve.
If we can start returning the server consistently, "locked wood," we will be able to set up our power offense. Once we have it worked, even Nebraska is able to store us.
Another problem the team has, Lockwood said, is not physical but mental.
200
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"The girls need to get a little more experience and start believing in themselves, gaining that mental edge, which we have been doing all this year, then we will really start to show our colors—hopefully we'll be the Big Eight tournament later this month."
As a lawyer's assistant you be performing many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at the Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of your training, you will be qualified for a service will hire an ambitious and challenging job in a law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice.
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SENIORS
SayCheese!
Rappoport Studios will be taking Senior pictures October 1-19 in Spooner Hall call Jayhawker Yearbook for appointment. 864-3728 $1 Sitting fee.Call Now.
STUDIO ONE
HAIR DESIGNERS
Today's Hair Care Center
843-2229
2323 Ridge Court
REDKEN
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106
Remember to Vote Rainbow Duo
Terri Robinson & Pam Lewis
Paid for by Rainbow FB/SOPH. Student Senate Elections Oct. 3-4
The Commission on The Status of Women will be having a meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct 4 at Watkins Scholarship Hall.
Topics to be discussed are:
• Escort service
• Additional lighting and blue phones on the university campus.
Your interest and support will be welcomed.
For further information contact
The Commission on The Status of Women 864-3954 or The Emily Taylor Women's Center. 864-3552
FREE COKE
Now's your chance to meet your senators!
Wednesday October 3rd
in front of Flint Hall
11:30 am-3:00 pm
Student Senate's
Open House
CINCINNATI (AP)—Willie Stargell walloped a three-run-homer offincinnati The Tom Hume in the 11th inning, carrying the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in the opening game of the National League championship series last night.
Open House
Hume was working in relief of Tom Seaver, who had pitched brilliant against Pirate starter John Candelaire for eight innings. The ace of the Red bulden held Pittsburgh off in the ninth and the fifth, both of which the harbormaster single before the decisive 11th.
Tm Foli closed the 11th with a single to left. Matt Alexander went in to run as slugger Dave Parker came to the plate. Dave Parker came to left, which sent Alexander to second.
Bucs win on Stargell shot
Stargell was next. He jumped on the first pitch, catching it and deep to the pitcher's field seat for the pitcher. Pittsburgh threatened to add to its lead, but Redler save Dave Tomlin choked off the ball.
With two out in the bottom of the 11th, winner Grant Jackson surrendered a single to Dave Concepcion and a walk to George Foster, bringing Johnny Bench to the plate. After Bench was able to reach Bench, but the next batter, Ray Knight, struck out to end the game.
Both Beaver and Candelaria experienced one bad inning each. For the Fords' ace, it was the third. Phil Garner, leading off, of the offense, right field seat seats for the game's first run.
For seven innings, the game was a brilliant duel between Seaver and Candelaria. Each allowed five hits and two runs
The Pirates added another when speeden Ormar Moreno ripped a hit to right. The ball came up to Ormar Moreno allowing the ball to reach the wall. Moreno ran it into a triple and scored when Folei hit a low kick.
Romo got into a jam, yielding a one-out single to Dave Collins, who stole second, and the second to Jake Fitzpatrick. Ken Takuki, who for a double play ball to Conception to end the rally. It was the last Reds hit until there were two out in the 17th inning. Fitzpatrick's shot put had Putschin in control.
and left the game in the eighth, Seaver for a pinch hitter and Candelaria for reliever Enrique Romo.
Seaver then walked the next two batters, Parker and Stargell, but got out of the jam by retiring John Milner on a pop fly.
The Reds got even in the fourth when Conception opened with a single to left. On the second day of training hit-and-run. Conception took off for second, but slowed to a trot when Foster jumped on Candelaria's pitch and sent 400-foot to the second deck in dead center field, tying
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KINKO'S
904 Vermont 843-8019
search followed Foster's homer with an infield single, but he was put out on a double play started by Garner.
headmasters
609 Vermont 843-8580
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TONIGHT
From England, Epic Recording Artist's
ROCK AND ROLL
w/Lawrence's own
"The Regular Guys"
Adm $3.00
$2.50 7th Spirit
Club members
THE ONLY ONE
DON'T MISS
PAT'S BLUE
RIDDIM BAND
Thur-Fri-Sat
$1.50 picketts
of PBR Thursday Nite
open 8:00 show 9:00
Lawrence
Opera House
Call for concert info. 842-6930
642 Mass st. Call for concert info. 842-6930
HOUSTON BALLET
Ben Stevenson, Artistic Director
University of Kansas Concert Series
Wednesday, October 3, 1979
8:00 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets available at Murphy Hall Box Office
AU STUDENTS WITH ID: 101. $10 GENERAL ADMISSION
AU STUDENTS WITH ID: 102. $10 GENERAL ADMISSION
FEEL THE POWER OF A GREAT BALLET
1
Wednesday, October 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Shoes With The Young Lady In Mind
9
A1 J. J. Angela's
New Open Evenings
Until 8:00 Mon-Thursday
Holiday Plaza
842-300-727
IDEAL coalition
paid for by an ideal coalition
CR
1 Year Free Replacement Warranty
ROADSTAR 0.5
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ENTER
Roadstar RS-3200 Car Stereo 1/2 OFF
Save 50% now on a Roadster RS-2320 AM-FM cassette player with Auto-Reverse and Eject, Lock Fast Forward and Rewind, Electronic LED tuning, Six preset Pushbouts for AM-FM. Sendust Head and FM Interstation Tuning. Reg.: $500.00
Price sale good price Oct. 6th.
NOW $250.00
Brighter Roads JJ
843 9030
1420 W 23rd
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
Dwelling or fewer
one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten
one dollar two dollars three dollars four dollars five dollars six dollars seven dollars eight dollars nine dollars
Each additional word
one dollar two dollars three dollars four dollars five dollars six dollars seven dollars eight dollars nine dollars
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Friday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
The DUK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed inerner or simply by calling the UB office number 841438
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 884.4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also salted, and raw fruits in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, rice, wheat and pigeon pea honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday.
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. ff.
Watch for track parked at 9th & Illinois. Home
watching the 10th, at 6pm. In-house in-the-hall, selling fruit vegetables and fruits. Aided milk, Raisin and Raw Pearl
milk. Aided Raisin and Raw Pearl
milk. Aided Red, Raisin and Raw
pearl milk. Aided white papaya, and surpah
yellow and white papaya, and surpah
Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. tf
INTRAMURAL TENNIS
Entry deadline for
(mixed doubles)
is Wed., Oct. 3
by 5 p.m.
in 208 Robinson
9R
Sign up for INTRMURAL RACQUETBALL
(mixed doubles)
by 5 p.m. on
Wed., Oct. 3 in
208 Robinson
Needed: vote! Why vote for anyone else? The only choice. Mie Pawlowski. independence, 10-4
Zen practice night-6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Suehn Sung from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21. Bufal-827-010 for information.
Comics, comics, comics. Booth #6. Quantrill's Flea Market. Weekends 10-5. 10-3
INTRAMURAL
SWIMMING and DIVING
MEET
DEADLINE MONDAY 5:00 p.m.
20B Robinson
COMPETITION BEGINS
TUESDAY, OCT. 9th
AT 7:30 p.m.
Rec Services
208 Robinson
864-3544
9R
Garage Garage Sale-9,4. Sat. Oct. 6 at 10h and Alabama. to support Seaborn Anti-ink use occupation. Donation of items welcome. Sponsored Natural Care Center and Rudolph Free Kanais.
Sit dunday 8:00 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4, community building, 11th and Vermont. No experience necessary. Public invited. 841-3765 or 841-5496.
1b-5
Rec Services
208 Robinson
864-3546
Meeting for WOLF CREEK RECONVIVENION PROJECT to discuss non-violent civil disobedience at Wolf Creek & Non-violence training will this week. Contact Pat 462-748-5033; talk to ib-3
INDEPENDENT THINKERS, your representative is here. Vote PTACEK for Student Senate October 3 and 4. 10-4
ADVERTISE
U
D
DK ADVERTISE
K ADVERTISE
MUM SALE - Parents Day Oct. 6 at Union Stadium.
Mum corsage $275.7 Lambda Siega, 19/14.
ENTERTAINMENT
It's Wednesday and Mermina's Night Deltight at its first-class dive for the 7-10 people there, $15 per person. By 7:10 p.m. Come in and join the parade, your boat in ship together at The Harbour Lines, 1161 Atlantic Ave., New York, NY 10024.
Don't miss
the return of
Pat's Blue Riddim
Band
Doors open at
8:00 a.m. show at 8:00
PAT'S BLUE RIDIMMING
CENTER
call by phone 414-4999
Thur
Fri-
Sat
Dorrs open at 8:00—show at 9:00
Lawrence
Dorrs house
Call for concert info. 842-6930
Billy Sparrow is coming back and you can see him on Bristol Road. He closes his home, Sunflower Hotel and goes out to play with his friends. Wednesday, Oct. 4 at 3 o'clock p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 6 at 7 a.p.m. On only Cabin cable TV.
Sister Katie Cafe will sponsor a benefit concert Thursday, October 4 at off-the-Hall H-7 p.m. to midnight featuring Betty Scalet. The KC Women's Jam and many more. 10-4
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
The apartment, from $179 per month furnished and
maintained, from 8/24 to 11/30. Please contact
rentals. INDOOR HEATED POOL. For appraiser
call 614-244-0000 or on 614 Frontier Road.
(914) 256-3600.
Beautiful, new 2 bdrm. apt. Completely equipped kitchen. 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone 842-1f
FOR RENT
Two-bedroom basement apartment, $160 monthly,
utilities paid, + $100 deposit. No pets. 842-6466
or 842-6666 10-4
Close to campus: one 3 bedroom 2 store house and one basement apt. A18 841-890 10-5
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-0579. ff
A person to share or sublease a nice and clean, one bedroom, furnished. Airwalk distance to campus. *5* half utilities. Apt. #111 at 1015 Mississippi. Call 843-942 or 842-0033. 10-4
FOR SALE
Room Now Available at the SUNFLOWER
HOUSE - 30 member student co-operative within walking distance of the KU campus and downlawyer. Evenings, call 842-6123.
Roommate needed to share four bedroom duplex.
$81.25/month + 1'/utility. Call 841-6063 evenings.
10-9
1-3 bedrooms, apartments, houses, mobile homes,
room near KU. Possible rent reduction for labor.
Call: 841-6254 or 842-4065 10-31
Two bedroom Quail Creek apartment $270
amonth. 843-2055. 843-7901.
10-9
SunSpecs—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. B41-5770. TF
Alternator. starter and generator specialties.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-806-9000, 2900 W, 6th. tfr
17:55.
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $6.98, 3 year guarant-
ance, WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 83-188, TSF
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Puch Mopeds Rik's Back Lake. 1033 Vermont. 8641-622F. TUF
Western Civilization Notes. On New Make up for the Ancient Civilization I. As study guide, 2. For class use to them I). As study guide, 2. For class use to them II). Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at Oriental Books, Malt Bookstore, O'Brien Book Store, Uber. Malt Booksport, O'Brien Book Store.
Dressers, picture frames, chairs, small couch,
jewelry, linens, oak tables—George's, 1035 Mass.
Open daily. 10-8
Tb Mustang Fastback Mach I yellow with AM.
FM 8 track. Good looking car. $3300. 842-9209
after 6:00. 10-3
1972 Ford Tortoise. Gold and White. Two-door.
302 V-8. Good car—good price. Call Craig at
842-800-890.
72 Toyo convertible. Be first in town to own
one 30 to 40 MPG. 1-913-223-9828 10-4
Fender public address system. This CUA-2014 offers a 3-way amplifier with 8kW beak power and 2+4 cayons speaker enclosures with 412k in each. Also miter speaker enclosures with 56kW beak power for use as monitor call. Call 816-7422-158-3.
Univeng bicycle—a year old, was in storage 9 months. Very good condition $120. Call 81-6230.
Guitars: Gibson acoustic B-25. Very good cond.
= beautiful sound. $150 or best offer. Also electric=
good cond. 2nd, lots of fun $350 or best offer.
Call 842-9803 evenings. 10-4
21" B/W Zenith录像 TV with remote. Dual Speaker
812-2500 after 5. $60.90 or best offer
HELP 'WANTED
1979 Trans Am, Aqua blue 400 engine. Power steering, tilt wheel, cruise control, rear window defender. AM FM cassette tape, T-ops, automatic. $8.500. Call 842-7272. 10-3
10" black and white TV set. One year old. $45.00
Cord 841-8522. 10-3
280-2. J, owner 4500 miles. Good as new.
280-3. J, owner 3000 miles. dek, and 15-
60. Call 844-3848 8:4am-pm
Ten speed bike. Small frame. Save gas at a good price. Best offer. Call Suile at 841-294-2. 10-8
Tyrola, 1972—stereo, good condition. Also Sony
TMA-3500 with FM tape. MTA, tap. 16-5
4683 or 18-813 Gligorio MIGRIO in 10-5
1917 Pinto, 4-speed, 60,000 miles; $600. Call Keith at 843-5073. 10-5
1979 Trans A, T-amp, loaded, automatic, low
miles, warranty, $1600 off list, 843.92-102.16,
500 miles.
1979 blue Toyota pick-up. AM FM cassette. Lik-low price, negotiable. Also silent Sony stereo recorder. Good condition. with extendable speakercord. Price $10.00 per hour. Call 862-6489 after 5 p.m. on tuesdays. Offer call: 862-6489 6489.
Mariano Stereo System, 225BH (40 wait receive)
617d direct drive turntable, TMK2 speakers, and
more. Must see to appreciate. Call Tom at
842-182
9270
Very nice two bedroom mobile home. C.A. dishwasher, washer, driver, appliances, skirted, deck.
8-by-10 red barn. 843-7238, 3325 Iowa. #422. 10-9
have the New York Times delivered to your
home every day for every Sunday afternoon.
Call 843-843-7777.
Motorcycle=1975 Kawasaki 125 Endura, only 240
miles, must sell, $350, Call Rk 842-8071. 10-9
United Air Lines 50% discount coupon, $50;
car top carrier $61.84-264.88
10-9
BEER SCREEN FOR SALE ILLUMINATED, ANI-
FIRED CLOCK 803-0710 AKEP 3 KEEP TRIGGING.
1976 Yamaha 600c. Excellent condition, mechanically
well maintained. Has received good maintenanc-
ing.
FOUND
Large four drawer dresser. $35.00. Call 842-0681.
5-7 p.m. 10-8
Adult with own transportation to care for year-old twins in our home Monday, Wed. and on Friday mornings 7:30-12:00 $2.90 an hour. Call fm: Mrs. Baird 843-3148.
Earn as much as $450 per 1000 student enrollments with our circular. For information, Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 6042
10-16
HELP WANTED
Ring near 12th and Kentucky—call 843-6980 and identify to claim.
FOUND: Silky grey 5-6 months old female kitten in 150th block of Main Had been injured, on the mend. 842-158. Qualified adapter gets free, climbing, palm dog, collar, dull shin. She'll ice you.
Found a small black dog at 23rd and Nalshimar.
Call 843-510-10
10-5
Puppy about 1 yr. old, black, small, in front of 2JRHP on Sept. 30. Call 684-2890.
Part-time dishwashing and counter help, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. at Intu Banco Fr. Apply in person only at Border Bandaio. Mon., Tue., Wed., 23rd. 10-16
Adult with own transportation to care for four old twins in our home, Monday, Wed. and or Friday marriages 7:00-1:30. $2.00 an hr. Call Ms. TRP 843-314-2194. tha
Bureau of Child Research, Achievement Plan Bureau, available to parents of children aged 5 to 24 months. Available salary up to $30,000 per month. Work with adolescent youth prefers. Own work with adolescent youth prefers. Own work with adolescent youth prefers. Excised work required. Excellent communication and event work required. Excited opportunity to work with Child Research is an equal opportunity employer. Compete fairly. Consolidate Milady Junction, Achievement Plan Bureau, available to parents of children aged 5 to 24 months. Available salary up to $30,000 per month. Work with adolescent youth prefers. Own work with adolescent youth prefers. Excised work required. Excellent communication and event work required. Excited opportunity to work with Child Research is an equal opportunity employer. Consolidate Milady Junction, Achievement Plan Bureau, available to parents of children aged 5 to 24 months. Available salary up to $30,000 per month. Work with adolescent youth prefers. Own work with adolescent youth prefers. Excised work required. Excellent communication and event work required
Part-time food service management personnel need, 15-23 hours per week pay $7.30 per hour. Must have at least a year supervisory experience. Must be a licensed private institution. Schum Foods. 719, Max. 8.5-M. P.
Bucky's drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person between 10-5. Bucky's drive-in, 1210 W. 9th, 10-5
Full-part-time positions available—especially those in areas where heat is present, conditions above, min. wave temperatures on evaporation ponds, Contact Amno Oil Co. 842-1135 or contact Amno Oil Co. 842-1135 or email info@amnooil.com; S. infall of Lawrence on Lake Ontario.
$10 per hour if you quality. No experience.
Accept a part-time free uniform, food,
prepared food, and kitchen equipment.
people willing to work and apply themselves.
If you need help, please contact the
Restaurant, 127 W. 6th St. 10-12
Wanted: Hard-working individuals to become student managers for the football team. You will be expected to join a growing athletic program. Contact Mike Hille in Room 12A1 at the Travel Clinic McGraw Hill
THE MOFFET-MEER BAND is now holding auditions for male vocalist keyboard player, vocalist guitar player or vocalist drummer. Seriana仅邀请 only 421-842-6088, 842-9323, 841-0931.
Shenjianang's 21 needs her gender, waitresses
841-600 or come to 991 Missington. 10-5
DRUMMERS: Thumbs auditioning—days, call 842-0191 ask for Slave or 841-2544 ask for Marty, nights, call 841-7977 ask for Kevin. 10-8
Full-time eacher, 5 day week, excellent working condition, drug store experience preferred. Apply in person. Ranney Hiller Drug. Hilleret Shopping Center. 10-5
Jawahar Tower has an opening for a part-time custodial worker. Hours are flexible and can be tailored to your schedule. Call 843-4983. 10-5
Part time assistant to throw papers and help district manager with KC Star circulation in Lawrence Ave. pay $4 hour and 15 mile. Come in person to 922 Mass. 10-9
Baker wanted early, morning hours. Apply by
12-12 p.m. 81st St. Sublub. 530 W. 23rd
St.
Pizza Hut-We are now accepting applications for part time cooks. Please apply in person at the Pizza Hut Restaurant, 1606 W. 23rd. 10-9
Wanted: 10 ambitious college women to start immediately. Assist part-time with marketing distribution of internationally known artistry 2 classes, 842-7624 for interview. 10-9
Better Homes and Gardens Craft Creations is now looking for part-time craft counselor. Will train, gain money. Call Robin 842-4097-1068
COOK 10 m, a-2.30 s or 2 p.m., M/F (weekends)
10 a.m to 8 p.m is in the session and off during KU
general restaurant. Apply online at
general restaurant application. Apply in person at
Kunio Union Resort. Office: 8-320-5-M-FM-EAT
Concordia Winterfest night weekend matinee
Concordia Winterfest on Sat or Sun at 6-12 p.m. year-round (May
June) and 8-12 p.m. summer season (June to September).
above depict dependently, national talent
conference, above depict dependently, national talent
conference, above depict dependently, national talent
Union Office: 841-922-8305 8:30-pm-
The Department of Microbiology, University of
Melbourne, Australia. Assistant to host on or after De-
cember 1st. Residency in the fields of chemica-
lical, immunochemical and in vitro cell biol-
ogy. Expand your technical experience in: Microbiological,
chemical, immunochemical and in vitro cell biol-
ogy. Equivalent experience in: Microbiological,
chemical, immunochemical and in vitro cell biol-
ogy. Appointed the appointment will be for a minimum
of 80 months, commensurate with education and
training. Master's degree (women) 841/519 and
Master's degree (men) 864/531. An Equal Opportunity
Assistant and妇产护士 of all races and persons who
have a medical license.
LOST
$10 reward for lost brown organizer billfold.
Contents can not be replaced. Baby depends on
the medical cards. Call Mr. Mikhail 842-7282
or 843-0890. No questions asked. 10-5
12mm-thin gold bracelet with initials C J E.
Cell 841-8500 10-3
NOTICE
Lost set of keys on key ring with large brass
*'attached'* If found call 841-8048 Reward
Last - T7-58 calculator in Learned, either room
3016 or 4009 Thursday m. 9:27 Call 841-6720
or 842-7452. Reward offered. No questions asked.
105
WOMAN'S TAN BLAZER. Left outside room.
6407 Wescon at 2:30 p.m. Thurs., Sept. 27th, Call
843-563-105
10-5
MISCELLANEOUS
Butterfly key chain, with 6 keys lost in front of Wescree 9/27. Call 8641-1619 after 5. Retail 10-4
THEIS BINDING COPYING—The House of Ubber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawyers. Let us help you at 858 Mast or phone 642-3647. That will be the answer.
For a close-up look at the life and music of
Bilac a clear-up look at "Bring It 'Alim Back Home!"
—the only television program devoted to area
television. It will be shown on channel 6 at
7 p.m. Exclusive on Cable Channel 6. 1-855-
204-3900.
Vote
NOTICE
INDEPENDENT
FOR
INDEPENDENT Ptacek
STUDENT
Ptacek
SENATE
Ptacek
Evolio Now!! In Lawnware driving school, receive驾驶 license in 4 weeks without highway patrol test! Transportation provided, drive now pay later. 852-0615. 10-12
Tonight epic recording artists "the only ones"
only $3.00
$2.50
club members
CENTRE OPENHOUSE
Call for concert info 842-8350
Lawrence Jayhawk Kentek Club will need at least 25 members to fly the plane of the Douglas County 4-H Fairgrounds. The program will be led by Major Bob Swaththorpe commander of the Fairgrounds and will include demonstration. This public program will include demonstrations.
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-564. If
TENNIS AND RAQUETTBALL PLAYERS. When worn the last two letters of the player's first name (Member Position) Strikes Ass. Aims and, Official Stringer, DCT Bouts. There are very reasonable rules on good grips. grits 11-18
FOX HILL, SURGERY CLINIC—up to 17
pregnancy. Pregnancy treatment. Birth Control.
Cubic Built In Center. For appointment.
9 AM & 9 PM. Surgeon Park. 480
19th St. Overland Park, KS
GAY COUNSELING REFERREALS through
quarters, 811-235 and KU info, 844-3506. tt
If you're looking for a box with a beer boo, pool or bar setup, try the Harbour Lounge, a crazy people you like. The Harbour Lounge has a large pool and Friday afternoons for TUF! New sayings like "I'm in love" and "Harbour Lounge Get your ship together at the Harbour Lounge."
MUM SALE - Parents Day, Oct. 6 at Union or
Stadium. Mum corsage $2.75. 10-5
Monotheistic DOCREINTY of Reperiphenia in the Torah, the Prophets and the Gospels; Write: 'The Truth of Islam,' P.O. Box 4494, South Bend, Indiana 46024
WOMEN'S SELF-DEFENSE CLASSES START-
ING. Sign up in Women's Coalition Office, 1168
Union. 10-4
Paid for by AN IDEAL COALITION vote October 3 & 4) 10-4
Fairy Tale Theology isn't for kids! Learn why
7 p.m. Tuesday at the Baptist Student Union,
1829 W. 19th. Want details? Transportation? Call
441-8001.
White, male. Graduate seeks mature female for a happy life together. Write P.O. Box 3555, KC.
KS 66103. 10-5
Get a winning reaction with MAGINACTION.
Paid for by Imagination. 10-4
"GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE!" Drawing attention to the issue, Stated Society Contact Petel Burrows in 2009 asked for information about a role to the ASS or Martin Hall Benison dormitory on the Christmas rush! Sabe Benison responded.
LAW STUDENTS-Git-riowet this Friday It's Country Western Swine time at Shiloh's. It'll be a great day.
Join us in singing the Glory of God with the West Side Presbyterian Church Choir, 1124 Kaulof. For more information call 843-1542 or 842-0236.
JOBS ON SHIPS! American, Foreign, No experience. Excellent job. Travel worldwide. Required. SEAFAX, Dell. Eval. $20, $40 for internship. Washington, HSt384
Teal, I'm glad with times passing our friendship remains. Grow, love, enjoy, and have a happy one. Courtney. 16-3
Happy 2018, 0211. I think zippered knees are groovy and 88 always was my favorite number. Love ya, C. 16-3
SERVICES OFFERED
EXPERT TUORING: MATH: 000-102 call 87575. MATH: 115-750 call 87421. STATISTICS call coworks: 843-9066. CIS: 100-600 call 843-9066. CIS: 100-600 call 843-9066. AND SPANISH call 843-1292. **tf**
SPANISH TUTORING. Experienced teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108,
109, 111, 112, 116. Call 841-2467
IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $40 for your 306-page catalog or college notebook. 10,250 topics listed. BOX 25097G: Los Angeles, CA. (213) 477-8726. 11-7
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT You will be at Alice in the House or You Available Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at S8M Station.
Do it once . . . right! Right Arrow Auto Service. Quality repairs on most domestics and imports. Socializing in Flat, Honda and Toyota. $829. Eibh. 841-242-442. 10-7
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 871-4500, 1P
TYPING
The Bike Garage—complete professional bicycle repair. Garage speciality—"Tune-Ups" and "Total-Downtail" Details call 814-2781. 10-22
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF
Journyman typographer, 20 years typing/typing experience, 4 years academic typing; thursdays, dissertation for 10 universities. Latest Solicite equipment. NU2-4848. TF
Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work,
reasonable rates. These, 32uests, welcome;
edit layout. Call Joan 812-9127. TF
Experienced typist-Quality work, reanable
rates. Call Beverly at 843-2910.
TF
Experienced typhus—tiphers, distortions, term parallax; experienced seborrhea, selective boron-1428, evenings 842-2310
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Eltm
or Jeannan, 841-2172.
experienced Ttypier-typ form papers, these mis-
corrected: 845-3544 Mrs. Wright.
TP
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate
service, low rates. 842-3603 evenings and week-
ends.
10-23
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Nick at 843-8644, 4 p.m. - 2 p.m.
I would like to type your term papers, thesis,
discussion, etc. Reasonable rates. Karen M42.
Mary S31.
BEST WISHES
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387.
WANTED
Good condition, used typetwriter. Prefer office model. Call Jan. 833-1798. 10-3
Female roommate wanted. Call Steve, 811-2054
after 5.00. 10-4
Female roommate to share nine 1 bedroom apt.
$110. Fully furnished, phone 841-859-103
Nord nature roommate to share a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. Stop in bus stops, front have a pool and landyard one block away. $105 plus utilities. Call between 6:39, p.m. to 8:44, mth.
Typewriter table in good condition, call 843-10-30
8474 after 5 p.m.
Typewriter write in good condition, call 843-
4874 after 5 p.m. 10-2
Need to buy THIS WEEK—Used bird cage for two hammers. 684-8645. 10-8
Motorcycle's trailer. Standard size automotive wheels on any Aux condition considered. Mon- thursdays only.
WANTED for immediate occupancy. Student Senate seat VOTE FOR ALEAN PTACETER. 10-4
For calen kitten She loves people. Call 832-5090
10-9
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
--additional words
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now to feature your
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it! Selling Power!
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KANSAN CLASSIFIED—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
10
Wednesday, October 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
An aerial view of yesterday's Amtrak accident shows the extent of damage to some of the derailed railroad cars and to the track. The derailment was the second worst accident in the history of Amtrak. The train was on its way to Chicago when the accident occurred less than a mile from its scheduled stop in Lawrencetown. (Right) A speed record photographed in the first engine of the train shows the needle of the speedometer at 53 mph. The car is surrounded by other evidence indicated that the train was traveling 78 mph in the 39 mph zone when it dermalized.
RUSSIA
Lawrence firemen and a police officer pull one of the 168 persons aboard the derailed the slightly injured and uninjured were transported to the Lawrence Community train to safety. The injured passengers were taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital while Building.
GRANDE INDICATOR
Kansan photos by Jeff Harring, Bill Frakes and Bill Higgins
A premonition of danger
By BOB PITTMAN and MELISSA THOMPSON Staff Reports
Staff Reporters
Phill Winter says he isn't a superstitiousBut youyes. Buses are awaitting turnstiles. But yes, passengers from Amtrak's deraled train,he admitted to Amtrak in a little detour.
As he boarded the train in San Diego Sunday night, en route to Washington D.C., he landed at the airport. So 11. Do the flight numbers of a DC-10 that crashed in June at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport and those of a 747 that collided in midair with another plane over the water.
"I said to myself, 'We'd better get off this train.' " Winter said, laughing nervously.
And his mother were among the 168 passengers aboard the 18-car train that derailed near Ohio and Fourth streets early morning and killed two crew members.
THEY WERE SHELTERED with 104 other passengers at the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th, waiting for them. They were to decide how to get on with their travels.
Jo Beyers, Red Cross director, said she had been notified of the dermatal at 6:5 a.m. Within half an hour, she said, the building was open and receiving passengers from the
The Winters were luckier than some. Mrs. Winter suffered only a brushed shoulder and back when she fell from her sleeper car. Her husband had no injuries.
Other passengers had stories to tell. Eighty-seven-year-old Joe Bettiewier, Newton, said he was dozing when the train left the tracks.
"I THOUGH HE was a 'breakin', he moment, his right eye widened. Vision in his left eye was impaired by a cut and a bruise he received when the derailment's impact
"There was such an excitement when the train hit—screaming and a hollering going on," he said.
Bettiewler was on his way to visit relatives, and although he has a return ticket, he said he probably would find some other means of transportation.
By midmorning, activity at the center had quieted. Some passengers remained, talking with police. Amtrak officials and
reporters. Others had been taken to Kansas City's Union Station to begin their trips home. Some remained at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
BEN SCHIER and his wife, Nettie, stood in the lobby of the center, talking with a television camera man. Schor was wearing a pair of flowered bedroom slipp-
The slippers had been given to him by Marge Black, a resident who lived near the scene of the accident. His own shoes had been lost in the wreckage.
The Scibiers had been traveling from Albuquerque, N.M., to Dearborn, Mich. at the time of the derailment.
"It all happened so fast; it was just . over." Soothra said.
ALL OF THE passengers remaining in the building agreed on one point. They all appreciated the speed and friendness of the residents who responded to the accident.
The incident did plant questions in the minds of a few, however. Marion Winter said she wasn't sure whether she would travel on a train again.
"I haven't traveled on a train in 19 years and it's going to be 19 more," she said.
1978
Victims wrapped in blankets given to them by Lawrence residents living near the accident scene watch the efforts of rescue and cleanup crews during the early morning hours, yesterday.
Victims calmly tell of derailment
Rv ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Reporter
By noon yesterday, things had quotted down at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. A few of the victims of the early morning bombing had lobbied waiting for the three Greyhound buses that would take them to the Lawrence Community Building at 115 W.
Some of the passengers were dressed in pajamas and bathrobes. They had had no chance to grab clothes in their freazied escape from the overturned train.
However, Luvena Logan, 83, of Chicago, had time to gather her clothes and did not seem fared by having gone through the book. She was so keen that looked as if she were dressed to go to church.
She had gone to Los Angeles with her daughter for a nurses' convention.
"I was in the lower bern, my mother was in the upper bern. I saw her hurt me and let it fall on me. I think I strained my shoulder trying to hold it off, but otherwise I was not hurt."
"AFTER WE tipped over I just sat there and looked out the window. I could see the trees baning over us.
Logan said she was awake when the train derailed.
"We usually fly to these conventions," she said. "But my daughter and I decided it might be nice to go on the train to see the country."
"While I waited for the firemen to break the glass, I gathered up my clothes. I could
hear other people crying and praying. It's a miracle that more weren't killed.
"I figure when it's your time to go, you'll go no matter where you are."
Tim Jackson, 31, from Nashville, Tenn., was reserved, but disheveled. He wore white pajama bottoms with his blue sport coat.
Jacobson said he had only minor bruises, but his wife suffered a broken neck. He said that she was injured during the fight or for at least a week. The Jacobsen, who had been on vacation in Arizona, plan to stay in the city this weekend.
"We travel by train quite often," Jacobson said. "We have always enjoyed it."
She said that after she was pulled from the train, someone went back in to get her clothes from the close but they missed her shoes.
"It may seem silly at a time like this but I've lost my shoes," she said. "I don't have any shoes. They were in the closet of my room and I'd never be able to wear bedroom slippers back to Chicago."
ANOTHER VICTIM. Charity Ward, from
Chicago, was telling anyone who would listen about her lost shoes.
Helping the victims in the hospital lobby were hospital auxiliary volunteers, nurses, police officers and social work interns. A meal, juice and cookie was set up in the lobby.
Officials removed all the checked luggage from the train and took it to the community building
EASTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
T
CENTRAL RAILWAYS
TAMPA
Workers and spectators walk among several of the 16 cars detailed during yesterday's accident. Two persons died and dozens were injured in the wreck that left debris on the road.
Kansas Kennedy backers ready for announcement
BvTONIWOOD
Staff Renorter
If Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, would to announce his presidential candidacy tomorrow, he probably could count on a block of campaign workers in Labor.
Two Lawrence law students, John Scheirman and Julie Craft, have been drumming up Kennedy support in Douglas County.
"I fully expect him to run," Scheman said. "When he does, he's going to have a very complete organization within a couple of weeks after he announces.
"But I think people will hold back their support until Kennedy declares his candidacy."
Kennedy has indicated he will announce his decision in November.
Meanwhile, Scheirman and Craft have
been collecting names of supporters and sending them to John Petty of Hays, who is helping coordinate Kansans for Kennedy.
About 20 people in Lawrence have shown interest in barking, Kennedy, Scherman president of D-Lawrence, who announced his support for Kennedy last Thursday at the AFL-CIO meeting.
CRAFT SAID she had looked to local Democrats for support rather than students.
"At this point, we're just collecting names," she said. "We don't have anything really concrete."
"We're basically just getting names together to have a base of supporters."
Petty said the names that had been sent to him had been filed for future reference. "I've been in touch in one way or another with each person," he said.
He said supporting Kennedy instead of President Jimmy Carter had been a hard decision. "I like Jimmy Carter," he said. "I think he's the second best presidential candidate."
HAYS IS ONE of three areas in Kansas where action is brewing to support Kendy. Activity in Kansas City, Kan, and Wichita beaten in September.
"But Kennedy is capable of demonstrating much more leadership."
Spearheaded the action in Kansas City, Kan., is Richard Williams, the Kansas coordinator for Democratic Alternatives for 1980.
"I'd also like to get a meeting going on the KU campus."
"We've made many contacts, but nothing definite is going yet," he said. "I've talked to a number of people in Lawrence and I know they are looking to be a steering committee set up."
He said about 8,900 people bought tickets to a Kennedy rally in Kansas City, Kan., on Sunday. He spoke at William Stark's, national field representative of the Kennedy campaign, spoke at
MUCH OF THE Kennedy support in Kansas can be traced to involvement in earlier Kennedy presidential campaigns.
Petty worked on Robert F. Kennedy's presidential campaign in 1968 when he was 18 years old.
Williamson campaigned for John Kennedy in the 1960 presidential race, serving as the teenage youth coordinator for Kansas.
In Wichita, Robert Allegrucci,
Democratic chairman of the 4th
Congressional District, has headed a petition drive to get Kennedy's name on the presidential primary ballot in Kansas.
Allegrucci was the campaign coordinator in California for Robert Kennedy in the presidential race in 1968.
He said he had gotten calls from across the state from people who wanted to help in the campaign, but that the organization was still in limbo.
"PART OF THE problem, whenever you have an officially undeclared candidate," he said, "is that you're limited on what you can do.
"We don't want to tell too much structure established. I think he'll run, but still, politically and strategically, we have to be prepared before pitting in an organization."
Allegrucci launched the petition drive
with the help of State Sen. James Francisco, D-Mulvane, who is co-chairman of the Kennedy organization.
Allegruge's first action was to get enough signatures on a petition to enter Kennedy University. Only one, 1,000 were needed, he said, but the Kennedy organization collected 'three or four times
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The next action will be to set up a steering committee in each congressional district.
Many of the Democratic party leaders are lee-ors of opposing an incumbent president in the party, he said. "I have no illusions. I have to a hell of a time carrying the state."17
PLEASANT
Allegraue said the Kennedy organizations from Hays and Kansas City, Kan., would meet in several weeks at Wichita with the Kennedy supporters there.
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 29
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Thursdav. October 4. 1979
Baltimore zaps California, 6-3
2135 2135
See story page eight
Tow train
Sante FF Railroad officials and workmen coner in the foreground prior to the departure of the remaining cars involved in
Tuesday's dermalation. One official said the cars would be towed at 5 a.m. to topkha where they would be repaired.
Amtrak conductor interviewed; investigators puzzled by speed
By MARK SPENCER
By MARK SPENCE
Staff Reporter
A conductor on the train that derailed here early Tuesday told federal informants he knew the train had been traveling at high speed, it was slowing for curves and maintaining safety speed limits, according to a National Transportation Safety Board report.
Elwood T. Driver, vice chairman of the NTSB, said the speed record taped in the first and third engines of the 18-car train indicate the train was traveling 78 mph with speed zone. The tapes, which have to be double checked, could vary 3-4 mph.
the spokesman, Brad Dunbar, said the conductor, J.D. Gunek, was interviewed by investigators yesterday afternoon after a basis based from Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
The conductor was one of the first crew members investigators were able to interview, a step investigators said was necessary in determining the cause of the accident.
THE TRAIN was running 40 minutes late, according to a railroad official. Dustbins were filled and the driver had lost time adding cars and an engine in Newton, but that he and the engineer had to wait.
Des Moines prepares for Pope
From Kansan Staff and Wire Reports
DES MOINES - On the eve of Pope John
P.16's historic visit here, entrepreneurs
and students pedal souvenirs and
traffic build-up classes of highways as the
city braced for the arrival of thousands
of papal visitors.
"The main thrust of our investigation is why the train was going fast at that point," Driver said.
More than 20,000 people, mostly selected handicapped and elderly persons, are expected to greet the pontifit at 1 p.m. at Des Moines Municipal Airport.
Two Santa Fe Railroad crew members were killed in the accident and 69 persons were injured.
The largest crowd, about 200,000 people, is expected to be at Living History Farms, where the pope will celebrate a 45-minute Mass at about p. 2.m today.
An estimated 400,000 people will converge on the city to view the postfight during his four-hour visit to Iowa's capital city of 325,000.
From the airport, the pope will travel by helicopter to St. Patrick's Church for a brief service before going on to Living History Farms.
The two dead crewmen were identified as Robert Charles, 61, of Omaha, Neb. and T.R. Sligh, 39, of Chicago.
Twenty persons were admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. One person
See DERAILMENT page three
Supplemental food stations and portable toilets were being placed across the rolling hills of the farm. Workers were busy placing 25-five-gallon barrels 6 feet in the ground. The barrels have pipes attached to them, and they lie in which contributions can be denoted.
Within a mile of Living History Farms, hundreds of campers had gathered as traffic began to line the freeways, scheduled to close at 16 last night.
Access to the area will be limited today with priority given to mass transportation. More than 5,000 chartered and city buses will carry spectators from seven points in
In streets filled with a festival-like atmosphere, vendors made final bids to sell week-old paraphernalia ranging from papal point pens to resinaries made from Iowa
The contributions will help finance the visit, which will cost the city $1.2 million.
He also said that sex must be limited to marriage and that freedom is discipline.
John Paul also stressed his belief in priestly celibacy and later, to a group of seminarians, he referred to celibacy as a "gift."
the city to as close as a half-mile from the farm.
In Philadelphia yesterday, John Paul II called for Americans to follow the strict moral standards of their past. In his homily on Monday, the late John Paul II pontified note that Philadelphia was the home of the Declaration of Independence and said he found in the document "strong connections with basic religious and spiritual beliefs" among the million people looked on during the Mass.
Today, after three hours in Des Moines, the pope will go to Chicago.
Bv DAVID LEWIS
FacEx to discuss tenure
Staff Reporter
Recommendations to change KU's promotion and tenure policy will be discussed tomorrow by the Faculty Executive Committee.
The recommendations, which were made by the University Committee on Promotion and Tenure, would allow the UCP to appoint associate professors without granting
"Whoever refused to accept these norms, and to act accordingly, who seeks to liberate himself from these norms, is not truly free," he said.
The UCUP is a group of KU officials that grants promotions and tenure to instructors. KU's current policy considers promotions for teachers, coaches, and requests for tenure as the same thing.
For example, a petroleum engineer who had been working in an industry 15 years could seek employment at the University as an instructor.
Under KU's policy, the UCPT could not
appoint the engineer to associate professor without guaranteeing him a permanent position. The professor would be an instructor instead of an associate professor, regardless of his
T. P. SKRINVASAN, chapter president of the American Association of University Professors, said yesterday that both the University and the University were harmed by the bollers.
"This recommendation certainly merts serious consideration because the University ties tenure and promotions together," he said.
The recommendations also would allow each school in the University to handle its own promotions and would require them to evaluate a prospective employee.
For example, the UCPT would ask the
School of Engineering to review the qualifications of an applicant to that school.
Christoffersen said it would be beneficial to the UCPT if evaluations from other schools were required.
RALPH CHRISTOFFERS, vice chancellor for academic affairs and chairman of the UCUP, said he thought the promotion would undelete the promotions instead of each school.
Srinivasan he considered the recommendations a call for major changes. The decision to promote or grant tenure both the, UCPT, and
Christofferss also said that the recommendations were only minor and that the current policy of tenure and promotion was well established.
The complete de-centralization is not the
The decision to promote or grant tenure should rest between both the UCPT and individual schools, he said.
See TENURE page two
Staff Reporter
Value of faculty salaries declining
Bv JEFF SJERVEN
University professors and instructors but suffers more than their share of the stress associated with the study released last month by the American Association of University Press.
The study, conducted by W. Lee Hansen, chairman of the national AAU Commission on the Economic Status of the Profession, concluded that faculty salaries in real dollars had decreased by 16 percent in the past year and that salaries had shown modest gains in salaries.
T. P. Srinivasan, KU chapter president of the AAPU, said the study pointed to a nationwide threat to the standard of living of university instructors.
"If faculty salaries continue to decline at this rate, it is going to hurt higher education quite seriously."
"We are no longer quibbling over a few dollars and trying to get a piece of the cake," he said. "It is much more serious than that."
SRINVASN SAID faculty members had to tolerate present pay levels because professors traditionally had not formed best groups to pressure legislatures.
"Third, it will inhibit seriously the entry of bright young people into the academic profession."
"Three things will happen because of the need to be quick. First, there will be a wholesale division. Second, many faculty will be forced to take second and third jobs which I am certain will be worthwhile."
Data compiled by KU's office of institutional research and planning indicate that although the average salary for continuing faculty from fscs 1971 to fscs 1979 rose by 60 percent, in the concre- tion of the increase in a nidine in buying power of 7 percent.
The University of Kansas ranked fifth in average salary and average compensation among the top 10 colleges in institutions, according to AAPU data. Average compensation comprises salary, benefits, and training.
KUER *PSE* institutions are the University of Colorado, the University of Iowa, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of Oklahoma and the University of Oregon.
KU ranked fourth out of the six peer schools in salaries for full professors. The average salary for KU professors in fiscal
1979 was $27,300, or $744 under the average for all peer institutions.
Associate professors made $29,500, $79
under the peers' average. Assistant
professors at KU earned $16,000, $83 under
the peers' average. Assistant professors
at KU earned $16,000, $83 under
the peer institutions' average.
Average compensation for all faculty at KU lagged behind the peer school average by at least $1.000.
The Legislature granted a 6.5 percent pay increase for Kansas Board of Regents schools for fiscal 1980.
THIS YEAR, full professors earn an average of $29,588, associate professors make $21,420, assistant professors make $17,868 and instructors make $13,614.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said KU's salary levels were causing some
problems in keeping faculty members.
"We've lost some faculty who have gone to institutions offering $3,000 to $10,000 more than we can pay," he said.
Shankel also said KU salaries were not high enough to attract professors whose fields were in great demand among universities.
The KU administration will attempt to use its influence with the Kansas Legislature to gain higher raises for faculty members, Shankel said.
STUDENT SENATE
ELECTIONS
Count down
Thelaine Shatter, left, Athene junior, rests his eyes while he and Alden Wilson, Pierre, S.D., sophomore, wait for election returns
at the cafeteria at GSF-Corbin Hall. They described the voting as "moderately heavy." See story page two.
2
University Daily Kansan
2 Thursday, October 4.1979
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansas' Wire Services
Kreps quits cabinet position
WASHINGTON—Juanna M. Kreps, the nation's first female secretary of commerce, submitted her resignation to President Carter yesterday, a Comma
Kreets cited "Personal, family reasons" for leaving the Cabinet job, according to Commerce spokesman Ernest Lotto, who added, "She feels has been away from her family for almost three years and at this time needs to be with them."
He said the White House planned to officially announce today that Carter was accepting the resignation with regret.
Kreps had been considering returning to Durham last June because of her husband's health problems, said one source, who asked to remain
in Durham, N.C. Duke Chancellor A. Kenneth Pyle said that Krepws would return to the university Nov. 1. She had been on leave from her job as a
researcher at the University of Illinois.
Ethics panel investigates case
WASHINGTON—One or more witnesses may be laid over ear during testimony in the investigation of Sen. Herman Talmalda, D-GA, the Senate Budget Committee.
Other violations of law, including making false claims against the government and complying to defraud the government, also might have occurred, the government said.
However, the panel did not single out any person it believed led or committed suicide. The panel asked the Talmudic case to the Justice Department, which has jurisdiction files on the Talmudic case to the Justice Department, which has jurisdiction.
The investigation had earlier led the panel to recommend that the denouncement Talmadge's conduct as "repreprehensible" and as a "gross neglect of duty."
Damaged reactor shut down
RED WING, Minn. — A reactor at the Prairie Island nuclear generating plant in Red Wing, Minn., fired a 30-kilogram plutonium-239 bomb downstairs status yesterday afternoon, said Northern States Power Co. officials.
Inspections to find the cause of the radioactive leak could begin within two to four days, a power company official said yesterday.
A ruptured steam tube of two nuclear generators at Prairie Island allowed radioactive steam to flow through a turbine vent into the atmosphere
The leak was not serious enough to endanger workers or area residents, according to federal and state officials.
The general supervisor for Northern States Power Co. said yesterday that inspectors would check tubes in the steam generator, once it had cooled down sufficiently, to see whether the accident was a freak or leakage was common to other tubes.
He said that a major split or rupture was possible and that there might be incidental damage to other pipes.
Carter's response endorsed
WASHINGTON-Pentagon sources said yesterday that U.S. defense officials concurred with the modest measures adopted by President Carter in dealing with the issue.
From a military standpoint, the moves announced by Carter would preserve the status quo in Cuba. Sources said Carter's military advisers endorsed those moves.
The sources would discuss the decision-making only on the condition that they not be identified by name.
"Clearly, was this not the kind of situation where you'd think of using force?" said one member of the small group who helped put together a report 30 men and women in New York.
The adviser would not discuss specific options, but he indicated that on the military side they involved a set of demonstrations and exercises that would be conducted in their own manner.
Administration sources said Carter not only avoided a blunt military response to the Soviet troop issue, but that he also rejected any ideas that the US would take such action.
Enerau board survives dispute
WASHINGTON - The Senate yesterday sounded defeated two attempts by environmentalists to weaken President Carter's proposal for a powerful new energy policy.
By votes of 59-38 and 69-34, the Senate agreed to give an Energy Mobilization Board broad powers to push for construction of new facilities, including a gas plant.
Senators concerned about the environmental dangers of such new facilities did win one major concession which would give the Environmental Protection Agency a majority in the Senate.
By a voice vote, the Senate agreed that if plants were found to be a hazard to health after construction began, the EPA would have authority to stop construction. But that would occur only if state or local governments sought to block construction.
Liauor leaal in Kansas skies
TOPEKA-Federal law is the predation rate in the skies over Kansas, Attorney General Robert Stapleton said yesterday, and it pre-empts state efforts to kill the species.
The federal preemption applies whether the planes take off or land at Kansas airports, Stephan said.
His opinion is a departure from the legal interpretations of his predecessors, beginning in 1973 when former Attorney General Vern Miller and liquor could be charged with misdemeanor. In 1980, he also lost a
There has been scattered compliance with that interpretation during the past six years.
Tornado hits Connecticut town
WINDSOR LOCKS, Comi — Two persons were killed and at least 56 were injured when a tornado struck here yesterday. It was accompanied by a storm with wind gusts up to 86 mph. More than 40 buildings were damaged or destroyed.
Gov. Eliza Grasso declared an 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew and ordered in 200 National Guard troops because of concern about security in damaged areas
The figures on deaths and injuries were given by the state health commissioner, who said most of the injured were flown by helicopter to Hartford
KC pays half worker bus fare
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In a move designed to conserve energy, Kansas City has instituted a 90-day trial program in which the city will pay the cost of
Under the program, which began last year, city employee can purchase
transportation tax licenses and insurance to drive by the city from its half-cent transportation sales tax fund. Harold Bautin, an
employer of the city, said he will be required to pay $125 per month.
If the program causes a significant increase in riders among city employees, the city council will be asked to pass an ordinance appropriating continued use of the bus system.
Today will be sunny and mild with north-westernly winds from five to 15 mph and a high temperature of 39 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
Weather ...
The extended forecast for Saturday through Monday calls for temperatures in the high 70s to low 80s with no significant precipitation. Low temperatures in the lower 40s are expected.
Tomorrow will be clear and warmer with temperatures in the high 78s.
This morning at Concord Garden Amphitheatre, Hendersonville
Service in Topeka. The low temperature will be around 20°C.
Temperature will be close and upreme with temperatures in the high 70s.
From page one
"owner," he said, "because often it helps in terms of objectivity to consider promotion and tenure decisions away from the units which are involved.
Tenure...
"The question is how far you can go with the de-centralization and give the different schools relative freedom to make their own promotion decisions."
FaxEx sent the recommendations to the Committee on Tenure and Related Problems, a quas-judicial committee that handles issues where questions of due process are involved.
The UCP forwarded the recommendations Sept. 28 to FacEx, but no action was taken because of a lack of response (from the University faculty).
The CTRP said its duties would not be altered if the recommendations were approved.
proves Gerhard Zuther, chairman of FacEx, said
he would confer with Christofersen soon and request that copies of the recommendations be sent to all faculty members. The recommendations call for:
*Discussion of the possibility of changing a University procedures to allow school officials to meet with recommendations for promotion at the lower ranks (up to and including associate officers) in the university.
- Discussion of the advisability of granting promotion to the rank of associate professor without the award of tenure.
- Examinations of the issue of peer review and further discussion of the possibility of requiring evidence of peer review and assessment of instructional implications for promotion or tenure or both.
* School and departmental committees to seek outside review and evaluation of research, scholarship, and creative or instructional indicators of instructors considered for promotion.
More aid money available for next spring's students
Additional funds will be available for the spring semester to several of the financial and programs, Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said yesterday.
The exact amount of money is undetermined, Weinberg said, but students should file aid applications within the next two weeks. The deadline for applications is Nov. 18.
Money will be available from the KU undergraduate scholarships, and graduate and undergraduate loans from the National Loans and College Work Study programs.
The financial aid office will begin making awards to students who have applications on file for the award and are those who are receiving aid or have contacted the financial aid office about their eligibility.
According to Weinberg, early applicants will have time to re-file their application before the November死领贷 if the ACT computer rejected their first form.
Students who have not filed aid forms for
Weinberg said the money was available because some students who had qualified for loans this semester had declined their loan or grant, or they had failed to enroll.
the 1979-80 school year, or had filed an application late should reapply.
Students should apply early to speed the application process by the American College Test Program in Iowa City.
Wenberg said that the financial aid office would be reviewing students files, and that the award will be given to the awards will be few compared to the financial aid awarded for the spring semester.
ATTENTION!
Weinberg said one ACT application form would be the only form required .
?
Pre-Med Students
A meeting for all students considering applying to medical school in Fall of '79 or '80 Tuesday Oct. 9 7:00 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union and Lawrence campus
Representatives from KU Med Center and Lawrence campus will be in attendance.
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Wear your favorite beer for only $3 50.
Now you can wear your beer without spilling a drop on yourself Just slip into one of our Good Taste of Beer T-Shirts They look terrific on guys or girls They're perfect for wearing around campus or to Happy Hour But we only have a limited supply so send for yours today.
Please send me "Good Taste of Beer" T-Shirt(s).
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Derailment
From page one
was discharged yesterday and another was transferred to a hospital in his hometown in Newton, according to Robert P. Ohlen, executive officer of the hospital.
OHLEN SAID 17 persons were in satisfactory condition and one person was in satisfactory condition. The crew members suffered injuries ranging from 'simple face fractures to major fractures.'
A spokesman for Amtrak, John Jacobsen,
said $3 million in equipment was damaged
in the accident.
The accident occurred at a curve in the tracks about one mile from the Lawrence traiment depot when three engines and 16 of them collapsed on Wednesday, 4th Ohiou streets. Tuesday near Fourth and Ohio streets.
Driver said the speed recorder tapes indicated the train had been traveling
--within speed limits before the accident occurred.
The accident was the second worst in Amrtak history in terms of the death toll. The worst accident was a 1971 deraliment in Illinois that killed 11 persons.
AN INVESTIGATION by the NTSB was authorized Tuesday morning by Dr.韦勒 led the investigation of the DC-10 airplane crash in Chicago in May. The team of 11 investigators arrived in Lawrence Tuesday after a session session after the accident site.
Driver said the investigation would examine mechanical, operational, track and human factor aspects of the accident. He said the NTSB was be assisted by representatives from Amtrak, Santa Fe, the Federal Railroad Administration and local
He said the NTSB would decide in the next five days whether to hold a public hearing.
Thursday, October 4, 1979 3
Driver said he also wanted to find out if the engineer was familiar with the route.
G. R. MARTIN, a union official in Kansas City, said it had been at least five years since the engineer had traveled the Lawrence route.
It could be four months before an official cause could be determined, he said.
noplastic officials told the NTSB the engineer, L.H. Graham, 63, would not be available to investigators for three or four days. Driver said.
two other crew members, R.B. Maupin, M.P. Wand, P.W. Hand, the fireman, he may be interviewed on the next two days, he said. Hold may have been in the engine at the time of the accident.
Yesterday, investigators walked about mile west of the accident site, examining the track.
Richard Bradley, a spokesman for Santa Fe, said, "All I can tell you is that the cause of the accident was excessive speed."
The train, a combination of the Southwest Limited, which originated in Los Angeles and the Lone Star, which originated in New York was scheduled to stop in Lawrence.
Driver said, "My experts tell me it would have been extremely difficult for the train to have stopped within that distance."
Yesterday afternoon, in the investigators pardoned around in the scattered along the track, crews were on the track and to remove the damaged cars.
Bradley said 16 of the cars had been rerailed and would be shipped to railroad shops in Topeka and Kansas City.
Freshman votes trickle in on first day of elections
"We found nothing in our walk to indicate the track was defective." Driver said.
After a low voter turnout in the first day of fresh elections yesterday, John Mitchelson, Student Senate elections commissioner, haoped more students would vote today.
University Daily Kansan
Generally, more students vote on the last day, he said.
Michelson said 430 ballots were turned in for freshmen class officers and 439 ballots were turned in for the six Student Senate seats for Nunenmaker Center.
"It was a really poor turnout today," he said.
The heaviest voting took place at the Kansas Union Lobby, Mitchelson said. Commared to last year's figures, he said.
452 ballots were turned in for Student Senate elections.
Compared to last year 329 votes was about average. About 329 votes were cast for freshmen class officers and
One problem that kept the number of votes down was that several students forgot to bring their KU identification cards, he said.
KZR
106
Ploting calls available today, the final day of elections, will be from 8 a.m. to 14:30 Booth, the west end of Wescoe Hall's fourth floor, Fracken Holliday Lobby, Gymnastics House
From 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.: Gertuled Sellarsi
Parmenian Corbin Tahm, Colm Hallum M,
Bernardo Cervone, Elias Serrano.
Gamma Delta, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha
KappaLambda, Chi Omega and Kappa
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sua films Present
"A MASTERPIECE!"
- Jonathan Scott DCLLING STONE
Werner Herzog's
AGUIRRE,
THE WRATH
OF GOD
Sunday, October 7
2:00 p.m. $1.50
Woodruff Auditorium
-No refreshments allowed.
Thursday, October 4
Forrest Ackerman
in person!
METROPOLIS
This classic German film by Fritz Lang is one of the earliest and most influential movies made. Includes a rare prologue, "Science Fiction Films," a KU-produced film. Mr. Ackermann told the films to answer any questions.
Friday & Saturday October 5-6 ANNIE HALL
(1977)
Monday, October 8
SHOOT THE PIANO
PLAYER
sua films
Klaus Kinkai plays a power-driven knight who dreams of stealing an enchanted ring and misapplying it to the mid-1500s. Werner Herog has hard work in convincing her formidable "Vincent Canela" into the ring.
Directed by Woolly Allen, with Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Tony Roberts, John Galliano, Danielle DeWalt, Walker Kellen Dewhurst, & Marshall McLachlan. Winner of the Academy award for the Best Film of the Year. For The Performer's Dream: a Ranbir Flend.
Sunday, October 7
New German Cinema:
AGUIRRE. THE WRATH OF GO
(1800)
Directed by Francois Truffaut, with Charles Aznavour and Nicole Berger.
Francissubtitles.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
weekends show also in Woodfort at
3:30, 7:00, 10:00 or 12 midnight and
Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise
noted. 15 a.m. admission. No Retrieve
COPIES 4c
no minimum
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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 authors.
October 4.1979
Pope appeals to all
America, Pope John Paul II told the American people Monday, is a free and generous land, but its youth are beured away from religion to the escapes of sexual pleasure, drugs, violence and indifference.
"I propose to you the option of love, which is the opposite of escape," he said.
That statement goes a long way in telling us about the pope's purpose in visiting the United States and about the source of his effect on the U.S. population—one-fourth of which are members of the Roman Catholic Church.
THE SEVEN-DAY, sk-city visit by John Paul has dominated the attention of the American people this week. Reaction to President Carter's address to the nation Monday night gained scarcely half the coverage that the pope's visit drew Tuesday in New York.
The reason for the attention is simple. Despite his recognition as the religious and spiritual leader of this community, he has shown himself to be an effective
spiritual conscience to the entire nation and the world.
In addition to being the prime advocate of the Catholic Church's strict moral doctrines, the pope has found himself in stirring in the nation's conscience.
He has asked to do more than that,
however. He has asked us to look at
both our individual and national
purpose.
"I come as one who already knows you and loves you," he said, "as one who wishes you to fulfill your noble destiny of service to the world."
JOIN PAUL'S plea for a return to love was more than condemnation of modern American mores. It was a plea to examine those mores.
Indeed, what John Paul has asked us—primarily the youth of this nation —is to at least look a little more inside into ourselfs and our country.
He came as the head of the world's Catholic Church. No doubt remains, however, that upon his departure, his words and influence will have reached far beyond America's 49 million Catholics.
Vacation, pay raises House's priorities
The U.S. of Representatives, long the home of cackpot conservation and malicious selfishness, has done it again. It has made it so that many agencies of the federal government temporarily without funds—funds that are needed to provide aid for the sick, injured or homeless.
The House has done this by failing to produce an acceptable bill that would allow federal agencies to temporarily continue spending into the new fiscal year while problems with the 1800 budget are being worked out. The only bill the House did manage to pass was an effort to selfish representative tackies unacceptable amendments on to the original proposal.
But the Senate found the house amendments too difficult to swallow and simply vetoed the bill, leaving dozens of federal employees to pay their employees or money end.
john
logan
Although Monday marked the beginning of the 1980 fiscal year, the 1980 budget is still far from completion - a relatively normal distribution of spending. What is known as a continuing resolution giving temporary spending authority to federal agencies. Without that authorization, the agencies, ranging from the Social Security administration and armed services, cannot spend their money.
THE HOUSE passed a continuing resolution last week, but insisted on an amendment authorizing a 5.3 percent pay increase for Congressmen and top federal employees in the House and Senate spending for abortions The House then adjourned for a long-week vacation.
House leaders hoped that their absence would force the Senate to pass the continuing resolution because the House would not be around to reach a compromise on the bill. Because of that, the money was needed so badly, the Senate would have no choice in the matter.
NOT ALL agencies will be hit immediately by the funding problem. Even though they may not have enough agencies still have funds left over from the last fiscal year that can tide them over for the next five years.
But many agencies do not. The Medicaid program, for example, has no money left and cannot issue any checks until it is too late. The federal funds for checks are scheduled to be mailed Oct. 10, but might have to be held if there is no money to back them up. That would create a pathetic situation in which the government has no power would not be able to pay its own servicemen.
Also threatened are 78,000 workmen's compensation checks, aid for the aged, blind and disabled, as well as expense vouchers from the company all scheduled to be mailed in early October.
AFTER VETOING the House's continuing resolution, the Senate acted quickly to try to get a new measure passed. The Senate Approval Act would have allowed the government originally intended to provide funding for the Federal Trade Commission and tacked on a continuing resolution to authorize spending. The Senate was to act on the resolution in order to satisfy the approval of the House on Tuesday.
The Senate spent most of Saturday and Monday in vain efforts to persuade the House to return from its vacations to pass a bill that would not. Not surprisingly, there was little response.
So now any work on the resolution may not come until Oct. 9, one day before the election. The state will be divided and if Congress stays on its recalcitrant high horse, it might take several days of thrashing in conference committees before any authorization can be
Meanwhile the spectre of Medicaid patients going without funds, along with thousands of disabled persons, looms darkly on the horizon—all because of a petty, misguided system that is more concerned with its own pay raises than with the welfare of the American people.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
[US$ 950-6440] Published at the University of Kansas daily August about Mo and Wed, May 12th and June 3rd, 2018. Subscriptions are charged on request by mail or by phone. Subscription fees for booklets of $17 per month in Indianapolis and County are $28 per month in Batavia and Indianapolis. Subscriptions by mail are $12 per month in Indianapolis and County are $18 per month in Batavia.
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Advertising Agent
Pope John Paul II's visit to the United States is a magnificent event. It is a chance for many of his Catholic followers to attend his last Mass, and he asks them to church. It is an expression of the likable pope that he wants to be more than a religious leader, too. He wants to be, and is, a kind man.
Profiteers cheapen pontiff's visit
Unfortunately, it is also an opportunity for Americans to reveal an irrational side of behavior by using the event to make a quick, decisive decision. This can increase opportunity to make a profit is one thing. To prostitute the visit of such a leader by an American would be humiliating and bummer stickers is quite another.
It is a practice that breaches the ethical codes that should govern all business actions. There are large companies and small independent groups from Boston to Des Moines that are dispensing "I got a bill" for the scripples or抄纸 or p公篷ebloomed button labels.
In the words of one who has cashed in on the pope bonanza, "It's the biggest thing since the smile button."
In addition to the hawkers, there are pending court cases in Philadelphia and New York. These cases Liberties Union and Madison Murray O'Hair are trying to make the point that the country should not be able to use public resources as many people as can see the pope.
IF YOU DIDN'T talk to Jimmy Carter was talking out of both sides of his mouth during his campaign for president in 1972, he has made it a little easier for you to see.
The lack of respect these instances so sharply define is a sad comment on our society.
This week Carter signed a bill to create a new department of Education. Its $4 billion budget does not seem to work into his overall plan to trim the size of the bureaucracy and cut some staff.
Oh, the creation of the new department was a campaign promise—he made it to the 1.8 million members of the National Education Association, whose support he received. He planted them, and needs now. But to the rest, he promised to cut the size of the government.
The new department will take many of its 18,000 workers from the old Department of Health, Education and Welfare, but the cost is still a burden on the taxpayers who must preside in president that he would exercise him in his mledge and restrain government spending.
COLUMNIST
david
preston
THE WINDFALL profits tax continues to hang over the head of the free enterprise system. Carter is still pushing for enactment of the tax on large oil companies' profits, and Congress is reportedly waiting until after the oil companies report their third-quarter earnings in mid-October so that it can use public办用虫 its advantage.
It's the very principle of the tax that is questionable. To tax a company beyond the normal limits is an abuse of the federal power to tax. It is unfair and county taxes are tax on money that could be used for exploration and research when it is so badly needed.
Consider the cost of Exxon's latest exploration effort. Exploring for oil off the New Jersey shore in the Baltimore Canyon, Exxon has estimated that $8 million on drilling and $343 to millions
THE CONDITION upon which Ted Kennedy will enter the 1980 presidential race is almost sure to occur. Kennedy said that after getting approval to run from his mother and wife, he would see how the state had handled a crisis, and then decide whether to challenge Carter.
Inasmuch as the state of the economy has scarcely improved for more than a decade, it is a pretty sure bet that Kennedy will see the need to face the president.
Republican campaign organizers would welcome the internal dissension in the Democratic organization. To them it would be worse than the military in the November election a year hence.
MAGELYD
REPHONDMENTE LUNARE
© 2014 MAGELYD FILMS
purchase the leases from the U.S. government.
And they're probably right.
IT IS a state of affairs when the owner and the general manager of a major league franchise cannot overcome the size of their own egos and feel compelled to pass the
kansas City Royals' owner Ewing Kauffman and general manager Joe Burke seem to have shoved the blame for the Royals' failure to win a four consecutive Western Series. He is also in charge of their manager Whitney Herzog. Herzog has the second-longest record of service one team in the American League (behind Baltimore's Earl Weaver) and has won six national crowns in his four years at the helm.
Kraffman and Burke are to blame for the Royals' failure this year. Herd needed at least a dozen players, but he can be counted on every time he goes to the mound—and a right-handed power hitter. He received neither and therefore fielded a consistently consistent 162-game schedule.
He got no help from Burke and no respect from Kauffman. It is a sad way to treat a fine manager and a loyal servant to the club. Oriole fans should be thankful that the front office did not see the need to hire another midweek years that he has had at Baltimore.
THE WHITE HOUSE
Dear Ted,
When I said that I had never
grumpled in a crisis, I was not
referring to Chappraquidick.
Chappraquidick should not be
an issue in this campaign, and
I assure you I won't bring up
Chappraquidick. Chappraquidick
has nothing to do with
problems facing this
Royal fans will be sorry that the Royals' front office saw the need to do so.
THE WHITE HOUSE
Dear Ted,
When I said that I had never
gamified in a crisis, I was not
referring to Chappraquiddick.
Chappraquiddick should not be
an issue in this campaign, and
I assume now I won't bring up
I assume now I won't bring up
Chappraquiddick. Chappraquiddick
has nothing to do with
problems facing this
country, and I won't even mention
Chappraquiddick, let alone make
any additions to Chappraquiddick.
I want to forget Chappraquiddick,
you want to forget Chappraquiddick,
and the American Society want to
forget Chappraquiddick.
Tonight I am addressing the
nation to urge that we just
Chappraquiddick behind us,
once and for all.
Sincerely,
Jimmy
Sincerely,
Germany
Sincerely,
Jimmy
Papal visit has political overtones
By PETER HEBBLETHWAITE N.Y. Times Special Features
OXFORD, England—Officially, Pope John Paul II's visit to the United States has no political implications—it is spiritual in tone and pastoral in purpose; but it would be naive to take these views at face value. The pope, on the one hand, would not accept such status. It may be a tiny state, but it allows the state to international affairs, to be a "transnational actor."
On his two previous journeys he faced formidable problems. In Mexico, everyone wondered if he would support the "theologians of liberation" or shore up Latin America's military dictators. He avoided the dilemma. He believed in the religion of theology while rejecting some of its Marxist methods, and the addressed tough words on human rights to the dictators.
POLAND POSED a comparable problem: Would his visit confer a blessing on the communist leader Edward Gierke or would it strengthen the dissidents' hands? Again, John Paul II showed *more subtle* than his commentators. He remained courteous and polite toward the regime, but he also emphasized the aspirations of many Poles for freedom and independence.
The visit to the United States is entirely different. His previous journeys have been to safely Catholic countries. He has always been a Catholic, and officially asthetic, these labels disguise the sociological reality. So, the American visit will be the pope's first serious brush with a pluralistic culture. This will likely be re-examined as he works in his symbolic language on which he could draw. Crestchauke stood for Mary. Auschwitz for reconciliation, and his being an Auschwitz slaughter glory. There are no comparable shrines in America.
JOIN PAIL is very keen on the natural law. It enables the reader to see what happens in nature, certain that he will have read the late John Courtney Murray's book "These Things We Hold." It shows the influence of natural-law thinking on the framers of the natural law.
He will not fail to point out that the Polish constitution of 3, 1790, a brief narrative of hope that was soon after so badly shocked him, had been a victory for his people.
A pluralistic society cannot exist without tolerance. I would therefore expect the pope to speak on religious liberty. In Poland, he deplored its absence and insisted that it is not a special privilege but a human right. Yet at the Paris Council (1826-60) he argued that the church had no business in declaring religious liberty if it did not also concede it.
BUT THE POFE will not simply flatten the American ideology. In his encyclical Redemperor Hormin ("The Redeemer of Mankind"), he criticized "consumers unrestraint in nature" and would have an immediate effect on gas-guzzling in the gas-uzsquazing oriented American society. He is in favor of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," provided the pursuit of the happiness of some does not lead to the misery of others, which is roughly the Third World's analysis of our
It could be argued that an emphasis on the political dimensions of the visit distorts its purpose. In a sense it does not.
The crucial ecclesiastical question will be how the pope reacts to the liberals in the American church. He has made it clear that he does not share in the "liberal agenda" for the church. He does not believe that reform on contraception, clerical cellbacy and the ordination of women are top priorities.
But he may find himself caught in a contradiction: "liberal" in international affairs, "conservative" in church affairs. But the political dimension cannot be waved away by any episcopal magic wand. In "Vaticanese," no one is accustomed to battle, but the euphomism for politics is "striving for justice and peace," and to that the pope is surely committed.
THERE IS AT least one event that will be political in any sense of the term: the encounter with President Carter. The idea of a pope—any pope in the White House is enough to make some old-fashioned WASPs tremble with apprehension if no rage. But who will gain from the meeting? On two vital points—the ratification of the strategic arms treaty and the acceptance support from a pope who has already spoken on these questions. But that may not help Mr. Carter all that much.
He has been dogged by bad luck. He came to the White House as a man with reasonable ability, who would work in the press, but to the president. He proclaimed his faith in human rights the world over. He tried to make his actions correspond with his words. But he failed.
This is speculation, but I can imagine many Americans feel that the highly moral approach to the presidency has been a failure and what is needed is a tough-minded pragmatist. The job of moralizing can be safely left to the pope, who is classically prepared to take on the task of being the conscience of the nations and better qualified to
Peter Hebeblewhite, author of "The Year of Three Popes," is a US civic affairs writer for the National Catholic Church. He also writes for The Times and Forbes.
To the Editor:
Energy audits needed more publicity
Your Story from Friday the energy audits to be conducted on 500 buildings in eastern Kansas does not reflect a typical situation that awaits that can slow conservation efforts.
While $12 million seems large, it is for three years, covers only a few potential sites. In all cases, the salaries of the auditors. All this process is business as usual under normal circumstances, but is the energy crisis not even publicity, only those institutions (which include health care, educational, and housing) on persons on an inside track were able to understand and respond in time to be chosen, leaving many small, needy institutions.
And what about Western Kansas? It is frequently overlooked though it is just as deserving of federal funds to insulate the threat of energy's spiraling costs.
But KU, with all its wealth, power and leadership, is draining this small fund to perform audits we could and should already have performed. Its acceptance of new tax money for materials and auditor's fees feels like an absurdity. We need, deeply and unified of our own state.
Soon we need to see that this is a small boat, and that we must concentrate on helping each other survive or we all will be lost at sea. The audits will be accented by
KANSAN letters
the KEO until the middle of October. Let's hope for more responses from the heartland.
Jim Mendecuh
1991
Anti-Nader charges shouldn't be scorned To the Editor:
Last Monday night I had the opportunity to present in the speech of Ralph Nader: "The War on Iraq," an article on Ralph Nader by John Eases. II was passed out, and III were passed out. The Review of the News is a weekly news magazine, and it is one of many publications of the John Ease series.
he became apparent long before Nader's speech started that the passing out of this information was distasteful to his supporters. It was not the case on ground on Nader, on his political movement, the public Interest Research Group in Washington, D.C., on his activities in amusing the Chevrolet Covair while at the same time stocking in stock in the Ford Motor Company.
It also focused on the activities of his Safety Systems Foundation and Public
He did not deny any of the charges. He did not threaten to sue the Review of the News Press for its failure to inform him he did was attempt to intimidate the students and others who had distributed the materials.
Safety Research Institute, which invested in the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. at the same time that another Nader spinoff began its campaign against the rival Firestone Rubber Co. This resulted in the 1978 recall of all Firestone 500 tires and, in turn, Firestone took full to about half of what it was and Goodydee noted that Nader had invested in wug up.
In the opinion of many knowledgeable individuals, Nader is a charitant and a fraud,
THESE ARE some of the things that were mentioned in the article passed out at the meeting. In the past, the paper was since early in his speech he pulled out a copy of the article and attempted to discern the word.
He was, of course, called in his bluff, as some students did go forward, whereupon he met the John Birch Society with an old lie that is frequently used to intimidate members of the John Birch Soci-
He challenged the people who had passed out the article to come forward. When they did not immediately do so, he then attempted to discredit them by suggesting that they did not have the courage to come forward and admit to passing out the information.
a phony who has collected millions of dollars which he holds under his own control in trust funds.
Nader apparently believes in academic freedom and freedom of speech for those who do not wish to speak or live and lies when his own record is exposed. Open-minded, honest students and faculty at the University of Kansas will look upon Ralph Nader with interest and concern.
E.A. Munyan, M.D.
Mission Hille
Kansan gets praise on news coverage
To the Editor:
I have been impressed with the Kavan's arrival on campus. However, the Oct. 2. second picture with picture and a disaster that occurred just a few hours before your paper hit the floor.
To me it demonstrates staff ability and existing news mechanics far above the reach of most student newspapers.
And isn't it a shame that it takes a spot news story to provoke this praise, when I also aware of the frequent editorial excerpts you achieve in normal daily coverage?
In any event, today it's kudos for the Kansan.
George Rasmussen Assistant professor, RTVF
---
University Daily Kansan
Thursdav. October 4.1979
Achievement Place helps girls with the law
5
By KATE POUND Staff Reporter
"It's fun," one girl said.
It is ruth, one girl said.
"It's a lot of work," a second said.
"It's a lot of work," a second said.
"I hated it at first," yet another said.
"I'd like to go home," a fourth said.
He laughed at each, yet another said,
"I'd like to go home," a fourth said.
"I miss it when I leave," a fifth said.
"I'm glad I'm here. I could have gone somewhere worse," the last said.
The six girls, who ranged from eight graders to high school seniors, were taking about their home-Achievement Place for Girls. A special home, its purpose it to keep juveniles who are in legal trouble out of the house and on their way back to their families.
Achievement Place, 637 Tennessee,
hardly looks like a home for troubled
juveniles. There are no iron bars, no locks,
forbarring offenders or dark, drab walls
Instead, there is baby furniture and children's art. Books and toys, a shaggy white dog and bright, clean rooms. No
guards, matrons or police officers. Just Paul and Jennifer Veerkam and their four preschool children.
PAUL AND JENNIFER are "teaching parents" in the Achievement Place which was developed in 1877 by the department of human development and family life at the University of Kansas. They are trained to help the girls stay out of trouble and care for the six girls at Achievement Place.
The girls hug them back.
"I just want to say that the teaching- parents are really nice. I swear they do everything they can to help you," one girl said firmly.
"It's like a real family," Jennifer Veerckam said. "The girls love us and get mad at us. We get along really well and then they are all yelling. It is not artificial."
THE VEERKAMPS have been with Achievement Place for 10 months. Only one of the girls at the house has been there longer.
"She really knows the ropes," Paul Veerkamp said.
A quick-to-t smile high school student talked about her homie with ease. She was the only girl in class who supervies the girls' chores, called "constants." She makes the work is done
The girls explained their work. One cleans the kitchen, a second the living room, dining room and kitchen. They also large the kitchen appliances; others keep the yard neat and the Achievement Place
The jobs are shifted weekly, so that everyone tries everything. The chores serve two purposes: keeping a full house clean and teaching good work habits.
"I sure learn a lot doing the work. When I came, I didn't even know how to sweep." one girl said.
"I remember that," Jennifer said. "You just kind of waved the broom around."
Points are earned for school work.
properly done constants, good attitude and proper behavior.
Points are lost for poor school reports, fighting, improperly donned clothes and broken glasses. Points are added daily. Each day, with hard work and a bit of luck, the girls are a little closer to going away.
THE POINTS also are used to "purchase" privileges, such as watching television, dates, allowances and weekend trips home.
"It's hard, sometimes, to earn points," one girl said. "You get going good and something happens and you're right back where you started."
"You know about that," another girl teased gently.
The first girl had recently lost all her privileges after getting into trouble, the girls explained. Now she had to earn extra points to get them back.
"Seems like all I do is work and study, now," she said.
"But I guess I deserved it," she added shyly.
The girls rarely get with poor behavior, they said. If the manager doesn't catch poor work, the teaching-parents will, or teachers at school will.
"THE TEACHERS at school expect more from the Achieve School place," Paul said. "We get daily reports, so we’re in closer touch than most parents are."
The girls attend the schools they attended before come to Achievement place. Each morning, they pile into the van and it heads to Lawrence High School or to Lawrence High School. They take cases ranging from typing to welding and fill their cases with materials they must keep up their grades to earn points.
But there is time out for fun, despite homework and constants, the girls said.
"We get to go camping, fishing and all sorts of stuff I'd never done at home," one girl said.
KANSAN On Campus
...
TODAY: THE UNDERGRADUATE ANTHROPOLOGY ASSOCIATION is sponsoring a lecture by Felix Moon, Ph.D., at the Kansas University Definition" #7 at 3:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The GERMAN HISTORY DEPARTMENT is in the fourth floor lounge of Murpah Hall.
TONIGHT: THE ACCOUNTING CLUB was on Causeway, in the County Room of the Union. In the Union, the Room of the Union. GAV SERVICES OF KANAS will meet at 7:30 p.m. A Taper at KANAS
**TOMORROW:** Companies interviewing the School of Engineering, Proctor & Grace University, Commerce Bancshares Deloitte Haskins & Sells. Companies interviewing in the School of Engineering will be Amoca Research-Naperville, Chevron Research-Naperville, and the School of Law will be Clark, Mize; Linville; Breggleog; Simson, Mag, Fazzel; Morris, Lavians, Evang; Brock & Kennedy.
10
TOMMY HILFIGER
SINGING
Jazz Up!
with your parents!
Tonight: Live jazz jam! Free Admission 8-12 Fri. & Sat.: Earl Robinson & The Red Hot Scamps $7 includes free beer, pop, peanuts and popcorn. (This ad worth $2 off, Friday only.) Reserve now. Seating will be limited. Tickets available at University Music, 926 Massachusetts
Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. (upstairs) 843-2644
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Thursday, October 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
STUDIO ONE
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REDKEN
Houston Ballet merits crowd's appreciation
Houston Ballet, featuring "Britten Van De Dex," "L," "Ramifications" and "Graduation Ball." Presented as part of the show at The Jazz Club, 5 p.m. last night, Beeb Auditorium.
By JUDY WOODBURN Staff Reporter
Many regional ballet companies must rely on the talents of one or two dancers for difficult solos or complicated choreography, but not the Houston Ballet.
Although last night's performance highlighted the talents of Kenneth McBride and Suzanne Longley in "Brittan Pas De Ceau", the technical capabilities of
KANSAN Review
other members of the group were by no means overshadowed.
At times, intermittent applaure for Longley's seemingly endless pirouettes and McCannie's leaps seemed to break the continuity of the dance. The pas dedeau was choreographed especially for the two women by Ben Stevenson, Houston Baler's artistic director.
The audience's appreciation of technical strength had gained momentum earlier, during an elaborate series of fouette
pirouettes at the end of "L," an all-male rock ballet also choreographed by Stevenson.
"L." PERFORMED in eight sections to a commissioned percussion score by Don Lawson, was a study in contrasts. Was it a performance or dancers' stamping feet and clapping hands. In other sections, the movements were almost dreamlike, mimicking the sounds of a drummer's foot.
Solo performances by Kevin Meyers, Daniel Jamison and McCombe were powerful, but the effectiveness of "IL" was slightly higher by inconsistent ensemble work.
The multiple image created in the 12-man opening ensemble of "L" was marred at times by a lack of togetherness in the ensemble.
It is unfortunate that “Ramifications” had to follow such an energetic dance as ‘L’. It was a quiet yet emotional piece, but it was also not the kind of friends, but the subtle meaning of “Ramifications” was to be missed by an audience too unequalized to be the previous dance.
The final dance, "Graduation Ball," choreographed by David Lichine to music by Johann Strauss, was a celebration of
some of Strauss' most memorable waltzes and polkas.
An exaggeration unless done by the young man, and not in a dance meet for dancing and entertainment with the young men of a nearby military academy. "Graduation Ball" at times is a good time to dance.
These technical accomplishments seem to be one of the reasons the Houston Ballet has attracted so much attention lately as a regional company. And a crowd gathered at the concert showed that Lawrence and the University of Kansas are ready for more dance groups of this caliber.
MASS. STREET DELI
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SUA
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POETS & WRITERS SERIES
presents
MONAVANDUYN
"Mona Van Duyn is one of the best women poets around. . . American poetry has a fine new addition."
JAMES DICKEY
"She does see, and takes her life in her hands to say so. Out of much searching and finding come poems that will. I think, live happily ever after."
RICHARD HOWARD
JAMES MERRILL
Recipient of the Eunice Tietjes award (1956), the Harriet Monroe Award (1968) from Poetry, the Helen Bullis Prize (1964) from Poetry Northwest, the Hart Crane Memorial Award from The American Weave Press (1968), first prize in the Borestone Mountain Awards Volume (1968), the Bolliigen Prize (1970), and the National Book Award for Poetry (1971).
Author of Valentines to the Wide World (1959). A Time of Bees (1964).
To See. To Take (1970). and Bedtime Stories (1972). Co-founder and
editor of Perspective, a Quarterly of Literature.
"She is our Penelope in verse, and inversely; day by day undoing the web she weaves each night against her missing Ulysses' return, against her mysterious suitors' departure. With what ardor yet what responsibility (to herself, to her surroundings, to the time served in them) she sets about her scandalous task, her scalding play, her homework, as she calls it . . . how Mona Van Duyn's poems work!"
OCTOBER 8,8 PM
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R100 Rolling Writer pen
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reg. $ 98^{c} $
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YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
1974
V174
master change
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Your Kansas Union Bookstores
in both Kansas Unions The Main Union; Main Store, Level 2 The Satellite Union; Satellite Shop
We are the only bookstore to share its profits with KU Students.
TODAY IS THE LAST DAY TO VOTE
9
Cross over the bridge to
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Our motto is and has always been . . .
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Phone 843-1431 for Information.
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DINING
University Dally Kansan
Thursday, October 4, 1979
Low-income housing project obtains HUD financing
By BOB PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
A request by the Lawrence Housing Authority for the construction of 50 public housing units for low-income families was approved by the city's development of Housing and Urban Development.
Although the amount of money to be spend on the project was also set by DU, Dave Murrell housing authority executive committee to reveal the proposed project's cost.
"It would be improper to do that at this time," Murrell said. "It would interfere with the letting of birds at a later date if we released an estimated cost."
A majority of the 50 units will have two bedrooms, with some one - and some three-bedroom units. he said.
He said the proposed project would be financed strictly with HUD money.
THE PROJECT will remain under the
management of HUD until the mortgage is paid. Then it will become the property of the city, according to Murrell.
The proposed units will be the fourth type of D-Financial housing project. Lawrences Building, 1700 Massachusetts St., was built for the elderly and Edgeworth House, 1006 Haskell Ave. There also are 96 private dwellings in Lawrence where rents are subsidized by
He said the rent for the units would be based on one fourth of the family's income after tax deductions.
"The people must be low-income."
Murrell said, "HUD has certain standards for income levels of the residents. If, for example, a family of four made $12,000 a year or less, they could be eligible in live-in care."
--authority was to make the project blend well architecturally with the neighborhood.
The location of the project has not been determined.
"A public meeting of the housing board last month turned the board in favor of scattered sites for the project if enough funds from HUD was available," Murrell said.
"A big variable is land cost. If we bought 10 pieces of property throughout Lawrence, this would change the cost of the project substantially."
"We feel that the public housing should be integrated into the neighborhood, if well integrated so that residents feel that they were part of a neighborhood, and that they were part of a government project."
He said the housing board plannes a survey of residents at Edgewood Homes to find out whether the residents thought their house was safe or not. A HUD project gave them a good or a bad image, and whether they thought the new building should be scattered throughout the city.
HE ALSO SAID the goal of the housing
"For instance, we don't want a boxy house in with some older homes," he said.
Members of the authority's boarding will talk in late October with a team of two or three HUD officials about the price HUD has projected for the units, the setting of a construction schedule for completion by a project architect and the letting of bids.
proceed with our studies through the winter and be very close-mouthed about the estimated costs of construction.
Murrell said the housing authority had 30 days beginning yesterday to schedule a planning meeting with HUD officials.
"It will take a good two to five months for the city planning commission to start taking bids on the project," Murrell said. "We will
Dedorbat Butcher, project manager at Edgewood Homes, said 33 families had applied for two-bedroom homes, and 63 had applied for three-bedroom homes.
"A lot of the people that we now have living in Edgewood are single heads of families," Murrell said. "There are also a number of families whose head is disabled able to work. You've got to keep in mind that not all of the people are also on welfare."
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Lewis Hall
You Need Your Temporary KUID To Vote
Paid by Student Activities
8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 4, 1979
Orioles clip Angels
BALTIMORE (AP) - Pinchhitter John Bailor in the 19th inning to give the Baltimore Orioles a 6-3 victory over the California Angels in the opening game of the American League.
Lowenstein, who had started only three games after severely spraining his left knee on Aug. 9; scored a drive down the left wing and broke into an 8-6 pitch from reliever John Montague.
Drew DeClinee, who drove in a fourth-
inning run with a sacrifice fly, opened the
innings with a single and was sacrificed to
second by Rich Douer. A Albumry was
walked intentionally after pitchbacker
Crowley Ried to center for the second out.
Appearing in a record sixth playoff, the Orioles won the opening game for the sixth consecutive time. The victim was a Ravens player appearing in its first postseason action.
Lowenstein circled the bases with his hands unraised in triumph as a record
Baltimore playoff crowd of $2,787 roared its approval. He later was recalled from the dugout to doff his cap during a rousing call curtain.
He tied a major league playoff record by fanning the first four.
Nolan Ryan, who has a 5-12 lifetime record against Baltimore and has lost his last six in a row, a start, the game by striking out of the first six batters.
A dropped pop fly by Bobby Grich, a bassist and a former Origerator, led to two unearned Baltimore runs in the third. And a wild pitch by Ryan helps produce another great run.
Decinces made it all the way to second when Grippedich drove his pop fly along the right field line. He score on a double by 15 points, and his previous high hit on the California foulshorn.
The Orioles, who held a 9-3 edge over California in the regular season, need two more victories in the best-of-five series. The team's next game is three. Three is scheduled for Friday in Anaheim.
Bucs edge Cincy take 2-game lead
CINCINNATI (AP) -- Slugger Dave Parker drive home onome Moreno with a 10th-inning single and gave the Pittsburgh Pirates a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in yesterday's second National League championship series.
The triumph, coming after a dramatic rally by the Reds, tied the game in the ninth, and gave the Pirates their second victory in this best-of-five series.
The Pirates, driving for their first NI
nennant since 1971, will try to finish off
the Reds when the playoff series
resumes Friday at Pittsburgh.
Moreno, who led the league with 77 stolen bases, opened the 10th with a strikeout in the seventh. Rather than risk the steal, the Pirates used a sacrifice by Tim Foley to advance
home a controversial run which gave Pittsburgh the 2-1 lead into the ninth.
With Moreno dancing off second, Bair worked to the dangerous Parker. The left-handed slugger ripped a single to the ground and hit him with the hilp, hovering for a play at the plate.
Three innings earlier, Foster had thrown out Ed Edd to try score. But his arm was no match for Moreno's speed and the Pirates had their winning run.
The Reds seemed finished earlier, but came off the deck to tie the score.
Pittsburgh reliever Kent Tekulve pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the eighth to preserve a 2-1 Pirates' lead.
Don Robinson, who saved Pittsburgh's 5-2, 11-inning victory Tuesday night, came on as the sixth Pirates pitcher of the game - lying a playoff record.
IDEAL coalition
In the 10th, Robinson preserved the lead, setting the Reds down in order to nail down the victory.
paid for by an ideal coalition
STARTING THIS
WEEKEND
AT
BULLWINKLE'S
a private club
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
FEATURING
LIQUID FIRE
FRIDAY, OCT. 5
MAX GROOVE
SATURDAY, OCT. 6
SHOW STARTS AT 10:00
BUT WHY WAIT TIL THE WEEKEND?
WE HAVE TWO FOR ONES
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 9-11 PM
AND
WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS LADIES' NIGHT!
It was Foli who earlier had doubled
SPECIAL NOTICE
Thursday, October 4
is the last day to withdraw enrollment for Fall Semester and receive a one-half tuition refund.
For further information see page 245 of the Timetable or come by or call the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064.
Buy your mom a mum
MUM'S THE WORD For Parents Day
Day of Game
October 6 $2.75
at Union or
Stadium
Presales Delivery
Saturday Morning
Paid for by Lambda Sigma.
For You Personally From
This beautiful brilliant ring Only $68.95
Don't Miss This Special Offer!
Oct. 4 & 5
VISA
master charge
Oct. 4 & 5
Nov. 7 & 8
AT THE KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
AND DANIEL WELLITTE UNION
On Ring Days only the ring will be on sale for the price of $68.95.
SENIORS
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students
SayCheese!
Rappoport Studios will be taking Senior pictures October 1-19 in Spooner Hall call Jayhawker Yearbook for appointment. 864-3728 $1 Sitting fee.Call Now.
Burke doesn't want Rojas
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Speculation was rampant in Kansas City yesterday about who would succeed Kansas City as head coach. Whitey Hertzey, who was fired Tuesday.
Although Cookie Rojas, the predecessor of Frank White at second base for the Royals, garnered the most support from fans in a game the City Star. He probably won the聘.
Joe Burke, Royals executive vice president and general manager, was unimpressed.
"I can't start naming names," said Burke. "But I can tell you that Cookie doesn't have the experience in my opinion to give me a reason, why, I must he'd seen it in *i* Chicago."
Burke said he had contacted no candidate about the job, but revealed one person already had thrown his hat into the ring.
Joins had the majority of votes in the poll with Charlie Lau, Royals former batting coach now with the New York Yankees, coming in second.
"I had one today call me already applying for the job. This man told me that somebody contacted him two weeks ago to ask if he called him. He told them he absolutely had not heard from anyone, but he thought he met call me and get his name in the hat."
Speculation indicated that Burke's caller was Danny Ozark, recently fired as manager of the Philadelphia Phillies.
Asked what he asked his chances were, he said, "Gee, I don't know. I don't know." I talked to Joe Burke about it. I called him and he called me back.
"But you know, I just don't know what my chanées are. I'm just applying for the job and that's about the extent of it. He (Burke) said he would time before making any kind of decisions."
Reached at Vero Beach, Fla., last night,
Ozark said: "Yeah, I did call the Royals
management."
also yesterday owner Ewing Kauffman denied Herzog was fired because the owner disliked him personally.
Kaufman also said he expected to name a successor "shortly after the World Series."
No "1. Kauffman said. "Whitsey was not fired because he said, the writer told me, that the authors, as the writers had, Mr. K. dith' like him. The change was made because in the judgment of Joe Burke, it was true.
"As far as mr. Burke and Whitey are concerned, Whitey might never have managed in the major leagues if it were not him," he said in his snad. "Whitey owls all to Mr. Burke."
★ STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS ★
Deadline for formal complaints
complaints must be in writing
is one hour after the final polls close. All
and submitted to the elections chairman.
Godfathers Pizza
A Bottomless Cup of Coke
The thickest, richest, most mouth-watering pizza you ever sank a chop in, and an offer you can't refuse!
Buy a large serving of Coke in our special cup for just 69'. Then bring it back and with every medium or large pizza, we'll fill it free for a year.
711 W. 23rd Street • Lawrence
Phone: 843-6292
Godfather's Pizza
New Members
Always
Welcome
Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
Environment
MINGLE TONIGHT!
INFLATION NIGHT
TONIGHT ONLY
Mon-Fri 4 pm-3 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th
Sat-Sun 6 pm-1 am
842-7030
Thursday, October 4. 1979
University Daily Kansan
9
Bethke gets QB start
For more than a year, quarterback Brian Bethe has been waiting for a starting assignment.
He will get that chance Saturday against Syracuse. Head Coach Dumfrench made the official announcement after practice yesterday.
"As of today, Brian Bethke will be our starting quarterback," Fambrough said. "I have no quanims about starting him."
Bethke, who was the No. 1 quarterback last year until he was injured, will start because of the uncertain status of Kevin KUUs starter in the first three games.
Clinton bruised several ribs in Saturday's 37-18 victory over North Texas State, and he worked out his injury. He was not able to throw yesterday.
"At this rate," Clinton said, "there's no
way I can play Saturday. I tried to throw today, but I ended up sitting down and watching practice. My ribs just hurt too much."
Although Bethek has seen only limited action this season, he is ranked third in the Big Eight in passing. He has completed 66 percent of his passes for 112 yards and has started senior started four games for KU in 1971, throwing for 843 yards on 25 of 53 passes.
"I'm ready," Bethke said. "This is definitely my big opportunity. Every chance I get to play is important, but it really importantly since it is a starting role."
While Fambrouch said he wasn't concerned with the KU quarterback situation, he said the Syracuse offense was a major worry.
"Syracuse is one of the better offensive
teams in the country," Fambraugh said. "They do a lot of things that we’re not used to—every offensive thing you can think of. Right now we’re confused."
Leading the Orange offense is quarterback Bill Hurley. He teamed to a 3-1 record and a 60-point victory margin over the last two opponents.
"Bill Hurley is one of the best quarterbacks I've ever seen," Farnham brought said. "However, Hurley is not the only coach that Baylor teams will have to baskassthis weekend."
Fambrough also said that fullback Harry Sydney would be ready for Saturday's game. Sydney, who rushed for 101 yards last weekend, missed practice Monday and was held out of practice until he held suffering from a sore neck, a carry-in injury from the North Texas State game, Sydney practiced yesterday.
Without two of its top golfers, the KU men's golf team will left yesterday for the 54-hole Falcon Invitational in Colorado Springs, Colo.
The two golfers, Doug Anderson and John Lyons, stayed in Lawrence to take exams, coach Jerry Waugh said.
"We won't be taking our best golfers out on there." Waugh said. "It's just a mixture of friends, coaches and teammates. Two of our guys are taking tests this week, so I really can say for sure how the team is doing."
According to Waugh, the Hawks have placed in the middle of the pack the past five years.
This year, 22 teams are entered in the tournament sponsored by the Air Force Academy. The tourney will be played over a six-day course of golf course in the foothills of Pike Peak.
Missing linkmen hurt 'Hawks chances
Competing for KU will be Mark Crow, Larry Eudaley, D. R. Senseman, Mark Steiner and Doug Weltner.
With two good golfers staying home, we're going to rely heavily on Crow and Steiner."
The Eisenhower course, according to Waugh, has given past KU teams numerous problems.
Waugh said. "Both of those guys have played in the mountains before."
"You're almost up in the mountains," Waugh said. "The ball is going to roll half the time. The course also creates a number of problems that you have to urge the望来 what your eyes see.
The Hawks play a practice round today before the tourney officially begins tomorrow.
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Successful surgery was performed Tuesday on the right knee of Louis Cardinals starter Daniel Pujols to Lois Cardinals defensive end for the remainder of the National Football League
The 31-year-old former KU All-America was injured Sunday during a game against the Los Angeles Rams. His surgery was to repair cartilage and ligament damage
Zook sidelined
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Now thru Oct. 28
Open Sat. and Sun.
The University Daily
2:00 pm—Close
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
KANSAS UNION
1 baskets or fewer
one basket two baskets four baskets five baskets six baskets seven baskets ten baskets
$2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 $6.00 $6.50 $7.00
additional baskets
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
Weekend 5 p.m.
The UOK 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 simply by calling the UR business office at 481-458.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 464.475.825
Every Sunday.
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. If
Watch for truck parked at 9th & Illinois. Home garden with vegetable and fruit bins in-the-wall selling fresh vegetables and fruits in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry brown rice, lice, pomegranate juice, honey, pasta, butter, and sambar every Sunday.
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also roasted, salted and raw peanuts. Varieties of dry beans, green, yellow and white papaya, money, and southern Every Sunday
IDEAL
coalition
Neded: vote? Why vote for anyone else? The only choice, P Mike Powlowski. independent. 10-4
Zen practice night—6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Seung Sahn from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21.
Bell 827-7024 for information. 10-12
Bergare Garage Sale- 4-1, Sel. Oct. at 6th and Alabama, to support Scoabell Anti-make-up assistance. Duration of sale terms welcome. Sponsors: National Guard and Radius- 5 Free Kauai.
thur-fri-sat
pat's blue riddim band
tonite
8:00 am - 12:30 pm
8:00 am - 9:00 pm
$1.50
price of per
all nite
Lawrence
Opera House
Call for concert info 842-6930
INDEPENDENT THINKERS, your representative is here. Vote PTACK for Student Senate October 3 and 4. 16-4
Sundancing 8:00 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4.
Community building, 11th and Vermont. No experience necessary. Public invited. 841-5783 or 841-105-
MUM SALE-Parents Day Oct. 6 at Union Stadium
MUM morgue corsage 27 Lambda Sigma 10-5
DIRICO SUCKS Because a number of the ANTI-DICO DIRICO LEAGUE Member includes Bufton, Derrick and Jeff Robinson Membership fees $50. Send to Anti-Dioco League, 12345 North Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90074 THE WORLD KNOW YOU LOVE JOHN ROLLIN
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
The Harbour Milton has one easy way! It comes from 1-8pm. You can get cold counts of Cocks or Boats from 1-4pm. You can get warm counts your ship together at the Harbour Lives if you visit The Harbour Lives to the Harbour Milton. This is a first-class cruise.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING
unfurnished, from $192. Two bedroom apartments,
from $248. Two bedroom apartments, INDOOR HEATED FOOL. For appraisal
next door to Kensington's Rental. TF
Billy Searle is coming back and you can see him here. Saturday, Oct. 3 at 6:30 p.m. and Monday, Wed. Oct. 3 at 6:30 p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 4 at 7:00 p.m. On cable channel CBS4.
Two-bedroom basement apartment, $160/month
utilities paid, + $100 deposit. No pets. 824-6022
or 842-6063.
Beautiful, new 2 bdm. apt. Completely equipped
kitchen. 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone 843-
9579.
Thursday, October 4 at Off-the-Wall-Hall-7 p.m. a featured feature featuring Beth Scalet. The KC Women's Jam and many more. 16-4
A person to share or sublease a nice and clean, one bedroom, furnished not. Walking distance to campus. 5- half utilities. Apt. 211; at 108 Mississippi. Call 843-942 or 842-003. 10-4
Close to campus: one 2 bedroom 2 story house and one basement apt. A184 831-890
10-5
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. ff
Roommate needed to share four bedroom duplex.
841.25 month + 1', utilities. Call 841-6663 even-
nings.
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
rooms near KL. Possible rent reduction for labor.
Tailor Call 841-6258 or 842-6465 10-31
Two bedroom Bail Creek aquark公寓 $479 a
month
1 bd. apt 7261, Arkansas $110.00月 see,
address furnished, furnished 10-8
After 5 a.m.
ROOM FOR MALE STUDENT. Furnished, share
bath, refrigerator. Walk to campus. 14th and
Kentucky. $7.00 plus one-ninth heating bill.
Call 841-215-90. 10-10
FOR SALE
SunSpecs—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Hue suitage, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-570. TF
Alternator, starter and generator specialists
Parts, services and exchange units. BELL AUDIO-
UNIT SERVICES
ATTERED MATTRESSS, $85.99, 3-year ca-
rriage.
WILLIE LINK, HALL, MAJOR, 720-430-1100.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization notes by making value judgements, preparation 2. For exam preparation. New preparation 3. For exam preparation. New preparation 4. At Town Cite, Mala Books店, & Oread Bookstore.
FOR SALE
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Pouch Mopeds. Rick's Bike Shop, 1033 Perch 841-6442. TP
Dressers, picture frames, chairs, small couch,
jewelry, linens, oak tables—George's, 1655 Mass.
Open daily.
1972. Ford Torino. Gold and White. Two-door.
302 8-8. Good car—good price. Call Craig at
842-880.
Fender public address system. This CGA-701A P.A. includes stage-a4 channel reverb, 15K ohm speaker cabinet with 4-12T in each. Also mki. stands. Perfect for arranged combo or studio.
Guitar: Gibson acoustic B-25. Very good cond.
—beautiful sound $150 or best offer. Also electric—good cond. 2nd, lots of fun $35.00 or best
10-6th $42-900 evenings.
22 Toyo convertible. Be first in town to town
one. 30 to 40 MPG. 1-913-235-9820. 10-4
1970 Trans Am. T-10, top loaded, automatic, low-speed. $25,000. 1971 Toyota Camry up-air. $45,000. 1979 Toyota Hybrid up-air. $45,000. Apple Like. for large cargo. Apple Like. for small cargo
Univega bicycle—a year old, was in storage 9 months. Very good condition.$20; $214; 81-15
21" X W Zenith console TV with remote. Dual speakers. B42-2850 after 5. $60.00 or best offer.
280-Z, 1 owner, only 4500 miles. Good as an.
A.C. AM/FM stereo, tape deck, and 5-speed.
CALL 864-3748 6 a.m.-5 p.m. 10-5
Maranzit Stereo System. 23248 M 40 watch receiver.
6170 direct drive turntable. TKM2 speakers, and
more. Must be to appreciate. Call Tom at 842-
9270.
QUANTRELL'S FEA MARKET - the area just south of 90th Street and west of Oakland's famous furniture displays. Located on the ground floor, the store is stylish, charming and handsome of all interiors. Shop at Quantrell's for any of its specials every Saturday and Sunday from 8-11 noon. Visit www.quantrells.com. 514-767-3220.
Tavola, 1972—stereo, good condition. Also Sony FX130, includes " TV, AM; FM, tape rec. 164-683 or 811-6835 Giorgio 10-5
Very nice two bedroom mobile home, C.A. dlu-
wasser, washer, dryer, appliances skipped, deck,
8-by-10 red burn. 643-729-3233. www.m22.com. #122.
1971 Pirito, 4-speed, 66,000 rulers, $400. Call Keith
at 843-5073.
15 Bestles albums, 50 classical and a hundred
78 rpm records. Congo Drum and a recording
phone, 841-623-keep-yrying.
10-8
Ten speed bike. Small frame. Save gas at a good price. Beat offer. Call Suite at 841-2994. 10-8
Have the New York Times delivered to your home or apartment every Sunday afternoon
1976 Yamaha 600cc. Excellent condition, mechanically and commetically. Has received good maintenance. 841-2964 after 5.00. 10-11
Large four drawer dresser. $35.00. Call 842-0681.
5-7 p.m. 10-8
BEER SIGNS FOR SALE, ILLUMINATED, ANIMATED, CLOCK, 842-0110 AFTER 5 KEEP TRYING.
10-6
1972 WV Super Beetle, Rebuilt engine, radial tires, runs good, mileage 841-852 345.
1974 Pontiac LeMans Sport Coupe, 350 V8, great
price; $1300. Call 8347-8471 for 5 p.m. 10-10
mon.
Beautiful 88" brick and frame ranch-back bake-off golf course. Paint Upless. In Country Club North, pried in Bayside. Rimless. Rimless. Rimless. Ramsey office, 841-290-5000; 841-290-1300; 841-290-6000.
Two twin mattresses and box springs. Excellent condition. Also set of new Martex sheets and comfort call. Bqt 841-2128. Ask for Jk. 10-10
FOUND
Puppy about 1 yr, old, black, small, in front of JRP Hall on Sept. 30. Call 864-2890. 10-5
Female Calico kitten, about 4 months old—near GSP-Corbell Call and identify 864-1673 10-8
Found a small dog at 23rd and Naismith.
Call 843-5110. 10-5
HELP WANTED
Earn as much as $50 per 1000 stuffing envelopes with our circulators. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 45042.
10-16
Part-time dishwashing and counter help, 11 a.m. 2 p.m. Mon, thru Fri. Apply in person only at Border Bandoid, 1538 W. 29th 10-16
HELP WANTED
Our business has increased dramatically. We now need four weekly meetings with our staff. You will work two to six weekends per month. A pay is 16,000 plus benefits.
842-6135
the party picture professional
David BERNSTEIN PHOTOGRAPHY
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place,
New York, NY. Reqs: Bachelor's degree in EHD or
experimental study design on EHD or experience
work with adolescent youth preferred. Ou-nn-
work with adolescent youth preferred. Ou-nn-
work with adolescent youth preferred. Ou-nn-
work with adolescent youth preferred. Excellent inter-
national skills requi
Wanted: Hard-working, dedicated individuals to the football and track programs at KU. Participate in a growing athletic program. Benefits include: Bachelor's in sports training. Travel Buddies Male Hike in room 121A at the KU Athletic Center.
$3.10 per hour if you qualify. No experience needed. Must have a Bachelor's degree in food, opportunity for advancement. Need people willing to work and apply them. Please visit our website at person.a at Restaurant, 137 W. Kith 60, 10-12
Part-time food service personnel personnel needed: 15-25 hours per week. Starting pay $3.70 per hour. Must have at least 1 year supervisory experience. Must have: *Mass-Mind* *Schumann Foods,* *19.5*, Mass-Mind *10.9*
Concerns Venturing *night weekender* weekend work
would make your job more stressful. On big on week and year round (Sky
and Water) you may want to look for a night shift,
weekends when most workplace dutiesJob includes
workforce management, employee administration,
Personal Office, 842-952-3120, best for non-
military employees.
Bucky's drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person between 10-5. Bucky's drive-in, 2120 W. 9th, 10-5
COOK 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m. or M.N. weekends
10 a.m. to noon in isaac and during OKU
morning from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
main restaurant cooking. Apply in person at
Cook 10 from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer
Shenanburg's 21 needs bar tenders, waitresses and floor walkers immediately. Contact John at 841-4609, or come to 901 Mississippi. 10-5
THE MOFTEE-BEERS BAND is now bedding
auditions for male vocalist keyboard, player,
vocalist call, or vocational serenity. Serious
inquiries only. Call 812-568-8101, 812-568-8101.
The Department of Microbiology, University of New York at Buffalo, will conduct a search. Assistant to begin on, or soon after, Gene Transfer (GT). This research will be conducted chemical, in vitro chemical and in vivo cell culture experiments with students. The student will also be equivalent experiences in Microbiological, Biotechnological and Experimental Curriculums. The appointment will be for a minimum period of six months complemented with education and clinical experience. Applicants must be members of the University of New York at Buffalo's AMC43519 or CMIC-4137. An Equal Opportunity Employer will be available to women of all races and persons with disabilities.
DRUMMERS: Thunbs auditioning-days, call 842-0191 for Steve or 841-2545 ask for Marty, nights, call 841-7067 ask for Kevin. 16-8
Wanted-Counter: help day and night. Kentucky
Fried Chicken: 8431-242, 6158 W. 29rd. I-10
5
Full-time eacher, 5 day week, excellent working condition, drug store experience. Analyze in person. Ranier Hillery Drug. HIllerst Shoping Center. 16-54
Jayhawk Towers has an opening for a part-time custodian worker. Hours are 4-8 o'clock and can be tailored to your needs. Call 851-4993. 10-5
Part time assistant to throw papers and help district manager with KC Star circulation in Lawrence Area, pay: $4 hour and 15 mile. Come in person to 622 Mass. 10-9
Baker wanted, early morning hours. Apply between 11-2 p.m. 23rd St. Subshop. 230 W. 22rd.
10-10
Pizza Hut—We are now accepting applications for part time cooks. Please apply in person at the Pizza Hut Restaurant, 1064 W. 23rd. 10-9
Wanted: 10 ambition college women to start immediately. Assist part-time with marketing, distribution of internationally known art 2 courses. $82-76J for interview. 10-9
Better Homes and Gardens Craft Creations is now looking for part-time craft counselors. Will train, good money, Call Robb. H2-1057. 16-9
Student Assistant Needed—must be available to work 15-20hrs during your time as Student Assistant. Please information call Mrs. Gracey 844-6223 or apply at Nunumberer Center, 1060 Krewel Blvd. An Nunumberer Center office is located.
MEN- WOMEN- JOBS! CRUSIERSHIPS! SAILING
OFFSHORE TRANSITIONS! BOATS! SAILING
FOR APPLICATION INFO JOBS! TO CRUSEW
WORLD 152, Box 60249, Sarajevo, CA 95058
OVERSEAS JONIS - Summer year round. Bound,
N. America Australia, etc. All fields, $200-
monthly, examinations paid. Shipfree. Free
vacation. IBC, Box CIVA, Costa Rica.
CA 92263
Need-person to clean-up hars daily, flexible
hours. Call Terry 845-1023.
locs
LOST
Lost set of keys on key ring with large brass
^E" attached. If found call 841-8088. Reward
Lotus-71-20 calculator in Learned, either room
3016 or 4095 hours. Turing on 9 27. Call 841-8250
or 842-7157. Reward offered. No question asked.
10.5
WOMAN'S TAN BLAZER Left, midtown room
4007 Worcester at 2:30 p.m. Thurs., Sept. 27th. Call
843-5633.
10-5
Butterfly key chain, with key loss in front of Weser 9.27, Call 864-1619 after 5. Support, 10-4
MISCELLANEOUS
For a close-up look at the life and music of Billy Squarra, watch “Bringing It All Back Home”—the only television program devoted to a child’s life. Streamed on Channel 6 at 7 p.m. Exclusively on Cable Channel 6. I-450.
THISIS BINDING COPYING—The House of
Ursula's Quick Copy center is headquarters for
thesis binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us
put at 838 Maxs or plasma, 436-350. Then
try the following.
NOTICE
Enroll Now! **In** Lawrence driving school, receive driving license in 4 weeks without highway patrol test? Transportation provided, pay now lay out. 842-6015. 10-12
Vote
INDEPENDENT Ptacek
FOR
FOR Ptacek
SENATE Ptacek
STUDENT
Lawrence Joachim Kohlman Club will meet at a workshop held at the Douglas County 4-H Fairgrounds for the Douglas County 4-H Fairgrounds program by Major Beryl Schwab, Commander of the Douglas County 4-H Fairgrounds program will include demonstrations. The public meeting will be held on Tuesday, May 26th.
tonight
dance on lawrences biggest dance floor to the reggae of pat's blue riddim band
Dear客户:
8:00 above 9:00
lawrence
house
Set yourights on the 2nd annual JYAHWAK
JOG, Set 21, 1978. CONTACT GAMMA PHI BEETA
443-8622 or PHI KAPPA PSI 843-2653 for registration
10-5
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Lega,
864-564-5544. If
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--clinches up to 17 pregnancy, treating birth, Birth Control, Coupling Tubal Ligation. For appointment call (850) 469-2100. 469 St. Overland Park, KS
TENNIS AND RAQUETTEH PLAYERS. When was the last time you had your request touchscreen? Assist, Assist and Official Stringer. GCT Doubles. Very reasonable rules on good play. 10-11
GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through headquarters, 811-235 and KU info, 841-306. . . tt
Paid for by AN IDEAL COLECTION vote Octo-
ber 3 & 4! 10-4
If you are looking for a bar with clean beer, pool or outdoor seating you'll find the Harbour Labs you like. Their juicy pizzas and burgers offer a day and afternoon for TGIF? New-service Bar? The Harbour Labs' Hotel-Guy gift t-shirt in lieu of the Harbour Guy gift t-shirt at the Harbour Labs!
Monotheistic DOCTRINE of Relicarmony in the Torah, the Prophets and the Gospels. Write: 'The Truth of Islam, P.O. Box 4494, South Bend, Indiana 46244'
WOMEN'S SELF-DEFENSE CLASSES STARTING.
Sign up in Women's Coalition Office, 110B
Union.
MUM SALE - Parents Day, Oct. 6 at Union or
Stadium. Mum courage $2.75. 10-5
White, male. Graduate seeks mature female for
work together. Write P.O. Box 2054. 185-6334.
kkddaa.
G: a winning reaction with IMAGINATION.
Paid for by Imagination. 10-4
learn-Happy 20th. The past 13 years have been unstoried. Sometimes I'm surprised we've made it this far alive. Thanks for being the best friend ever-Heitwitt. 10-4
"GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE!" Drawing tables from 10F Proceeded to the Archibald Building, Marvin Center and Mavin Center with phone number 851-231-Cash or (government) Committee. That the Christmas tree! Safe ends!
LAW STUDENTS - Git-removed this Friday! It's
Western Swimming time, all Shiloh's
18.
Join us in singing the Glory of God with the West Side: Probably Church Choir, 1124 Kawid. For more information call 843-1542 or 843-6236.
JOBS ON SHSIP: American, Foreign. No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Summa job or career. Bare $100 for informational materials. Mail resume to Washington, 98322. 10.10.17
Miss Poppy-Happy Birthday-Sweet nineteen-
and all fifteen- Love Kevin Carasur and
Carsur.
Come to the Huddle for a TGIR and PRrrerr at 4 p.m. 10-4
PSYCHIC AWARENESS CLASS. Learn about
anxiety, energy centers, healing, spirit guides,
Thursday evenings, starting Oct. 11. Call Kyle
Lossender 825-782-7481. 10-30
SERVICES OFFERED
R. M.K. Happy b-day late! I know you’re leaving your teen years behind but the twenties are exceptionally fantastic!" Bobba. I hope had a good day, Love, Lizrith. 10-4
P.S. Bubba, did you have a good time in jazz?
I love you! I love you, Elizabeth.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid -841-5641
tf
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Garage—complete professional bicycle repair. Garage maintenance. "Tune-Up" and "Total-Occuracy." Details call 841-2781. 10-22
EXPERT TUTORING MATH 600-102-124 call
.5785, MATH 710-123-124 STATISTICS (all courses) call 832-696-521 C. 100-600 call 832-696-521 D.
ASSIGNMENTS AND SPANISH call 842-192-158
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available at Alice at the House of Mother Quick Conveyor. Alile is available from AM to 5 PM Monday for 9:30AM to 1 PM on Wednesday at RKM Mass.
SPANISH TUTORING Experienced teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108, 109, 111, 112, 116. Call 841-2467.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $100 for your 300-page catalog of college research. 10,250 tonies listed. BOX 25097G, Los Angeles, CA 90217. 877-479-8799
Do it once. . . right! Straight Arrow Auto Service. Quality repair on most domestics and imports. Socalizing in Fliat, Honda and Toyota. 92% / EJ 818, 843-2442. 10-7
Excellent do-lay with sound equipment... 811
private parties. Very competitive prices. 811-
8198, after six. 10-12
TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. TF
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
Journalism typographer. 20 years typing, typetyping experience. 4 years academic typing; thesis, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest Scribler equipment. AQR-4684.
Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work,
reasonable rates. Themes, distortions welcome;
editing layout. Call No. 842-9127
Experienced typist -Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 832-5910. TF
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-8654, after 4 p.m.
2-28
I would like to type your term papers, thesis,
assertation, etc. Reasonable rates. Karen. 10-4
Experienced typet- thuse, dissertations, term
studies on chemical electrodialysis, selec-
bion B64-3138, evenings 822-2510
864-3138, evenings 822-2510
Experienced Typist—term papers, theses, mice,
elegant IBM Solicit. Proofreading spelling
corrected. 843-0554 Mrs. Wright. TF
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective. Call Erik Joran or Jeannine, 841-2172.
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 814-3387.
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate.
low rates, low ratings evenings and
10-23 days
WANTED
Female roommate will Call Steve, 841-2058
after 5:00 10-4
Need mature roommate to a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. Bus stops in front, have and laundry room one block away. $105 plus utilities. Please call between 6-9 p.m., 8:37 a.m.
Motorcycle trailer. Standard size automotive wheels only. Any condition considered. Mon-Fri 6 p.m. 842-456-605. 10-5
Masterkey v2.01 wifiHP "Starman size automated"
Paid for 6 a.m. or after noon.
PAID for 4 a.m. or after midnight.
Rescue suit VOTE FOR ALAN PAYACER
10-4
For help call kennies She lives people Cailen
10-4
Roommates wanted to share two bedroom apt.
Keep calling 842-6575 10-10
WANTED TO BUY or more of less 2 cu. ft. re-
wanted. 842-1703 or 884-4724. Parnes. 19-10
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
If you've got it, Kansas Classified sells it. Just mail in form will help you to 111 FIlm money or money to 111 FIlm Hall. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
10
Tuesday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Friday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:
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2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
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2 times $2.25 03
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$2.50 $2.75
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KANSAS CLASSIFIED—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD.
10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 4, 1979
Researcher says ambition fueled Cuba troop issue
ByHAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
American politicians overreached to the presence of Russian soldiers in Cuba to further their political ambitions, an act that is widely criticized in Latin America researcher said yesterday.
The researcher, Howard Handelman, who recently visited Cuba, told about 25 people in the U.S. who were American politicians were trying to enhance their political images, and had a hard time coming up with words for them.
The speech was delivered in the Ecumenical Ministries building, 1294 Oread Ave.
"Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) is up for attention and need to find some solution to affect and increase popularity," Handelman said. "Dahao is a largely conservative state and he needed a candidate."
Handelman also said the controversy was a handy way for President Jimmy Carter to boost his ratings.
"I don't think he has gained any popularity from this, however." Handelman said. "I think he blew the whole issue."
HANDELMAN SAID Carter handled the
issue poorly by failing to mention earlier that the 2,000 to 3,000 Russian soldiers had been in Cuba for at least five years.
S. M. KINZEN
Howard Handelman
Attention Republicans!!
Attention Republicans!! Nancy Kassebaum to speak at Bradley Farm, Rt. 5 Sunday, Oct. 7
5-7 pm
Bring covered dish, table service. Coffee and meat furnished by Republican Women of Washington
For Reservations Call Delores Haas
Women of Douglas County
843-0871
The Commission on The Status of Women will be having a meeting,7 p.m. Thursday, Oct 4 at Watkins Scholarship Hall.
Topics to be discussed are:
- Escort service
- Additional lighting and blue phones on the university campus.
Your interest and support will be welcomed For further information contact
The Commission on The Status of Women 864-3954
The Commission on the Status of Women 864-3593 or The Emily Taylor Women's Center. 864-3552
thursday night
1
MALE DANCER NIGHT
The FLAMINGO
women only from 9pm-one am
cover charge $3 includes free beer until midnight
members & guests welcome
501 N9th
(memberships available)
lemon tree
Handelman said he thought the Russian troops were in Cuba for training purposes, as Soviet and Cuban officials had claimed.
Earlier this week, Cuban President Fidel Castro called the troop issue a "comedy."
11 w9-behind Weavers
Before discussing the Russian troops in Cuba, Handelman said he was impressed with some of the progress the Cuban had made since the 1960 revolution.
Chocolate
yogurt
has
"I was impressed with Cuba's gains in education and in mass involvement in the political process," he said, referring to the news made on his three-week trip to Cuba.
arrived!!
and is it good!
ALTHOUGH THE quality of Cuban education is poor, he said, it is better than in past years.
He said that today, 50 percent more children attended grade school and 300 percent more attended high school in Cuba than in 1970.
"Many teachers still have only a seventh- grade education.
starting Oct. 3
"However, any gains in Cuban education would be impressive compared with the state of education in Cuba before the 1990 midterm when the illiteracy rate was rather high."
Hair Designs
Besides education, Handelman said he was impressed with "mass involvement" of Cubans in local politics.
Shear Dimensions
by
Mon. 9-5
Sat. 9-4
Handelman has done research in Latin America since 1968, when he studied psaedist life in Peru. He also has written books about American America for international magazine magazines.
Evenings:
Tue.-Fri. 9-8
"Of course, Castro directs major policy and foreign affairs decisions in exchange with the government such as garbage collection and work hours are run by Cuban citizens," Handelman said.
The organization sends researchers to parts of the world that it thinks the American press does not adequately cover. Many of those says, are Latin America, Africa and Asia.
This involvement developed, he said, through the "Poder Popular" (Popular Will) movement, created by the Cuban government, which brought about the first elections in 1877. The elections called all Cubans to choose their own city officials.
The American Universities Field Staff, which employs Handelman, is a non-profit organization financed by 11 U.S. universities, including KU.
1802 Mass.*Dillon Plaza*842-3114
CANDIDATES. HE SAID, did not have to
But Cuba seemed to be recovering from "economic blunders" and an exodus of trained persons after the 1959 revolution, he said.
reports, the Soviet Union gives Cuba $4 million to $5 million a day in aid.
He said the greatest weaknesses he saw in Cuba were a lack of civil liberties and the country's inability to become economically self-sufficient.
He said Cuban citizens could get "into big trouble" if they questioned government policies, such as the alliance with the Soviet Union and sending troops to Angola and Ethiopia.
Besides lack of civil liberties, another weakness Handelman mentioned was the Cuban economic dependence on the Soviet Union.
be members of the Communist party, but could not be anti-Communist.
However, citizens were "encouraged" to complain about inefficiency in local government, Handelman said.
ACCORDING TO SEVERAL published
Handelman will be on campus the rest of the week and will speak to various KU classes about Latin America.
WLZR
106
tonight the finest reggae in the land with
Pat's Ridldim band
$1.50 pitches of pbr
ALL NITE LONG
only $2.50 gen. adm.
$2.00 for club mem.
monday night oct. 8th
EDDIE & THE HOT RODS
one show only
w/the Tunes
Doors open at 8:00 - show at 9:00
Lawrence Opera House
Kings House
Call for concert info. 842-6930
SOCIAL GATHERING
The KU INTERNATIONAL CLUB
Invites all Foreign Students to Join fellow Internationalists on Friday, the 5th October at McCollum Hall (West Alcove) at 8:00 P.M. Students are encouraged to put on their national costumes. It would be a good opportunity to meet and to get to know people from all parts of the world.
Funded from the Student Activity Fee
Light refreshments are provided.
Julie's
Pizza
213 W. 40th St.
1978
a steaming mug of cinnamon-laced apple cider to toast the victory, a hearty portion of rich lasagne in spicy tomato sauce to restore your vitality or a "Hot Fudge Lover's Banana Split" to ease your disappointment. Picture a pizza that captures the zesty taste of a taco, a mug of Capcino coffee for a prince, and an iced beverage for a guest that will astonish the hungriest group (12 or more). Dream of sipping an old-fashioned chocolate soda in a turn-of-the century atmosphere. Julie's has it all. Come in and indulge!
Imagine the taste of . . .
Hours:
11 a.m. to Midnight
Monday to Thursday
11 a.m. to 1 a.m.
Friday and Saturday
11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Sunday
Julie's
3218 Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas
842-7170
MEN
headmasters
809 Vermont 844-8008
HAIR and SKIN CARE
Don't say "Maybe" Vote for
GAEBE
Independent Candidate for Student Senate
Paid for by Lauren Gaebe
Eve. 7:15 & 9:15
2. "SEY & VIOLENCE"
Varsity Services 811-7099
THE BEST FOR YOU AND WORLD
COMMONWEALTH
THEATRES
"MONTY PYTHON'S 'LIFE OF BRIAN' "
"THE SEDUCTION OF JOE TYAN"
Granada
Boston, 03-19-78
Eve. 7:16 & 9:40
Rain. 7:16
Hillcrest
1. "THE MUPPET MOVIE"
Eve. 7:45 & 9:35
"CONGORDE·AIRPORT 170"
Sat Sat 1:45
Eve. 7:15 & 9:15 Sat Sun 2:00
3. CONCORDE: AIRPORT 79
Eye 7:20 & 8:45
Sal Sun 1:30
Cinema Two
1. "ANIMAL HOUSE"
2. "WHEN A STRANGEF CALLS"
Eve. 7:40 & 9:40
B'nai Brith Hillel presents
a Delicious
Deli/Coffee house
Sunday, Oct. 7
Eat & Enjoy entertainment
6 p.m.-10 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
a (Across from Hi"
Sat-Sun 1:45
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Sat Sun 1:30
2 "WHEN A STRANGER"
Movie Information
TELEPHONE 841-6418
---
Hillel members $2 Guests $3
sua films
Presents
"ANNIE HALL"
"ANNIE HALL"
A nervous romance.
WOODY
ALLEN
DIANE
KEATON
TONY
ROBERTS
CAROL
KANE
PAUL
SIMON
SHELLEY
DUVALL
JANET
MARGOLIN
CHRISTOPHER
WALKEN
COLLEEN
DEWHURST
Enjoy "ANNIE HALL" uncut and without commercials
Friday & Saturday, October 5-6 3:30, 7:00, 9:30p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium $1.50
-No refreshments allowed-
1
DEVIL HAWK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
A LITTLE COOLER
Vol. 90 No. 30
KANSAN
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Freshmen elect class officers See story page seven
Midwestern warmth welcomes John Paul
By AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Renorter
DES MOINES-The early morning sun blessed the collisions counters with autumn and yesterday.
Outside the Des Moines Municipal Airport, the crowd which had gathered hours earlier in the pre-dawn chill.
The day they had all awoken for weeks had finally arived. Pope John Paul II was coming to town.
From as far away as Chicago, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City they came, hoping to catch a glimpse of their holy Father as he stepped from his plane en route to a Mass at Living History Farm, west of Des Moines.
"If we just get to see her beanie, 'I'll be excited,' a Topeka woman said. She and four friends drove from Topeka Wednesday, camping in their van overnight one mile from the airport.
Eleven members of a Red Oak, Iowa, family pitied their ruined 60 Ford at 3 a.m. yesterday so they could
"WE JUST HAD to do it." Donald Gits, the father,
said. "Otherwise I would be waitin' another 2,000
Children ran about the grassy area, playfully working off expectant energy for them, too. knew this was an
"The Pope's supposed to be some great, really neat person," a 10-year-old Des Moines boy said between Frisbee throws. "I guess he's kinda like the vice president of the Catholics, you know, cause he's after God."
"Get your pope button here," a bearded vendor shouted, his breath visible in the crisp air. The pontiff image smiled from the buttons, every color and size pinned over row after row to a cardboard sign.
All along the near-mile走 from the parking lot to the airport, vendors selling T- shirts, pens, bumper stickers and program books mixed with eager spectators.
OVER THE chain-link fence and across the runway, members of the press scurried about, reading cameras and notebooks, while senior citizens gathered slowly on the grassy hill behind them.
Trench-coated Secret Servicemen, blank-faced and ice even in the warring sunshine, permitted only appraisal of items.
Nearly a month ago, 150 bandcapped people had been suited by lottery to buy on the runway and edge of greetings.
One of those selected, Mike Sears, a patient at our rehabilition Center, Des Moines, said he was grateful to Dr. A.
"I needed a refreshing moment in my life." he said.
AT 10:30 A.M. airport workers rolled a red carpet onto the runways and the sun disappeared beneath
Back across the runway, in the "un-priveled" area, a 64-year-old retired Omaha pharmacist strolled through the growing crowd, carrying a wooden cross plastered with fluorescent orange "its exciting to be here."
"I just wanted to get a little chuckle and spread some good will" he said.
Although he was not Polish, he said he had many friends who were.
TWA
College students played cards and half-listened to radio. Families nibbled bag lunch and nervously talked with friends.
By the pontifex's scheduled 1 p.m. arrival time, a crowd of nearly 5,000 was bouncing energy off one another. By 1:30, they were on their feet, searching the runway in red and white and Trans World Airlines jet, Sheenberd I
MICROPHONES IN place at the end of the red carpet.
Children in place at parents' shoulders. In place at
ceiling.
It was 1:50 p.m. and the sun broke through the cloud mass, shooting excitement with the bright rays through the canopy.
Paval areetina
See POPE page three
Pope John Paul II waved to spectators as he stented out of his plane at the Des
Munich Municipal Airport in Iowa. The pope, on his fourth stop of his U.S. tour,
visited the Midwestern city for four bourses before departing for Chicago.
POPE JOHN PAPA III
1957 VISIT
WELCOME
JOHN PAUL II
VIVA IL PAPA
THE POPE VISITS IOWA
October 4, 1979
Proud sister
of the caravaner she hiked onboard 4k
of the souvenirs she bought yesterday after awaiting the pope's arrival at the Des Moines Municipal Airport.
Mary Celeste Funaro of Des Moines, Iowa, displayed some arrival at the Des Moines Municipal Airport.
Groups upset by campus crime meet to press for better security
Sally Turner, president of the Commission on the Status of Women, and George Gomer, chairman of the Commission on meeting in response to growing concern about rapes, assaults and vandalism on
By JUDY WOODBURN
Representatives from several student groups and University administers met last night to begin work on a unified effort to improve campus security.
one primary purpose of the meeting, Turner said, was to initiate proposals to University administration for increased security measures.
Staff Reporter
The group's concerns increased lightning at several poorly lighted areas on campus. It was also the case for women who must walk home late at night and increased men's awareness of fire hazards.
"What we're looking for," she said, "are things that will continue after all of us leave KU—lasting action."
SGT. JEANNE LONGAKER, who directs the KU Police Department's campus crime prevention program, said the KU police had
Longeraket met with representatives from Gay Services of Kansas and University residence halls after the meeting to help plan an escort service that could be provided to our student groups until the KU police is able to operate the service independently.
ANOTHER GROUP formed after the meeting to identify spots on campus in need of better lighting. Areas of particular concern included the Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall and the Joseph Loeph Hall and the areas behind Essex Hall and surrounding the Caramani.
"We have the personnel," Longaker said. "We want to do it, and you want to get the student back and forth. If we want to have a full-fledged escort service, we're going to need a vehicle that will hold us."
been trying for two years to organize an escort service.
"It's really important that we get a budget commitment from the administration on this," said Carla Hanson, senior vice president and a member of the group.
"WHEN SOMEBODY'S about to attack you," one student said, "who has time to run to one of those blue phones?" If the attacker is between me and this phone. I am not going to do that.
Caryl Smith, dean of student life, said that it was important to educate students, especially women, to walk with neighbors or classmates to night and early morning
dissatisfaction with the blue emergency phones on campus, saying that although the phones were useful for reporting vandalism and other crimes, they were not effective in preventing raps or assaults.
Several people at the meeting expressed
Other proposals included the formation of jogging clubs or walking pools for late night walkers.
Gomez said the funds for posters and other educational tools might come from Student Senate or KU police budgets.
"BUT THAT'S the easy part," he said, "but really don't take too much, so like lighting, we come from it. It a matter of shifting some of the administration's priorities to campus."
Warning signal in doubt
BY MARK SPENCE
Staff Manager
Federal investigators may never know whether a federal-speed warning device was activated in the ill-fated Amtrak train that derailed Tuesday as it approached
"We may not ever be able to determine beyond any doubt if it worked on the train before the accident," Brad Dunbar, a spokesman for Safety Board spokesman, said yesterday.
Investigators determined that the track portion of the sophisticated "dead man" device, which signals an engineer when his train is approaching a speed-restricted-zone vehicle.
too fast, was functional after they traveled over temporary tracks at the accident scene in the first train.
However, it was not known whether the warning alarm and light in the engine's cab were activated, officials said.
The alarm, triggered by a device implanted in the track led about a mile before the accident, would have been shif off by the engineer or his brakes would have been activated automatically, but the system was not.
"Obviously we hope to learn from the engineer and the fireman whether they received the signal," Dumbar said.
The accident, the second worst in Amtrak
history in terms of fatalities, killed two Santa Fe crewmembers and injured 69 other persons.
Representatives from the NTSB said they were concluding their on-the-scene investigation of the derailment. The team of investigators will remain on the last night to discuss evidence collected during the day pertaining to the safety device, the track-side warning signs and the equipment used.
Doctors have told the NTSB that the engineer, I.H. Graham, 63, Shawne Mission, will not be in a condition to answer
See DERAILMENT back page
Classifieds' pay slighted
Staff Renarter
BvJEFFSJERVEN
Classified employee at the University of Waterloo, who was part of infusion with the most experience in receiving the smallest pay raises, according to data released yesterday by KU office of data management.
The data indicate that some classified employees have kept pace with inflation, while others have fallen behind.
Richard Mann, University director of informational systems, said that only classified employees receiving base salary increases and periodic increases based on merit were able to stay ahead of inflation. Employees with superior employees receive merit increases, he said.
Those employees receiving only base salary increases have lost buying power despite the increases, he said.
Classified employees in each of the 44 civil service categories in Kansas are eligible for merit pay level increases, which are usually based on their job category, there are six pay levels.
After an employee has reached the sixth step, he receives only the cost-of-living information that is provided to correspond to Joseph Collins, chairman of the interim steering committee for the Classi-
sic Committee.
price index rose 48.7 percent. During that time, the number of classified employees receiving cost-of-living and merit increases increased by 57.75 percent.
However, increases in salary for employees receiving only cost-of-living increases totaled only 28.55 percent during the same period.
Collins said that the structure for classified employee salaries penalized individuals who enjoy their work and decide to keep their jobs.
"The Legislature has to understand that employees who have exhausted their step increases are depending on the cost-of-living increases from the Legislature to get by," Collins said. "These employees are the ones who need more." And they're receiving the smallest increases.
Gov. John Carlin will receive classified information from the state Department of Justice regarding his legislative session begins in January, according to Bruce McKelynock, personnel director.
Between 1974 and 1979, the consumer
McReynolds said the department was waiting for the Council on Wage and Price Stability to release President Carter's new guidelines before making recommendations.
"If Gov. Carlin says Kansas will comply with Carter's guidelines, we could be
restricted in the size of raise we could recommend." he said.
The department's personnel division is considering making two proposals to revise pay plans for classified employees, McKeynolds said.
"The main thrust of the proposals is to return the salary system to that one is more tightly tied to merit," he said. "The idea is that you should perform well should be fairly compensated."
He said one of the proposals involved creating subdivisions in existing merit increases. Under this proposal, employees who did not pay half to two times the raise of one of the current pay levels. Employees who did not pay half to two times the raise of only a half-fleet increase, he said.
Another proposal, McReynolds said, involves significant increases in base salaries for a number of categories.
"The rules are not solid yet, so the specific recommendations won't be ready for a month or six weeks," he said.
Collins said the proposal for subdivided pay level increases was worth studying, but added that the state would still have to reintroduce a tax on new homes and have exhausted their pay scale increases.
"At some point the state has to look at what it is going to do with people past the merit step increases," he said.
Sign ordinance angers owners
By ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Reporter
Local businessmen whose requests for sign variances were turned down at Tuesday's city commission meeting exasperated, and anger yesterday about the decision.
The city sign ordinance, which was written to improve the appearance of the city, stipulates requirements such as an signs size and number of signs allowed.
Two weeks ago the city notified the owners of 57 signs, including 11 billboards,
that the signs would have to conform to the ordinance by Oct. 22.
The businesses whose requests were denied Tuesday were given a 94-day to one-year period to conform to the ordinance, *derwinde* in their offense.
Henry's Drive In, 1117 W. Sixth St., was cited for having a 14-square-foot sign. The restaurant had a 28-foot-feet. Jean and Corbett Collins, owners of the restaurant, were given one year to replace
"I THINK WE have been taken advantage of." Jean Collins said. "They're trying to
tell us how to spend our money. If we had several extra thousand dollars we'd spend it for something more beneficial like repaying our parking lot."
She said that she thought a grandfather clause should be applied to older businesses in town.
City Commissioner Ed Carter did suggest at Tuesday's meeting that a grandfather clause be enacted for businesses that had an existence before the ordinance was enacted.
However, Mayor Barkley Clark, express-See SIGN back page
2
Friday. October 5. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kreps resians from Cabinet
Kreps, the first economist and first woman to hold the top Commerce post, wrote to Carter Wednesday about her decision to resign Oct. 31 for personal reasons.
Friends who asked for anonymity said she had been considering resignation since June, when her husband, Cliffon, attempted suicide.
The White House made public an exchange of letters between Carter and Kerry to direct reference to Kreps' desire to return to North Carolina and her family.
A. Kennech Pye, charceler of Duke University, said in Durham, N.C., that Kreps would return to the University Nov. 1. She has been on leave as a Duke vice president and economics professor while serving in the Carter administration.
Connecticut stunned bu tornado
WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn—Stummed families salvaged what they could yesterday from area homes left in shambles by a storm that killed two per-
"I've never seen anything as bad," Gov. Ella Grasso said after a helicopter tour of Windsor Locks, her hometown.
Grasso continued for a second night the $8-p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew in Windsor and Windsor Locks. Five hundred National Guardiards were called out to assist.
Killed were William Kowalsky, 24 of Manchester, and a 43-year Windsor woman whose name, authorities said, has not yet been confirmed.
Grasso, who appointed for federal disaster aid for the area, received offers of assistance from the governors of Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
Crime increases in Kansas
TOPEA-K the number of violent crimes reported in the state in the first six months of 1997 increased 13 percent over the comparable period last year. The number of homicides fell by 25 percent.
Kelly said there were 3,680 violent offenses—murder, rape, robbery and assault—reported in the six months ended June 30. This compares with 3,240 in the previous six months.
The statistics are compiled from monthly crime figures supplied by law enforcement agencies throughout the state.
The biggest percentage increase by category both in 1978 and the first half of 1979 was in the number of raps reported. There were 577 raps reported in 1978, and 394 in 1979. In 1978, there were 225 raps reported.
In the first six months of 1979, there were 278 raps reported, up 23.5 percent from the first half of 1978.
TOPEKA—Attorney General Robert Stephan yesterday commended the Wichita police chief and the Sedgwick County district attorney for their handling of the controversy caused by a stag party attended by some officers and assistant prosecutors.
Stephan lauds Wichita chief
Richard LaMunyon, Wichita police chief, and Vern Miller, Sedgwick county district attorney, said Wednesday that five assistant prosecutors and two investigators had resigned and two police officers had been fired because of their involvement in the November slug party at a private club operated by the Fraternal Order of Masons.
LaMunyon said he had determined that there had been violations of the law at the party, including liquor possession, gambling, showing of pornographic materials.
Kennedy funds draw complaint
WASHINGTON—President Carter's campaign committee, alarmed by opposition money being funneled into Florida, filed a formal complaint yesterday with the Federal Election Commission in an effort to dampen the draft-Kennedy movement.
In its complaint to the FEC, the Carter committee said that national fundraising in support of efforts to draft Sen. Edward Kennedy, D.Mass., for the Democratic presidential nomination was being coordinated and therefore was illegal.
If the commission accepts this view, it would drastically reduce the money donors and political commissions may give to the Kennedy movement.
The complaint marked the Carter campaign's first major assault against the movement to draft Kennedy for the nomination and reflected growing concern over his handling of the war.
Carlin firm on death penalty
TOPEKA-Gove, John Carlin yesterday expressed his sympathies to the family of murdered a 20-year old bank employee Grant Avery, but reaffirmed his condemnation.
Carlin's statement came in a written response to a four-page letter he received this week from Peabody banker W.E. Avery, father of the slain bank employee. In his letter, Avery asked the governor to justify his veto earlier for the issue of reinstitutional capital punishment.
Describing his decision to veto the bill, Carlin said, "I was convinced then as I am now that for us to take away a life that God has given is wrong."
Avery's son was kidnapped and killed by 29 after an extortion attempt failed. An 18-year-old Haysville man, Timothy Newark, has pleaded guilty to assaulting Avery.
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Palestinian guerrilla chief Yasser Arafat yesterday brought flowers to the bedside of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and planted a big kiss on his head.
Arafat visits ailina Jackson
The governor said he would recommend legislation in 1800 to “address the sentences for those convicted a first-degree murder,” but he did not elaborate.
Jackson, suffering from a stomach ailment, was admitted to the American hospital on Monday, December. Because he had to postpone a meeting with Arafat, the Palestinian leader,
Jackson has been snubbed by Israeli officials but welcomed by Arab leaders since beginning his Middle East travels. Sept. 24.
MANHATTAN—A special legislative committee yesterday decided to recommend that the burned-out shell of Nichols Gymnasium on the Kansas side be rebuilt.
Jackson said yesterday that he had contracted food poisoning from fresh fruit in Darmusac, Syria, but that he expected to be released from the hospital in October.
Nichols Gum to be preserved
The committee purposely left out suggestions for possible use of the gym, leaving that issue up to the university planning department.
Jackson and his 17-member delegation had planned to leave Beirut for the United States yesterday. He has said he hopes to bring President Carter a
One report estimated it would cost $500,000 to do the wall and floor work.
The Ad Hoc Committee on Nichols Gym, composed of two legislators and three university representatives, recommended that money be appropriated to stabilize the walls of the structure and protect its concrete floors in preparation for future renovation.
"The legislature last session had considered appropriating money to destroy
the cattle," which was burned in 10 years ago.
Today will be partly cloudy with temperatures in the mid-70s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the south at 10-15 mph and 15-20 mph from the northwest in the late afternoon. Tonight it will be clear and cool with temperatures in the low 40s.
The committee will make its recommendations to the Legislative Coordinating Council, a panel of legislative leaders, and Gov. John Carlin.
Weather ...
Bell tolls for Lone Star
Saturday will be sunny and mild with highs in the mid-70s.
The extended forecast for Sunday through Tuesday calls for a gradual warming trend with highs in the low-80s and lows in the 80s.
Judge Frank Thesis of the U.D. District Court said the order allowing Amtrak to stop the train would be effective at 6 p.m. CDT today—giving lawyers time to appeal.
WICHTHA (AAP)-A federal judge lifted his restraining order against Amtrak yesterday, freeing the passenger railway to eliminate its trains.
AN AMTRIKA spokesman in Chicago said that two of the trains that were scheduled to depart from Boston on Monday, as planned, but that no decision had been made on which run would be the train's start.
The three trains affected by the order are the Chicago-to-Houston Lone Star, the Chicago-to-Stealth North Coast Haithawa and the Chicago-to-Miami Floridian.
In Miami, the northbound Floridian left 11 minutes later after it was decided to go ahead and run the train, which left with only 10 to 12 passengers.
AN AMTRAK spokesman in Washington said any train enroute at the time the
Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephen, who infiltrated the said announced opposition to the court order, would also be moved that he would take a preliminary injunction from the 108 u.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
The judge's original order required Amtrak to continue operating the three trains to their scheduled destinations after their Friday departures.
judge's order took effect would go through to its destination.
THE SOUTHPLAZA CHIROPRATIC CENTER WELCOMES KU STUDENTS & FACULTY
"The temporary restraining order cannot stand and must be dissolved," he said. "Once Congress has specifically spoken on the matter, the court will exercise policy, the courts thereby are bound."
THE SAISID in his decision that the Amtrak Reorganization Act of 1979, which was signed by President Carter Saturday, changed the complexion of the suit.
For spinal related conditions feel free to contact
"When the president and Congress are going in a different direction than you, how long can a state fight the federal government?" He said funds and we are using them up," he added.
AMTRAK'S ATTORNEY indicated that the railway would seek reimbursement for the losses it had incurred in operating the
Stephan said that if the state lost in court today it probably would not go to the Supreme Court.
lines past its Monday termination date.
The deraliment of the combined Southwest Limited and Lone Star Tuesday in Lawrence, which killed two crewmen and four officers, was not mentioned in the proceedings.
Carlin said he was not being critical of the judge's decision because he understood that congressional action had led to the decision.
DR. WILLIAM A. MILLER
KANSAS GOV. John Carlin said elimination of the Lone Star passenger train was a 'step backward' for rail travel. And the government has been reducing the passenger rail service in Kansas.
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ANNIE HALL
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Sunday, October 7 New German Cinema
AGUIRRE, THE WRATHOF GOD
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**Weekend shows also in Woodruff at**
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All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted, $1.00 admission
Wednesday, October 10
CLOSELY WATCHED
TRAINS
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Directed by Jiri Menzel. Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Czechoslovakia/sbittles.
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University Daily Kansan
3
Events set for parents
Parents Day officials are expecting a greater attendance for this year's activities than in last years.
Edward Julian, secretary of the Parents' Committee, said most people would prefer to work tomorrow because their traveling had been limited during recent months by travel restrictions.
He also said that the honoring of parents still was a big reason for attendance.
"The University then designated the day as Parents Day—a day when parents could come up and visit with their kids and see them at school." And as we meet with University faculty and staff.
TOMORROW'S activities revolve around KU's 1:30 p.m. football game with Syracuse University. Most of the day's activities are for parents that can spend time with students.
The first of tomorrow's events, a reception for band students and their families, is scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. in Room 159. Students will attend the group will begin in the same room at 11:15.
A chemistry reception will begin at 9 a.m. in Room 234 of Malott Hall.
The University's new Computer Services Facility will be open for tours, displays and demonstrations from 9 to 11 a.m.
The Reserve Officer Training Corps also has scheduled a reception for 9 a.m., the Military Science Building, with all Army, Navy, Air and Air Force ROTC units.
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS and their families can visit with University faculty and staff at a all-University reception rooms located in the facilities of the Kansas Union and Satellite University.
The University's eight residence halls will begin serving picnic meals to hall residents and their parents at 10:45 a.m.
The KU Marching Band will perform the Iowa band's game in Memorial Stadium during Music from George Gershwain "Porgy and Bees" will be featured during this event.
The Helen Foreman Sphenar Museum of Art will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 14:30 p.m. and will feature special exhibits including "The Prints of Anders Zorn," "Chinese Paintings in the Sackler Colleague," and "20th Century American Drawing."
The Dyche Museum of Natural History will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will feature exhibits on South American frogs, birds, mammals and reptiles, and the Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
*AN ALMIGHTY JUSTICE DOES VERILY RULE THIS
GOD'S SIDE, AND
BLOODY EIGHT OF THEIR FINGERS*
are you a fighter? If so, on whose side are you neater? Some time ago we were told of a promising young preacher who said he was not going to "tight" fire. He had gotten his own back and he was very resentful of doing something or do something other. He testified he was a fundamentalist that believed the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments required a person to be more faithful to his preach and teach, but he would not be contentious and "fight unbelievers, modernists, apologists, etc.,—don't that sound and look sweet and lovely? We are of the opinion that such a message is necessary."
In Revelation 13, 15; 16, 17 said of those "nothing cold nor hot,ukwawen" will glue their out of my mouth".Conclusion: "and nothing cold nor hot,ukwawen" had been "spued out"; There were stings, famentations, and incisions on her skin. There were slung Divers tongue, horribile horns, a single, english, accents of ravity, voices high and hoarse, and clausing and sewing. She was said to have looked like the sand when the whirlwind blows. This is the abode of the "ukwawen" who lived on earth with infantry and infantry who, when Lucilc rebelled were neither rebels, nor faithful followers, but were mercenaries who have been demided by their presence; nor would the depth of half receive them, because the damned below would have fallen from their grasp.
Here were men who did not act a manly part during life,
who did not know how to make up their mind and take a stand, and who were not as determined as themselves freedom to join the successful side—justice and mercy hold them in equal contempt. They are disfellowshipped, and they must be lied to just to rail on the "ukwamur and non-fighters" but rather to so get them "no under the collar to the end they may be held hostage." (The author's own experiences of the eternal life!) We are persuaded, unless one "believes in Scriptures of the Old and New Testament of the installation of the Scriptures of The Old and New Testament of the I
"THE LORD IS A MAN OF WAR" - Exodus 13.5, Abraham, the Friend of God, fought several kings and whipped them - Genesis 14.14, e. Judge Deborah was a "woman of war" f. Judith is a woman of war (46). In war of the Man. "The Paulian Pastor was a haughty" have fought a good fight, I have kept the faith; and he cursed upon all true men, I have cursed them, and I cannot be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, world, against spiritual wickedness in Anglo place. Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of that, ye may be able to staint in the evil day, and having done all to,
Thank God for the fighting of Luther, Calvin, Knox. Stephen on down to those who today fight and suffer for the s
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In the past few months, Lawrence, as well as all of America, has seen a new industry emerge and explode almost overnight. The idea of suntanning and the long known fervent desire to have a beautiful all-over tan is now nothing we. All we look better with a tan and most people will go to great lengths to look their best during the fall, winter, spring and summer.
We at Tainique would like to answer a few questions you might have about this new tanning industry.
Q. What is a Tan?
A. A Tan is caused by a dark, brown pigment known as melanin produced by special melanocyte cells in the base layer of your skin. As your skin is exposed to the mid-range ultraviolet rays of the sun, melanocytes produce melanin that rise from your skins surface—thus producing a tan
A. People who, because of a fair skin condition, cannot risk the consequences of a hot sun. People who are in vacation bound, but have not had an opportunity to build up their tolerance to the sun. These people don't like to spend half their vacation going out and seeing all of sunburning. People who wish to look as though they ve already been on vacation, and not as though they've just arrived.
A. Besides the attractiveness of a nice tan, it also protects your skin against sunburn. Contrary to many people's belief, a burn does not majically turn into a burn. Trying to squeeze in every minute of sun, wheather from the sun itself or a conventional sun lamp, cannot only be painful, but can permanently damage your skin.
Q. Why do I need a tan anyway?
Q. Why are Tanique lights better than conventional sunlamps or a weekend in the sun?
A. Tanque's unique system of lights (tintless sun lamps manufactured by Westinghouse) generate only the mid-range ultra-violet rays which activate the melanocytes. Summer's blistering sun and conventional sun lamps cause extreme heat that can damage the skin and create no heat. The problem with most sunamp set ups is that they are one-directional. In other words, to get an evenly distributed tan you have to keep turning a different side of your body toward the sunamp. At Tanque, our lights are evenly
distributed around the entire tenure booth. The soft white walleys of our tanning booths do not reflect this mid-range ray but in uniform and even tan with none of the problems presented by the sun or conventional sun lamps. Probably the most outstanding advantage of a Tanguine suntan is the small amount of time it equals minutes equals two hours in the sun so sessions are very short.
Q. Do I need any special medication for my skin while I am undergoing the tanning treatment?
A. Depending on your skin type, you may desire to use a moisturizer that is not only easier and tastier but will retain a tan longer than dry skin. We at Tanique not only recommend a moisturizing lotion for most skin types, but we take this on no charge to all our customers who wish to use it.
Tanique of Lawrence wishes to offer you, the citizens of Lawrence an open invitation to stop in and see our unique atmosphere and take a free visit in our completely private booths. At the present time we have not for 2 or 4 bots with the capability to increase this number to 12 if business so requires. This will insure our customers will never have to wait in line.
We also provide a make-up area to make your visits at Tanguine quick, easy and as convenient as possible. (We even provide the
Because your tan will not be achieved in 1 or 2 visits, we at Tanque feel you should be selective in choosing your tanning
We invite you to compare our atmosphere, facilities, convenience and most important our safety with that of our many competitors.
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Pope...
Then, as if rehearsed, Shepherd I raised the grassy hill and taxied slowly to the portable ramp standing on the runway.
From page one
Several hour-long minutes later, the door of the plane opened slowly and the pope's entourage of unknown officials and blue-clad journalists stepped brightly down the ramp.
FINALLY, Pope John Paul II stepped into the newly arrived Iowa sunna, descended the stairs, hugged a small boy who gave him a kiss, and held hands in blessing to the cheering follower.
Cheers, applause and emotional shouts expelled from the crowd. He was here.
A breathless hush choked the crowd.
红 robe sparking in the sun, the pontifix red ros
He went into the crowd, reaching both hands forward, touching everyone and reaching even those he did not touch.
He blessed the crowd and Iowa and thanked everyone for the welcome. Then buried behind escorts, he walked to waiting helicopter, only his white skull cap visible.
JUST 15 minutes had passed, but for the 5,000 who braved the cold, the walk and the heat, it had been a timeless 15 minutes.
They had not noticed the cold or the wind and the walk was long forgotten.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
focus
affirmative action
October 5, 1979
Equality efforts falter
The new acting director of affirmative action at the University of Kansas says that although he thinks the University has made efforts in promoting the employment of minorities, handicapped people and women, there is always room for improvement.
Michael Edwards, who was named acting director until June of next year when director Bonnie Ritter returns to work, couldn't help, couldn't hurt the trump barder.
The fact of the matter is that while KU, along with a large number of other universities, has made strides in recognizing the need and responsibility to encourage minority recruitment, it still has a long way to go.
WHEN the University first adopted an affirmative action program in the spring of 1972, it said it was committed to more than just the elimination of discrimination against members of unmarried groups in University activity.
KU said it also was committed to the development and implementation of policies and programs designed to
promote the full participation of members of such groups in the functions of the University at all levels.
The ideals of equal opportunity were easy to espose; the commitment and execution of those ideals at KU have been much harder.
ADMISSIONS OF an inability to carry out the promises of those ideals have come from all parts of the University community. The recruitment of blacks and other minorities for the position off positions has been difficult at best.
Although the University has staunchly supported affirmative action programs, it has fallen short of producing a program that is effective.
Edwards, along with others, has seen the discrepancy between the ideal and the actual.
Espousing ideals never accomplish what a commitment to ideals does, and that commitment has not been as strong as it should—and could—be. Perhaps it has even been missing.
Indeed, a return to the commitment to progress promised in 1972 is needed now.
The newspaper business is a white man's business and there is no disquieting. And if it isn't important, it is not representative and unenlightened, it is. Something is being done to remedy the problem.
Newspapers need affirmative action
Viewed in total, the newspaper business is almost lily white. As William Hillard of the Portland Oregonian said, "This business is done by middle-class, middle-aged, white males."
And so it is. There are now 1,700 minority newspaper professionals. This figure represents 4 percent of the total number of journalists, which is more than 90 percent of all editors are white.
THESE FIGURES, when compared with the percentage figures of the composition of the same object, show not being properly represented in the image business, nor have they ever been properly represented.
Newspaper circulation figures reflect the neglect of minorities. Circulation among blacks and other minorities is down sharply. Major metropolitan dailies have lost four percent of minorities' live, and have catered to the desires of the white suburbs and the shopping centers. While overall newspaper circulation figures are rising, they are not in proportion to the increase in population, nor are they rising among blacks.
IT IS SAD to think that it has taken a loss in circulation to awaken the newspaper businessmen to the fact that they have been discriminatory. But such is the case. The process of assimilating blacks into white society is slow, but there has been some progress.
In 1988, for instance, there were only 400 minority professionals in the business and today's 1.700 figure is a sharp improvement. Eighty percent of the major newspapers in 1988 featured even one minority worker in 1988. That figure has since dropped to 68 percent.
Affirmative action always be a buzz word, a catch-all term describing the often elusive desire of Americans to free from the burden in the workplace and in the classroom.
Affirmative action product of past
The term "affirmative action" actually emerged from an executive order by President John F. Kennedy. In 1961, Kenney wrote that the country needed to take "affirmative steps" toward dealing with information in education and employment.
It's also been labeled a second Recon-
nection, in reference to the reverse de-
scription of the first. But the labels are only poetic license. No one term can describe this count.
For more information, go to www.
BUT HIS order defined these steps only as measures barring job discrimination among contractors doing business with the federal government and providing recruiting and promotion of minorities.
That definition was narrow by both today's standards and by yesterday's history
Legal scholars like to pinpoint the beginning of the affirmative action debate with the Henry vs. Ferguson case in 1896. That case was decided by a United States Pleasen case involving a Louisiana law allowing separate accommodations for blacks and whites on railroads, provided there was a license. The Supreme Court modiated the Supreme Court rule that black citizens' rights were adequately observed if the "separate but equal" rule was not unconstitutional.
melissa
thompson
COLUMNIST thompson
THIS DECISION touched off a wave of
Jim Crow legislation and set a precedent for later cases dealing with discrimination.
For 38 years, this reasoning was uplifted. But in 1964, the Court reversed its precedent and ordered the prosecutor to have radically altered. And so had the concept of racial discrimination, as any judge could do.
The next 25 years have brought an incredibly fast thaw in the ice state of racial inequality. However, the speed with which the legal system has assisted astonished and worried—many people.
A PSYCHLOGIST in a consulting firm specializing in equal employment opportunity cases since 1927 had a graphic description of the sudden changes.
He said, "It's been like going from Kitty Hawk to the moon in less than 10 years."
It is in the latter section that critics see inconsistencies. They see the problems as results of the too-basal growth of affirmative action programs.
The concept of affirmative action was exerted in the 1960s by a group called Title VI of that act banned discrimination in federally funded universities and programs. Title VII baned such discrimination in colleges.
SOME RESEARCHERS have suggested that the focus of affirmative action programs in the workplace is faulty. Like any printer's four-collar press that has been
A writer for Forbes, Bob Tamarink, wrote, "The bureaucrats and activists more interested in punishing business for greed have been making progress toward equality of opportunity."
poorly registered, the attempts at racial equality have been a fraction out of whack
Time and resources have been poorly managed, Tamarinka said. From 1974 to 1978, more than $1 billion was spent on back pay, promotions and training for women and minorities—all remedies provided by the violations of the Civil Rights Act's Title VII.
THAT TIME and money could have been to spend to top-notch affirmative action programs, suggested Tamarkin, instead of hiring clerks who hold horns of the government and business.
Some people think the retroactive wages, promotions and training programs already constitute top-notch affirmative action pro-rams.
Perhaps that money was not as wasted as unarmin and other critical思考. Even the censure of Mr. Wagner made, but it was not without much legal push-and-shove from the courts and federal
The legal horizon of affirmative action is not free from landmark decisions, by any means. The Supreme Court will be ruling on affirmative action in work grants to minority-owned businesses. It will be another classic stand-off between affirmative action and reverse discrimination. And it will raise difficult questions that are not easily answered answers throughout a century of debate.
Quota system unfair, regressive
Increasingly, it seems, American colleges and universities are having problems with programs that are aimed at preventing discriminatory practices in admissions and
Many universities have already been tested for discrimination in these areas, and many others are beginning to develop and action programs to avoid local problems.
The questioning of the legality of these supposedly fair and equal quda systems has put many colleges' affirmative action programs in seeparty. New colleges have the burden of developing new affirmative action policies, which are not quda system and yet still help minorities.
But for colleges and universities, establishing affirmative action programs is very touch, especially in light of the Alan Bakee case.
THESE INSTITUTIONS wash the thin line between trying to admit and employ additional numbers of minorities, while trying to preserve high educational standards.
The Harvard plan simply gives extra
A perfect solution for their dilemma has not been found yet. Harvard University has come up with a plan that appears to be working well, but the university without violating anti-discrimination laws.
The Supreme Court decision in the Bakke case created a mass of new problems for colleges and universities. Before Bakke, many colleges relied on quota systems to avoid charges of discrimination. They encouraged or job entrals for minorities, thusriding themselves of suspicions of discrimination.
BUT THESE quota systems in themselves are unfair and discriminatory, as pointed out by the Bake case. In their decision, the theorist argues that the mere liberation of race or sex in employment or admissions but knocked down the use of quota systems to ensure equality in these cases.
John COLUMNIST fischer
credit to minorities in consideration of employment and admissions.
Quota systems for *admissions* and employment have been used too long in college. The program has had to change the students and the institutions' reputations. Lesser qualified students who are admitted to the school or on the job after graduation. And by employing lesser qualified faculty, the university can reduce costs.
"REFUSING INSTITUTIONS the right to choose the most qualified individuals mocks academic standards and ids of excellence," he said, "and it generates hostility and butterness among more qualified insofar who may be paid less or even bypassed."
Allan C. Orstein, an associate professor at Loyola University of Chicago, perhaps sum summarizes the consequences of quota systems:
BUT BESIDES helping minorities and avoiding lawsuits, this plan avoids the unfair and discriminatory guide systems.
"Although such a policy may be required to reduce racial polarization and to produce
IT IS A sad thought that the basis for granting a position or an admission is a person's race, sex or religion rather than his/her gender. So students should boogie to think that a person applying for a teaching position at a college or for admission to medical school would be turned down because he is white and a male, rather than because he lacks the required qualification.
eventual equality, we should not delude ourselves. The present affirmative action program has produced a new kind of social welfare program which is based neither on performance nor quality. It places less competent people in a fast running track where competence compete because they have been situated at a higher level than they can function."
The quota system, then, is just another phase of the skin game that was played with different rules in past years.
Any type of affirmative action program that is disgused discrimination should be abolished. Affirmative action is necessary and is important in guarding against discrimination and in helping correct it, but quota systems are not the way to do it.
Rather, programs that use race or sex as a consideration in employment and admission should be the programs adopted by our colleges and universities.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced or single-spaced. Letters should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed by the university, the should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit these letters.
david preston
COLUMNIST
True, the progress is slow, but improved status for blacks has been a slow process in all areas of society for decades. It has been audited by a few government programs.
President Lyndon B. Johnson spoke no truer words than on June 4, 1968, when he declared that for the rapid improvement in societal status for blacks, " freedom is not a luxury, but a right," and centuries by saying "Now you're free to go where you want and do what you desire."
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION is one such program.
Johnson believed that more should be done, and his Executive Order 11246 in September 1965 reinforced that idea.
Johnson ordered all major federal contractors to ensure that employees were trained in the job duties of national origin. Since then, affirmative action programs, thanks primarily to theEqual Employment Opportunity Commission, have become a major aspect of the job description.
COMPANIES, OF course, have not
readily taken to the idea that government should have a say in an individual business' hiring programs. They complain that the government's rules are too time-consuming, complex and vague. Several companies have said they have no experience in Chicago have taken the matter to court.
Gannett has now formulated an incentive policy for its editors and publishers to accelerate affirmative action hiring practices. Gannett will pay cash to the management of any of its papers that submits a report on a candidate's candidacy. Gannett initially made the plan a three-year deal, but has since made it a one-year, direct incentive program.
EARLIER THIS year, Gannett executive editor Bob Gannet, who is editor of Gannet's Rochester newspapers, agreed to hire a 15-year-old activist only after protests and lawsuits were brought by minorities. Giles claimed that the papers' officials "had not acted as racists", and agreed to aim for a goal of 20,000 representation on the two Rochester papers.
In the newspaper business, affirmative action is becoming a major part of bringing blacks into the newsroom. Individual publishers and editors and newspaper groups have shown a trend toward placing their stories in well-defined affirmative action programs.
The Gannet newspaper group, based in Rockefeller, N.Y., is one of the country's leading news organizations, publishing papers nationwide. In those papers there are close to 3,000 professional journalists. Of these, about a quarter or more minorities. Change is coming in the Gannet organization, but there has been a fight for its status.
THE KNIGHT-RIDDER group, the largest employer in the business with nearly 3,000 journalists, has a similar program. The organization also behind Knight-Ridder, has no direct program, but individual publishers within the organization are seeing that affirmative advertising is needed.
There are other positive signs. Robert Maynard, former associate editor of the Washington Post, heads an organization that sponsors summer programs which offers summer programs for minority journalism students. There are many major newsmen around the country.
It has taken long enough for minorities to be represented and recognized in the American press. The present rate of progress needs to be accelerated. Alfalfa motion can and should play a major role in seeing that this acceleration does occur.
Y. Times Special Features
Jews, blacks must work together
By Arthur Hertzberg
ENGLWOOD, N.J.-The ouster of Andrew Young as United States delegate to the United Nations precipitated a confrontation between black and Jews, but it was not.
Apartheid is almost universally opposed Even the raging battles about the use of force in the Organization are not really a Jewish-bitch issue. Andrew Young would sit comfortably in the peace-now movement in Israel or among the $9 million prominent Jews who support the Nazi menace Begin protecting the new settlements near Nabis. It is true that the majority—but not all—of the Zionist moderates remain opposed to dealing with them.
The visible queries about foreign policy are not really the issue between Jews and Muslims, but rather more African that persist in not having relations with Israel, but so have some blacks, including, most notably, Young Andrew speaking in the Security Council.
BUT THE major and continuing issue between the two communities is not Yasser Arafat but rather "affirmative action." The two communities point for the last 10 years. For two decades or more, the American Jewish community has had no significant domestic agenda involving its own self-interest. In the 1980s when the Israeli energies were spent on the black revolution.
Blacks have lambasted Israel's connection with South Africa, and Israel has lambeted that connection. The large arms suppliers and the largest arms suppliers and that several black African states are much more connected to the Israeli army.
FOR MOST Zoonsists, South Africa is an uncomfortable and embarrassing fact on Jerusalem. No one in Israel agrees that Israel should be better than everyone else and describe this dirty world with pride.
By the late 1980s, blacks and Jews began to move apart. Some of the most activist white liberals fought with white liberals biting it. It was said that blacks, to grow to full stature, did not need sympathetic whites—not even Jewish immigrants. Away from whites, much of the organized Jewish community was drifting, and many went to work as servicemen in domestic affairs. In the last decade, the bulk of the Jewish organizations has been for "merit" and against "af-
Despite these differences of opinion within Jewry, the Jewish community as a whole has been perceived by blacks as less aggressive to the blacks' struggle than in the nast.
THE OLD Jewish-black alliance has not been abandoned by all the Jewish organizations. Some have denied special special treatment, but others have provided that race was not the criterion and numerical quotas were not set, because those were devised to be used. Those who have devised such formulas (myself among them, during the six years of the 1950s) are now Jewish Congress] have known very well that their rhetoric was constructed to calm some of their own neo-conservatives while maintaining that their culture
Almost every black leader with whom I have spoken in the last 10 years has said, over and over again, the following: We should work together with Israel along with Israel, even though we know that it is a significant element in America's foreign aid budget. Why can't the Jewish community stop the black concerns are symbolized in "affirmative action?" Why can't other communities, and especially the Jews, meet intergroup bargaining on a plane in fairness?
SUCH A QUESTION, stated so boldly.
cannot simply be brushed aside. It has moral as well as political force. What is the moral benefit of demanding for affirmative action? Herzi, Weizmann, Jabotinsky and Ben-Gurion—all of the great names in Zionism—made a case against it because their argument. They maintained that whatever discomfort it caused to a state, rather than its state, the demand for such a state was morally defensible because it asked for an act of repression at a stateless people for 18 years.
It would not be helpful to the great national debate about policy in the Middle East if this current quarrel between Jews and Muslims reflected itself into wangling about the PLO.
There are both Jews and blacks on the several sides of the argument about the Palestinians, and it is ever clearer that Israel is a spirit of accommodation. Blacks and Jews do need to meet, and about the domestic issue that really lies between them. Such a discussion ought to move, in give-and-take, in order to affirm "affirmative action" for blacks in America.
Arthur Hertzberg, rabbi of Temple Emanuel in Englewood N.J., is vice president of the World Jewish Congress.
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University Daily Kansan
Fridav. October 5.1979
5
WE LOVE YOU HOLY FATHER
DIVINE WORD MISSIONAKTLS
KSIEZA WERBISCI
More than 200,000 people gathered at Living History Farms just west of Des Moines yesterday to show warm affection for Pope John Paul II.
POPE JOHN PAUL II
As he prepared to leave, the pope walks into the crowd to bestow a departing blessing.
Mary McKenzie
Abunda Loper, 85, Des Moines, wanted to see the pope as the one thing she did before she died. She camed out in a field in the night to insure a place in the crowd.
Iowa to Pope; We Love You
DES MONIES, Iowa. For the more than 430,000 people who withdrew the wind and chilly weather—since 5 a.m.—the IFS seemed to provide a blanket of warmth.
Carrying a message of love of the earth and deep rewards from farmland, the popo celebrated an hour-and-a-half Mass before the crowd gathered on the verdant land.
Visitors bundled in sleeping bags, skis jackets and sweaters tramped the fields of the farms to move as closely as possible to the fence enclosing the palant alar.
Early morning arrivals included a family from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who said, "It's a beautiful day. It's so nice to have a pope who will come out and see the neele."
"We came prepared," they said, pulling blankets closer. "We're ready to wait."
As the morning wore on and the autumn winds sharpened, spectators began making acquaintances with their neighbors for the day.
Food was being shared with those who did not bring their own. Blankets and cushions were passed around to keep people off the cold, damped earth.
Five chartered buses carrying more than 170 KU students and Lawrence residents arrived at Living History Farms, west of Des Moines, around a 9. a.m.
Scores of other bus travelers arrived between 7:30 a.m. and 11 a.m., while others could be seen traveling in two hours later from the straggling car nearly 400 yards (from the pilgrim owl).
By 2 p.m., the 600-acre farm was jammed with people sitting, standing, lying and sleeping—all awaiting the oo's arrival.
Babies snuggled close to their mothers as crisp winds swept the Iowa plain, tossing clouds of dust into the air.
Lines to portable toilets stretched into a two-hour wait, but tapered as the estimated time of the pontiff's arrival grew near.
Nuns waited patiently for the pope by saving the rosary.
"I stood in St. Peter's Square, but I never thought I'd be standing on our own
Two sisters from St. Mary's College in Leavenworth were among the 200 people who rode buses from Leavenworth to Living History Farms.
American soil to see the pope," Sister Marie Paula Hardy said.
"He's been through all, living through World War II and he has paid his dues for everything he says," she said.
Sister Mary Edwin Dcourse from St. Mary, who will be teaching philosophy at the University of Kansas next semester, made insightful ideas made an impression on neobel.
A woman from Prairie Village said she wasn't about to pass up the opportunity to see the none.
"My husband will never take me to Rome to see him, so this is my only chance."
Visitors from Crete, Neb., said they arrived at 6:45 a.m. to get a good spot on the field to see the noon.
"We're getting pretty excited about him coming. We're just so glad he is coming so we will be able to close to him," they said.
Although most of the crowd was middle-aged and elderly people, children also were visible in the crowd.
"This is the first and last time we'll get to see him, an 11-year-old boy from west Des Moines said.
Shortly after noon, nearly 75 priests and church officials marched down the ramp leading to the basilica, which held an ecumenical service. For many cold and tred vestitions, that was a sign of the death.
The crowd, which had been shifting throughout the morning, came to a standstill by early afternoon.
Children scrambled to the shoulders of their parents as massive arms began waving to the helicopter circling high around the field.
It was nearly 3:30 p.m. before the pope's helicopter could be seen in the sky south of the farm.
"He is almost an hour and a half late, but no one cares," a man nearby said.
Cries of "Oh here he comes. That's him," errupted across the crowd as thousands of cameras began clicking simultaneously.
"Look, you can see him," one man said to his wife, who answered, "Yep, that's him right." Second later Secret Servicemen emerged from the bellcaster, but no pipe.
A second helicopter approached and the crowd began waving once again. The air was laden with dust as Marine Corps Boeing 737s "carry" the ponfiff landed on Iowa soil.
Minutes later Pope John Paul II appeared in the doorway and was greeted by heartwarming cheers from the audience.
Photos by Bill Frakes
Gressed in the traditional white and carrying a golden staff of St. Peter, the pontifal slowly made his way along a lengthy procession of priests and bishops.
There was a sense of power emanating from the white clad figure as he made his way to the altar. He walked as if he were standing before the altar with the knowledge that he was being followed.
Gifts of corn baskets, a pair of milk and a small tree were presented to the pope from a select group of participants. Joseph Hays Jr. (left) and his wife, Nora, the note on visita were, ill bearers.
With the exception of repeating prayers in unison, silence loomed over the crowd throughout the consecration.
Breaking the stillness of the plain, the pope emerged with his deep Polish accented voice, asking for an exchange of peace among the crowd.
Instantly, strangers were hugging each other, tears tricking down their cheeks, in a joyous response to the pope's request.
Communion was distributed to 150 people by the pontifix who priested stood at the edge of the crowd giving Communion over the fence to those nearby.
"He blessed everyone along the way. I hope he's not too tired to say Mass," a spectator said as the pope roasted in his high-backed chair in the center of the altar.
Accompanying him to the altar were 21 bishops from across the United States. Together the pope and bishops celebrated the feast of the saints gold, rasp, bronze and marigold mums and mums.
Story by Rosemary Intfen
Cameras clicked and binoculars were adjusted as thousands perched on their tapes and strained their necks when the pope stepped forward to deliver his address to
During his homily, the pope emphasized the importance of the farmer's role in providing food for the world.
"The land is not only God's gift, it is also man's responsibility. By hard work you have become masteries of the earth and you can teach mankind how to fruitfulness which modern agricultural advances have made possible, you support the lives of millions who themselves do not work the land, but who live because of what man has done," the post said during his 28-minute sermon.
The Holy Father stressed that attitudes of gratitude, careful conservation of land and generosity were essential to rural life.
"You who live in the heartland of America have been entrusted with some of the most important resources God has given to the world. Therefore conserve the land well, so that your children's children will be well nourished and even richer than was entrusted to you."
"But also remember what the heart of your vocation is. While it is true here that farming is the best livelihood for the farmer, still it will always be more than an enterprise of profit-making. In farming, you cooperate with the Creator in the very sustenance of life on earth."
Thousands of rosaries and religious medals were raised high into the air as the pope bestowed his final blessing on the crowd before ending the historical Mass.
Keeping with the tradition he had set in Boston, New York and Philadelphia, the team has gone on to Servicemen and marched into the crowd to give a personal goodbye to grateful spec-
Cheers rose as the pope moved from platform to platform shaking hands with the irritant neon.
Cries of "Long live the pope" followed John Paul as he was escorted back to the waiting helicopter.
P
The pope acknowledges the masses as he prepares to give his address.
6
Friday, October 5, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
TODAY: COMPANIES INTERVIEWING in the School of Business will be Procter & Gamble, Garney, Commerce Bank and DeLattke Hassle & Sells. Companies interviewing in the School of Engineering will be Dell, Merrill Lynch, General Dynamics. Ferms interviewing in the School of Law will be Clark, Mice, Linnville; Breggfehl, Stinson, Magn, Firezil, and many others. FINE ARTS FILM SERIES will feature "Night Journey," Martha Graham's dance of the Oedipus Legend, and "The Performance of The ROYAL LIGHTSTENEIN CIRCUS
will perform at 10:38 in front of Watson Library. BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: OBSERVATORY OPEN HOUSE will begin at 7 p.m. in 500里林 HAU KOLF DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173仁唐镇 A MUSIC INSTRUMENTATION BATTERY BY Terry Badlringe will begin at 8 p.m. in mary Hall Lounge.
TOMORROW: PARENTS DAY will include departmental and school open houses and activities. KANSAS EDITORS' DAY will begin with registration at 9 a.m. in the
Jayhawk房 of the Union CLINTON STATE PARK ORIENTEERING MEET will begin at 11:30 a.m. More details available from SUA.
SUNDAY: A PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION by undergraduate photography students will open at 1:30 p.m. in the Art and Design Building Museum. MUSING IN the museum, students will visit the Muse of Comedy by William Arrowsmith, John Hopkins University at 2 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of art auctiorum. A CARLILON RECTAL by Albert Gerkin will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the SHOWCASE will begin at 3:30 p.m. in Swaworth Recital Hall of Murpalt Hall.
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SUA
POETS & WRITERS SERIES
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
presents
MONAVANDUYN
"Mona Van Duyn is one of the best women poets around. . . . American poetry has a fine new addition."
JAMES DICKEY
JAMES MERRILL
"She is our Penelope in verse, and inversely; day by day undoing the web she weaves each night against her missing Ulysses' return, against her mysterious suitors' departure. With what ardor yet what responsibility (to herself, to her surroundings, to the time served in them) she sets about her scandalous task, her scalding play, her homework, as she calls it. . . . how Mona Van Duyn's poems work!"
Recipient of the Euince Tietiens award (1956), the Harriet Monroe Award (1968) from Poetry, the Helen Bullis Prize (1964) from Poetry Northwest, the Hart Crane Memorial Award from The American Weave Press (1968), first prize in the Borestone Mountain Awards Volume (1968), the Bolligen Prize (1970), and the National Book Award for Poetry (1971).
OCTOBER 8, 8 PM
Author of Valentines to the Wide World (1959). A Time of Bees (1964), To See, To Take (1970), and Bedtime Stories (1972). Co-founder and editor of Perspective, a Quarterly of Literature.
COUNCIL ROOM, KANSAS UNION
300 state journalists to gather at KU for annual Editors' Dav
W. Davis Merritt, editor of the W. Davis Merritt, Ensign of the Eagle and Beacon, and Tom Ebens, Editor of the School of Journalism, who is the keynote speakers at the annual Kaiser Editor's Day conference in Oakland.
They will address about 300 Kansas newspaper editors and publishers in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. They begin at 9 a.m. in the Jawbow Room.
Merritt will speak on the current status of the media's access to court records in Kansas, specifically records of arrests and court results in dropped charges or acquittals.
Before becoming executive editor, Mr. Herritt was the Washington correspondent for *The New York Times*. Observer and was national reporter at the *New York Times* editor, city editor and sports reporter at
the observer. He also was editor of the Boca Raton, Fla., News.
He graduated from the University of North Carolina and worked on the University of North Carolina Daily Tareelet.
Ebens, whose topic will cover editors' commitments to readers, is on a one-year plan. He met with Star and Times. He had been a reporter for assistant city editor, city editor and managing editor for the Star and Times committee, then the managing editor for administration.
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Communication, told the meeting he said that the meeting generally was the only time editors and publishers could get together to exchange ideas with colleagues.
Calder Pickett, professor of journalism will announce the 68th member of the
Kansas Newspaper Editors Hall of Fame. The posthumous award is voted on annually by Kansas editors and publishers.
Frank "Bus" Boyd Jr., late editor of the Jewell County Register, was inducted into the Hall of Fame last year.
Boyn Brimmer, professor of journalism,
will offer a tribute to Oscar S. Stauffer,
chairman of Stauffer Communications, Inc.
and gift the million gift to the KU
Journalism program.
Included in the program will be remarks from Bob McCans, president of the Kansas Press Association; Don Fitzgerald, KPA executive director; Robert Bontrager, journalistic department at Kansas State University and KU Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
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The general session will begin at 9:45 a.m. in the Big Eight Room and the buffet lunch will start at 11:30 in the Ballroom.
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Senators, class officers chosen
Freshman class officers are president, David J. Adkins, Topeka; vice president, Amy Hassig, Kansas City, Kan.; President, Katherine Schiafu; and secretary, J.Megs, Wichita.
The Limittis coaltion swept three of four freshman class offices in the fall elections, with the Visa coalition taking the onie.
The winners were Terri Robinson, Leawood freshman, (Rainbow Duo), 243; Jamie Fitzgerald, Mission freshman, (Rainbow Duo), 213; Laurie Griffith, Fairway freshman, (Heal)d, 225; Lynn Bradford, Freshman, 216; Lauren Smith, Kevin Mebust, Lake Quaver freshman, (Imagination) 188; votes, Kevin Mebust, Wichita freshman, (Heal)d, 170
In the election for six freshman-sophomore Senate seats, the ideal coalition and the Rainbow Duo coalition dominated the Rainbow
In addition to the six student senators elected yesterday, Mitchelson said 17 new senators were nominated vacated by senators who resigned to the summer, did not return to school or were discharged.
The following senators were appointed
Alan Looney, engineering; Dwane Nesse, engineering; Mikl Gordon, engineering; Skip Berberman, engineering; Terry Berberman, humanities; Kevin Milburn, liberal arts and sciences; Kevin Milburn, liberal arts and sciences; Terry McCoy, humanities; Kevin Goebaehan, Nunemaker 3; Kriety Kossover, Nunemaker 5; Eric Behrens, Nunemaker 6; Gary Klusman, off-campus; Edmund Haynes, graduate; David Romano, graduate; Hon Heape, graduate.
THE REST OF the election results are as follows:
Freshman class president: Robert A. Caffarelli (Limissim), 154 votes; Brett Milbourn (Key), 151 votes; Kurt Landing (Imagination), 96 votes; Wanda Lindman (Imagination), 96 votes.
Freshman class vice president; Beau Peters (1ed), I33 votes; Jim Brull (Visa), I32 votes; Molle Anne Mitchell, I34 votes; Kevin Nannally (Ki), I24 votes.
Freshman class treasurer: Karen McBride (Ideal), 149 votes; Karen Blackburn (Immature), 142 votes; Kate Dempsey (Independent), 138 votes; and Lynda Lutes (Independent), 77 votes.
Freshman class secretary: Mary Kay Eckergich (Visa), 151 votes; Amy Jensen (imagination), 150 votes; Valerie McCormick (social media), and Sara Simpson (ideal), 108 votes.
**STUDENT SENATE SEATS:** John C. Adams (Independent), 149 votes; Douglas Simpson (Independent), 134 votes; Mark J. Anderson (Independent), 128 votes; Imagination (159), votes; Sarah A. Duckers (U.S.S.R.), 115 votes; Lauren Gaebe (Independent), 92 votes; Alan Placek (Independent), 69 votes; David Lange (Independent), 60 votes; U.S.S.R., 102 votes; Monte Sandwick (Independent), 80 votes; Marina Jenkins (U.S.S.R.), 71 votes; Lynda Lutes (Independent), 70 votes; Ruthban Rees (Independent), 60 votes; Monte Sandwick (Independent), 64 votes; Carla Williams (Independent), 61 votes; Mat McCarter (Independent), 60 votes; Mark T. Parker (Anarchist), 60 votes; Mike Pawlowski (Independent), 60 votes; Charles D. Lawher (Independent), 57 votes; Stacia A. Veal (Independent), 51 votes; Lucy C. Wren (Independent), 51 votes; Patrick Lynch (Independent), 45 votes; Charles Reze (Independent), 40 votes.
BASS
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University Dally Kansan
SenEx to discuss interim policy for videotaping KU public events
By DAVID LEWIS Staff Reporter
The University Senate executive committee will discuss today the new interim position of chairperson, events, which some SExEm members content was developed without proper student involvement.
Del Shankle, executive vice chancellor, and Chancellor Archie R. Dykes were among the KU officials who approved the interim guidelines last week. The guidelines defined Del Shankle's right to videotape any police event and use the evidence for criminal prosecution.
The SenEx Human Relations Committee had been developing a permanent
videapetting policy, which will replace the videapetting equipment after former Israeli temporary policy developed by administrators.
Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction and a member of SenEx, said yesterday that the administration did not have a clear picture of its efficiency when developing the interim policy.
Gerhard Zuther, chairman of SenEx, said,
"As far as I know, the faculty has not been
consulted."
The temporary guidelines state that the police's right to videotape a public event will be exercised with discretion, "and that no officer shall go out in an open and nonsecretable manner."
The University of Kansas had purchased a video camera to document the disrupted April 6, 1978. The University was not able to identify the offenders then, but has videotaped demonstration since the video was released.
In other business, SenEx will discuss the KU Classified Senate.
The Senate's code was ratified Sept. 6 to represent the ideas and interests of classified employees, but is still awaiting recognition from the administration.
Roadstar RS-3200 Car Stereo 1/2 OFF
SenEx will discuss the Classified Senate's relationship with other KU governing units and organizations.
SenEx also will discuss what action could be taken on late delivery of paychecks to faculty and students.
1 Year Free Replacement Warranty
NOW $250.00
CR
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Price sold good pre-October 6th
Brighter Roads JL
843 9030
1420 W 23rd
D
abil's Restaurant
For personal and pleasurable dining.
Watch for our liquor section.
10% discount this Sunday to all K.U. students.
We cater. Call us to help arrange your next party.
Open Mon.-Sat. 11:00-10:00
Sunday 12:00-9:00
841-7226
925 Iowa next to the Hillcrest theaters
grand opening oct.5.6
A healthy bronze tan is a symbol of attractiveness, youth and each affluence. Besides the attractive appearance of a nice tan, it also protects your skin against sunburn.
Totalizes process involves a private booth while you can tan in the light of 12 fluorescent ultraviolet tubes clad by reflective material , for that all over area timing is controlled for you so you can't burn.
There will be prizes, membership specials and snacks soda furnished by Coca-Cola.
Pring in this ad for $5 off on your membership during our grand opening.
TANTALIZE
Sleep by or call today for your tantalizing experience.
SOUTHWEST PLAZA ANNEX
2210 Iowa Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66448
Telephone 576-395-2511
Safety by the Army Reserve Center
913-843-2511
230mL Bc.
| Centrifuge |
| :--- | :--- |
|
8 Friday, October 5, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Parent's Day
Welcome KU Parents on Your Special Day
Enjoy your weekend even more with a great meal at Western Sizilin Steakhouse. Choose from many fine steaks priced from 99* to $5.19, plus a 20 item salad bar.
Best Marine Place In Town
WESTERN SIZZLIN.
STEAK HOUSE
2920 Iowa St.
Phone 843-2550
Serendipity
5th W. New Hampshire (The Marketplace)
OPEN 11 a.m.- 6 p.m. Tues. - Sat.
11 a.m.- 8 p.m. Thurs.
New Arrivals:
Sporty Cord pants with 4 zipper pocket,
Rich colors: wine red, mid-nite blue, wheat,
rusty tangerine, chocolate. $24.50
Soft glove-like sweaters: 100% pure
argin wool, turtlenecks, crows,V-necks. $24 - $45
Come See!
Cornucopia Restaurant
Complete Salad Bar
Steaks Vegetarian Entrees
Crepes Omeletts
Quiches Sandwiches
Come Enjoy Yourself
1801 Mass.
842-9637
11:00 to 10:00 M-F
10:00 to 10:00 Sat.-Sun.
Bathing Duck
robin's nest
Bath & Kitchen Shoppe
2120F West 25th 841-3330
PARENTS DAY SPECIAL
Towels and Rugs All Are
20% OFF
Holiday Plaza
Next to General Jeans
841-3330
Mon-Sat 10:00-6:30
Thursday 10:00-8:30
WELCOME
HAINTS
Edward & Naimi Roste invite you to stop in this weekend for an Authentic Mexican Meal specially prepared for you. American Dishes served also. Special Luncheon Menus.
--on Parent's Weekend
with a
Football Mum
$3.50
CHINA
PARENTS
Aztec Inn
Flamenco Guitarist Every Sunday Night.
807 Vermont Sat.
Tues.-Sat.
11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Sunday
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Flower House
Make Mom Feel Special
Delivery 11.50 Extra
Owens Flower Shop
843-6111
9th & Indiana Street,
Lawrence, KS, 60444
Hours Mon - Fri 8 a.m. NH 8 p.m.
Sat 8 a.m. NH 5:30 p.m.
we send flowers world wide thru FTD
--plus Sunday Brunch Buffet
U
THE KANSAS UNION
BEFORE THE GAME
MAIN UNION
We've Got A Great Weekend In Store For You!
The Deli
Welcome parents
Level 3
THE CAFETERIA
11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
A complete menu featuring
daily specials
The Soup n' Salad Bar
8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Hearty sandwiches made to order.
11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Build your own lunch with
our garden fresh vegetables
and home-made soups.
Level 2
Level 2
The Prairie Room
11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Full selection-Leisurely dining
The Hawk's Nest
The Hawk's Next
11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Self-service for those in a hurry.
AFTER THE GAME LEVEL 2
The Hawk's Nest
3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sandwiches—Shakes—Snacks
OREAD
BOOK
SHOP
Main
Lev
Parents and Students
You're invited to meet, informally, with K.U. faculty and staff at the University Reception. Coffee and rolls will be served.
10:00 - 11:30 a.m.
Main Union, Level 4
Satellite Union, Level 2
Main Union, Prairie Room Level 2
features entrees, salad bar, fresh baked pastries and
desserts, plus juices and coffee—a very enjoyable meal.
Main Union Level 3
11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Main Store
Complete Your Weekend With A Visit To
THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES
We have Jayhawk gifts galore!
BEST QUALITY • BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
Satellite Union
Bus Schedule
Parents—Now there's a new Satellite Station conveniently located next to Allen Field House. It's close to Oliver and Naismith Halls and the residence halls on Daisy Hill. There's plenty of free parking too! You can walk to the game or ride a shuttle bus for 25'.
Bus Schedule
Buses are continuously starting at 9:00 a.m. to Satellite Union to stadium. Return buses, parked outside stadium, run continuously from stadium to Satellite Union until 5:30 p.m.
Be sure to stop in before or after the game for a bite to eat and a thirst-quenching beverage including beer.
The Pantry
10:00 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
In a hurry? We offer a fast food line featuring hot and cold sandwiches, soups, salads, shakes, snacks and a variety of beverages, including beer.
The Deli Shoppe
10:00 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Old-fashioned Deli sandwiches.
New Satellite Union Level 1
Fine Arts and Interior Design
VW
By
Kathy Bartholomew
Kansas Artist
WELCOME STUDENTS & PARENTS
Valley West represents over 30 outstanding Midwest Artists:
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
Paintings-Ltd. Ed.prints — Framing Wildlife — Decoys — Sculpture Silkscreens — Stoneware — Lamps Textiles — Baskets — Quilts Dried & Silk Floral Arrangements Unique Accessories & Gifts Interior Design Consultation Residential & Commercial
Marlyn F. Brown — Owner/Designer
VALLEY WEST galleries & Interiors Holiday Plaza + Lawrence
VALLEY WEST
Hours: Mon-Sat 10:30-5:30 -- By App. 841-1870
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 5, 1979
--sizes: 5-13
Reg. $110
Save $21
Jazz Up!
Tonight and Tomorrow
Earl Robinson
and the
Red Hot Scamps!
Paul Gray's
Jazz Place
926 Massachusetts
843-2644
--sizes: 5-13
Reg. $110
Save $21
ROBERTA BELKIN
Parent's Weekend Special
Buy 3 Mexican Dinners and
Get The 4th One Free!
offer expires Oct. 7th
843-9880
1105 Massachusetts
--sizes: 5-13
Reg. $110
Save $21
Friday thru Sunday, October 5-7
Talkee
Cafe
Imagine the taste of . . .
a steaming mug of cinnamon laced apple cider to toast the victory, a hearty portion of rich lasagne in spicy tomato sauce to restore your vitality or a "Hot Fudge Lover's Banana Spit" to ease your disappointment. Picture a pizza that captures the zesty taste of a laco. a mug of Cappicino coffee for a pre-game warmup, or a huge pizza, 32 inches in diameter, that will astonish the hungriest group (12 or more). Dream of sipping an old lashioned chocolate soda in a turn-of-the century atmosphere. Julie's has it all. Come in and indulge!
Hours:
11 a.m to Midnight
Monday to Thursday
11 a.m to 1 a.m
Friday and Saturday
11 a.m to 11 p.m.
Sunday
3216 Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas
842 7170
Julie's
3216 Iowa Lawrence Kansas
827-777-8000
CALAMITY JANES
30% OFF
EVERYTHING IN STORE
EXCLUDING:
Designer Lines
Lingerie
Better Gold & Jewelry
Holiday
Hours MC AE
2112-C W. 25th
Fri & Sa 10:00 6:00 VISA UH
West of Kief's
HENRY'S RESTAURANT
SIXTH & MISSOURI 843-2139
DRIVE-IN
23 henrys
Make A Good Impression
Mom and Dad are coming and you want to take them somewhere nice—but affordable! Henry's is the answer. We offer a wide variety of good food at reasonable prices.
So bring Mom and Dad in this weekend— you'll make a good impression!
We close at 9.00 pm Sun-Thurs 1.00 pm Fri-Sun
1:00 am Fri-Sat
At Henry's You Have Your Choice.
Make a wise fashion investment now and save at pre-season prices!
retained suede jacket
lit
VILLAGE SET
NOW
$89
Tops everything! Cork or Nutmeg.
of choice split cowhide.
Shawl collar, casual Obet tie belt, shirred front and back yoke.
Beautifully detailed suede jacket
922 Massachusetts OPEN Thurs. till 9 pm Use our convenient payment plan.
the VILLAGE SET
PARKER
Hair Benders
Introduces
"Soft Edge Cutting"
for
Men & Women
842-9641
Call for appointment
1919 W. 24th
The Hair Benders & Co.
Sandwich
HOAGIE'S HERO
Hair Benders
Introduces
"Soft Edge Cutting"
for
Men & Women
Co.
MARY PETER
"It's time we met the folks!"
HOAGIE'S
HERO
Sandwich Shoppe
2214 YALE
Behind University State Bank
Hoagies PASTRAMI Corned beef
Soup Salad Beer 5 foot sandwiches
842-6121
---
The first Annual, Old Fashioned Ice Cream Social
Our Big Old Fashioned French Ice Cream Cones
only $ 1 0^{\mathrm{c}} $
your choice of our 4 creamy flavors. Giant Double only 20¢
Celebrate Parents weekend or any special event with Old Fashioned French Ice Cream at old fashioned prices.
Special Good Saturday After Football Game & All Day Sunday,
CHELSEA ST. Creamery
Try Our Gourmet Style Hot Dogs!
521 West 23rd at the Mall Entrance
10
University Dally Kansan
Fridav. October 5. 1979
'Life of Brian'an outrageous spoof on religion
"Life of Brian," a film written by the Mongoose Python trooper directed by Terry Gilliam and Jerry Earle. Cleese, Terry Gilliam and Erie Earle. Now showing at the Varsity Theatre, 1015
BY JOAL HETHERINGTON
Kansan Reviewer
and now for something pretty familiar to
you, the group of seven has targeted and plum
ed on purée. The group is at it again with "Life of Brian," the latest
event in its tradition of outrageous,
silly pranks.
KANSAN Review
The plot is simple. Brian Cohen (Graham Chapman), the kid in the manger door next in Bethlehem, is mistaken for the Messiah by the Three Wise Men. But the Wise Men quickly up. Brian instantaneously grows up off-screen, reappearing in time to be the mistaken for the Messiah. But this time is the only one to catch the mistake.
Brian, a timid, scrawny type, makes his reappearance with his dominating mother in an outdoor performance to deliver the Beatitudes. But because of the distance and squabbling among the crowd, Mr. Brian's audience was skeptical.
"Blessed are the cheesemakers?" asks one in perplexity.
Another wants to know which Greek is going to inherit the earth.
**HILLAN'S MOTHER finally decides to go to the local stoning instead.**
From here on out, the show is an Drama 5,
as he gets entangled with subversive
groups, religious fanatics and pursuing Romans.
In this setting, Monty Python takes its inspiration from the human being, religion, unorganized religion, cultism, government of any kind, philosophy, homosexuality, heterosexuality, and racism.
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(FORMERLY FRAME WORKS)
FRAME WOODS
(NEXT TO KIEF'S)
842-4900
HOLIDAY PLAZA
LAWRENCE
&
3074 W. 29th
TOPEAK
BURT JILL
REYNOLDS CLAYBURGH
BURT REYNOLDS
CANDICE BERGEN
A
Starting Over
PRODUCER PACKAGE 2 (JAMES A. BURKE)
THIS PACKAGE IS DESIGNED TO PROVIDE JAMES A. BURKE WITH THE MULTIPLE USE OF THE PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS IN THE PRODUCTION PACKAGE 1 (JAMES A. BURKE). THE PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS IN THE PRODUCTION PACKAGE 1 (JAMES A. BURKE) SAVE TIME AND EASILY DONATE THE PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS IN THE PRODUCTION PACKAGE 2 (JAMES A. BURKE). THE PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS IN THE PRODUCTION PACKAGE 2 (JAMES A. BURKE) ARE PROVIDED BY JAMES A. BURKE, INC. FOR THE PERFORMANCE OF PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS IN THE PRODUCTION PACKAGE 1 (JAMES A. BURKE).
Phil Potter would like to straighten out his life... One way, or the other.
TIMES:
Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400
Pinnacle
Eve. 7:30 & 9:50
Weekend matinee
1:30
Starts
TONIGHT!
1:30
"Life of Jairm" is cultism gone crazy in a biblical practice. Judeus are a hishoryn of the Jews, as they are in the People's Front, the Popular Judean Front, the People's Front of Judea and an antiquity.
THE MARKETPLACE of Brian's Jerusalem must be one of aides show after another of religious fanatics. Each has his own special interest, a small crowd of listeners. Each one is more perverse than the last, and all seen best on eventual self-amnibition or helplessness.
While eliding the Romans in the marketplace, Brian attracts a crowd that decides he is the Messiah. He flees the crowd, which thinks the sandal he loses in the road is an omen. Brian is finally cursed alluring the time that he is not the Messiah.
"I say you are, Lord, and I should know," replies one follower, "I've followed a few of them."
The physical setting is quite up to the Monty Python par. it is graphic and correct down to the minutest detail of dirt and dust on the walls, the fact that it is all quite self-consciously convincing, that it is all quite self-consciously convincing.
The film is completely irreverent—what else do you expect from Monty Python?—but hardly heretofore. However, it is sure to elicit controversy, as it already has started to do.
AGAINST THIS intensely realistic scenery, the zany action, with its modern intrusions and exaggerations, approaches surrealism. This is the essence of Monty Python—having the characters behave like human beings in situations, or injecting completely irrelevant and impossible elements into blantly innocuous settings.
"The Life of Brian" may or may not be the funniest film Monte Python has made. That judgment is left up to each viewer's taste. But Monte Python is a case one of its best efforts. The jokes and gaps keep tumbling right along, and even when the movie isn't being particularly funny, it never dares. The big question "Life is leaving. Is what on earth can they next?
DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER
2545 Iowa - 1835 Mass.
ANNOUNCES
EVERYDAY LOW
LOW PRICES!
YOU
WON'T BELIEVE
OUR PRICES TILL
YOU SEE THEM!
Spare Time
OPEN 10AM - 10PM SUN - THURS
10AM - 11PM FRI - SAT
COME CHECK US OUT.
Galleries
Sculpture by James Leedy, member of the Kansas City Art Institute, ends today. "Pushing it," an exhibition by undergraduate photography students, Saturday at 15. Open 8:30 a.m. 3:30 p.m. Monday to Friday and 1:30 a.m. 4:00 p.m. Sunday.
ART AND DESIGN GALLERY Visual Arts Building
THE GALLERY
745 New Hamshire St
Paintings by Celia Sella and pottery by Alan Brummell, through Oct. 26. Open 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
LANDIS GALLERY
018 Massachusetts St
Higher limited edition prints by Allen Hughes, Maynard Reece, Mark Reece and Robert Baterman, through Oct. 31. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Monday.
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER
EASTERN CENTER
Ninth and Vermont streets
Anniversary Celebration Exhibition of drawings, paintings, prints and sculpture from the late 19th century at Kent Van Hoven, through October 31. Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday at the Art Museum in Yorkville.
PEN AND INC. GALLERY
Oil paintings by Paul Penny, through Oct. 31. Open 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
OY'S CREATIVE FRAMING AND GALLERY
GALLERY 711 W.23rd ST.
Wildlife prints by Roger Tory Peterson and Maynard Reece and traditional scenes by Dalbart Windberg, through Oct 31. Open 30 a.m to 6 p.m. on Monday.
7E7GALLERY
7 E Seventh St.
Watercolor and wash drawings by Evonne English, tomorrow through Oct. 31. Open onn to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
UNION GALLERY Kansas Union
Annual Art Department Faculty Show, ends today. *Art Posters*, a circulating gallery of art from the University of Oklahoma, Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. at Daphne Ferguson Gallery.
VALLEY WEST GALLERIES
Stoneware by Roger Copeland and Kathy Bartholomew, graphic drawings by Dye Lauderdale. Inland wood buckles from the 1820s to the 1940s of Lorenza, through Oct. 21, Open 10:30
a. m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
Music
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER Ninth and Northeast streets
Nirmal Yasin 13th Street
"Sunday Night Jazz Stuff," with pianist Jue Uttacker and vocalist Dick Wright 14th Sunday
LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
601 Massachusetts St.
MEMORIAL CAMPANILE
737 New Hampshire St.
Pat's Blue Riddig Band, tonight and tomorrow night. Doors open at 8, music begins at 9
MEMORIAL CAMPANLE
Albert Gerken, University cartilioneur,
3 p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Wednesday.
FACILITY CONTACTS
99% Massaheugetti St
OFF-THE-WALL-HALL
611 Vermont St.
137 New Hampshire
Used Parts, tonight and tomorrow night. Doors open at 8, music begins at 9.
PENTIMENTO COFFEEHOUSE
STUDENT RECITAL HALL
Swarthorth Recital Hall
STUDENT RECITAL SERIES
VISITING ARTIST SERIES
Ferry Hilderidge, music history lecturer demonstration, 8 a.m. tonight Kansas University KU Wind Ensemble, 8 p.m. Tuesday Doctoral Recruitment by John Williams Doctoral Recruitment by John Williams
Earl Robinson and the Red Hot Scamps, tonight and tomorrow night. Doors open at 8, music begins at 9.
Paul Brylaska, 8 tonight. Stefanie-
Pardonel, 10 tonight. Dave Thompson, 6
years. David McCormack, Joseph,
10pm. p.m. to尾场. Owari Trio,
min. tion尾场. John Andrews,
8pm.
Sawthorn Rehearsal
Anthony Plog, trumpet; lecture demonstration, 12:30 p.m. Sunday, performance 8 p.m. Sunday.
Theatre
I Year
free
replacement
Warranty
INGE THEATRE SERIES
William Inge Memorial Theatre
Morrow Hall
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER
"Streamers," by David Rabe; 8
taught, tomorrow and Sunday.
"Radio, Greep and Prip-Frap," a Halloween forest tale, and the continuing adventures of "Nymr the Sprite" by the book Be-Players, 1:30 p.m. tomorrow.
MILTON COOPER CLOTHING
Independent
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
6th & Indiana
843-4011
Look in your People Book for coupons worth 20% off on Dry Cleaninglll
Independent
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Roadstar RS 3700 Car Stereo 1/2 OFF
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Save 50% on this great roadster RS 3700 - AM-FM cassette, with Auto Search Tuning LED dial Indicator. Auto-Reverse and Lock Fast Forward/Windwheel
Brighter Roads, Inc.
843-9030
1420 W. 23rd
WARNING: CHILDREN UNDER 16 MUST BE WATCHING THIS PAGE.
Get Set For KU/Syracuse Football
At The Jayhawk Bookstore
- 54 Styles of Shirts
Adult and Youth
KU Shirts
- Jogwear, tank tops
- Vlsors, umbrellas
- Post Cards, decals
- Sunglasses
- KU glassware, jewelry
- Candy, Cigarettes
- Park Free While Shopping
Keep the String Going . . .
KU
GO BIG BLUE We Are Behind You
8.5
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent block from the fountain
KU
4. 5 M.S 10-4 Every Sat. 843-3826
Friday, October 5. 1979
11
Personal vineyard fulfills dream
Bv ROSEMARY INTFEN
Staff Reporter
With a sense of pride known only to an artist who had toled loyalty from planting to bottling, Robert Gilmore sid back a door and dislusted the results of his efforts.
Row upon row of bottles of wine rested horizontally in the crisscross racks that reached from floor to ceiling in the winery in the basement of his Alvamar Hills home.
Gilmore said it would be at least a month before those bottles would be opened for tasting.
Lining one wall of the winery was a counter covered with bottles of white wine undergrowing fermentation. Underneath were fewer larger bottles concealed by paper
"Ninety percent of the world's wine should be consumed within the first year," he said. But he added that wine produced in France could remain stable for several years.
Por Al米伦, who has a PhD. in Latin American history, the wines aging in the wine cellars of Porto Alegre several years from his five-acre vineyard south of Lavergne and the initial plot in the city.
The cultivation of wine grapes is a primitive art known to date back to ancient Roman times. Gilmore carries on that art here.
Gilmore's hands have spent most of their 66 years turning pages of textbooks and writing dissertations—labs befitting a Ph.D. holder.
But for the past eight years, he has been raising granes and making wine.
Although it would be easier with machinery, as a neighboring farmer has told him many times, Gilmore prefers to do it by hand.
DETERMINED TO USE the manpower
Gave him. Gilmore sunk the 1,900 grape
stakes into the soil of his five-acre vineyard with a 10-oound sledge.
The growing of grapes and the production of wine has been Gilmore's desire since he was a graduate student at the University of California at Berkeley.
While a student there, Gilmore discovered a girl he met at an alma mater produced in the famous Napa Valley area. It was at that time that he promised she would somehow have his own vipard and jacket.
Moving constantly, Gilmore was unable to fulfill his dream until he and his wife, Juliet, settled in Lawrence in 1968.
The backyard of their home became his first field. And in 1975 he purchased a small wheat field and turned it into a vineyard.
I JUST STARTED reading and went from there." he said.
In his vineyard, Gilmore has 40 varieties of red and white grapes, all of European origin.
Famous names, such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Bourdoue Rouge and Cabernet Blanc adorn the posts at the end rows neatly snacked in the vineyard.
"Most of my vines are mixes, French vines that are grafted onto American roots. The best wines come from mixes," Gilmore said.
Gilmore purchased cuttings from Ohio, New York and Maryland to begin his vineyard.
"The cuttings are all crosses between well-known European vines and American."
The vines can be purchased in the form of a cutting (stem) for grafting purposes, or as one-year-olds that are ready for planting, he said.
GILMORE SAID he had learned a lot from experimenting with the vines.
"Usually a vine will not bear until the
Despite a small crop this year, Gilmore's seven-month-long efforts in the field matured into a small, but rewarding harvest that he completed last week. The harvest is brought into its basement where a second stage begins, the art of making wine.
third year. I had one vine that didn't bear for seven years.
"The tighter packed soil around Lawrence affects the growth of vines and it usually takes most vines a longer time than three years to bear."
Amid the winenaking materials of empty bottles, plastic fermenting buckets, pots and other containers for stages of aging, resting the essential tools of the art: the grape grinder and the wine shaker.
10
**BOTTHE RED AND THE WINE** glays go to the oven, and the red wines go to the red wines I ferment them in the containers before pressing, but I press the white glands first and then allow them to ferment in glass.
The winemaking process varies for white and red grapes, Gilmore said as he moved
BOONE'S RETAIL LIQUOR
EXCELLENT SUPPLY OF AMERICAN AND IMPORTED WINES
from table to table examining labels on various bottles.
Case Lot Prices
- Cordials and Spirits
- Cold Kegs • Chilled Champagnes and Wines
Both types need five days for fermentation, he said.
711 W. 23rd 843-3339 10 a.m.-11 p.m.
Next Door to Westlake Hardware in the Malls Shopping Ct.
POLYVILLE, MON., JULY 27, 1976
sua films
Presents
WOODY
ALLEN
DIANE
KEATON
TONY
ROBERTS
CAROL
KANE
PAUL
SIMON
SHELLEY
DUVALL
JANET
MARGOLIN
CHRISTOPHER
WALKEN
COLLEEN
DEWHURST
A nervous romance
Enjoy "ANNIE HALL"
uncut and without commercials
Friday & Saturday, October 5-6
3:30, 7:00, 9:30p.m. $1.50
Woodruff Auditorium
-No refreshments allowed-
"ANNIE HALL"
Now that the year's harvest is in and the grapes stored safely in the winery, Gilmore enjoys walks in his home vineyard where he sees apples and pear trees surround the miniature vineyard that has been abandoned for another winter. It is there that he can remember the team of acquiring a vineyard in winemaking that came to realize all that he has attained.
Come See Our Large Selection Of Handbags
HANDBAGS
University Daily Kansan
Over 380 Baas To Choose From.
Holiday Plaza · 25th & Iowa
BAG SHOP
?
Pre-Med Students
GINNIE HARVEY
A meeting for all students considering applying to medical school in Fall of '79 or '80 Tuesday Oct. 9
Representatives from KU Med Center and Lawrence campus will be in attendance.
7:00 p.m.
Big Eight Room
Kansas Union
OLD GARPENTER HALL
SMOKEHOUSE
All our meats are slow roasted over a hickory log fire to give you the finest in deep pit smoked barbeque flavor
OLD CURRENTEN HALL
SCHOOL HOUSE
719 Massachusetts
treat mom and dad to a meal they will really enjoy BBQ GO BIG BLUE! beat svracuse
Robert Gilmore
STARTING THIS WEEKEND
BULLWINKLE'S
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING
FRIDAY,OCT.5
LIQUID FIRE
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SATURDAY, OCT. 6
SHOW STARTS AT 10:00
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12
Friday, October 5, 1979
University Daily Kausan
Consumer Affairs to stop services if funds denied
The Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association may stop printing information for students and community consumers if request for Student Senate supplemental materials, Clyde Chapman, administrative coordinator for Consumer Affairs said yesterday.
The association will request $4,686 to pay the second half of the director's salary for this year.
If the request is denied, funds to pay the salary will be taken from city revenue-sharing funds that were to finance the publishing of handbooks, rental housing directories, pamphlets and a consumer businesses in Lawrence, Chapman said.
The Senate had paid the director's entire salary since 1972, when the association was formed. However, Chapman said, the
Senate only provided half of the salary for this year.
He said that although the association received funds from other sources, it would not be able to meet the payroll.
Chapman said that city revenue-sharing money was granted in two allocations, one of which is a grant for grants would not be available until July, leaving the association without immediate control.
the association received grants from Training Act and from county revenue sharing totaling $30,000, the money could not be used to pay salaries, according to the report.
A fall budget committee will meet from 7 to 11 p.m. Oct. 8, 9 and 10 at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
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MASSACHUSETTS ST.
AAUP rejects exigency standard
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
The executive committee of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors yesterday passed a resolution calling for the creation of Regents' definition of financial exigency.
The Regents definition, approved last month, states: "It shall be the responsibility of Regents to develop appropriate Regents institution, in consultation with appropriate campus groups, to develop a plan for reductions in personnel as necessitated by conditions of financial need."
"I think we need to press the Regents to adopt an acceptable standard of exigency," Richard Cole, a member of the executive committee, said at yesterday's meeting.
The Regents definition of eviction, a fine, requires that the student must possess such as the fault of tenured faculty to keep open an institution, has been a point of concession this fall between the two groups.
According to T.P. Srinivasan, president of the KU AUP chapter, the Regents definition is too vague and does not meet national AUP standards.
THE AAUP opposes the definition,
Srinivasa said, because it does not include
safeguards against the unnecessary declaration of exigency and it does not follow AUAP standards for notifying faculty members before termination.
According to Evelyn Swartz, vice president of the KU AAUP chapter, members also opposed the procedure used in adopting the definition.
"The Regents should not have released the resolution in the summer when faculty members do not meet." she said.
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The definition was brought before the faculty for approval and most faculty groups were not meeting, and was passed before faculty members could take action against the definition. Swartz et al. (2015)
Any new discussion of the definition should have greater faculty participation, Cole said.
THE RESOLUTION passed by the AAPU included a clause asking for meeting with the Regents attorney, William Kauffman, to discuss AAPU concerns with the definition.
The resolution also asked for assurance that the Regents definition of exigency would not supersede the current KU exigency, which has been approved AUAP.
The KU policy is a seven-page document that outlines several specific steps the chancellor must follow before a condition of exigency can be declared.
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Sunday, October 14
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5:30 p.m.—Union Ballroom
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The steps include consultations with other administrators, the University Council Committee on University Affairs and the Senate executive committee. The chancellor also must publicize his reasons for a declaration of exigency and a request for emergency may be held by the University Council.
KU IS THE only Regents institution with an exigency policy.
The resolution states that the Regents definition of financial accountability "in effect, does not mandate that the Regents inconvenience for a genuine financial crisis" and refuted the Regents response.
According to Srinivasa, the resolution was based on looseness on one passed last year and now has been approved. The state resolution was approved by faculty members of all the Regents schools with the highest qualifications.
is the only state institution without an AAUP chapter.
In other action at the meeting, the AAPL asked its committee on the Economic Status to increase the number of faculty members who would compare the salary increases of KU faculty members with those of administrators.
THE COMMITTEE also will analyze the salaries, years of experience and grades of all classified employees below the rank of Assistant Instructor or resident director.
The executive committee will meet Oct. 11 with Chancellor Archie R. Dykes to discuss the financial expexation definition. The next meeting will be concluded meeting of the committee is Oct. 18.
"Some of these people without doctors are making more than assistant and associate professors with doctors, and others who make our lives easier," Swart said.
FBI wrong in firing homosexual mail clerk
WASHINGTON (AP)—An appeals court ruled Thursday that the FBI acted improperly four years ago, when it fired a mail sorter without giving him a hearing.
The ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals reinstates a suit challenging the right of the FBI to fire exequials in its non-investigatory cases.
The suit was brought by mail clerk Donald Ashton, who contends that he was fired solely because of his sexual preference. The FBI contends Ashton wasn't fired but "voluntarily resigned" after being confronted with the bureau's knowledge of his homosexuality.
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It said, instead, that Ashton should have received a hearing before his dismissal where those issues could have been raised.
The appeals court said it was not dealing with the issue of whether Ashton was fired or resigned or whether he could have been fired solely because of his homosexuality.
The court, however, noted that it felt the courts failed to perform his duties satisfactorily for failing to perform his duties satisfactorily and without prejudice to the FB's achievement of its law-enforcement mission.
The court also took note of other personal regulations and said the FBI "seems preoccupied with what might well be thought to be the private lives of its employees."
TGIF
at
THE HAWK
The Castle Tea Room 1307 Massachusetts
Reservations 843-1151
SOCIAL GATHERING The KU INTERNATIONAL CLUB
Invites all Foreign Students to Join fellow Internationalists on Friday, the 5th October at McColllum Hall (West Alcove) at 8:00 P.M. Students are encouraged to put on their national costumes. It would be a good opportunity to meet and to get to know people from all parts of the world.
Light refreshments are provided.
Funded from the Student Activity Fee
New Members
Always
Welcome
Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
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MINGLE TONIGHT!
PARENTS WEEKEND
Bring your parent(s) get happy hour prices
Offer good all weekend
Mon-Fri 4 pm-3 am Ramada Inn 2222 W.6th
Sat-Sun 6 pm-1 am
842-7030
Friday, October 5.1979
13
Orioles one from flag
BALTIMORE (AP)—Brian Downing got just what he wanted yesterday from Baltimore relief catcher Don Stanboube. But Baltimore catcher catches it didn't do what he wanted it to do.
With two out, the bases loaded and his team trailing by a run in the ninth inning. Downing antecipated a slider from Stanton. The ball was delivered just before that pitch on a 1-0 count.
Instead of lining a hit that would have captured an incredible comeback, Downing was also able to drain Dennis DeCaires Taylor in Doug DeCaines tagging out the final out, preserving Baltimore's 84 victory and giving the Orioles a 24 lead in the best-of-five American League championship.
"He threw me a slider on the first pitch and it was just off the plate. "Dowding said next pitch, he three another slider, and next pitch, he three another slider, and I was looking for it. But I didn't get it sold. I was looking for it."
one Angels had rallied from a 9-1 deficit and appeared on the verge of pulling out a victory against Stankoe. The Oriole reliever's slow mound tactics and inability to retire batters before reaching a full count in a Stadium Stadium fusspairing in their seat.
While the crowd may have doubted the outcome, Stanhouse said he was in control all the way.
"I think my shirt savs it all." said
Stanbuck, pointing to the orange T-shirt bearing the legend "Stan The Man Unusual," an enderment handed out by his coach, in the non-confirmed off-the-field activities.
Stanhole has been known to drive manager Earl Weir into the dugout几次, but he never wades away, but this time Weaver stayed to watch as the veteran loaded the bases and faced
"Earl was rooting for me today," said Stanhouse. "Usually he doesn't see me pitch."
Besides, Weaver added, he had a long way to go before reaching the point of no return with Stanhoe pitching. Explained the manager: "I still had three cuperies left."
Weaver said he stayed around because "the runway didn't work today. Every time I went there the Angels did something, so decided to stay in the daund at the end."
California Manager Jim Pregos said that the second consecutive loss doesn't mean the Angels are out of the running for the league championship.
"This club has battled back from a lot of adversity all year and I think they'll do it again," Fregosi said. "I think we'll win three in a row in California."
Meeting Fregosi's prediction will mean a stay on the West Coast a little longer than most of the Orioles anticipate.
"I'm from California," said DeCinces, "but I only want to stay there one day."
Harriers face tough test
The KU men's cross country team will try to unsteal a strong Arkansas squad as champion of the Oklahoma State Jamboree in Stillwater State.
Kansas is undefeated this year. The team placed first in the Wichita State Gold Classes two weeks ago and beat Southern Illinois 25-10 in a dual meet last weekend.
"Arkansas is the team to beat," said Timmons. "They are the ones we want to compete with."
The Jahwahns finished second to Arkansas, the defending South Conference foe who led the team last year. KU Coach Bob Timmons said he expected the two schools to vie again for the national title.
Timmons said that Arkansas had almost everyone back from last year's squad and that they also had made some improvements.
Other teams in the meet include Oklahoma, Kansas State, North Texas State, New Mexico, Oklahoma Christian College and host team Oklahoma State.
Hockey club aims for second victory
KU's field hockey team takes a 1-4 record into its game against the Kansas City Field Hockey Club at 2 p.m. Sunday on the field of West Olive Hall,
KU Coach Diana Beebe said the team's record was deceiving.
"We have made tremendous improvement," Beeeb said. "We're not the same team we started out to be. Each team is a totally different person on the field."
--hander has pitched four half innings in relief, allowing four hits and striking out three.
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KU's baseball team closes out the fall season with double-headers against Missouri Western University on the next two Sundays at Quigley Field.
KU shoots for sweep
The Jayhawks will play Missouri
Washington in the Nets game.
Sunday, KU Coach Cloe Flood Temple was
planned to use two new players, Jim
Philips and Sandy McIntosh, for his
job.
Phillips, a right-hander from Prairie Village, has allowed three hints in five two-third innings this fall. He has struck out eight batters.
"This will probably be the toughest competition we've had all year," "temple said. "I'd like to see what they do with it."
McIntosh, a walk-on, was injured his first two years at KU. This fall, the left-
Other KU pitcher and the number of strikeouts they have recorded this fall are Clay Christiansen, 11; Clayton Kearney, 20; Kurt Kafnes, one; Mick Wake, eight.
After eight games, KU has a 7-1 record. The team batting average is .306, with 13 doubles, 12 triples and seven home runs.
Jesse Vann leads Jayhawk hitters with a .668 average, including two doubles, two triples and a home run.
Other KU hitters with their averages are Dick Lewallen, 50; Roger Lee, 461; Brian Gray, 455; Scott Wright, 444; Jeff Dickman, 444; Roger Riley, 429; Steve Graham, 437; Tim Graham, 273; Loren Hobbs, 200; Mark Giley, 209; and Matt Gundefinner. 143.
Netters host Oral Roberts
KU's women netters will face tough competition today, according to tennis Coach Timo Kivisto, when they host Olr Roberts on court, on the courts behind Allen Field House.
The team travels to Manhattan tomorrow to compete in a triangular meet against Kansas State and Oklahoma State universities.
Kivisto said he would start the singles line that he used in the season-opening win over Wichita State the University last week, the exception of the No. 5 and 6 positions.
Shart Schrufer will play No. 5 and Kathy Merrion will be the 6. player.
Valerie Block will compete at the No. 1, position, with Mary Stuart playing in No. 2. Marcie Eary and Mauren Gulfill, both will play No. 3 and 4, respectively.
changed for the weekend competition, Block and Guillolf will play No. 1, Stauffer and Schrüfer No. 2 and Merrion and Lissa Leonard No. 3.
The doubles teams for the Jayhawks were
"Oral Roberts will be good competition," Kristova said. "Their Two. 2 girl beat Carrie Fetopolos last year. They've gone out and won." The team's depth our depth is our strong point in the meet."
Ruggers seek fifth
The KU Rugby Club will aim for its fifth victory of the season in a game this Sunday at 1:30 p.m. against the Emorys Rugby Union at 2:30 a.m. in Iowa streets.
The ruggers are coming from a first-place finish at the Kaw Valley Cup Tournament and the Western States Tournament. KU best Pittsburgh and Kansas State universities before typing the Toca Rugby Hawk
WEEKEND BOWLING SPECIAL .50*/game
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Fri.-Sat.
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THE 70'S
University Daily Kansan
Starting Group Classes
at
Disco - Smooth - Latin
in
Eldridge House
7th & Mass.
Starting - Monday, Oct. 8, 1979
(Crystal Room)
Time 8 p.m.
For Information
Or Write
Phone 913 233-1420
915 Kansas Ave.
Topeka, Kansas 66612
Dance
headmasters
809 Vermont
854-8098
HAIR and SKIN CARE
Shoes With The Young Lady In Mind
Sun and Games
J. J. Angela's
New Open Evenings
Until 8:00 Mon Thursday
Holiday Plaza
842-3007
Jun
June
Mon-Fri 10 a.m.
841-6450
Saturday
1002 Massachusetts
new to General Library
OPERA HOUSE PRODUCTIONS
CONCERT CALENDAR
HOURS:
Saturday 4:30 PM
Monday 6:30 PM
Tuesday 7:30 AM
Wednesday 8:30 AM
Thursday 9:30 AM
Friday 10:30 AM
Saturday 12:30 PM
Sunday 12:30 PM
WEEKLY TICKETS:
WEEK 10 THE NIGHT WHALES
WEEK 17 THE HAWKS
WEEK 19 GATEMENBROOM AND SOUTHERN FREED
WEEK 20 HARMONIUM AND THE Campfire Band
WEEK 21 HALLOWEEN PART II Wi-Fi Blue Red
WEEK 22 HARMONIUM AND THE Campfire Band
WEEK 23 HALLOWEEN PART III Wi-Fi Blue Red
NOVEMBER:
Harmonium and the Campfire Band
Lark Brewery Reservoir
Bellevue stage at 5:00 PM
THE SUPER BIRD LANE is open
intermission times on the
theater stage
THE SUPER BIRD LANE is open
intermission times on the
theater stage
NOBUMBER
1047 W. Lawrence and 43rd Ave. Blue Ridge Dam
List of Employees:
Dr. Larry Summers
Director, HR & Legal Services
Dana James at 600 M.
Fred Smith at 250 M.
Fred Smith at 120 M.
Fred Smith at 110 M.
First Name: Fred Smith
Last Name: Summers
Phone Number: (918) 455-2000
Email: fred.summers@nobumber.com
Sizzler Welcomes KU Parents with a special dinner
Steak & Gulf Rock Shrimp
Includes a sirloin steak, cooked to your order, with juicy gulf rock shrimp served in a tasty garlic sauce. Also includes baked potato or fries and sizzler toast
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2018
14
Friday, October 5, 1979
University Daly Kansan
100% of your savings dollars are re-invested in this community when you save at LSA!
money market interest rate:
Member F.S.L.C.
Equal Opportunity
Employer Lender
10. 327%
1. 50's paid on Passbook accounts, no minimum interest compounded daily.
$10,000 minimum. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal
LAWRENCE SAVINGS ASSOCIATION NINETH & VIRGINT STREETS
For the individualized look,
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HAIR LORDS
styling for men and women
1017 1/2 Mass open Mon-Thurs.
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23rd & Iowa
By TONY FITTS Snorts Editor
Orange to face Crimson and Blue
Tomorrow's football game between KU and Syracuse University could be the tale of three quarterbacks.
One of the three is Syracuse's Bill Hurley, a senior who has led the Orangemen to a 3-1 record. Hurley is a versatile player who won six games and second game of the season, against West Virginia, and then came back to rush for 164 yards against Northwestern the following season.
The third quarterback is Clinton's backup, Brian Bethe. He will start for Kansas tomorrow because of Clinton's injuries.
ANOTHER QUARTERBACK is KU'S Kevin Clinton. He started for the Jayhawks in each of their first three games, and has passed for 38 yards on 36 completions out of 47 attempts last week. He injured his back slightly during the Michigan game, and his ribs a little more seriously during the North Texas State game. Clinton played through, though, and was said yesterday.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Probable starters
Sports
KANSA OFFENSE
46 Kew
SC BVYTAU SCALE SYBAC DEFENSE
47 Kew
SC Tubalaua BVYTAU Mime Zanic
48 Kem
SC Ragadable BVYTAU Mike Connors
LG RG 63 Jim Ragadable LT RE Mike Connors
BG RG 20 Bob Whiteman LT RE Mike Connors
RT RT 5 Loay Said MLB Kee Kominari
KT RT 5 Loay Said MLB Kee Kominari
QR 17 Ben钻贝梯 LCB Dicr Henton
QR 17 Ben钻贝梯 LCB Dicr Henton
FB 14 Harry Syring FC BArk Applegate
FL 14 Harry Syring FC BArk Applegate
FB 14 David Vernet RC BArk Spatite
FB 14 David Vernet RC BArk Spatite
BETHKE, A SENIOR, began last season
KANSAS DEFENSE SYRAUXC OFFENCE
LGLB Kirk City CVWEL TOY Storm
LGBI Kirby Carswell TSOR Tony Storm
G66 Giant Gardner LGI Tory Hazan
ROG 61 Stan Gardner LGI Tory Hazan
ROG 11 James Apple LGI C4 Craig Johnson
ROLB Kirk McNutton LGI John McCollom
RLBC Kirk McNutton WR Jhon McCollom
RLCB 31 Dervil Milter RT AR Art墨柯
LCB 31 Dervil Milter RT AR Art墨柯
S H 47 Levy Law RB RB 41 Manillevandle
S H 47 Levy Law RB RB 41 Manillevandle
M Hibach Mike Hibach Gk Anderson
DEFENSIVELY, RU looks as if it might win two teams. It looks like the unit is not a stone wall, but to 171 yards rushing, fifth in the Big Eight. Hawks are last in the conference in
averaging 20 yards a catch on six receptions.
Bike to sell?
Advertise it
in the Kansan.
Call 864-4358.
Syracuse seems to be a proponent of the "good offense school of defense. The team has been doing well, two last football games, but they have allowed 46. Their scoring average of 22 points per game is only a little better than Oklahoma, and their only loss was to Ohio State, 31-14.
as the Jawhawk's starting quarterback in the multiple offense, but he injured his back in the first game against Texas A&M, and then in the second, where the railing allowed him to come back this fall.
The Kansas offense may look a little different with Bethek at quarterback. Clinton is tail '61—"and has a good arm. He's a classic clash dribble and locket the football.
Bethke, on the other hand, is short-
—10" and quick. He started four games in
1977 as a wishbone quarterback and was a
winner for two years. He will end to run the ball a little more than
Clinton. KU has some option plays in its playbook that he might show off.
SYRACUSE HAS more on offenses than Hurley. Joe Morris, running back, has been having a good year, and Art Monk, wide receiver, who gained more than 1,000 yards last year as a freshman, has been moved to linebacker and is leading the team in receiving.
KU finally showed it had a running game. KU led 42-19 and scored in Sydney each gained more than 100 yards to lead KU huskers to a 300-yard game. Kevin Murpury and Lloyd Jobie lead the teams down home.
FAMBROUGH SAID Syracuse would be a tough opponent for KU.
"We'll have to play the best defensive football game we've played to date to stay in the ball game with that bunch," he said. "There's a lot of pressure on our defense."
Kansan predictions
| Game | Davis | Dressier | Earle | Pitts | Frakes |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New Mexico St. at Nebraska | Nebraska 52-10 | Nebraska 52-7 | Nebraska 56-14 | Nebraska 41-7 | Nebraska 38-7 |
| Colorado at Oklahoma | Oklahoma 35-9 | Oklahoma 45-7 | Oklahoma 45-0 | Oklahoma 52-7 | Oklahoma 42-7 |
| Syracuse at Kansas | Syracuse 31-15 | Syracuse 27-21 | Syracuse 21-19 | Kansas 24-21 | Kansas 10-7 |
| Oklahoma State at So. Carolina | South Carolina 28-16 | Oklahoma St. 17-14 | South Carolina 24-17 | South Carolina 13-10 | South Carolina 14-10 |
| Tulsa at Kansas State | Kansas State 24-12 | Kansas State 28-14 | Kansas State 31-21 | Kansas State 14-7 | Kansas State 21-3 |
| Uni. of Pacific at Iowa State | Iowa State 28-7 | Iowa State 24-16 | Iowa State 24-7 | Iowa State 28-10 | Iowa State 35-3 |
| Michigan at Michigan State | Michigan 21-20 | Michigan 30-18 | Michigan 24-21 | Michigan 14-13 | Michigan 21-17 |
| Stanford at UCLA | UCLA 17-14 | UCLA 28-21 | UCLA 31-24 | Stanford 21-20 | UCLA 21-0 |
| Penn State at Maryland | Penn State 24-17 | Penn State 26-10 | Penn State 17-13 | Penn State 24-20 | Penn State 14-10 |
| Texas A&M | Texas A&M 21-14 | Texas A&M 34-14 | Texas A&M 16-10 | Texas A&M 21-10 | Texas A&M 24-21 |
| Season Totals | 23-7 | 24-6 | 21-9 | 21-9 | 21-9 |
Last week correct Kansan predictions resulted in a 78. average. Predictions are made by Tony Filt, sports editor; Mike Earle, sports writer; and Scott Benton, analyst.
Frakes, assisting management editor; Ken Davis, KU sports stringer for the Kansas City Star and Times.
TROJAN WARRIOR
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available
NEW
ARRIVALS:
15 Passenger Vans 2340 Alabama
80 Chevettes 843-2931
Attention Republicans!!
Nancy Kassebaum to speak at Bradley Farm, Rt. 5 Sunday, Oct.7
5-7 pm
For Reservations Call Delores Haas
843-0871
Bring covered dish, table service. Coffee and meat furnished by Republican
Women of Douglas County
Jay Bowl
2nd Place 20%
3rd Place 20%
Sign Up At The Jay Bowl
1st Place 50%
single elimination Open To KU Students & Staff
Doadline Friday Oct. 12, 6:00 p.m.
Oct.13,1979
2:00 p.m.
Jay Bowl
Entry Fee $5.00 60% prize fund
9 Ball Tournament Race To Five
--the games. Satellite Uniier
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No glitter—No Hype
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USED PARTS
--the games. Satellite Uniier
+++
KU
QUARTERBACK
CLUB
Catch it every Sunday
Catch the film highlights of the fighting Jayhawks every Sunday at 5 p.m. Come talk to the coaches, players and fellow KU supporters about
*Oct. 7 Syracuse
Oct. 14 Nebraska
Oct. 21 Iowa State
Oct. 14 Nebraska
Southeast Lounge
Oct. 21 Iowa State
Oct. 21 Iowa State
*Oct. 28 Oklahoma State
*Nov. 4 Kansas State
suA indoor Recreation
Nov. 11 Oklahoma
*Nov. 18 Colorado
*Nov. 25 Missouri
(
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 5, 1979
15
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
Call 864-4358
one pound two pounds three pounds four pounds five pounds six pounds seven pounds eight pounds nine pounds ten pounds (3 weeks or fewer) two pounds three pounds four pounds five pounds six pounds seven pounds eight pounds九 pounds十 pounds
full additional词汇
AD DEADLINES
1. run
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Friday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or via calling the UBI business office at 844-3580
The DKM will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Aitro also roasted, and raw peanuts in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, honey, pomegranate, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday
Also wooing wood crables Herb Allisterle, in the 1820s, was a member of the World War II blackwork books and the literature of the World War II blackwork books. He also asked Alice Allen to asked, Reasted and Raw Peanut tapes. Alice Allen asked, Ree
Also selling wooden crates Herb Altenbernd. tf
RAMURAL DIVING
SWIMMING and MEET MONDAY 5:00 p.m
DEADLINE MONDAY
20B Robinson
COMPETITION BEGINS
TUESDAY, OCT 9th
AT 7:30 p.m.
Rec Services
208 Robinson
864-3546
9R
Zen practice night—6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Seyun Sahn from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21. No phone information for. 10-12
**B49-78301** for information.
Beneign Garage Sale- 4-3, Sat. Oct at 6 and 7th,
Alabama to support Seabreak Anti-mine use-
occupation. Donation of sale item fees. Sponsor
Natural Guard and Radio. Residences.
Free Kanas.
"songs for every occasion
Asta singing telegrams
get well congratulations
birthday, anniversary.
secret admirer, and more!
841-8515
Sud dancing 8:00 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4. Community building, 11th and Vermont. No experience necessary. Public invited. 841-5763 or 841-105
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% nationally and there are a doe down at J. HODGE HOOKSEN (800) 264-7000 price—always have been and always will be $449 Come in and be viewed at 1401 Manli 10-11
DISCO SICKS GETS THE ANTI-
TEMPTION LEVEL OF JEFF GREAT,
bumpersticker, decal, card, and much more.
Membership for $5.00 to Anti-Diaco League.
Dare to be a champion! The WORLD KNOW YOU LOVE KROLL ROCK!
*Discounts apply.*
ENTERTAINMENT
Billy Sparsen is coming back and you can see him on "Britain." It all Back Sunset, "Sunflower" with a sunrise scene. Wednesday, Oct 3, 6 p.m. and上午, Monday, Oct 4, 6 p.m. On July 10, only on November 6.
USED PARTS appearing at the off-the-Wall Hall, Fri. Oct. 5, Sat. Oct. 6.
10-5
It's really Friday and your Harbour Minnesotan is ready to get out and play. You can enjoy $1 pliures and 50 bait cards and canad. And you're welcome to come on board, dive, hoke, come on down and get your boat at The Harbour Linen, 1613 Main Street.
FOR RENT
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW BENTINY
Studios on balcony, bedrooms, bathrooms,
furniture, and carpet. INDOOR RATES:
INDOOR **RATED** POINT. For appointment
call 424-844-6000, or at FRONTIER Front
Ride.
Beautiful, new 2 bdm. apt. Completely equipped kitchen. 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone 843-9579.
tf
MUM *Sale*-PARENT Day Oct. 6 at Union Hall.
MUM *correspondent* Carys Lagerhaus Sigma. 19-8
Close to campus: one 3 bedroom 2 story house
one basement apartment A3; 813-8900. 19-5
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. If
Rooms needed to share four bedroom duplex.
$82.54 month + 1 utilities. It costs $614.69 each.
1-3 bedroom, apartments, houses, mobile homes,
rooms near KU. Possible rent reduction for
labor Call 841-6254 or 841-4065 10-38
Two bedroom Qalah Creek apartment $270
Three bedroom Qalah Creek apartment $270
bord call $41.95 or 842-7601
Two bedroom Quail Creek apartment $270 a month
842-7605, 842-7901
10-9
1 bd apt; 7301; Arkansas; $110.00 see
8 bd address, furnished, utilities,
After 5 p.m
**OON FOR MALE STUDENT. Furnished. share halls, refrigerator. Walk to campus. 14th and Kentucky. $75.00 plus one-ninth heating bill. 10-118 841-2105.
FOR SALE
SunSpee—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably
priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TP
Alternator, starter and generator specialists
Parts, service, and exchange units BELL AUTO-MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9600, 3900 W. 6th. tl
WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.99, 3 year quarantier,
WELL, LIGHT, DAILY, MD Mass, 1838-1860 TFP
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Puch Mobility
Kibs's Bill Book! 103 Vermont. 841-6642. TMP
TP
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make use of these notes to use them 1) As study guide. 2) For class preparation of Western Civilization now available at Town Creek, Main Bookstore & Owed Book at Town Creek, Main Bookstore & Owed Book
Dressers, picture frames, chairs, small couch,
jewelry, hooks, oak tables—George's, 1035 Mass.
Open daily.
1922 Ford Torino, Gold and White, Two-door,
302 V-6. Good car--good price. Call Craig at
842-8800. 10-11
Univega bicycle—A year old, was in storage 9 months. Very good condition $120. Carriage 81-6524.
Ponder public address system. This CGA-1001
provides public address systems. The CGA-1001
watt warmts 130 peak power amp ups and 2-4 kHz,
speaker cabinets with 4-12 kHz in each. Also mice
can be used as a power amplifier for use as
noun system. BAC-4822-3-158-70, BAC-4822-3-158-70.
21" B, W Zenith console TV with remote Dual
speakers. 842-2850 after 5. $60.00 or best offer.
280- Z. 1, owner for 4500 miles. Good as new.
300- Z. 1, owner for 3600 miles. deck, deck, and 10-5
463- 847- 384 8 am - 5 pm.
Pen speed bike. Small frame. Saxa gas at a post.
Pen speed bicycle. Medium frame. Saxa gas at a post.
Pen speed bicycle. Large frame. Saxa gas at a post.
FX310, includes 3" TV, AM FM, tape rec. 964-
4683 or 814-683. Giorgio. 10-5
1971 Pinto, 4-speed, 66,000 miles, $400 Call Keith
843-203-7078
10-5
1979 Trans Am, T-top, loaded, automatic, low miles, warranty, $1600 off list, 843-923-106
1979 blue Toyota pickup .AM FM cassette. like new, price negotiable. Also Sunny stereo cassette recorder. Good condition. with extended sport cover. $5 per month. Offer to Cal. 10-489 6489 after 5 p.m. or less.
Marantz Storero System, 22MB 40 watt receiver,
6170 direct drive turntable, TMKZ speakers, and
more. Must see to appreciate. Call Tom at 842-
9270.
Very nice two bedroom mobile home. C.A. dishwasher, washer, driver, appliances, skirted deck.
8-by-10 red barn. 843-7282, 3333 Iowa, 24222, 16-9
Have the New York Times delivered to your
home every Sunday at 10 a.m.
Please call 843-848-91.
Motorcycle=1975 Kawasaki 125 Endura, only 2400
miles, must sell. $356; Cali Rocket 842-8071. 10-9
United Air Lines 50% discount coupon, $50; car
top carrier $60, $64-248. 10-9
1978 Yamaha 600c Excellent condition, mechanical
sealage. 841-7904 after 5.00. 10-11
Large four drawer dresser. $35.00. Call 842-0681,
5-7 p.m. 10-8
HELP WANTED
GAMBITMART, 8 SHEER MARKETING, 213-756-0000, gambitmart.com. Add ibhman to the list and save. Books on ibhman's birthday and dvd sets, books on ibhman's new book, and dvds are available. A really fascinating tribute to being a biblical figure, as ibhman is survived by a very funeral celebration on Saturday, January 31st, and Sunday, January 31st at 8:30am in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, 819 W. 4th Street, New York City.
Beautiful **88** brick, and frame rafter-backs on golf course. Full basement. In Country Club proof in low 30% For more information call Riviera-Royal - 412-954-1000 - 10-10 - 1200. ICON - 412-954-1000 - 10-10 - 1200.
Two twin mattresses and box springs. Excellent condition.
Furniture in new Markets, sheets and pillows.
Mail 841-212-8180.
15 Beatles albums, 50 classical and a hundred
78 rpm records. Congo Drum and a recording
of The Beatles' early songs.
1974 Pontiac LeMans Sport Coupe, 350 V8. great
price $1300 Call 845-8471 after 5 p.m. 10-10
1972 WV Super Beetle, Rebuilt engine, radial tires, runs good. Good mileage - Call 845-2523
FOUND
10-inch buckets 225-940 can from 841-843. 10-11
Come to a great sale - Sat, Oct. 6th 2018 Clare
A room sized rug, several old quilts. Emerald
City Antiques, 415 N. 2nd. 10-9
1966 Mustang-automatic, new brakes and paint,
clean and dependable` Call Mike at 843-715-1031
Puppy about 1 yr, old, black, small in front
JRP Hall on Sept. 30. Call 864-2890. 10.5
Ladies glasses found North of Military Science building. Call and Identify, 864-4291 or 841-2583. Ask for Jidk.
74 Vega—excellent condition—to sell immediately
sell at $150.00
Female Calico kitten, about 4 months old—near
GGSBCalco, Call and Identify #8647578
1972 Maverick 4 dr. low mules, new paint, ex-
cellent condition. Call Dave or Mate. Attn:
10-11-8
Earn as much as $450 per 1000 stupping envelopes with our information. For Information. Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1138, Midtown. Ohio 40542.
HELP WANTED
Found a small black dog at 22rd and Nalismith.
Call 843-5110. 10-5
Keys- 4th floor of Wescoe, call and identify-
843-1907. 10-9
Set of keys w/ "D", found between Lindley Hall and Hoch. Call 864-1376. 10-9
Part-time diskwashing and counter help. 11
a.m-2 p.m. Mon, thru Fr. Apply in person only
at Border Bardroom, 1528 W. 23rd. 10-16
Vanted--Counter help day and night. Kentucky
vried Chicken: 143-242, 658 W. 23rd St. 10-5
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Placement available up to $250 million annually. Work will be conducted on work with transportation, dishable. Flexible work required. Excellent interpersonal skills necessary. Child Research is an equal opportunity employer. Contact Madison Milledge 317-894-4628. Achieve Placement contract.
Part-time; time food service personnel personalized 15-25 hours per week. Starting pay $3.70 per hour. Must have at least 1 year supervisory experience. Must be a USDA Certified Food Sampler, Food Seeds, Milk - 8, Mast - 6, M-9, 10-9
Bucky's drive-in is now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person between 10-5. Bucky's drive-in, 2120 W. 9th. 10-5
$3.10 per hour if you qualify. No experience needed. Prepare food, order food, opportunity for advancement. Need people willing to work and apply themselves. If you do not have any qualifications, visit the Restaurant, 1257 W. Kith, 6th Floor 10-12
Wanted: Hard-working individuals to become football managers for the football and soccer teams, to join a growing athletic program, to join a growing academic program, to contact Mike Hill in room 134H at the University of Chicago.
Shemanigan's 21 needs bar tenders, waitresses and floor walkers immediately. Contact John at 941-6406 or come to 901 Mississippi. 10-5
THE MOTFFET-BEERS BAND is now holding auditions for male vocalist keyboard player, vocalist guitar or vocalist drum. Serious inquiries only. Call 822-658-8431, 842-3534, 841-9031.
NONCUI!
Our business has increased dramatically! We now need four more quality photography to fill our studio space and we will weekend parties a month. Pay is approximately $10 to $10 on hour.
David Bernstein
Photography
the paint picture professions
842-6195
COOK 10 a.m.-2.30 at 3 p.m., M.J.* (some weekends)
COOK 10 a.m.-2.30 at 3 p.m., M.J.* (some weekends)
experiences work and/or general restaurant cooking. Apply in person at
the provided address. Attend 10 a.m.-2.30 or Affirmative Action
Affirmative Action 10 a.m.-2.30
Concession/Vending night weekend matriculation 9:30am-12pm (A) Night of the Week (age limit $400) Advance valid direct deposit. Night of the Week (age limit $400) Advance valid direct deposit. Some mechanical ability. Job includes some physical activity. Equal pay for equal pay. Equity All, Affirmative Engagement.
$800/month, commensurate with education and or experience. Contact Dr. Jill O'Brien; b18; www.jillobrien.com. University Affirmative Action Employer. Qualified university accommodations are required. Disabilities are encouraged to apply. 1-800-526-3472.
The Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104. The experiment was conducted on December 15, 1939. The assay research effort in this department involves the use of Qualitative Instruments M.A. S. Kandol, Quality Control, Inc., Philadelphia, PA. The experiment will be for a minimum duration of 2 hours.
DRUMMERS- Thumbs auditioning…dails. call
nights, call 841-709-8076 ask for Kevin. 10-8
Full-time caeder, 5 day week, excellent working condition, drug store experience preferred. apply in person. Ranney Hilleer Drug, Hilleerst Shipping Center.
Jaylahner Towers has an opening for a part-
time custodian worker. Hours are flexible and
can be tailored to your schedule. Call 843-4993.
105
Part time assistant to throw papers and help distribuer manager with KC Stair circulation in Lawrence Area, pay $4 hour and 15 mile. Come in to 922 Mass. 10-9
Baker waited, early morning meals. Apply between 11-3 p.m. a Sub班. Subship. 530 W. 10-10
Student Assistant. Needed-must be available to work 15-20 hours.work during school year and/or a paid vacation. Send information on formation call Mr. Gracey 844-3422 or apply at [http://www.hawaii.edu/work.html](http://www.hawaii.edu/work.html) or Opportunity Employer.
Pizza Hut—We are now accepting applications for part time cooks. Please apply in person at the Pizza Hut Restaurant, 1606 W. 23rd. 10-9
Wanted: 10 ambitious college women to start immediately. Assist part-time with marketing, distribution of internationally known artistry 2 courses. 862-7618 for interview. 10-9
Better Homes and Gardens Craft Creations is now looking for part-time craft counselors. Will train, good money. Call Robin 842-4097. 10-9
MEN! WOMEN! JOBS! CRISPISSHEES! SAILING EXPIRATIONS! Good experience! God gave you the job! APPLICATION INFO JOBS! to CRUSHEWORLD 132, Box 60129, Sacramento CA 95805. $250.00
OVERSEAS JOBS--JUMP季 from Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields: $260-$1,280 monthly expenses paid Sightseeing, JOB CES, IXC, BCS-94, CA-69A, CA-925G
10-29
DISCANCE DJ and sound system for the GSKHOJ-lowen DANCE DM. Nov. 3 J with own system preformed. System must be powerful enough for the device. DJ or other DJ equipment B O. Box K, Unison Union, before Oct. 15. 10-11
LOST
$10 reward for lost brown organizer biffalo.
Contents can not be replaced. Baby depends
on these medical cards. Call Mr. Mallik. M842-7822
or 842-6900. No questions asked. 10-5
Needed—person to clean-up bars daily, flexible
hours. Call Terry 843-1022.
10-5
Lost- T11-T59 calculator in Learned, either room 3018 or 4099 Thurs morning 9:27. Call 811-A570 or 842-7427. Beward questioned. No asked.
1
MISCELLANEOUS
WOMAN'S TAN BLAZER. Left outside room
609 Wosue at 2:30 p.m. Thurs, Sept. 29, Call
843-5633. 10-5
MISCELLANEOUS
Two weeks ago, Red and blue plaid unirella in
Museum. Sentimental value: 10-10
841-7697
THEISH BACKCOPY COPYING—The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for businning and copying in Lawrence. Let us see you at 838 Mass or phone 842-360-7100.
For a close-up look at the life and music of Billy Spars, watch "Bring It All Back Home." The only television program on Channel 4 is at 7 p.m. Exclusively on Cable Channel 6. 10-53
Lawrence Jayhawk Johnson Club will meet at the University of Kentucky for the Douglas County 4-H Fairground. The program will be by major Bob Swailthorpe, commander of the public program will demonstrate demonstrations. The public program will be by major James Killen.
Enroll Now!! In Lawrence driving school, receive driving license in 4 weeks without highway patrol test! Transportation provided, drive now pay later. W82-0015. 10-12
NOTICE
See your sights on the 2nd annual JAHAWK JOG, Oct. 21, 17-59. Contact GAMMA PHI BETA 843-8922 or PHI KAPPA PSI 843-2853 for registration 10-5
For the Hawk's home game, make a day of it at Hibernia on Friday, when the Open Cup will be at 10:30 p.m. Hogger's hero Bubba, where you make your own basketball shots and deliver rights to the Stadium. For the Hawks, our coolest and our hardhats the warmest! Get your jersey and our hardhats the warmest! Class dive for Jawahars for 45 years. i-9-5
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564 if
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--upgrades up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment. Birth Control. Nursing Tubal Ligation. For appointment call 800-325-4681, 480-319-6071. Westport, CA KS
TENNIS AND RAQUETTE PLAYERS. When won the tennis court, you are awarded 60 Member Professional Stringer assists. Aun and Official Stringer CW Tudds weighs 920/850 resonant on good grip levels. 10-11
GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through Head-
quarters, 841-235 and KU info, 864-2360. . . .
If you’re looking for a bar with cheap beer, pool or restaurant people you’ll like. The Harbour Hotel, like many other bars in TLD, now offers the Googly's Weed Bar together at the Harbour Hotel, 106 Museum St., TLD.
Manothetice. DOCTRINE of Reincarment in the Torah, the Prophets and the Gospels. Write: The Truth of Islam, P.O. Box 4494, South Bend, Indiana #6824.
10-5
ELISE-
YSSYCBB
MUM SALE - Parents' Day, Oct. 6 at Union or
Stadium. Mum corage $2.75. 10-5
White male, graduate seeks female for female to
work together. Write P-O Box 3250.
K6 96104
"GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE" Drawing
Students from the School of
Student Society Contact Pete Browns in 2015 to
please send resume to the following:
able to the ASS or Marvin Hall Bowlen
the Christmas sale) Sale:
December 24th.
'TAW STUDENTS'-Git roady this Friday! I'd
country Western Swing time at Shilah's (eo
$^2$La). 10-5
JOB'S ON SHIPPS! American, Foreign, No experience. Excellent job. Expenditure worldwide. Summer, Same time. Salary $300 for information. Job location: Washington 9852. Date: 10.17
Miss Piggy—Happy Birthday—Sweet, nineteen and all mine! Love, Kermit . . . and Caesar. 16-5
PSYCHIC AWARENESS CLASS, learn about aura, energy centers, healing, spirit guides, Thursday evenings, starting Oct. 11. Call Eve Lesdenberg 842-782-781
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid - 864-5564. tf
Redemere Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod invited year to year to meet in our library. We lead product lessons at 2 and 8 am. Our church service at 8 a.m. Sunday School and the child's service at 10 a.m. Sunday School. Happy Birthday Sweetie From: Brooke, Leslie Jane, Dana, Jane, Margaret, Mary, Susan, David, Chris, Catherine, Judi, Janet, Cindy, Janet, and Renee. 10-5
My drawn Dutkina--I love you beyond my
mind and could never be better. 18-6
You, Matisuhua. 18-5
Rm. 208 DU-Thanks for making my 1st the
Best! God Bless you real good. Rm. 208 Chi-O-
J
Mike, Happy, Anniversary sweetie! This part year has been the greatest and I hope we can continue to grow. Remember that I love you very much and always will! Love, Jackie. 10-5
SENIORS! Hope Award voting Monday and Tuesday 9-3-20. Booths at Summerfield. Welcome, Kansas University
Poverty may come to me, it's true; but what care I, as long as I have you-jeg elkder elker. Happy 22nd. 10-5
The Hope Award: For special teachers only.
Senior—vote Monday and for your favorite.
10-9
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Garage—complete professional bicycle
garage with 25 bikes and a full storage area.
Overhaul? "Detail call 841.2781." 10-22
EXPERT TUORING MATH. 000-102-164 call
5785- MATH. 115-700 call 6583- STATISTICS
call survey 843-900-698 C. I. 100-600 call 6583-
call survey 843-900-698 ENGLISH
AND SPANISH call 843-900-698
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from am to 4 AM to PM on Friday; 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 8AM Mon.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES Send $100 for your 302-page catalog of college literature, 10,250 topics listed BOX 52097 Los Angeles, CA, 90253) (213) 477-8286. 11-7
SPANISH TUTORING Experience teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108, 109, 111, 112, 118. Call 841-2467. TF
Do it once . . . right! Straight Arrow Auto
Service. Quality repairs on most domestics
and imports. Specializing in Fiat, Honda and Toyota.
8:20, Eich 83, 842-3424. 10-7
Excellent dee-jay with sound equipment for your private parties. Very competitive prices. 841-819, after six. 10-12
Need Body Work? We can shape up your ear with dermat repair, rust removal, and a new coat of paint. Will also lune up and winterize your heels at 843-HSER. **10-11** you buck!
TYPING
The Entertainers
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
O
O
Back Lunch $1.75 Sand., Chips and Pickles
MR LONDONS
Hoagle's Canoe
Downtown
Disco tonight until 3 AM 701 Mass.
LUNCHON
Aztec Inn
American and
Mexican Food
LOUISE'S
Bistro & Restaurant
100 Sq. Ft.
$1.00 per pint
$2.50 per bottle
100 Wk.
Live Flamenco Music
Every Sunday 6-9 pm
842-9455
Aztec Inn
LUNCHEON
MENUS
American and
Mexican Food
West
Tuesday night — College ID
$31¹ all you can drink
Hickman Shading Coat
below J. Watson's
G.P. LOADS
O
w/the tunes
Eddle and the Hot Rods
only 2.00
O
Monday night Rock & Roll with
Door open at 8:00
evening at 8:00
For business calls call
fortune info. 847-8393
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
LOUISE'S
Open at 10 a.m. For groceries warm up
in the sun.
WATER TOWELS
TOWEL Mats
gen. adm.
2.50
club mem
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3287.
926 Massachusetts
843-2644
2. 50 club
Call for concert info. 842-6930
---
Journymen typographer. 20 years typing,typing-
setting experience. 4 years academic typing;
thurs. dissertations for 10 universities. Latest
S.Sective education. 842-4848.
Pat's Blue Riddim Band
72nd
House
Tonite Reggae-Dance with
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF
Experienced: typist- Quality, work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 843-5910. TP
Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work,
reasonable rates. These, desserts welcome;
edit layout. Call Jonn 842-9172. TP
Experienced Tertiary-terti paper, thesis, time sheet, electrode, specimen specimen spraying specimen. 843-9544-Mila, Written.
Experienced trait-thoughts, dissertations, term papers, mine IBM correcting selective. Barb 864-3135; evenings 862-3210.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call E-11n or Jeannann. 841-2722.
I do darned good typing. Papers under 50 pp.
page. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6438, 85e per
15.
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate
service, low rates. 843-3623 evenings and weekends
10-23
Need some typing done? Quality, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-8654, after 4 p.m.
2-28
O
WANTED
Roommate wanted to share two bedroom apt.
Keep calling 842-6575 10-10
Need to buy THIS WEEK—Used bird cage for two hammers. 843-486-8971. 10-8
Need nature roommate to a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. But stop in steps, have a pool and landfillment one block away. $105 plus utility. Please call between 6 p.m., 9:31 a.m.
Motorcycle trailer. Standard size automotive
trailer. Consider indoor conditions. Moisture.
Prior after 6 p.m. M42-8058
Home for calico kilten. She loves people. Call
M43-8599
10-9
WANTED TO BUY more or less 2 cu. ft. furniture 842-7150 or 864-1724. Furniture. 10-10 Female roommates to share new Jiajie Town-walker. More than the dorm, quitter, and it better food. Less than the dorm, quitter, and it better food.
I'm interested in sharing a nice looking app with. other student students already preferably already must. Must be nice looking app. Call Paul M2-921, 9212, please have message.
Mature roommate necessary for very nice three
b bedroom duplex, 15 min. walk from campus.
$100 per month + ½ utilities. Call 841-3205 after 6
p.m.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DONT.
SELL IT!
SELL IT!
If you've got it. Kansan
If you've got it, Kanan
Classifieds sells it. Just mail
in this form with check or
receipt. Call 518-720-3694.
Hall. Use rates below to
figure costs. Now you've got
it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Tuesday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
Write ad here: ___
1
time
$2.00
01
additional words
RATES:
15 words or less
2 times
$2.25
02
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
DATES TO RUN:
5
times
$3.00
.05
NAME:
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
KANSAN CLASSIFIED—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
16
Friday, October 5. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Sign...
From page one
ing the commission's majority opinion, said that it was time to "Get tough with the hardcore, ugly signs." He said monetary consequences for the agreement are difficult for argumentations of a variance.
COLLINS SAID that existing houses, which were built under new housing codes that did not comply with the sign ordinance, were given variances.
"They don't make people tear down their houses because they don't have the right setback from the street," she said. "We are planning to invest in a new sign, we're planning to invest in a new sign."
"We are going to wait awhile about complying with the ordinance. We want to see what happens with the other businesses.
"I think if we all worked together we might get the commissioners to change their minds."
"I'm tired of talking about it,"
Ed Pocizewski, owner of the Virginia Imn, 200 W. Sixth St., said that he was very disappointed with the commission's decision.
KU student found dead
A KU graduate student was found dead yesterday morning in his north Lawrence residence, Lawrence police said yesterday.
The victim was discovered by his wife in the couple's kitchen after she awake at 8 a.m. and rushed to Lawrence Memorial Hospital after police arrived at 7:11 a.m. and found no pulse. The man was pronounced to be ill four hour later, a police spokesman said.
Detective Wayne Schmille said two bottles of an unknown substance which has been sent to a lab for analysis, and a syringe were found near the victim.
an autopsy was performed at about 11 a.m. yesterday, Alan Sanders, Douglas County coroner, said, the cause of death could not be determined until toxicity tests
Pocjeiwski said. "This will definitely be a financial burden for my family."
THE VIRGINIA INN must replace its 250-square-foot sign in one year. He said a sign firm had estimated the cost of a new sign to be from $5,000 to $8,000.
Pociewski said he was glad that the commissioners were partially sympathetic to the financial strain involved with purchasing a new sign.
"At least they gave us a year to get the new sign," he said. "I was surprised about that. The way the discussion was going I didn't even think we'd get that."
Rusty Springer, owner of Rusty's Food Center, 23rd and Louisiana streets, said he had thought that all of the older signs in
"I THOUGHT ID to keep my sign," Springer said. "I was shocked by having part of the sign so would concern. That was just a matter of removing an electric circuit. I have no idea how it got there."
Springer's sign, which has been in existence since 1959, also must be removed within one year.
town would receive variances under a grandfather clause.
William Cutter Jr., owner of Kentucky Fried Chicken, 658 W. 23rd St., said he also was disappointed in the commission's decision.
Kentucky Fried Chicken was cited for having signs on three walls. The ordinance
allows only two wall signs. The third sign, on the east side of the building, must be removed by the end of the year.
At Tuesday's meeting Cutter asked the commission for a variance from one and half to two years because of his plans to remodel his store within that period of time.
HE TOLD THE commissioners that the signs on the remodeled store would conform to the city's ordinance.
"I thought my request was reasonable," Cutrer said. "Apparently, the commissioners did not."
He said that the removal of the third sign and the resulting repair of the wall would cost about $250, that the remodeling of his store would cost about $150,000.
Derailment . . .
From page one
questions for three to four days, Dunbar said.
The fireman, H. P. Hand of Newton, may be interviewed in the next two days. It is not known whether the fireman was in the engine at the time of the accident.
Speed recording devices in two of the train's three engines indicated the train was traveling 7 km on a 30 mpc curve when it met the intersection of Fourth and Ohio streets.
DUNBAR SAID the tapes from the device to send a to Santa F. Laboratory in Barstow, Calif., for further analysis. Calif., the lab that analyzed the analysis might change the speed
estimate, previous experience indicated it probably would not be more than three or four mph.
Ellwood T. Driver, vice chairman of the NTSB, said Wednesday that the investigation sought to determine why the train was traveling so fast.
Driver returned to Washington, D.C.esterfield, leaving nine investigators in the firing room. The members would leave by Saturday, although there is a possibility that they may return.
Dunbar said officials from Santa Fe Railroad, who have been assisting in the investigation, did not know when Graham
had last traveled the route through Lawrence.
G. R. MARTIN, a unico official in Kansas City, said it had been at least five years since Graham had traveled the Lawrence route.
Investigators riding the train over the route found a large sign about three miles before the accident site warning that the Lawrence depot was ahead.
KLZR
106
A public hearing may be authorized within the next 10 days. Dunbar said, to collect more information. The hearing would be held in four to six weeks, he said.
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1
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 28.
free on campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Kassebaum criticizes Carter
Ry TONI WOOD
Staff Reporter
Nancy Kassebaum seemed to be the polished U.S. senator last night, as she calmly discussed controversial issues, such as SALT II and combat troops battles.
Krassebu was at Beverley Bradley's farm south of Lawrence for a women's Republican Club dinner, where she was greeted by more than 100 people.
Standing outside in the chill of the evening, K楚寰, R-Kan, cozy criticized the Carter administration for delaying action with the Soviet troops in
She said President Carter made the
United States appear weak because he took too long to deal with the issue.
"I can't believe how poorly the administration handled it," she said. "What have been done four weeks ago. He should not have allowed the issue to simmer."
Soviet troops have been stationed in Cuba for quite some time, she said. The government knew in 1972 about Soviet forces there and the area, but chose not to make it an issue.
"WE HAVE TROOPS in Cuba too," she said. Carter's action to send more troops to strengthen that force was wise, but should have been done a month ago, she said.
She said the United States should improve trade with Latin America, instead of just giving it aid in a "paternal" sense.
The issue that seemed to concern most of the local Republicans at the dinner was the second Strategic Arts Limitation Talks treat with Russia.
"We tend to overlook the importance of Mexico and Cuba, but the Soviet Union is very aware of their importance."
Krassebba said she had not decided to support or oppose SALT II, but had no reason to trust the Soviet Union's intentions.
"I feel it's important to get the SALT II debate on the floor of the Senate. It been in the Armed Services Committee and has
THE WONDERFUL AURORA SCHOOL
THE LETTERS she receives concerning SALT II show that about half of her constituents support the treaty and half oppose it, she said.
Many people simply are unsure about SALT II, she said, but many have been against the treaty since its beginning.
been debated, but it's time to move it onto the floor of the Senate."
She asked people in the crowd how they felt about the treaty, and of the few who raised their hands, about half supported the treaty.
of Lawrence. Kassebaum will speak to the Lawrence Rotary club today
Arden Booth, former state senator from Lawrence, was one who indicated he opposed SALT II Kassebaum asked him why he was arraigned it.
"lack of trust," he said. Defending the country is more important now than boosting the economy, he said, and SAIT did not help the United States defend itself.
KASSEBAU SAID internal problems, such as inflation, interest rates and energy also were issues that demanded immediate attention.
She voted against the Energy Mobilization Board last week, she said, because it would be another layer of bureaucracy."
non. Nancy Kassahman spoke last night to more than 100 Republican senators at Reyer's Bradley's farm, four miles east.
Up front
Kassaehu was one of only 25 senators who voted against the board.
She told the group at the dinner at the historic meeting Saturday between Carter and Pope John Paul II. Kassaeum was at the reception, and the members of Congress to greet the pope.
"It was an interesting time to watch the two together, she said. "There was a feeling of tremendous force of personality."
"THE POFE conveys a sense of genuineness and candor, but the president's personality shows a lack of leadership.
"That question of personality has affected legislative proposals—energy, foreign policy and the economy."
Kassebaum said she was convinced that Kassebaum would run for reelection in 1860. It can be prove that he is a tough incumbent, but he is also probably will not challenge him, she said.
Kassebaum will be in Lawrence today to speak to members of the Rotary Club. He was in Kansas City, Kan., yesterday afternoon and opened a new congressional office.
Anti-racist march needs approval
Staff Reporter
Bv JEFF SJERVEN
Two anti-racist groups must obtain the approval of the University Events Committee, which is also responsible for Day rally and march that will pass through the KU campus, according to Ann Evanhoe.
Eversteed said Friday that the groups, the international Committee Against Racism and Violence (ICAV), and the committee's approval because they wanted to march Jaswukh Boulevard on Thursday.
"If they're going to use University streets,
they will need the assistance of KU police," she said. "That requires the committee's approval."
Eversole said she thought the committee members might be concerned that the expected 250 to 400 marchers would be taken home near the stadium on Homecoming Day.
Picture Showlaw, INCAR member, said yesterday that he had talked I Eversole and that he would appear at the Events Comptroller's meeting to present a proposal for the rally and march.
The marchers will need permission from the Lawrence City Commission to use sound
equipment during the march. Showalter said he would try to have the permission request placed on the agenda of tomorrow night's commission meeting;
"So far," he said, "it appears that the University and the city are not particularly happy that we want to march on campus Day, but they have been cooperative."
Showalter said he thought the protesters would not have difficulty in gaming the approval of the KU administration and the Lawrence City Commission. Showalter said.
The groups chose Oct. 27 for their rally
"WE'VE ASKED for permission to rally on the lawn of Flint Hall from no.130 to 136, so that we can have a far enough away from the activities so that they won't interfere with us and we won't
because it marked the 120th anniversary of John Brown's raid on Harper Ferry. W. Va. Showalter said they did not plan to interfere with KU's Homecoming Day activities.
Showalter said the proposed march route would take protesters along Jayhawk Boulevard, 13th Street and Massachusetts Street before the process stopped the
See PROTEST page seven
Women to have championships
By BRETT CONLEY
Staff Reporter
The Big Eight conference will become the first large conference to sponsor championship athletic events for all women's sports beginning this fall.
The move could have some implications for women's athletics in the areas of who controls and makes rules governing women's athletics, and how competition among schools will be structured. Steve Hauser big Apple Big Eight commissioner, or Friday.
The decision last spring to spend $150,000 this year on the sponsorship of 10 championships for women was a national precedent. Hattched said.
"There are no other conferences as involved in women's athletics now as the Big Eight is." Hutchell said. "The Missouri Conference sponsors one of the three championships a year, but they don't have the communication with the women that we need."
Championships will be conducted in cross-
country, volleyball, basketball, gymnastics,
indoor track, swimming, tennis, softball,
self and outdoor track.
IN THE PAST, only the Association of INTELECTABLE Athletics for Women has sponsored local, regional or national championship events for women's sports. Hatchell said a problem with the AIAW has been competing within their state. Hatchell said.
The emphasis on state competition has often caused problems for teams from KU, Phyllis Howlett, assistant director of athletics, said.
"There are few institutions that are on the same level within a state, and that makes hard for everyone to be competitive with each other," Howlett said. "As an institution wet be crazy to ignore the additions we have in our sports in the Eight Conference."
Howlett said she thought the Big Eight would remain involved in women's sports
and continue sponsorship of the championships even though the championships are being sponsored as a one-year experiment.
"I know that the Big Eight getting involved in women's sports has got to be disquieting to the AIAW." Howlett said.
"It does go counter to the AIAW idea of state-based championships. But even though only three of the championships will qualify teams for further national competition, it would be silly for women to ignore the logic behind themselves through this process. It already has natural rivalries, institutions of the same size and tradition," she said.
Funding was an initial problem with Big Eight sponsorship of the women's championships, Hattchell said, because many people were not able to take away forms (from men's sashes).
HOWEVER, at a meeting of Big Eight faculty representatives and athletic director Michael Cohen, we sprung the idea of spending $130,000 for ten, the spring of spending was quicky, accepted, timely.
"WE ORIGINALLY set up an advisory committee last winter to look at the work that needs to be done on May 7, the athletic directors and faculty representatives adopted all of the task force's recommendations, which included the setting up of a coordinating committee to oversee the work.
The original task force disbanded after that meeting, Hatchell said, and each school appointed members to the new committees.
The new advisory committee's duties are more long-term than the coordinating committee's. Hatchell said.
Howlett, who was KU's representative on the coordinating committee, said, "Our meetings were more dollar and cents type meetings. We basically had figure out the cost of each meeting to go背 and the amount of reimbursement for travelring expenses and lodging.
See ATHLETICS page seven
ASK chooses issues; Glover advises reps
Staff Reporter
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, advised delegates of the Associated Students of Kansas last weekend to lobby for a legislative compromise such as the decriminalization of marijuana.
"You'll have more impact on the legislature if you concentrate your efforts solely on issues related to education," he said Saturday.
The ASK fall legislative assembly, comprising 72 delegates from seven state schools, met at Emporia State University to discuss support in the next state legislative session. Six Regents schools-Fort Hays State University, Pittsburgh State University, Emory State University, Oklahoma State University, Wichita State University and the University of Kansas—belong to ASK, in addition to Washburn University. KU has 24 votes in the assembly. Each school receives $50,000 per school.
The assembly compiled a list of issues it considered as priorities for ASK to lobby for this year. The issues are faculty salary issues, budget constraints for students, increased state funding for the state scholarship program, lowered Kansas residency requirements from one year to six years.
ASK, A STUDENT lobbying group, also will lobby for state funding for non-student use of student unions. 100 percent graduate students will be required to clarify the federal TAX IX guidelines and a
statute prohibiting the use of student fees for the construction of academic facilities
ASK will not lobby actively for these issues but will make a statement of support. The vote on the bottle bill resolution was 86-29, and the House voted in favor, stating that the issue was not student-
The assembly also voted to support resolutions to increase voter registration among minority students and to support bottle hill legislation.
THE BOTTLE BILL would encourage the return of beverage containers by putting a five cent deposit on them. The resolution noted that a similar bill in Vermont reduced the amount of bottle add litter by about 20 percent, and total litter volume by more than 35 percent.
Issues, including a survey of student reaction to the draft and study of the high rate of minority students who do not receive college degrees, will be researched by ASK
Heated discussion about ASK lobbying for or supporting social issues not related to students punctuated debate throughout the assembly.
Some of the delegates who agreed with Glover's remarks said ASK would be overstepping its boundaries as a student in a criminal court. Some such as the decriminalization of marijuana.
ALTHOUGH BOTH Glover and ASK have supported such legislation in the past, Glover was pessimistic about the chances of
Future use of 120-year-old house tangled in city zoning regulations
See ASK page two
By ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Reporter
A 120-year old limestone house sits on a slab built at 190 Pennsylvania St. Large terrace walls and a wooden platform porch. But the house's triangular appearance belies the fact that it is the tallest in the town.
Hayden then decided to convert the building into a tavern, which was allowed by the zoning. But Lawrence City Commission rejected his site plan for the tavern because it did not need setback from the distance from the property lines),
Owner Tom Hayden wanted to remodel the structure so he could use it as his home. After spending about $7,000 in repairs and renovations a year, a zoning law stoned his project.
Two weeks ago Hayden filed suit in Douglas County District Court against the City of Lawrence for depriving him of use of the orervoy.
HAYDEN, 30, purchased the property in November 1975 primarily to establish his business, Lawrence Pipe and Steel, 712 E. Ninth St.
"The old house was just a part of the deal, so I decided to remodel it so it could be my home," he said.
The suit asks for a variance from the setback requirements, approval of the site plan for the tavern and $10.000 in damages.
In April 1976 Hayden received a building
permit to begin remodeling the structure for a home.
But his request for a further extension was denied, he said, because a city zoning official realized the property was zoned for industrial use, not residential use.
Because the remodeling still was incomplete in August 1978, Hayden said, he received a 30-day extension on his building permit.
"Technically, I should not have received either of those building permits," he said. "They don't give you permits in use in an industrial zone and decided to remodel it into a tavern. Several of my neighbors used them."
But an appeal by Hayden to the Lawrence Board of Zoning Appeals in October 1978 for a variance from the setback requirements is being considered by Hedrick, city-county planning director, said.
Hayden said he had not known his property was zoned for industrial use.
HEDRICK SAID the revision attempted to distinguish between nonconforming uses and nonconforming structures. An example of a nonconforming use might be tavern in a residential zone and a nonconforming structure that does not require requirements.
Earlier this year the city commission revised an ordinance concerning existing buildings that do not meet certain requirements.
Hedrick said that according to the interpretations of the revised ordinance by the planning commission and city attorney, the proposed tavern was a nonconforming structure that could be allowed without a seback variance. The planning commission then recommended the site plan for the
Mary Baylor Clark said yesterday that a large number of the neighborhood residents had come to the August meeting to speak against the proclaimed tavern.
But the city commissioners rejected the site plan in August, because the building did not meet setback requirements.
IT WAS THE CONSENSUS of the commission, he said, that the tavern, besides not meeting setback requirements, would be an intrusion into the neighborhood.
Among several things, the neighbors objected to the tavern because it would increase parking and sewage problems.
As a result of the tavern controversy, the east side of the 900-block of Pennsylvania Street, excluding Hayden's property, has been recommended by the planning committee to be rebuilt in HMAI (multi-family). This recommendation is presented to the city commission on Oct. 16.
Even though the remainder of the block probably will be zoned residential, Hayden said, he plans to pursue his plim to build a tavern.
"I'll see what happens with my lawsuit," he said. "I feel optimistic about its outcome."
Frustrated Fambrough
A perplexed Don Fambrighu answers questions Saturday after the Jawahners走 to Syracuse at 45-27. Fambrighu could not answer the question of whether he was in the hospital.
Mirris who keyed the second-half comeback of the Orangen.
See related stories page six.
2
Monday, October 8.1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas Wired Services
Swissair jet lands, catches fire
ATHENS, Greece - Fire swept through a Swissair DC-8 jettlin last night, at killing at least eight of the 154 persons on board, after the plane skidded to a halt in Greece.
The Civil Aviation Authority reported two other persons were in serious condition and an undetermined number of the 142 passengers were being treated at Athens hospitals. None of the 12 crewmembers was injured, the authority said.
The plane landed and witnesses said flames started shooting out of its undercarriage as it attempted to brake to a stop, finally coming to a halt at the end.
The plane, Flight 316 from Geneva, did not go off the runway, Swissair reported.
The airport was closed while firefighting equipment was being used at the scene to extinguish the flames. Incoming flights were diverted to nearby airports.
Castro to visit, address U.N.
UNITED NATIONS--Fidel Castro will address the U.N. General Assembly this week. American and U.N. officials said yesterday.
It will be the Cuban president's first trip to the United States in 19 years.
David Passage, a State Department spokesman, said that visa requests for Castro and his party were made last week and that he would probably arrive in San Diego on Thursday.
Passage said Castro would address the Assembly session in his role as head of the non-aligned movement—the organization with more than 90 nationals professing Islam.
"There are no plans for meetings with U.S. officials," Passage said.
Each year a number of heads of state and foreign ministers address the General Assembly in the first few weeks of its three-month session. It had been expected that Castro might be one of this year's speakers, but as late as Friday a U.N. spokesman said it was his understanding the Cuban president would not
Sources have suggested Castro might not have made a final decision on whether to make the trin.
Everest claims two conauerors
KATMANDU, Nepal—An American mountain guide and a West German woman froze to death on the slopes of Mount Everest coming down from their successful climb of the world's highest mountain, the Ministry of Tourism said yesterday.
The ministry said that Raymond Genet, 45, a mountain guide from Taiketta, Alaska, and Hanneles Gschmidt Schmatz, 39, from Neu Ulm, West Germany, were forced by bad weather and exhaustion to make camp on their way down from the 28.008-foot Mount Everest last Tuesday.
The two froze to death that day in the camp at an altitude of 26,800 feet, the ministry said. A local guide accompanying the two climbers was rescued but unharmed.
They were part of a nine-member team led by Mrs. Schatz's husband, Gerhard Schatz, who led two other members to the summit on April 1.—just 30 men and women died in the attack.
Rock Island resumes service
CHICAGO—Freight service will resume along more than 7,000 miles of track in 13 states for about 13,000 Rock Island Lines commuters today, in the first phase of a new project.
Lines to receive top priority for Freight services, officials said, include Chicago to Omaha and Kansas City, Mo., Denver to Omaha, Kansas City, Mo., to
Full customer service involving 62 transit to and from Chicago was scheduled to be at 5 a.m. from the city's South Side and south suburbs.
The Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks picked lines closed Friday after an agreement was reached between the union, the Interstate Commerce Commission and 13 railroads named by the ICC to operate on Rock Island routes.
2 killed in university shooting
COLUMBIA A, S.C. — The police were still looking for a motive yesterday in a shooting at the University of South Carolina that left two persons dead
Mark Houston, 19, of Columbia, was charged with the shootings, which broke out about 12.15 a.m. Saturday at a fraternity homecoming party.
Houston will be arraigned today on two counts of murder and five counts of assault and battery with intent to kill, authorities said.
the police said Houston pulled a gun and sprayed bullets into a crowded recreation room at Bates West—a dormitory on the outskirts of the campus.
The dead students were identified as Terrell Johnson, 21, of St. Matthews,
S.C., and Patrick McGinty, 19, of Wilmington, Del.
Doctors transplant severed foot
NEW YORK—In an unusual attempt to provide mobility for a 19-year-old woman who has right foot and left leg, doctors at Bellevue Hospital have offered free physical therapy.
Adrienne Brown's left leg and right foot were severed Saturday when she was run over by a train at a Conrad train station in New York.
A spokesman at the hospital said Brown, a resident of Queens, survived the surgery well.
Doctors said her chances for gaining the use of her left foot were good. An artificial leg and foot eventually will be attached to the woman's left hip.
we are not running on the station platform when a train arrives, according to the police. As the train was pulling out of the station, the woman fell against the wall.
Scabies epidemic killing sheep
SANTA FE, N.M.—The surviving Desert Bighorn sheep of the San Andres Mountains may be captured and treated if they are to be saved from an endangered species.
... of microscopic seas mates that officials did not exist in the past have been spent on the sheep since the United States reintroduced the million has
Officials said that the 60 or 70 remaining sheep might die this winter unless the Fish and Game Department made an effort to save them.
The scabies outbreak is the first known epidemic of its kind since the turn of the century. Officials said they did not know its origin.
Pot legalization pushed in Italy
Radical Party members of Parliament addressed a crowd that filled the Piazza Navona in downtown Rome Saturday, demanding quick parliamentary action.
HOME- About 10,000 people, most of them young people, rallied in Home and other cities in support of a campaign by Italy's Radical Party to legalize the abortion.
In Milan, a Radical Party speaker invited everyone at a rally in Cathedral Square to join him in smoking marijuana in public. The police arrested the man.
Weather ...
today will be partly cloudy with the high in the upper 70s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the south at 8-15 mph this morning, changing to the north from 15-25 mph this afternoon. There will be clearer skies that will cool down. Tomorrow will be cooler with the high in the upper 60s.
The extended forecast for Wednesday through Friday calls for cool temperatures and good precipitation. Highs will be in the mid-60s to mid-70s with lowes in the low 40s.
ASK...
From page one
decriminalization legislation being passed this year.
"It will be the same Senate that hasn't supported three years and they are up for re-election," she said. "They are all running scared because of re-election and they don't think they can vote."
Frank Jackalone, national chairman of the United States Student Association, agreed with Glover that state lobbying groups should concentrate their efforts on education-oriented issues. Jackson address the delegates and later spoke at a meeting.
However, other delegates said that students also were citizens. Therefore, social issues that did not affect them should be affected and students would affect them as citizens.
"If a bill has a direct effect on students as a social group, ASK should deal with it," he said. "If we don't believe it has a direct effect on students than ASK should not deal with it."
"With their limited resources," he said, "the student lobbying groups should put most of their resources and time behind hard-core student issues."
A a resolution supporting diversiteit by university endowment associations of their own, which will be in consultation with operations in South Africa was withdrawn by the KU delegation before the meeting.
ROBIN MCCLELLAN, ASK camp director for KU said that after talking to other delegations, she decided the resolution would not have had a chance of passing.
Once again she said it is a social issue that other delegations do not want to deal with.
Margaret Berlin, KU student body president, said the issue did not belong in the ASK assembly because it was not an official job; could lobby for in the state legislature.
Fire damages residence
A fire broke out in a house at 917 Arkansas last night, causing heavy damage to the contents and interior of the structure.
Fire Chief Jim McSain said firefighters received the call at 10:24 p.m. and responded with 12 firefighters, two engines
Helen Frazier, the only occupant of the one-story, five-room house, told neighbors she had been sleeping on the sofa in the living room when she awoke to see flames and smoke and said of her own safety that she took her dog to safety and then called police. a neighbor said.
and a ladder company. McSwain, the assistant chief and a ground safety officer responded to the call.
McSwin said the fire was extinguished in eight to 10 minutes. Firefighters had to remove the ceiling in the living room as was smoldering and causing heavy smoke.
Two rooms were damaged by fire and three rooms received heavy smoke damage, McSwain said.
No cause or dollar damage estimate had been determined last night.
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SEABROOK, N.H.(AP) About 500 anti-numerals demonstrators ripped down a fence at the Baccharok atomic power plant and马赛和smoke bombs them back with Mace and smoke bombs.
Demonstrators rip down fence at Seabrook plant
As many as 1,500 demonstrators twice assaulted the chain-link fence surrounding the construction site in their attempt to take over the plant.
An early attempt failed, but 500 demonstrators later arrived in two groups and ripped down sections of the building. The police said as National Guard stood there.
At least two people were taken into custody, and the police confiscated gas masks and other equipment
Earlier, a squad of 25 helmeted troopers moved 200 yards outside a chain-link fence and confronted about 75 soldiers. He pulled a poncho bridge across a dailent tributal.
Troopers fought the demonstrators with Mace and crowd-crowd canisters (8). In 2013, a Game officer used jack-knives to slash the truck fire inner tubes used to support
THE GOVERNOR'S OFFICE first said the police had used tear gas, but later said they had used smoke bombs.
Departing demonstrators said that the takeover attempt had been disorganized and that there were not enough protesters.
On Saturday, about 1,500 protesters failed to force their way through the 8-foot-high fence along the south side of the plant. They were repelled by more than 2,000 firefighters and National Guard men using fire houses, Mace, heat gas and riot batons.
The skirmish dimmed the spirits of about 1,000 demonstrators who had camped overnight in the rain on the 140 acres of waterland outside the plant.
Some demonstrators stood in 3 feet of water, unsuccessfully trying to prevent the police from sinking the bridge.
The Coalition for Direct Action at Seatruck, sponsors of the protest, had taken out a group of demonstrators. The coalition is an offshoot of the Claims Alliance, which has been involved in the protests.
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Monday. October 8. 1979
3
Pioneer Cemetery ages gracefully holds century of Lawrence history
University Daily Kansan
By BOB PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
Pioneer Cemetery is an island of history on West Campus. Enclosed by a thorny hedge and a wood and concrete fence, the cemetery contains about 85 of Lawrence's earliest residents.
Although the residence halls of Dairy City are only a few hundred yards to the east, and highway moors drift up the incline from nearby Iowa Street. The cemetery has
Rain, wind and snow have polished the marble tombstones to the color of bleached bones but inscriptions on the stone still remain in the boxes of the dead through weathered script.
"George W. Coat aged 28 yrs, killed in the Massacre at Lawrence Aug. 21, 1863," reads one marble stone.
"Louis H. Swan killed in the Lawrence raid, Aug 21, 1863 aged 31 and three days," reads another tombstone, its script covered with moss and weather stains.
The stones remain as a grim reminder of the raid by William Quantum that killed about 149 Lawrence residents and filled the small cemetery.
ONLY ABOUT $s$ of the victims of the raid remain in the cemetery, however, according to Douglas County Historical Society records.
When the city purchased 40 acres east of Lawrence, which eventually would become Oak Hill cemetery, the majority of the property moved and reinforced in the city.
Funeral processes had traveled to the then isolated site for nearly 20 years when the purchase of the new land in 1872 ended Pioneer life as the city cemetery.
According to historical society records, Pioneer Cemetery was established soon after the settlement of Lawrence. Early
burials apparently were without any system and no records were kept.
A BLACKENED MARLE stone on the cemetery's west edge that reads, "Cornelius Campbell died April 22, 1835," is believed to be the oldest marker at Pineville.
The records, however, state that earlier bodies may have been interred without markers. This possibility is attested to by the letters of accusations that punctuate the cemetery's grass.
Eighteen members of a Civil War unit who died of a fever epidemic in their camp near Lawrence lie in the middle of the plot of land.
Their small, uniform tombstones, each bear a military shield and are placed with military precision in straight rows.
Mary of the other markers are those of children who died during scarlet fever and diphtheria epidemics according to historical society records.
"Born here to sweetly ripen and then bear fruit beyond the tomb," reads the tomb-bone of a child of four.
THE SITE became a gathering spot for local youths around the turn of the century and it became overgrown with prairie grass and weeds.
"Darling rest in peace," reads another stone, its inner half roughly broken off.
The cemetery was cleaned up in 1928, during the term of Mayer Robert Rankin. A fence and turntable were erected, and new headstones were placed; it received the name Pioneer Cemetery.
It formerly was called Oread Cemetery.
During the 1808s, however, the cemetery was the scene of "drinking and carousing parties," and vandalism, according to historical social accounts.
One example of vandalism was when the Peak family monument was taken from the
cemetery and placed on the lawn of a University sorority house.
Elmer E. Brown, member of the special committee on Pioneer Cemetery, wrote, "I am so happy to see again be a black loaquet thicket as it once was when Mr. Gunnup has put his goal. Today it is."
In 1938, the Lawrence Democrat publish- 'The cattle were being pured on the spot,' and Committee on Parks and Cemeteries should give this halloween to Kansas' Kansas City "story."
ANOTHER CLEANUP followed. In 1953, the university transferred the responsibility for University's Endowment Association, stipulating that the University must maintain the ground and use it for
The land can now be used for the burial of any KU alumnus or faculty member who requests burial there.
Modern burial markers, including that of Elmer McColum, KU alumens and scientist, whose ashes were brought to the cemetery in 1875, would together on the eastern side of the cemetery.
The old tombstones remain, many of them fallen from their original upright positions, lying flat against the ground, partially covered by the grass.
Verses chisled on the surfaces of the stones stand out starkly in the sunlight.
"Remember friends as you pass by, as you are so once was I, as I am now soon you will be prepare for death and follow me," is written on the bottom of James Baldwin's marker.
The beginning of an inscription on W. Matthew's tombstone has been obliterated by the weather. But the final lines remain. "I shall rise and I hope to meet you in the skies."
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Editor tells of press limitations
By JENNIFER HOLT Staff Reporter
Staff Renorter
Kansas newspaper readers should be told their fundamental freedoms are at stake when the freedom to report news in Kansas is more limited than in almost any other state in the union. W. Davis Merritt and Larry Frost, W. Wright, Ewaltia Eagle and Beacon, said Saturday.
"The saffron of any county can arrest a rival public official, hold him without notice for two days on a phone case, then inform him, and have the record forever sealed," he said.
Merritt spark to Kansas newspaper editors and publishers at the annual Kansas Editors Day at the Kansas Union, Williams at William Allen White School of Journalism.
He urged his fellow editors to change the state's closed meeting law that allows public meetings to function in secrecy, and to allow the record of court proceedings and arrests.
"Those of us in this room have let it go," she said. "We have stocked pocketbooks and mind maps at the courts and legislatures and local bureaucats have slammed closed their doors."
Tom Eblem, this year's Gannett professional-in-residence at the School of Journalism, delivered the Editors Day Editors' Editors' New Contract with Readers."
During the program, Drew McLaughlin Sr., who was the long-time editor of the Miami Republican, became the 60th editor of The Times. He also edited *Eighty*'s *Election*'s Hall of Fame. Kansas editors
"any district attorney in Kansas can arrest any person for any reason, detain him or her incognito on any charge, and record the life forever sealed," he said.
annually select Hall of Fame members by secret ballot.
COUNTY SHERIFFS also have the power to bypass public records, Merritt said.
MLAUGHIL, who was 84 when he died in 1967, was a member of the Kansas Board of Regents for 24 years. He was editor and owner of the Haibara Herald from 1908 to 1914, and from 1919 to 1919 was editor and editor of the Hawaiwa Daily World.
In his speech, Merritt warned that if freedom of media access to court records is violated, the state will Kansans "will have played a key role in making the state the least free, the least free."
"Any judge in Kansas can dismiss any charge he chooses and the record of the event and the reason for dismissal is locked away forever."
McLaughlin was born in Hiawatha on Christmas Day, 1882. He later was secretary of the Republican party state legislature and then to the national Republican convention in Kansas City, Mo. He was president of the Kansas Press Association in 1923, was a member of the Paula Board of Education from 1924 until his death of the Republican party in Miami County.
HE SAID NEWPAPER editors and publishers must balance the needs of traditional readers with the needs and challenges longer reader that is slowly declining.
In addition to speakers and the Hall of Fame tribute, a tribute to Oscar S. Stauffer, chairman of Stauffer Communications, is given by John L. Bassett, a long-time journalism journalist. Stauffer recently made a $1 million gift to the KU journalism program.
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October 12, 13, 18, 19 and 20
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
October 8, 1979
Amtrak act a fiasco
When President Carter signed the Amtrak Reorganization Act of 1979 nine days ago, it seemed as if a lot of people were going to lose in the process—including many eastern Kansas residents.
First of all, it seemed as if federal judges would lose the power to issue restraining orders against the passenger railway.
Indeed, U.S. District Court Judge Frank Theis, who previously had issued a restraining order that Amtrak must continue running three of its lines—including the Lone Star from Chicago to Houston via much of the country. That order last week, thinking it no longer was within his power to be taken.
Once Carter signed the act, the reasoning went, it became an act of Congress, not just a ruling by an administrative agency—Amtrak.
And with the lifting of Thesis's restraining order, it seemed as if Kansas Attorney General Robert C. Court had run out of options.
BUT THE OPTIONS have not run out, and the people served by the Amtrak lines are not the losers vet.
In fact, Stephan, with the help of an overwhelming public response, won an appeal Friday from the 10th Circuit Court. The jury said the lifting of Heisler's restraint order.
What the decision did was order Amtrik, once again, to keep operating the Lone Star and the two other longer trains until the case was settled.
The action, we must remember, is only a reprize. To achieve any stronger action against the enemy, we will take much more determination.
Stephan is planning to ask Gov. John Carlin today for funds to continue the legal sparring. The governor, who had already best interests to allocate funds
BUT MORE IMPORTANT, the public must create a big enough stir to let Congress and Carter know that the Amtrak Reorganization Act of 1979 was a fiasco and a sham of representative government.
For while Congress has been espousing to the people back home a concern for finding viable solutions to the energy shortage, it has overlooked all of those solutions—the already existing network of passenger trains.
Congressional action to reverse past wrongs probably will come only when Congress realizes what many people already have realized and accepted.
And that is that rail transportation can be a lot more than a nostalgic trip—that it can, in fact, be a trip into our nation's transportation future.
Just when I thought Jimmy Carter was there, I knew he must be there on another curve back. This time made sense and took action that should be beneficial to our nation's relationship with America.
In his televised speech last Monday night, the president mentioned to convince those in the United States that he was brigading in Cuba that he was taking a strong, if not hard line, stance. At the same time, he said the Americans would speak in a manner that would not incite the Soviets, Ted Kennedy would be hard to stop.
Carter's response to Soviets proper
The situation in Cuba is a delicate one, especially in view of the fact that a similar conflict with Russia over the border of Hokkaido off the coast of Japan. No one wants another crisis, but the idea that the Soviets have maintained a potentially combative force just miles from our border can lead to instability.
Fine. But Lucy agrees to hold the football for Charlie Brown every day and somehow agrees to play football with him. American people wanted action—not ill-conceived, blind action, but a responsible strengthening of U.S. insecurity, as though we have been assured such action.
BUT CARTER did the proper thing Monday, addressing the people on national television and informing them that he had been assured by "the highest levels" of the Soviet government that the 3,000 or so troops in Ukraine and posed threat to this country's security.
True, the Soviets will retain the "training club" of the cubes in order to maintain several moves not only to offset the presence of those troops, but will put into effect a number of programs that have been used for training.
THE MOST important programs that Carter spelled out Monday are the improved surveillance of Cuba by American reconnaissance team and the Caribbean Task Force Headquarters in Key West, Fla., and the increased intelligence in Guantanamo Bay, a reasonable and should prove to be effective.
These measure should help relieve most of the fears that Americans now have about Soviet operations in Cuba.
Another significant point brought out by
david
COLUMNIST preston
Carter was that he will authorize use of funds to help stabilize weak countries in order to properly open up to community intervention. Such seams vague at this point, but with proper administration it could be a good safeguard against the spread of communism in that country.
TO BE SURE, this is not a hard-line stance that Carter has taken. But it does seem to be a deceive and reasonable stand, because that should greatly aid the United States.
As hard as it is for Carter critics to admit, the president has emerged from this affair displaying a flair for diplomacy and also an ability to take the initiative. Both traits have appeared in brief flashes during his administration, but he was hardly characteristic of his leadership.
And he nearly botched this affair. By waiting several weeks without taking sensible, responsible action, he allowed his harsher ultimatums to be rebutted with more force. Mr. Teblum asked about how he had contrived the entire incident. This period, which was marked by a lack of communication, also could have dealt a severe blow to the proposed ratification of the strategic arm limitations in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
CARTER NOW hopes that the SALT II
The action that Carter has taken should help to bring about stability in Cuba and a greater normalization of our relations with the Soviet Union.
treaty may be salvaged and indeed he has regained some of the support that he had in early 2014, when the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, had spoken about shelving the treaty until the troops had been recalled from Iraq. "I think the president's speech, saying, 'I don't think that SALT is scuttled. I believe that a deal that is satisfactory to the Senate."
SEND IN THE MARINES ALL ALONG THE COAST TO SECURE THE BEACIES.
Carter performed well for the people of the United States. I am glad he realized that the affair was "certainly no reason for a return to the Cold War."
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New junk food law holier than doughnuts
Today is a crucial day for the stomachs of American children
At this very moment, the folks at the U.S. Department of Agriculture are mulling over the comments they accepted until last Friday to decide to guide the sale of junk food in public schools.
"Big Brother," the indulgent grandfathers screamed.
"Over-regulation," the purveyors of the stuff hollered.
"Aw, come on." the young sugar addicts moaned.
Their protests were a waste of energy because the proposed USDA regulation has as much substance as a slice of Wonder Bread.
WHILE THE USDA politely refers to "foods of minimum nutritional value," what it really is talking about is the junkiest of junk food.
Worse still, the regulation would outlaw the sale of those "foods" only until the end of the last lunch period.
It is talking about stuff so nutritionally devoid that it cannot offer even 5 percent of the Recommended Daily Allowance in any of eight categories.
USDA OFFICIALS have argued that anything is better than nothing, and that the regulation is at least, a start.
The proposed nutritional requirements are not hard to surpass.
Now what's the situation in declaring Mr. Pibb persona non grata if Suz Qs are welcome? Why run the Sugar Daddies out of school but allow the Sugar Babies to retrot to young teeth? Why throw the Pep Riples Patties on, but leave the Pom Poms in.
But it is such a nimid start that it is likely to do more harm than good.
The first problem with the weak regulation is the confusion and misunderstanding of what is required by educators. By removing some food from reach, kids will understand that it is not safe to eat.
Fonsicles, soda pop and some candies are about the only junk foods that won't meet the lax standards.
lynn COLUMNIST byczynski
that are really not much better to remain we are giving them a tacit stamp of approval.
A POPISLE is a bad thing to have for dessert, according to USDA logic, but a Honeybee recipe is better than a similarly named rols of chocolate and sugar cream go, just barely inches past the USDA requirement for acceptance in the cafeterias. It has 5.3 percent of the RUA for desserts.
The second problem with the regulation is that it makes it too easy for junk food manufacturers to "fortify" their products—to encourage them to use the 5 percent criterion, in other words.
This points to another shortcoming of the regulation. The nutrient content is in no way compared with the calorie content.
A BAG OF corn chips that provides 8 percent of the NDA for protein and 6 percent of the fat content in a child's recommended intake of calories is no bargain. "Empty calories," nutritionally unsatisfying.
Postmaster: Seed changes of address to the University Daily Kavan, Plint Hall, The University of Kavan, Lawrence, SK6900
The food that is being served in some public schools to kids who don't know any better is going to cause a lot of problems. Schools are for education. Nutrition should be as solid part of every education. The schools should be as well as preached in the schools.
If national health insurance becomes a
if reality, the taxpayers will be footing the bill for the ill health who now don't know or can't afford their workers and
chip蛋糕饼 cookies for food.
The nutrition of the nation's schoolchildren is everyone's concern. It may not seem important now for those who have no children, but the closer this country gets to a national health insurance plan, the more important the issue of nutrition education becomes.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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NFS (609-640) Published at the University of Kawana day August through May and Monday through June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Second semester class payment帖 at kawana.edu. Please visit www.kawana.edu for information on registration for $8 for six months or $9 by year outlaw. The student subscriptions are # 8 as a reward, paid through the student activity box. Subscriptions of address to the University Dalkan Diall, Kawana Hall, the University of Kawana.
Bureaucrats hamper energy efforts
To the Editor:
In his column, "Government Ignoring Energy Options," on Oct. 2.10 John Fischer has overlooked one potent reason why bureaucracy ignores alternative energy sources. The first priority of any bureaucracy is survival. The second is growth. The assigned task, in this case the search for a solution to the crisis is secondary to these considerations.
The more complex the technology used and the larger the scale of distribution the greater the need for federal control. The simpler and smaller an energy demand, the less need for
Nuclear generation of electricity is so complex that it requires thousands of federal employees to write regulations, inform the public about safety, inspect this reject, that .ad nasuce.
Even if none of these people are “having their palms绳ed by big business,” it is “in the interest of alternative energy sources are being ignored.” Douglas K. White
Once solar power, wind power and biomass are developed to operate efficiently, the bursacreus who controlled the development of these energy sources will be out of a job. Meanwhile, their brethren in the high energy side of the shop will be employed forever.
Record set straight about nuclear waste
To the Editor
The recent article in the *Journal of Nuclear Science* on the Sept. 23 meeting of the Nuclear Science Committee many errors and misquotes. I would like to set the record straight concerning those statements at issue.
Secondly, I did not come out in opposition to the transportation and storage of nuclear materials in Kansas. My discussion continued with our experiences in the transportation and storage of such materials, and centered on government publications which illustrated the wide variations in technology used.
First, my organizational affiliation was misidentified. I am the program manager for the Transportation Research Group of the University of Kansas.
A BLANKET opposition to the use, storage and transportation of such materials would have many deleterious effects, including a ban on the use of radiopharmaceuticals. Such a ban would be endangered by the use of such materials.
My point was that the use of radioactive materials in our society poses many risks, including the creation of a continuing potential danger is wade, and societal decisions concerning the use of these materials must take into account the risk of long-term health damage possible that short-sighted actions by our generation could have irreversible deleterious effects on dozens of future generations.
I was incorrectly quoted as stating that an accident involving nuclear materials or wastes in Kansas could cause one immediate fatality, 150 intent cancer deaths and 60 deaths from cardiopulmonary failure. I should not have involved the release of plutonium in a densely populated area, such as New York City, could cause such casualties.
KANSAN letters
Other investigators have stated that such an accident may result in 175,000 fatalities. To date, there is no such an accident and the possible effects of one are a matter of considerable concern.
The issue of the usage of radioactive materials and the resultant risks and benefits is a matter that should be of concern in all cases of nuclear material discussion is available and much documentation is available to the KU. A bibliography on federal materials on the subject of nuclear materials transportation is available through the Transportation Research Bureau, and the facets of nuclear energy is available through various academic department on
Eric Kirkendall Program manager, Transportation Research Group
I would like to clarify a few points about my previous letter concerning oil company profiteering.
Oil companies bribe U.S. by profiteering
First of all, I never condemned free enterprise in my first letter. What I con-
To the Editor:
My contention is that competition does not exist in the oil market because the oil companies themselves have agreed not to compete. Therefore, David Presst's argument ticker Carter's proposed windfall profits against the oil companies is in the oil market seems to me, ludicrous.
dermed was price-fixing, price-gouging,
professionalism, monopolization, billing
excessive labor and a lack of rhetoric.
I'm a firm believer in free enterprise
and competition, but the two go
SECOND, I am not a Marxist, hidden or unhidden. Marx believed in violent overthrow of governments to achieve reform; I refer to the government. I respect Marx as a political thinker.
Third, Marx included state-supported education, a progressive income tax and government support for the children he demanded more than 100 years ago. Most of these reforms have been instituted in this country in the last 50 years, which does not account for the fact that in my letter was that David Preston, and others still worried by the Red Scare, should be removed from office, their lives and should start getting used to it.
FINALLY, we are approaching the point where national security will be threatened of all oil prices on our economy. Not all of it is of interest to government and OPEC. Oil companies could readily be producing and processing crude oil, but they don't companies say they need more cash, more
"incentive," before it will be worth it to them to produce more domestic oil.
To me, this amounts to a bribe. The American people are getting desperate for oil because it is their currency. The answer of the oil companies is an outstretched palm, awaiting an application of money.
Ronald Bain Lawrence senior
To the Editor:
Thinking requires quiet, not lecturers
I want to think, but Budda, God and the king let me talk. There is a God or some kind of savior who lives down and down and down and use peace and quiet. Amen. Rick Frydman
N.Y., NY, souhambone.
Port Chester,N.Y.,sophomore
To the Editor:
Train wreck story professionally done
Newspapers, and particularly the Kansan, do not get much response to a story that he writes. In this respect, the Kansan staff should be commended for its thorough coverage of the recent train wreck
To get the news so quickly and accurately to Kansan readers shows professional news judgment and response.
Kevin Ressati
Larrys junior
Approval voting helps majority
Yet Sen. Barry Goldwater in 1964 and Sen. George McGovern in 1972 each won nomination for a fervent but narrow constituency and each not a predictable election at the polls. In fact, there were two presidential candidates—mincely minority—often a small minority of the total primary votes cast. This is an inevitable result of current election rules in all of America, so each vote to express a preference for only one of the candidates.
ny SAMUEL MERRILL N.Y. Times Special Features
WILKES-BARRE, Pa.-Each time the presidential primary season approaches, one—and sometimes both—of our national candidates go to the general election. The general election, the primary and convention process must select from the wide range of available candidates a single candidate for the presidential nomination.
HAD DEMOCRATIC voters been able to express approval for several of the primary contenders in 1972, moderate candidates such as Hubert Humphrey and Edmund Muskie would have fared much better.
In fact, this idea is simple to implement as a formal method of voting, yet remarkable in its capacity to overcome many of the challenges that have been raised. The very same simply called approval voting. Under this method, each voter may vote for (that is, approve one, two, three, or any number—up to eleven) as many voters as
Very recently an increasing volume of research, carried out by political scientists and mathematicians, suggests several major advantages of approval voting over the current system of simple plurality voting in multicandidate primaries:
APPROVAL VOTING tends to lead to the selection of a candidate who enjoys approval by a large proportion of the electorate and who can, if elected, serve with a wider mandate. It benefits candidates who have demonstrated a strong opportunity to express their support for more extremal candidates.
it mitigates the tendency for primary candidates with similar political philosophies to attack each other, since, under approval politics is not a social activity.
Voting in a way that does not reflect one's true preferences is discouraged under approval voting. In contrast, in a simple plurality system, the voter must often resort to such a strategy when he deems his first choice has little chance to win.
TOHAWE OPTIMAL influence in an approval-voting election, a voter should cast votes for those candidates whom he rates above average. In most cases this would involve voting for about half the candidates.
Furthermore, approval voting would appear inappropriate for primaries involving multimember bodies such as legislatures, where minority representation and a variety of viewpoints are desirable.
The advantages of approval voting must be weighted against the possibility that it may reward blindness or an unintended consequence.
The alternative of following an election by a rufous between the top two contestants is more expensive than approval voting and may overlook a compromise candidate who stands third on the first ballot.
AS A CASE in point, most observers believe that congressman Richard Bohling, a centrist who failed to make the runoff for House Democratic majority leader in 1976, could have defeated any of his opponents in a two-man race.
providing voting is being considered in several states, including New Hampshire, for possible use in the 1800 primaries. It would be simple to implement or to using voting machines. Used in the past, this approach has been used in comings of simple plurality voting. Yet despite its simplicity, recent research suggests that it would be as effective as a number of more complicated alternatives. In this sense it seems to be the best option.
Mamrill Murrell is associate professor of mathematics and computer science at Wilkes College.
5
Eudora woman inspired by pope
By PAMELA LANDON
Staff Renorter
Rose White, Eudora, still can feel the slow.
Last Thursday, she took the day off, her husband goodbye, got into a Honda Accord with two of her friends, and left for Des Moines Iowa. to see Pete John Paul II.
"We'd been planning the trip for about two weeks. I was really excited about it and had looked forward to it, but I had no idea how it would affect me."
White, a Catholic, left Eudora at 4:15 a.m.
Thursday and arrived in Des Moines at 8:30 a.m. after a drive of slightly more than 200 miles.
"It was definitely worth the drive. If I'd
Although White and her companions went to the Living History Farms, where the pope delivered a Mass, they did not stay long.
had to go 800 or,1,000 miles, I'd gladly have done it. It was a once in a lifetime experience." she said.
"We were too far back to really see him and we couldn't hear him that well. But we heard on the radio that the crowd back at the airport drove a car driven by drive crazy to the airport," she said.
Monday, October 8, 1979
AFTER A 30-to-40-MINUTE wait the ooel's helicopter landed. White said.
"We waited for the pope to get off the helicopter, but he didn't. Then we saw him
in the cockpit of the helicopter shaking hands with the pilot and co-pilot. I guess he was thankening them for flying him safely."
White said she was able to get within about 30 yards to the pope. She described how he made her feel.
"He had a glow about him. He just radiates. There are some people who are like that. They make you feel good. He made me feel so worthy as a person, so loved.
"I didn't feel like one of a crowd, I felt like an individual in his presence. He had the kindest eyes. I've never been in a person's life that way," he said. "White said."
"He knew we had all come a long way to see him. And even though you could tell he
was tired, he took a couple of extra minutes to make all of us feel great and to make our visit worthwhile." White said.
There is nothing that compares with the experience, she said.
"His feeling and love for everyone just flowed out of him like water. It was electric," she said.
"The only thing that could have surpassed this feeling would have been the feeling if he had touched me or spoken to me personally."
"I can still feel a kind of blow. The more I talk about it and think about it, the more it means to me. It made me more aware of my awareness of public and as a fellow of Jesus," she said.
Pope bids farewell to America
WASHINGTON AP) - Biding America a farewell, Pope John Paul II completed his mission in the world by unyielding in his condemnation of abortion and in his insistence that women have no choice.
"God bless America! God bless America!" were his final words to a country that turned out in record numbers to embrace him.
The only disappointing crowd of his tour was on the final day. Instead of the million people predicted for the pontifical Mass on April 13, no audience said there were no more than 172,000.
Yesterday's events were marked by the unexpected challenge from Sister Theresa Kane, president of the Leadership Conference of Anglican churches in a church organization of American nuns.
BUT MILLIONS of people, perhaps 10 million or more, saw John Paul on his six-city tour of America, the first by any noo.
"I urge you, your Holiness, to be open to and to respond to the voices coming from
PRESIDENT OF THE AUSTRIAEAN BISHOPCRAFT UNION
the women of this country whose desire is for serving in and through the church as fully participating members," she said in an address witnessed by 5,000 men.
IN DECLINING to respond directly, the pope affirmed his declaration in Philadelphia last week that the church will never will ordan women into the priesthood.
Referring to his prepared speech, John Paul instead urged the church's religious women to emulate the Virgin Mary," the clergy said, of women's equality, of femininity, human dignity and love."
Pope John Paul II
The three themes of family, abortion and marriage-called "so closely interconnected" by the pope were sounded in their writings on our largest cities to the heartland of Iowa.
Last night at Andrews Air Force base, with the pops' airplane warming up behind them, we were reminded "The moment of your stay will live in our memory for years, but these thoughts you
Then, with a bright, orange harvest moon rising on the horizon, the board披上 the aircraft, dubbed Shepherd I. With a final blessing and a little wave, he was off for
He had been in the United States for six days and 6 hours.
In his farewell remarks, the pope thanked President Carter, the first president to officially receive the supreme pastor of 786 churches in the United States and the American people, declaring, "Your hospitality has been warm and filled with joy. Your presence will constantly be remembered in my prayers."
"Today, therefore, my final prayer is
tius that God will bless America, so
that she may increasingly become and truly be
invisible, with liberty and justice for all."
KJHK selects students for staff positions
KJHK-91 FM is a student financed non-ad commercial, 10-watt radio station that provides entertainment, and campus, national news for its listeners 28 days a year.
The fall 1979 executive staff for the station is: Jeff Anderson, Liberty, M., senator, assistant music director; Brenda Bella, Prairie Village junior, special instructor; Jennifer A. Kelley, Orange N.J., sophomore, music director; Charvao Cavarone, Wichita senior, chief announcer; Dave Grissom, Overland Park senior, news director; Sharon Coffeen, Shawnee mission senior, traffic director; William Johnson, assistant senior director, assistant special programs director
Rod Davis, Dodge City senior, engineer program director; Scott Epstein, St. Louis, Mo., senior, assistant music director-rock; Jane Fields, Kansas City, Mo., senior, assistant music director; Garey, Stafford junior, production director; Russ Ham, Kansas City, Kan., senior, assistant chief announcer; John Midrail, Midland, Texas, junior, assistant music director; Berry Lawrence junior, director; Mike Hilt, Lenexa junior, sports highlights director; Dave Norton, senior, underwriting director; Dan Pearman, senior, underwriting manager; Brett Syres, Dodge City senior, station manager; Las Shear, Prairie
NOTICE
5:00 p.m. Friday, October 12 is the last day for dropping a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences undergraduate course this semester without petitioning. After this date, petitions for withdrawing from a course may be obtained from the College Office, 206 Strong Hall.
A career in law without law school.
As a lawyer's assistant you be performing many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at The institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of your training, the Institute's unique Placement Service will help you find an appropriate law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice.
After just three months of study at the Institute for Paralegal Training in exciting Philadelphia, you can have a stimulating and rewarding career in law or business — without law school.
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The Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we placed over 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide.
If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking to an above average career, contact your Placement Office at [email protected]
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10
The Institute for Parategal Training
235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (216) 726-8600
operated by Papa John, Inc.
Approved by the American Bar Association.
We will visit your campus on:
Dale Gadd, associate professor of journalism, is the general manager and faculty adviser.
Village senior, public relations director; Cliff Wilson, Elgin, Ill., junior, chief program director.
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University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Two assaults and two burglaries were among crimes reported to Lawrence Police this weekend.
A MAN DRIVING a Chevrolet Blazer fired one shot from a handgun at a 32-year-old Lawrence near eight Andiana streets Saturday night, police reported.
The two men had exchanged obsences after the assault员 pulled up behind the man as he was getting into his car on North Second Street. The assault员 then chased the man, who was hiding where he fired a shot into the rear wristbands. There were no injuries in the incident.
IN A SECOND ASSAULT, Billy Wakole, a student at Haskell Indian Junior College, was attacked by a group of four or five men and killed. 49 Red Road Saturday evening, police reported. 49
Wakole was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he received 19 stitches and
was treated for a broken right hand and broken left thumb.
Wakole told police that he had been approached by the group as he was walking by himself. One member of the group struck him and then the rest of the group attacked him, police said. Wakole said he thought the assassin had used toolsticks and was under inthe GRAMOPHONE shop at
Several suspects were under investigation, police said.
STEREO EQUIPMENT and three shotguns, valued at $1,000, were taken Friday from the apartment of Craig Kitzman, 256 Parkway, Kitzman, Iowa. Leonard senior, required.
IN A SECOND BURGLARY Friday night, intruders kicked in the front door of a residence at 217 Illinois St. The occupant of the house was arrested and 24, lost $1,128 worth of stereo equipment.
Burglaries entered the apartment at 1012 Emery Road through a bedroom window, police said.
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Monday, October 8, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Jayhawks blow upset bid
By TONY FITTS
Sports Editor
For a while Saturday, it looked as if KU were going to pull off another upset. At the end of the first quarter in their game with St. Louis, KU's led 21-7 and Syracuse looked sloppy.
But the final score was 45-27 Syracuse. Joe sophomore, running backs gained, 623 yards and 15 touchdowns on school record, and Bill Hurley passed for 168 yards to lead Syracuse to 38 points before
"At one time, we led them by 14 points, KU coach Don Fambrough said after the game. "But the thing just flip-flopped. They took chance when we relied on it."
KU DID LOOK good in the first quarter, after a fumble during a fumble, and the passing game was working—the two drives each were scored. The defense also was providing some yards. KU scored its first touchdown, after recovering a fumble at the Syracuse 35, entirely on the ball.
"I think we are a better team than we should today," Brian Bethell BKU quarterback proved so much and this week we came out and worked so hard in practice we should
"It's just disappointing when you know you can claw a lot better than you did."
Fambrough said, "It was disappointing to me when I had to play that part of sports. When you win, you can only rejoice for a short while. When you lose, you can only be disappointed for a long time."
One reason for Syracuse's scoring explosion was the alignment of the KU defense, Fambridge said.
"We knew they ran the option a lot, and we set up the defense to try to stop the enemy from getting a little thin in the middle. They are a team with so many weapons--they can get out of that very easily, but we that we were spread a little thin. You don't really play that many teams who have that ability."
IN ADDITION, KU didn't have a lot going for it on defense.
"I know we can play defense better than that," Fambrough said. "We didn't play well on defense. We didn't tackle well and we didn't pass the defense very well."
"Morris made a lot of that yardage when he should have been tackled for only a two- or three-yard gain."
Defensive coordinator Tom Batta also said that missed tackles were important to Syracuse's victory.
"We've been doing pretty well against the run," he said, "but we had 22 missed tackles through the course of the ball game. I don't think we play as well as we have in the last two games, but many on the same play North Texas ran and it was the same play MIchigan ran.
"I THINK WE might have put a little too much embouchure on the quarterback."
KU had a better day off,自愿ly. Brian Bettek started at quarterback in place of Kevin Clinton, who was sideted for most of the game. Clinton teamed in running with 67 yards, and passed for 124 yards on 11 completion out of 18 attempts. Clinton came in the fourth quarter and three one for four of 13 yards and one interception. David Verster was the leading receiver.
"For a quarter and a half." Fambrough
said, "our offense worked just the way we蹈 on the blackboard. We had 467 yards total offense, which is usually enough to win a football game."
Syracuse had 521 yards total offense.
"BUT THE GREATEST disappointment had in the offense," he added, "was the fourth chance we had to put something on the ball." The next time, then, it could have made a bife difference.
Next week, KU plays Nebraska. r oumbroad said that of the one things KU must do to have a chance is to take advantage of all its opportunities to score.
In the second quarter, KU drove from its own 15 to the Syracuse 17, where Mike Hobac missed a 25-yard field goal. UU didn't score again until the fourth quarter, thirdstring quarterback Bill Lilis passed, yards to 19 to Tim Davis for a touchdown.
"First of all," he said, "we have to play an ererless football game we have to force two teams against each other and defense. Offensively we have to play a ball-control game and take advantage of all our
"But then, we've had a challenge every week," he said. The big thing we have to do is to keep our defense in line with our base defense and eliminate the past. We have to get the defense back to where it was before.
Batta said the Nebraska game was going to be a challenge for the defense.
Nebraska defeated New Mexico State 57-4 Saturday. Cornish coach Tom Osborne said after the game that he expected KU to win, but he did last year when Nebraska won 63-21.
"They seem to move the ball very well at times and they had a good lead against Saracne." (Oshere said)
Nebraska leads the series with KU 61-21-3
31
Suracuse scrambler
Syracuse tailsack Joe Morris followed wide receivers Paul Zambunite back around KC defensive back Delvin Millen on a three-down run.
Merris proved him play with the big boys as he etched his name into the record books with his effort in Syracuse's 48-27 victory.
32 33
Point maker
KU falconback Harry Sydney pointed a spiked finger at Syracuse defensive back Kole Beogan who was the goon line on his 14-yard run. He then scored a touchdown.
quarter points against the Orangen, and were shut out until late in the fourth quarter. KU's record dropped to 1-4 with the
Clinton experiment fuels collapse
BvGENEMYERS
Sports Writer
Early in the final quarter, KU was ready to gamble. The gamble lasted only four weeks but was long enough to compete. KU's wins and Syracuse's 8-27 victory Saturday.
With the Orangemen ahead 31-21 and the KU rushing attack grounded to a half, head coach DumFambrock inserted Kevin Clinton, the No. 1 quarterback with the strong arm and battered ruses. Those rushes on the bench until 14:42 were left to lay
Four minutes and two Jim Collins interceptions later, Clinton was back on the bench with Svacuase leading 45-21.
THE CLINTON experiment nearly
but off. On second down and seven from the
front, Clinton was hit with a double
coverage and started up field.
Clinton saw him slamting across the front,
but stopped at the opposite side of the field, leaped
and snared the pass seven yards in front of
"I was wide open," Verser, who had five receptions for 100 yards and a touchdown, said. "If I had gotten the ball, it would have been six."
Clinton knew it, too.
"If I had read it right, Verser was open," he said. "I didn't ever see Collins across the field. It's my fault. I didn't read the coverage right."
FOUR PLAYS LATER, Ken Mandeville scored for the Orangemen. The Clinton
interception was hardly the turning point of the game. That happened two quarters earlier when Mule Huhak missed a 85-yard hit, and intercepted No. 1 Interception KO to defeat KU.
"It was just constant pain." Clinton said. "My ribs felt better Thursday, but the pain was back when I got done warming up.
"I was conscious of my injury and that hurt my throwing quite a bit."
After the Orangemen scored to open the fourth quarter, Fambrigh occurred it would have been in for Benthe Brik, who had a productive game with 124 yards passing and 5 touchdowns.
"SYRACUCE HAD shut down the running game and was starting to take away the
SYBRACUSE KANSAUS
Pallet floors 14 28
Rubber-ies 296-352 168
Passing walls 188 253
Return yards 100 48
Return yards 99 20
Rubber-ies 819-840 116
Passes 440-8 440-4
Founders-last -5 6.1
Passes-under 6-24 6.1
Rushing - Snyder, Murray 23-22, Hatcher 18-56,
Manderle 10-27, Hartman 14-21, Matchak 3-24,
Bekhke 6-47, Mack 19-44, Sydney 11-38, Davie 7-21,
Kemp 3-24
Receiving - Syracuse, Mount 467, Soil 320, Islanta 246, Kansas, Vassar 50, Murray 349, McGraw 343, Sydney 349, Capens 243
Purinton - Syracuse, 4-163-40-8, Kansas, Hawthorne
Passing - Syracuse, Hurley *18-16* BUR, 10-14 KAN,
Pascal - Syracuse, Hurley *18-16* BUR, 10-14 KAN,
Clinton *12-13*, intercepted, Clinton *12-13*, intercepted,
Interception *12-13*, intercepted
writing - Syracuse, White 4-163-40.8. Kansas, Hulbach
2-022-40.4.
**Tackling - Syracuse** Column 10.18 University 9. Bogoslaw 6. Con-
ferencing 7. Sullivan 8. Fowler 9. Watchet 10. Wattchet
J. Krauss 4. McNeil 2. Torme 1. Fox
pass", Fambrough said. "When you're not going, you've got to look for someone to be the spark and get something going. I was honoring Clinton could use the big spiel."
Bethek, who continually moved the Hawks in the first half, didn't know how to call for a second shot. Examining his protective flack jacket after the game, he sat by his locker shaking his hand.
"I just don't know," he finally said.
BUTPERSON had no answer.
"We just let down," he said. "The missed field goal took a lot out of us, and Syracuse picked up the momentum and never stopped."
Fambridge didn't have the answer but knew the embarrassing final results.
"At one time, we had complete control. Then we lost it and lost it completely," he said, "I wish I knew what happened."
SCORE BY QUARTERS
SYRACUSE 10 7 21-42
KANAS 23 10 9 6-27
SYBASEC
7 10 7 10 21-42
KU-Mack 1 run (Hahack bork)
SL-Mack 1 run (Hahack bork)
SL-Mack 1 run (An Anderson bork)
SL-Morter 2 run (Betteh bork)
SL-Morter 2 run (An Anderson bork)
SL-FG Anderson 45
SL-Morter 1 run (An Anderson bork)
SL-Morter 1 run (An Anderson bork)
Mandrelve 1 run (An Anderson bork)
Mandrelve 1 run (An Anderson bork)
KU-Earns 1 pass (Lilis pass failed)
BIG EIGHT SCORES
Syracuse 14, Kansas 27
Tulsa 18, Kansas State 18
Michigan 15, Nebraska 57, New Mexico 0
South Carolina 14, Oklahoma State 16
Littlest man on field sets rushing record
By MIKE EARLE
Associate Sports Editor
Associate Sports Edito
At 5-4feet and 175 pounds, Syracuse tailback Joe Morris, doesn't stack up to Orangmen alum, Larry Cuska, a big tulunk in the twilight of his career.
But after his performance in Syracuse's 45-27 victory over KU Saturday, Morris ran right past Csanoka and into the Syracuse record books.
MORRIS ALSO earned a spot in KU's record book. His 525 yards is the highest of any player for KU since 1941 when Missouri's Harry Ice ran for 218. Fifteen years ago, little, who finished his pro career at Denver, set the league high with 67 points and most touchdowns (5) against KU.
Morris, who rushed for 252 yards on 23 carries, broke the single game rushing record Csonka set in 1965 with 216 yards on 26 arrests against West Virginia. Syracuse, which came into the season ranked 140 of the 20 winning college football teams, has had a number of outstanding running backs, including Jim Brown, Floyd Little and Jamie Nance.
Upon learning of his record breaking performance in the Syracuse locker room after the game, Morris put on a few more moves to dodge tables, benches, and writers to give each of his offensive lineman a chance to quickly start to downlay his achievements.
"I HMAPP, but I'm a little down about the first half," Morris, who fumbled the ball twice said. "Pumples hit me. I up but I am not going to play." I have laingamed this many yards.
"he makes me buy a lot easier," Harur said. "I haven't seen billy Sims and Charles White play except in highlight films, but I'm confident Joe can play with anybody."
Syracuse quarterback Bill Hurley, who was rated 19th in the nation in total offense coming into Saturday's game, said he could live with Morris' two fumbles.
"He has confidence, tremendous speed, balance and a lot of intensity. You package all that and you have a great running back."
The current Heisman Trophy holder, Sims of Oklahoma, and White of USC are considered the premier running backs in the league. Morris doesn't compare himself to them.
"If I compared myself with them it would take away from my game," Morris said. "Our schedule is a lot different than OU's and UCS, and until the day they play against teams like them, I won't know how I can." I don't have that skill, I'm Joe Morris."
KU's defense found that out. Lining up in formation, Hurley simply handed the ball to Rizzo and hit him with the speedster pick his hole. The play resulted in Morris averaging 10.9 yards a drill.
"Joe doesn't usually fumble pitchouts," he said. "He's the best in formance. This week he was rated 48th or 11th in the nation in rushing, and he'll surely move up. You can't beat him. He doesn't go up."
And Orangement Coach Frank Maloney is more than satisfied with Morris' style.
"THEY JUST CAME at us with a simple football ball and killed us with it," he said. "I was not alone. Single-handedly he just about beat us. Once he got the ball, we were in the secondary."
Only a sophomore, Morris is already mentioned in the same breath as Heisman Trophy by his teammates. Saturday's giveaway gave Morris 68 yards after five games.
ALTHOUGH SYRACUSE'S schedule doesn't compare with KU's in difficulty, Morris said the Orangen deserve national recognition.
"This is our greatest win," Morris said. "All of us were tired, and we came back to win. It was an emotional football game."
"I feel we can score with anybody," Morris said. "If we correct our errors we're going to win a lot of ball games."
"He was just hard to bring down. I never got him down."
Chiefs win third in row, move into first-place tie
The Bengals' scoring was limited to Ken Anderson's three-yard touchdown run in the third period on a drive that ended with a 29-10 loss recovered a fumble by Ted McKnight.
CINCINNATI (AP)—Kansas City lost to North Carolina 10-7, not beaten the Chiefs did well enough defeat the Cincinnati Bengals 10-7 in their National Football League game
"We sputtered quite a bit offensively, but we came up with enough to win," Kansas City Coach Marv Levy said. "We made it all the way and we got the 10 and they beat the seven."
Rookie running back Mike Williams dove one mile into the Bengal end zone for a Kansas City touchdown, and Jan Stenerluck kicked a 49-field goal.
Williams' tochown capped a 48-yard drive late in the first half and Stenner gave the Chiefs a 10-1 lead with five seconds left in the half.
It was the third straight victory for the Chiefs, 4-2, and the sixth consecutive loss for Cincinnati.
Kansas City got the ball back when the
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE AMERICAN CONFERENCE Foot
It's tough losing week after week, but "it you've have to keep going," Cincinnati Coach Honner Rice said. "I told the team. You're never defended unless you
W | T | W | P | Pct. | PF | PA
Miami | 1 | 0 | 0 | .687 | 24 | 14
New England | 1 | 0 | 0 | .687 | 24 | 14
Buffalo | 1 | 0 | 0 | .500 | 154 | 114
Washington | 1 | 0 | 0 | .533 | 154 | 114
Baltimore | 1 | 0 | 0 | .533 | 154 | 114
Cleveland Pittsburgh Cleveland Houston Cincinnati
Denver 4 2 0 667 86 61
Kansas City 4 2 0 667 113 87
San Diego 4 2 0 667 142 88
Oakland 4 2 0 667 188 89
Seattle 4 2 0 333 182 147
Bengals were unable to move, and started a scoring drive on the Bengals' 48-yard line.
The key play in that series was a 31-yard pass from Steve Feller to T.J. Smith. Two plays later, Williams dove in from the 1-yard line for the touchdown.
The Bengals still could not move the ball on the ensuing kickoff and Kansas City City's 14-3 victory in cinnamon 28-yard line, where the ball was snapped. Stoneerbourn's field goal goal flew 150 yards.
The Bengals finally scored on their third possession in the third quarter, after RIGHT Browner recovered tightly's tumble at the Chelfs' 39-yard line.
Anderson capped the eight-play drive with a quarterback draw for the final three yards.
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Dallary 0 1 0 833 149 113
Philadelphia 2 1 0 833 121 109
Washington 2 1 0 663 121 109
N.J. Ganda 2 1 0 663 121 109
N.J. Ganda 2 1 0 167 75 122
Tampa Bay 3 1 0 833 133 82
Chicago 3 1 0 500 48 60
Minnesota 3 1 0 300 107 102
Green Bay 3 1 0 868 86 12
San Francisco 3 1 0 182 182
Los Angeles 4 2 0 667 119 111
Atlanta 3 2 0 567 119 111
New Orleans 2 2 0 333 118 114
San Francisco 2 0 0 600 117 172
Chicago | Buffalo
Minneapolis | Orlando 17
Alabama City | 15 Green Bay 27
Atlanta | St. Louis 14
New York Giants | 17 Tampa Bay 14
Louisville | 14 Louisville 14
Kansas City | Chicago 18
Kanada City | Cleveland 16
Detroit | Dallas 10
Miami Dade | Miami 16
Baltimore | 15 New York Jets 18
Baltimore | 15 Detroit 18
San Francisco | San Francisco 14
Miami at Oakland. n
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weekend Roundup
Men harriers repeat finish
In a repeat of last year's meet, the KU men's cross-country team finished in fifth place at Arkansas at the Okahoma State Jamboree Saturday in Oklahoma, OK.
Field Hockey club loses to KC
Arkansas won the meet with 23 points and KU followed with 65, while Oklahoma was a distant third with 104 points.
The KU football hockey team started off fast, but it was the Kansas City Field Hockey Club that off to the race yesterday. Kansas City beat KU 4-1 in the final game.
Hardy five minutes had elapsed before Ellen Jaskot, with assists by Janice and Karen Lauen, scored for KU. With the exception of a few scramblers in front of the Kansas City goal, the rest of the game was controlled by the Kansas team and they needed two goals in the first half and two more in the second to drop KU's record to 1-7.
"We started off great," KU coach Dianna Beebe said. "We did just what we'd been practicing and then disaster struck."
"We had a very bad tendency to set up and whack the ball as hard as we can, and then nobody's sun there to get it."
Jauvees lose to Missouri 16-7
The KU junior varsity football team had just as much trouble over the weekend as the parent club. Missouri triumphed the 'Hawks 16-7 Friday in Canton.
Early in the fourth quarter, KU made its run at the Tigers. Brad Bulls rammed five yards for a touchdown and Dusen Munger connected on the extra kick.
But Marvin Johnson ran three yards for a Tiger touchdown with 6:41 left to play, clinching the Missouri victory. The Tigers are 2-4 in junior varsity action
Mossi snared a 3-4 lead in the second quarter on Terry Harris' 22-yard field goal. The Tigers' next score came on KU's first possession of the second half. Defensive back Jay Wilson picked off quarterback Mike Philips' pass and ran 18 yards for a touchdown.
'Hawks split with Creighton
The KU football team split a doubleheader Saturday with Crighton University at Holcom Sports Complex.
at the center openers on offense:
The 'Hawks won the opener 4-3 in 10 innings. Darla Johnson, 1-1, picked up the
victory.
In the second game, the Blue Jays rebounded for a 4-2 victory, Jill Larson, 0-1.
Bob Stancifl said, "Game experience is so important, and with a young team, you have to look ahead.
With the split, KU's recoil of 24. Becky Ancio, a freshman from Sunny Valley, Ca., is the team's leading hitter with a 388 average.
Monday, October 8, 1979
Athletics...
"THE WOMEN came out basically equal to men as far as funding of the championships is concerned," she said.
7
From page one
Because of the difference between NCAA and AIAW rules, the committee must develop event rules, she said.
Howlett said that if the Big Eight stayed in women's athletics it eventually would get involved in several new areas.
"For one thing the Big Eight will have to make regulations concerning the eligibility of participants. The committee of the conference may have to get involved in the scheduling of schools to assure consistent attendance."
University Daily Kansan
have to set qualifying standards for certain events and championships."
Protest...
HOWLETT SAID that she did not doubt that other conferences would take steps toward sponsoring women's athletics desiate AIAW objections.
From Page one
Curtis, Heinhardt, general manager of Opera House Investments, Inc., said final arrangements for rental fees for using the Opera House would be made today.
Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St., where marchers would eat box lunches and hear speakers and entertainers.
"We're talking about a movement that is counter to the AIAW," Hollaw said. "We tell them we don't want conferences and many conferences are wondering if they can exist without getting involved in women's athletics because they must comply with the rules of competition between men's and women's athletics.
SenEx questions video procedure
Showalter in INCAR and the Progressive Labor Party, a Marxist-Leninist group, would begin the protest with him from Kansas City, Mo., to Lawrence.
SPECIFIC SITES along the march route, Showalter said, will be the Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., which is displaying items from the time of Quanitil's raid on Lawrence in 1853, and the recruiting office, 800 Massachusetts St.
Staff Reporter
By DAVID LEWIS
KU students and faculty received adequate consultation before the interim videadepartment policy on University public affairs. KU was also the executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
Some members of the University Senate executive committee said Friday that the policy was formulated without student or faculty consultation.
The interim videotaping policy, which issued by the University's campus, grants the right to videotape any University event and to use the evidence for criminal prosecution, was approved by KU officials.
Shankel said there was an understanding between the administration and SenEx concerning the videotaping issue.
"It was our understanding that the widening matter had been referred to Secretary of State, Roberts," Human Relations committee," he said. "He just made these interim guidelines for us."
"We want videotaping to be used openly. We are not trying to fool anyone."
EVELYN SWARTZ, professor of curriculum and instruction and a member
of SenEx, said yesterday that the faculty and students had not been consulted on the videotaping matter since last spring when the committee agreed to correspond to the Human Relations committees.
The temporary guidelines state that the police's right to videotape a public event" will be exercised with discretion, "and that any officer who goes out in an assault and nonassessive manner."
"That doesn't mean to me that we were consulted on the interim policy," she said.
SENEX VOTED Friday to invite Shankel to its next meeting to discuss the interim guidelines and the procedures to implement them.
"I would be glad to accept an invitation to the meeting." Shankel said.
The University of Kansas had purchased videolapping equipment after former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's speech was disrupted April 6, 1978. The University was demonstrators then, but continued to videotape demonstrations since the Rabin incident.
SenEx members contended that although the guidelines were temporary, the administration should have consulted the students and faculty.
and faculty were not consulted, even if these guidelines are interim," Swartz said Friday.
"I think it's regrettable that the students
Lawrence Sherr, professor of business and a member of SenEx, said the clause in the policy that said the videoting of an artist is exercised with discretion was too vague.
The Association of American University professors has voiced opposition to videotaping any University public event.
"This opposes . . . the use of videotaping as a tool in 'freedom of expression' in the name of protection this frees我们 from the appropriate tool for University authorities."
However, Shankel said videotaping was a necessary part of the University's security procedures.
THE AUAP ADOPTED a resolution May 6 that said, "The Chapter is unquebly opposed to videotaping by University for purposes other than instruction."
"The various faculty and campus these students attend wouldn't identify the persons who disrupted Rabin's speech," he said. "If we would have videotaped education, we would have told them."
In other business, SenEx appointed a committee on financial exigency, which will review KU's definition of exigency and compare it to the Regents definition.
Financial exigency may be declared when budget difficulties arise and the release of tenured faculty is necessary.
SOME FACULTY members have said the Regents definition was too vague, and if it conflicted with KU's definition, would limit the effectiveness of KU's definition.
The Regents policy, approved Sept. 21, says, "It will be the responsibility of the chief executive officer of each Regents institution, in consultation with appropriate staff and faculty, to plan for reductions in personnel as necessitated by conditions of financial exigency."
KU's policy states that the release of tenured faculty is to be used "only as a last resort after all possible alternatives have in good faith been examined, and utilized or
The committee's three members are Joel Gold, professor of English; Robert Frifan, professor of physics and astronomy; and Robert Schutz, professor of social welfare.
The committee will report back to SenEx. Its report will be placed on the agenda for the University Council's meeting Nov. 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
Daily fees for
three times:
$1.00 three
times $2.50 four
times five six
seven eight nine
ten ten
Fond additional fee
total additional fee
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ERRORS
Monday Thursday 9 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 9 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 9 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 9 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in newspapers or simply displayed at the UB emergency number 44348.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 844-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also roasted salad and peanut sauce. Taste of the summer: yellow and white peapow, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday in woodland crates. Herald伯利特, ed.
Friday and Saturday
Don't miss
Doors open at
8.00, show at 9.00
THE JEWS
Lawrence
Opera House
Every Sunday.
Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. tt
Watch for truck past at 9th & Illinois. Home of the World Famous (Jayhawk Fondles and the Caterpillar) Also served, Roasted, and Raw Pumpkin yellow and white poppy, honey, and sagebrush
INTRAMURAL
SWIMMING and DIVING
MEET
DEADLINE MONDAY 5:00 p.m.
208 Robinson
COMPETITION BEGINS
TUESDAY OCT. 9th
AT 7:30 p.m.
Rec Services
208 Robinson
864-354G
9R
PAPER BACK SALES ALL of 15 nationally
branded paper backs sold at Kohl's,
KOOKSLELL all of our 50,000 paperbacks are
price-free have been and always will be
Come in June at bookstore 140 at Muni 10
11-28
**Blue Monday**, but the Harbour Likes in a first-class cruise so join us for $18 per客车 and can beat between 7-9 pm. You will own an船 and stay together at the Harbour 103 Mass.
Zen practice night—6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Seng Saun, Gown from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21.
N62-7520 for information.
DISCO SUCKS BUCKS be a member of the ANTI-
TEMPTATION DISCO SUCCESS MENADE, diners
bachelor, diner devel, and much
Membership for $50. Send to Anti-Disco League
and the WORLD KNOW YOU LOVE ROCK! HOLL
1-800-349-2777
ENTERTAINMENT
Tonight
Triumph
Eddie and the Hot Rods
One show only
Do not open at
9:00 am or
10:00 pm
adm. admin.
$2.50
club membership.
Opera House
call for concert tickets
492 4920
Dawn open at
$3.00
8:00 show at $9.00
lawrence house
$2.50
club mum
contact number 42720
FOR RENT
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT:
Fifth month's rent, $250. Five-months rent,
uninsured, from $170.
Two nursery rooms, large unfurnished,
with NICDOR HEATED
appointed apartment in R-4146 or
appointed room in C-4146.
FOR SALE
Beautiful, new 2 dkm, apt. completely equipped kitchen. 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone: 811-697-5100.
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. tf
Roommate need to share four bedroom duplex.
Roommate month + 1/4 utilise *Bell roommate*
month - 1/4 utilise *Bell roommate*
10-9
1-3 bedroom apartments, homes, mobile homes,
call 811-6254 or 842-4065.
10-31
SunSpees—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1212 Mass. 841-5700. TF
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $38.98, 3 year guarantee; WHITE LIGHT, 94 MA, P43-198, TUF
Dressers, picture frames, chair's small couch, tables,告示牌-tables, 1025 MA, Open daily.
2 bedroom townhouse, 1½ bath, unfurnished.
Meadowbrook Regency Place. Close to campus,
on bus route. Call 841-4122 or rental office 842-
4200.
10-12
FOR SALE
Two bdmr. unfurnished apt. near KU. Pool, CA.
ele. kitchen, laundry. WW carpeting. Evenings.
814-6838.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sense of Western history with these ten issues in a study guide, 21 preparation. Prepare, preparation. "New York Press." Preparation. At town crier, Male Bookstore and Oread Book Store at Town Crier, Male Bookstore and Oread Book Store.
Alternator, starter and generator specailities.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 342-508-3900, 390 W, 6th ht.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 342-508-3900, 390 W, 6th ht.
Very nice two bedroom mobile home. C.A. dishwasher, washers, dryer, appliances skirted, decked, 8-by-10 bed. burner. #432. 3232, table. #42. 100
Have the New York Times delivered to your home or apartment every Sunday afternoon.
Please call 432-8481. 10-9
Ten speed bike. Small frame. Save gas at a good price. Best offer. Call A61 at 894-2134.
1972 WS Super Belle, Rebuilt engine, radial tire, run good. Good mileage. K46 - 8523.
www.wssuperbelle.com
1924 Ford Torino. Gold and Gold. Two-door.
842-8800. Good car—good price Call: Cail
10-11
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Pouch Mopeda
Rick's Bike涨店, 1033 Vernon, 841-6442
QUANTHILL'S FLEE MARKET—the aaest's best collection of antiques and old-modern books. Art gallery, art deco, comic books, coins, lamps, clocks, art cards, and hundreds of other interesting collectibles. And hundreds of other interesting collectibles. Open every Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Your friends and family before the game. Open every Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.
United Air Lines 50% discount coupon, $50; car
top carrier $30, 84-284. 10-9
Motorecycle 175-1925 Kawasaki 125 Endura, only 200 miles must sell, $350. Call Rick Bick 842-807-101.
Large four wheel set, $350. Call 842-806-108. 5-four p.m.
1978 Yamaha 600cc. Excellent condition, mechanically and cosmetically. Has received good maintenance. 841-7964 after 5.90. 10-11
1979 Trans A. T-ip, loaded, automatic, low
miles. warranty. $160 off list. B132-925 10-mi
Dictaphone, Paymaster, 50 clamatel and a number
28 rpm records. Conso Drum and a recording
studio, phone 841-4822 - keepying) 10-8
condition, $200. Call 843-8417 after 5 p.m.
condition, $120. Call 843-8417 after 5 p.m.
Beautiful 84 brick and frame racker-hatch
oil course firm. Full hallway. In Country Club
office. Bathroom. Formal entrance. Call
call ion Ranney-炉房, 841-2900-house, 843-
8417-office.
Two twin mattresses and box springs. Excellent
materials, excellent sheets, and
coverings. Call 512-823-4286. Ask for dill
A room sized rug, several old quilts. Emerald City Antiques. 415 N. 2nd. 10-9
HELP WANTED
74 Vea—excellent condition—to sell immediately
call 842-2325 after 7 p.m. 10-11
1973 Maverick 4 dr, low miles, new paint, excellent condition, Call Dave or Mike at 843-6226.
10-11
1966 Mustang-automatic, new brakes and paint.
clean and dependable! Call Mike at 843-6236
10-11
1978 Delta 88 Old- Excellent condition.
everything must sell $500. $4306 - 88- 10- 12
The image contains no text content. It appears to be a blank or empty space with no discernible information.
New Sony micro cassette tape recorder, rechargeable battery pack. MC power adapter, 50-10 hour timer, hand-held and dial equipped with speaker, earpiece. Earphones 10-12
0833
Must still furnish condition shear. Squip Amp. 800
(wooder, mid-range, tweeless) excellent con-
duction. Pt. tumbleable-free with purchase $900
or best offer. Call after 5-124-1031-5231.
RCA victor 19 inch portable black and white television set. Call 841-0358 after 4:00 p.m. 10:12
FOUND
Female Calico kitten, about 4 months old—near
GSP-Corbin. Call and identify 864-1673. 10-8
Set of keys w large "D", found between Lindley Hall and Hoch. Call 864-1576, 10-9
Keys=40h floor of Wescoe, call and identify=
843-1907 10-9
Ladies glasses faced North of Military Science building and identify 864-4291 or 864-1093 10-9
Speech Communication book found Tuesday
night 8 p.m. outside Wesco cafeteria by the
phone. Call 843-9467.
10-10
HELP WANTED
Wanted: Hard-working, dedicated individuals to become student management for the football and basketball teams; a good opportunity to join a growing athletic program. Travel Contact Mike Hill in room II41 at the Air Force Base in San Diego.
Part time assistant to throw papers and help distranger管理 with KC Star circulation in Lawrence Area, pay $4 hour and 15/mile. Come in person to 932 Mxs. **10-9**
Earn as much as $500 per 1000 stuffed envelopes with our circulars. For information: Pentax Enterprise, Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 45042
10-16
THE MOFFET-BEERS HAND in now holding auditions for male vocal键盘 player, vocalist guitar, or overtail ladder. Serious inquiries only. M12-51068, 813-9234, 814-9291.
$10 per hour if you qualify. No experience required. Requires a Master's degree or food opportunity for advanced education willing to work and apply themselves. If you are interested in the Restaurant 1237 W. Court, Attendance: 10-12 PM
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place,
Boston, MA. Requests for applicants available to us up to $250 million Experiential Work Package. Please submit a work with adolescent youth preferred. Gain work with adolescent youth preferred. Gain work with adolescent youth preferred. Gain work with adolescent youth preferred. Gain work with adolescent youth preferred.
Bureau of Child Research is an equal opportunity employer. Contact Margaret Milledge at Achievement Place, 477-691-3481 or mgmilledge@babycenter.org.
The Department of Microbiology, University of Colorado at Boulder is offering a Search Assistant to begin on or, upon death. Offer includes a Bachelor's degree in chemical immunochemical and in vitro cell biotechnology, an equivalent experience in Microbiological, or equivalent experience in Microbiological, or qualified. The appointment will be for a minimum of 52 months, with compensation in education and training expenses. Action Employer Qualified disability Advantage: Action Employee Qualified disability disabilities are encouraged to apply to USC.
Part-time dilding and cleaning help, 11 p.m.
2-4 pm. Mon, thru Fri. Apply in person only
at Border Bandids. 1238 W. 21rd. 10-16
Wear early mornings.
MEN! WOMEN! JOBS! CRUISERSHIPS! SARING
EXPIRATIONS! You expect a good pay!
Escape No. Pacific! World! Seattle! Skate
WORLD L3, Box 40129, Sacramento, CA 85600.
Baker waited, early morning hours. Apply before
twelve 11 p.m. on Friday. Sibship. 530 W. In-
flection Avenue.
10-10
Pizza Hall-W. We are now increasing applications for the Pizza Hall Restaurant, 1060 W. 22nd St. 10-9
Wanted to associate college students women to start distribution of information known as artisanal pizza. Send resumes to Better Homes and Gardens Craft Creation, Inc., 545 N. 38th Street, train, good money, Call Bill 824-6927. 10-9
Assistant Needed: must be available to time tutors, school break baskets, and summer tutors.
Nominee Manager, 1060 W. 22nd St. Annelise Murnauer School, 1060 W. 22nd St. Annelise Murnauer School, 1060 W. 22nd St.
OVERSEAS JOB- SUMMER year round, Europe,
N. America, Australia, summer all, All Eds. Bills:
$120, $180 expands expertise, Free
expenses IAC, IEC Box 524, Coastal De-
tai C92236 CA 92236
DRUMMERS Thumbus auditioning—days, call
842-1014 or mail 842-1014 for Mary K.
Kentley, 842-767-952 or 842-767-952
DISCO D1 and sound system for the CSOK Hockey Decade, Dance. Nine, 3. 2015 with own system preformed. System must be powerful enough for a team of four players. Box O, K Munson, Unison, before Oct. 15. 10-11
Kitchen help, waits and waitresses need for get-together employment. Apply in person, between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m., at Job Center, Inc., 506 Washington St., N.W., Washington, DC 20007.
LOST
Two weeks ago, Red and blue plaid umbrellas in Science Museum. Summertime value. Inward rotation.
Lost class ring in 4th floor men's room of Wescoe Hall on 9-25 Call 8634-2319 4. Reward 10-12
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS SENIOR COPYING - The House of Udice's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for those books and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 85 MHz of phone 436-310-7000.
NOTICE
Roswell Now! **In Lawrence driving school;** receive driving license in 4 weeks without high-speed patrol test: Transportation provided, drive new car later. 822-0155. 10-12
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS
“SONGS FOR
EVERY OCCASION”
birthday, anniversary,
get well, congratulations.
841-8515
secret admirer, and more!
Lawrence Johannesek Club will meet at next Wednesday (April 21) for the Double County 4-H Fairground. The club will be made up of former members and is headed by Major Bob Savellich, Commander of the program with included demonstrations. The public program will include demonstrations.
Have you traveled to other countries? We invite you to show your slides and talk about your trip. Monday evenings, 7:00 p.m., at the Center, 1829 W. Ith Street (1 block west of Oliver). 10-8
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid, 861-564. If
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—Nurseries up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling. Total Ligation. For appointment with Dr. Thomas St. Bernard, 401-690-4811 St. Overland Park, KS.
TENNIS AND RAQUETTA PLAYERS. When was the last time you had your raquet strong? No, not yet. Try it now. Alum, and Official Stinger WG Tweet K.C. Very reasonable rates on good strings and K.C.
ARE YOU READY? The 2nd annual JAYHAVN JOG is AT 21: 179, 10.000 meter run Contact GAMMA PHI BHETA 843-6232 or PHI KAPPA PSI 843-2653 for registration. 10-12
PSYCHIC AWARENESS CLASS. learn about
anxiety, energy centers, healing, spirit guild,
thursday evenings, starting Oct. 11. Call Eve
Lesnarden 812-7421
10-10
If you are looking for a car with cheap beef pool fun, the Harbour Life is it. You'll probably people you'll like from the Harbour Life. It has the said Friday afternoons for TGIF! Now invites you to try their new Harbour Life Car with your ship together at The Harbour Life Getaway.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid - 804-5564 if
JOBS ON SHIPS! American, Foreign. No experience. Excellent job. Workward, travelable. Career. Served $40 for information. SEAFARP. B1st, B2nd. 869-750-3988. Washington, WASHINGTON 10:17
The Hope Award: For special teachers only.
Seniors—vote Monday and Tuesday for your favorite.
SENIORS! Hope Award voting Monday and Tuesday 9-3-30. Boosts at Summerfield, Wesco, Kansas University
The KU GO CLUB meeting every Tuesday 7-10 p.m. Cock-2, Union 843-3477. 10-12
GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through Head-
quarters, 814-2345 and KU info. 864-3506. . . . . .
Hello Baby. Have a festive Viceminal Natal Day.
how gree? QTPI and Disco. 10-8
If you are interested in playing SCRABLE, call
SUA 844-3471, Emily 843-6925, Tonìa 843-3910.
DILTA HC PRESIDENT—Even though it was a year ago, I thought that you would like to know. I've said it was you indeed of another that I hate and of my big brother. I love the Chin Annex. 10-8
An informal Tarah study group, including philology of Jewish observance in meeting weekly on Wednesdays 2:30-3:30 p.m. in the Union. For more info contact Judith P. Smith. 861-324-7988.
Mary J—Got a whole Thanksgiving vacation and nothing to do. Got any suggestions? Steve. 10-15
Short of time? W'll write those letters to mom, your friend, or a hot and jaupy letter to boss. I'll write a simple reply to Business letters too. Most dates and excellent calls. Call 864-2566 for more info. 10-11
A chance to meet people an opportunity to burn, and a kind of fun! Operation Friendship, every Monday evening at 7:00 p.m. at the Center, 1629 W. 19th (1 block W of Oliver), 10-8
ABB minus B plus S. It's T minus one day to flaffdog. 10-11
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Garage-complete professional bicycle repair. Garage specialty—"Tumors-Ups" and "Total Overgrowths." Details call 841-2781. 10-22
EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 call 824
7583. MATH 111-750 call 824. STATISTICS
824. MATH 111-750 call 824. ENGINEERING
7583. PHYSICS 100-500 call 824. ENGLISH
AND SPANISH 842-1926.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Herun Quack Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 am to 1 PM on Saturday at 893 Mats.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES. Send $190 for your 308-page catalog of college research. 10,250 topics listed. BOX 505K7 Los Angeles, CA, 90253. (213) 477-8286. 11-7
SPANISH TUTORING. Experienced teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108, 109, 111, 112, 116. Call M41-2467. TF
Need Body Work? We can shape up your ear with dermat repair, rust removal, and a new coat of paint. Will also tune up and winterize your heels at 843-6258. We'll wear you back!
SERVICES OFFERED
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TF
1 do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
TYPING
Excellent dee-jay with sound equipment for your private parties. Very competitive prices. 841-8198, after six. 10-12
Experienced Typist—term papers, thesis, mite,
electric IBM Solicite. Proofreading proofed
corrected. 843-954 Mrs. Wright. TP
Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work.
reasonable rate. Send resume to welcome calls.
Call Down 842-9127
Experienced typist—Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 843-3910. TF
Journalism typographer. 20 years typing; typed-
ing experience. 4 years academic typing; thesis,
dissections for 10 universities. Latest
Solicitee number. 842-4684.
Experimented typit-theses, dissertations, term-
labors and selection selective bata-
684-3138, evenings 842-2310
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct Selective Calc.
11-5
Nerd some typing then? Quality work, low rates.
Contactd in Clay 843-8654, mo 4, p 28-
MASTERFIELDS professional typing. Fast, aequ
spelling. Spelling, grammar corrected. Ea
843-1387
I do darned good typing. Papers under 50 p.
only. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6428, 85e per
10-17
All kinds of typing, expertly done. fast, accurate service, low rates. 843-3653 evenings and 80-22
WANTED
Home for calico kitten. She loves people. Call
843-8509. 10-9
Nied nature, rominate to house a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. But stop in steps, have a pool and laundry room one block away. $155 plus utilities. Please call between 9:30 p.m. & 8:41 p.m.
Need to buy TIFS WEEK-USED bird cage for two hamsters. Call 843-4867. 10-8
Roommate wanted to share two bedroom apt.
Keep calling 842-0575. 10-10
WANTED TO BUY more or less 2 cu. ft. refrigerator, 842-1703 or 844-6724. Farnes. 10
Permit: roommate to share nice jadehawk Tower
Apt. $105 monthly, call 842-2877. It's cheaper than the dorm, quieter, and it's better food.
in. 11
I interested in sharing a nice looking app, with other student students preferably already furnished. Must be nice looking app. Call Paul 842-10421, please leave message.
Mature rootmate necessary for very nice three b-droom duplex. 15 min. walk from campus. $100 month + 1/2 utilities. Call 841-3205 after 6 p.m.
Someone to do part time sewing. Pay negotiable.
Call 841-2904. 10-10
Roommate wanted for beautifully furnished 3 bedroom house $75 per month 1.3 tilt units 1.6 ft wide
7
AD DEADLINES
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DONT.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan
Classifieds sells it. Just mail
in this form with check or
money order to 111 Flint
below to figure costs. Now you've got it!
Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
Monday 5 pm
Tuesday 4 pm
Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday 5 pm
Monday 5 pm
Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday 5 pm
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:
___
___
___
___
___
___
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additional words
RATES:
15 words or less
1 time
2 times
3 times
4 times
5 times
`~90`
8.25
8.25
8.50
8.75
8.75
8.30.00
8.30.00
3
times
$2.50
.07
2 times 3 times 4 times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75
.02 .03 .04
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.50
DATES TO RUN:
DATES TO RUN:
NAME: _
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
KANSAM CLASSIFIED—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
8
Monday, October 8, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Apple picking accents autumn
By PAMELA LANDON Staff Reporter
Seven children roll, tumble and jump out of the blue van as it pulls into the driveway
Three women follow, carrying baskets, cardboard boxes and buckets.
The children run and skip ahead to a flatbed trailer hitched behind a faded tractor.
THE APPLE TREE
Apple harvest
Courier Yeager, Endorn, does her own apple picking, tossing the apples down to her son Coleinick Gréchard's Grechard. Although the apples hibernate at almost no, the orchard, four miles from Courier Yeager, is filled with fruit.
headmasters
809 Vermont 843-2608
HAIR and SKIN CARE
Mini Sal 10-6
841-4430
1000 headmasters
next to Cleveland Leans
The Castle Tea Room
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STUDIO ONE
HAIR DESIGNERS
Today's Hair Care Center
843-2229
2323 Ridge Court
Several adults on the trailer look at the excited youngsters and share a mutual smile.
"We're gonna' pick apples! This is gonna' be fun!" the children shout as they clamber onto the trailer.
"Wait *or* us!" a blonde, ponytailed girl shouts.
NATIONAL LAMPOON'S
The tractor snorts, the trailer jurches and "here we go," someone says. The orchard lies just ahead.
Mary Davenport, owner of Davenport Orchards, situated four miles east of Lawrence on old Highway 10, said for that customer apple-picking was family event.
*(the adults)* like to come out to the orchard and pick their apples. They have a choice of kinds and can eat what they want. The kids have fun riding the flat rock," she said.
HER "15" OR SO "s" trees offer a choice of Jonathon, Red Delicious or Yellow Delicious ants.
Davenport said the Jonathon was a popular apple and good for baking, frying or making pies.
"If you prefer a sweeter apple you get the Red or Yellow Delicious. The Yellow Delicious also makes good pies," she said.
Davenport charges her customers 12 cents a pound for the apples. She said the season for fall apples usually lasted through September and part of October.
DAVENTPON SAID she could sell the apples nicely because she and her grandson, Grace Shipe, Lawrence senior, have no hired at the orchard.
The average customer buys a bushel or a bushel-and-a-half, she said. A bushel of apples weighs about 48 pounds.
"We're not making a lot money, but if we had to pay to have the apples picked, that would be a lot more money for the customers more," she said. "If the customers are willing to pick them, they will."
COMEDY
NATIONAL
LAMPOON
DEC. 13TH
8:00 PM
THE BEATLES WILL REMAIN THE MASTERS
NOT ON THIS ASSET!
KENNIE BELISGUN
LEFT CENTER
BARRY KAHMBAH
STEVE MARTIN
Eva Davis, Lawrence, said she came to the orchard because apples in the grocery stores were more expensive and were not as fresh as orchard apples.
"Besides, I just like to pick'em. As long as my "daddy" was living, we always had an orchard," she said.
She said her favorite apple was the Jonathon and said she planned to cut up her apples for apple pie filling.
SHARON BURNS, Eudora, said she came to the orchard because the apples were cheaper and because "it makes you appreciate nature more."
It's October and the leaves are turning brown. It is a season of change – the cold, dead寒冬 of winter shines ahead of us. We need to be ready for it with the snow, and roll our cars over on patches of black ice. Winter anticipation and good jokes sure to be as scarce as summer birds, now is the time to lay in a winter's supply of mulch. The National Lampoon Comedy issue has enough rich, pimp guffaws to keep you短小 right into it. So go buy one now at your local newsstand or bookstore. You can start nipping people's noses, making it a pain to go outside.
"I'll be back next Saturday," many of the customers tell Davenport as they leave.
Davenport tells them they can pick again on Oct. 13.
Hair Designs
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Evenings:
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THE BEST FROM MILWAUCOI
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
"TEN'
"MONTY PYTHON'S
'LIFE OF BRIAN'"
Granada
Commercial 215-308
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat-Sun 2:1n
Varsity
Hilcrest
St. Louis, Missouri
1. "ANIMAL HOUSE"
Eve 7:30 8:30
Sat Sun 1:30
2. "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS"
Eve 7:40 8:40
Sat Sun 1:45
1. STARTING OVER
Eve 7.30 & 9.50 Sat Sun 1.30
2. "THE SEDUCTION OF JOE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Main information Main information
17.89.61.81.41.41 17.89.61.81.41.41
Cinema Twin
G. LOVE AND BULLETS
Eve, 7:45 & 9:45 Sat Sun 2:00
1. "STARTING OVER"
On Campus
Sat Sun 2:00
TYNAN"
Ever 7.15 & 9.30 Sat Sun 1.15
TODAY: WOMEN GRADUATE
STUDENTS information lunchroom will be at noon in Cork Room One of the Kansas Union
UNIVERSITY OF STATES AND ASTRONORMAL COLLOQUY
Functions for Magnetic Plasmas in Dwarfs and Neutron Stars*, at 4:30 p.m. in room 138 of Malot Hall, will feature Terry Dawson and the University of Missouri at Columbia.
TONGHT; RECREATION SERVICES
INTRAMURAL SWIMMING AND DIVING
ENTRY AND MEET will be at 5 a.m. in Robinson
Natatorium. DISCUSSION CLUB will meet
at 6 in the English Room of the Union. **AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL** will meet at 7:30 in the International Room of the Union. Emeritus Professor Klaus Berger will present "The History of Japanism" at 8 in the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium. A POETRY HEADING by Mora Van Duyp, an acclaimed writer of the Union. TWO WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM FESTIVAL films. "Black History: Lost, *Sbilen or Strayed*" and "I Have a Dream." Biography of Martin Luther King Jr., shown at 7:30 in room 3 of Old Green Hall.
Prof to discuss symbols
Humberto Ec, secretary of the International Association for Semiotic Studies, will discuss the use of symbols in the field and how to tomorrow in Kansas Union Forum Room 105.
The speech will be the first of the humanities lecture series sponsored by the KU Center for Humanistic Studies.
Semiotics is the study of different cultures and their use of symbols instead of words to convey meanings, Robert Spires, lecture series director, said Friday.
Examples of cultures using symbols, Spires said, were shown in research ECO had done with primitive tribes in Africa, Asia and South America.
In one tribe Eco studied, the number three was incorporated prominently into its souls. The tribes used three subjects, its houses used three subjects, its houses used three subjects to support them and three gods were supported.
KU sophomore commits suicide
Sanders said the cause of death was wounds to the head inflicted by a .12 gauge shotgun.
David Shull, Lenexa sophomore, was discovered by his roommate in the upstairs bedroom of their residence at 1019 Kentucky at about 6:30.m., police said.
A 21-year-old KU student shot and killed himself Saturday night, according to Douglas County Coroner Alan Sanders.
Shall's death was the eighth suicide in Lawrence this year, a police spokesman said. There have been 17 attempted suicides this year, he said.
Are you interested in the power of the
HOLY SPIRIT?
Come find out every Tuesday 7:30 pm Regionalist Room KU Student Union
Sponsored by Mustard Seed Fellowship
"Are you thinking about grad school in Psychology?
Questions?
Worries?
Con cerns?"
Need to plan ahead?
Come to the Psi Chi/Psychology
Club Meeting today. Oct. 8th 3:30
p.m. Room 4 Fraser Hall
Let a grad student tell you how it really is.
Eco, who also is a professor of semiotics at the University of Bologna, Italy, has written two books and several magazine articles about semiotics.
His books are A Theory of Semiotics" and "The Role of the Reader.
The next humanities lecture will be Oct. 18 when novelist Burgess will speak on "The Daily Damnation of the Novelist."
Overdose blamed for grad student's death
the death of a KU graduate student Thursday morning is being termed a presumptive accidental overdose. Alan Douglas County coroner, said yesterday.
Lewiew Borgendale, 785 Maples St, was found unconscious Thursday morning by his wife. He was rushed to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he was declared dead about an hour later.
Borgendale, 26, was a research assistant in biochemistry at KU, and worked in the biochemistry lab. He was working toward a Ph.D.
Sanders said the accident overdue classification was not final. The substance that was found in two unmarked bottles near his actin's body has not been identified, he said.
WZR
106
2545 Iowa - 1835 Mass.
DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER
ANNOUNCES
EVERYDAY LOW
LOW PRICES!
YOU
WON'T BELIEVE
OUR PRICES TILL
YOU SEE THEM!
COME CHECK US OUT.
OPEN 10AM • 10PM SUN • THURS
10AM • 11PM FRI • SAT
A meeting for all
students
Tuesday
sua films
Student Senate to hear requests
ATTENTION!
PLAYER
Pre-Med Students
considering applying
VanPansys said the total budget request would be "roughly $65,000." Last year the committee will deliberate on the requests $13,752.15 to 29 student groups.
Fall of '79 or'80
A total of 27 student organizations have made budget requests to David Vaughan, the Student Senate Chair of the groups previously have received funding, but there are new groups which do not.
The Student Senate Budget Committee will hear budget requests from 12 student groups tonight as fall supplementary budget hearings get underway this week.
The committee then will make recommendations to the Student Senate at its meeting Oct. 17, he said.
Directed by Francis Giacobetti, with Sylvia Kristel. RATED X—Positive age ID required for admittance
TRAINS (1966)
Mat David, chairman of the Finance and Auditing committee, said he did not want to disclose the amount of money available for allocation to make the hearings more fair.
to medical school in
Monday, October 8
SHOOT THE PIANO
(1950)
"If the committee members go into business knowing how much money they have, they will decide to just split up the money among the committee instead of looking at the quality of the service."
Directed by Terrence Malick, with Richard Gere, Brooke Ainsworth, Sam Baker and James McMullen. Phy by Nastar Almendros; Plus: Maya Cohen, Michael O'Reilly. Sat. mat. in Forum
Midnight Movies
EMMANUEL, THE JOYS
OF A WOMAN
Weekend shows also in Woodfort at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise a 150 am admission. No Releases.
(1976
Directed by Francois Truffaut, with Charles Aznavour and Nicole Berger. Francaisubtilites.
Kansas Union
Most of the requests will be heard tonight and tomorrow night, VanParys said. The committee will deliberate on the requests Wednesday night.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.10
admission
Friday & Saturday,
October 12-13
DAYS OF HEAVEN
Directed by Nicholas Raim, with Humpy Bogart and Gloria Grahame. The movie is dressed screenwriter who is accused of being before all of the evidence is in.
Tuesday, October 9
Humphrey Bogart
IN A LONELY PLACE
Directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, with Eddie Constantine, Louise Zimmerman and Alicia autobiographical mediation on the act of thinking is set at a seaside beach where a crew crew spend their spare time assaying each other verbally, emotionally, and logically.
?
Oct. 9
Representatives from KU Med Center and Lawrence campus
Directed by Jiri Menzel. Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Czechoslovakia/subtitlettes.
Wednesday. October 10
CLOSELY WATCHED
TRAINS
Big Eight Room
Thursday, October 11
BEWARE OF A HOLY
WHORE
7:00 p.m.
sua films
Presents
2 REPEAT SHOWS!!
100
Fiddler on the Roof 31 ACADEMY AWARDS
THE MUSICIAN PRODUCTION COMPANY
Distributed by COLOR
TOPOL
ROBBIE BRANE
LEONARD PREY
Molly Pigon
A
Due to the tremendous demand last month.
2 more showings of "Filder" have been added to our schedule. Sunday, October 14
Sunday, October 14
2:00 p.m.--Woodruff Auditorium
5:30 p.m.—Union Ballroom
Still only $1.50!
Tired
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No.22
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Footballer breaks arm
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Tuesday, October 9, 1979
See story page six
ACME H2KK CO.
ACME H2KK CO.
ACME BR
ACME H2KK CO.
ACME H2KK CO.
Brick builder
Wayne Johnson, Lawrence, is surrounded by stacks of bricks as he tries to straighten the inventory at Morton's Building
Materials, Inc., 1000 E. 15th St. Johnson, a truck driver, has worked for the corporation for 19 years.
University may seek more funds alons reject formula funding
Staff Reporter
Legislators can expect last minute requests for extra funding from Regents schools if the Legislature rejects the prosecution's funding system, a KU official said yesterday.
BY JEFF SJERVEN
The official, Ralph Christoferspoon, vice president of the college of formula funding would diregress schools to reverce to the number of full-time students at each university as a basis for admissions.
Because of increases in full-time enrollment, he said, Regents schools might ask for more faculty members to offset the increases.
Last-minute requests are not allowed under formula funding, which uses per capita spending at each university's peer institution. The program is instead the number of students enrolled.
Although budget requests at all Regents schools were prepared under the formula funding system this year, the Legislature has not approved the formula.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he did
“It’s anybody’s guess,” he said. “We don’t have any plans at this time to request additional funds if the formula is defeated.”
not know when the Legislature would decide the fate of formula funding.
UNDER FORMULA FUNDING, Regents schools base their budget requests on funding at selected peer institutions, which provide research, and research per capita fund.
The University of Kansas' peer institutions are the University of Colorado, the University of Iowa, the University of North
See ENROLLMENT page five
Senator unruffled by hectic pace
Staff Reporter
By TONIWOOD
She refused to associate her activity and pressures with the word "stress."
The agenda is much like other meetings and banquets she attends when in Kansas rather than Washington.
Long rows of tables in yet another meeting room have been set for a banquet, and after all the jello salad has been conceived, the guests again will speak about issues of the day.
Kassebaum is pulled in many directions while visiting constituents, to speak at meetings, answer questions and justify her actions in Congress.
She seems unruffled by all the activity, but admits the task is trying.
"It's hard on anybody," she said yesterday in an interview. "I don't think constituents realize that Johnson State thinks I don't spend enough time there. The western part of the state says I don't spend enough time there. And I'm trying to juggle this request from all over the country, particularly from women's groups."
KASSEAU BM AS in Kansas City, City,
Shannon to open a hospital
Susan to speak at Women's
Republican Club dinner at a farm south
Lawrence and yesterday she spoke at
the Republican Club dinner.
"I don't let it become stress, or I try not. I'm not a very nervous person. That helps. I can get on at a plane and read or go to sleep.
"You don't get into this job not understanding what's involved."
Kassebaum is the only woman in the Senate, and the first woman elected in her own right to the Senate.
"I'm not an aggressive sounding person, but I've always felt I was fairly tenacious. I don't think you need to be aggressive to be strong.
"CERTAINLY THERE are times when I'm treated with a little condescension by my colleagues," she said, "but it doesn't bother me.
"The important thing is what I can accomplish. If there is a little condescension, they'll change their minds if I accomplish what I intended to do."
"To do well, you have to understand the precedent that a freshman student is not supposed to speak very often. I have more than some of my freshmen colleagues.
KASSEBAUM SAID part of that learning process had been disillusioning, in finding out how bills actually became laws.
"But it's kind of sitting back and learning how to operate and then you're given more credit when you know what you're doing."
Kassebaum seems comfortable with the
“One of the problems—it was certainly one I encountered—was that a lot of men didn’t feel I could win, and so they were reluctant to make financial contributions.”
one to 99 ratio of women to men in the Senate. However, she said she expects more women to join her in the future.
She said that her campaign in 1978 had not turned into a cause for putting a woman in the Senate.
"One of the greatest quotes from the campaign was in the London Daily Mail," she said. "It said a woman had been elected to the Senate, not from a nearby coast west coast state, but from conservative King William's a man's a man and a woman's his cook.
"AND IVE thought about that, and I think it's very true on the other hand, we don't seem to feel that it is terribly important," she said. "We women's political causes didn't endure."
"I think that in a way, though we are conservative, we also imbued with the pioneer spirit, and women were very, very much a part of the breaking of the frontier
"I will always consider that my greatest contribution has been my family.
New pay plan in works
"But now, the thing I would most like to be able to do would be to instill confidence in the homeowners—or whatever the opportunities are—and to do it without feeling
A new statewide personnel payroll system could be implemented at the University of Illinois, which is a statewide payroll system, James Cobler, director of the state division of accounts and reports.
Staff Reporter
RvDAVE LEWIS
Cobbler said the new system would aim at preventing late paychecks for state employees. An average of 3 percent of the state paychecks are delivered to their owners
Of the state's 49,000 employees, over 7,500 are employed by KU.
Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday that 38 faculty members had complained about late paybackes since the beginning of the school
The late paychecks matter came before the University Senate executive committee and the Faculty executive committee earlier this year, but no action was taken.
LATE PAY CHECKS, which have caused problems in the past, usually result from paperwork being filled out late.
As in the past, late paychecks have
become an issue at the beginning of the year, when most of the new jobs are assigned. For example, most of the student who receives their jobs in August or September.
Christoffersen said he did not expect any recommendations from the state for six to 12 months.
The division of accounts and reports, with the help of a $230,000 appropriation form the Legislature, began a study in August to determine the needs of the state's payroll reserves.
Officials from the KU office of Business Affairs have been discussing possible changes in KU's payroll system, but they are not aware of what actions might be taken.
"The SYSTEM NOW is an intensive
work done by hand." Cobb said. "We
want to mechanize all the systems we can.
The system now is very time consuming and
hard."
Sherry Kopf, administrative officer for the payroll office, said she would welcome a change in KU's naval system.
Konf said that the present system no
longer could handle all the information cards required by state and federal law.
Appointment cards and insurance cards are just a few of the cards that have to be filled out and signed, she said.
DEPENDING ON THE INVOLUNTARY
employee, a card could go through as many as
six people before being processed.
Cobler said the state hoped to integrate all the payroll systems in the state, reducing the chance for human error.
Kopf said an employee's paycheck could not be processed until each card was signed by the employee and until it went through various channels of the University.
"You can never prevent human error," Kopf said. "We never carelessly make a mistake. It makes three times the work for us."
However, Cobler said an employee's department often makes mistakes, too.
"Quite often some department will fail to submit the appointment papers in time. Sometimes people get so busy that they foretend to send them in."
"The system doesn't get word of it. Then, two days before the paycheck comes out, they scramble to get the papers processed. It is not always the system's fault."
Budget discussions open
The Student Budget Committee heard budget requests totaling $4,028.95 from seven student organizations last night at fall supplementary budget hearings.
Matt Davis, chairman of the committee, said last night that according to the Student Senate Rules and Procedures, no funds were being provided by another group.
A budget request of $1,550 from the Iranian Student Organization was tabled until tomorrow night because of a question about services with the Iranian Student Association.
Iranian Student Association was nationwide.
Hossain Mahalati, president of the ISO, said his organization diffed from the Iranian Student Association because it was an American institution and social activities than political actions.
The committee will make a duplication ruling after hearing a member from each organization speak tomorrow night.
THE IRANIAN Student Association was funded $855 at last year's budget bearers.
The committee denied a request of $200 by the Masters of Public Administration Committee for City Management Association Conference in Arizona. The request was denied because the Commission did not regulate Regulations states that "no funds shall be allocated for sending delegates to conference."
Preliminary cuts were made by the committee in budget requests from the women's field hockey team and the Tae Kwon Do club.
The women's field hockey team asked for
$736.50, but the request was cut to $75.50 because of regulations state which the Senate cannot fund refreshments for clubs. It cannot fund 40 for refreshments at its Alumni Day game.
THE TAE KWN Do club's request of $1,200 for printing expenses and advertising was cut to $120. The spokesman for the club said he had guessed at the $1,200 figure, and would look into the less expensive means of having the point were pointed out by committee members.
the preliminary deliberations, the committee accepted the full budget requests from the following organizations: Microbiology Society of KU, $18.45; KU Communications and the Speech Communications and Human Relations Graduate Students, $62.
en more student organizations will See BUDGET page five
Bell ringer
Albert C. Gerken, University Carillonneur and professor music theory, plays the keyboard which causes the rods in the
JEFF HARRING/Kansan Staff
foreground to rock the bells in the Campanile. Gerken will play a recital Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Jewelry students say temporary home is inadequate
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Unfinished rooms in the Arts and Design Building are empty and jewelry and silversmithing students coping with what remains inadequate facilities have to ask why
The rooms, studios and offices intended to house the jewelry and silversmithing department, are located in the Power Building. Although the art building has been in use for two years, a lack of funds to finish the furniture has kept the jewelry department in its temporary home, Broadcast Hall, Gary Neumcker, chairman of the department.
"We're the only department not in the new building and I think it bothers the students
that there are these new studios they can't use." Nemchock said.
Broadcast Hall was not designed for use as a jewelry studio and is inappropriate for the purpose of its cope with the inefficiently designed studios since the department moved here four years ago.
Wendy Sanchez, Wichita junior, said that only inadequate but were not adequate students that the studios lack such safety equipment as eye wash, acid-bath and burn care.
“IT'S BECOME an attitude problem,” he said. “We'll survive, but I think the students are really unhappy.”
"We work with acids and heat," Sanborn
said. "If something went wrong, there's nothing here to help us."
Broadcast Hall also lacks proper ventilation, Sanborn said, making it unsafe for the use of acids, enamels and other chemicals needed in iewerv making.
She said that improvements have been made recently by students to the Readeast student nurse program, unafraid to unsafe. During the first three weeks of this semester, students moved unassigned furniture and appliances from a room in Hall, she said, and students also did structural repair work in the current
"IT WAS ridiculous that we had to do it," she said. "But we couldn't afford to do it any other way."
"I don't think I'm getting my share out of
what I pay here. Here we are paying to go to school and we have to do our own repairs.
Craig Owens, Wichita sophomore, said he resented not being able to use the new studios.
"I like it having your candy and not being able to eat it," Owens said. "We could really use that space and we shouldn't have to raise hell to get it."
"IT WAS NOTHING personal against
According to Peter Thompson, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts, the jewelry department was left in Broadcast Hall because it cannot furnish the new studio where the pieces were built. The Broadcast Hall studios would be adequate for the next few years, he said.
Completing the studios will cost more than $100,000 Wiechert said, although a more exact figure was not available.
REQUESTS for the funds have been included in budget proposals for the last two
jewelry, Thompson said. "But there just was no adequate way we could have suedered the studios out of the budget."
"We can'n't begin to get estimates or take bids until we have funds." Wiechert said. "And we have not been able to identify any funds to finish the building."
According to Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning at KU, the new studies in the remodeled Fowler building attached to the art building have been renovated. The rooms, however, lack air conditioning, a heating system and lines, plumbing and an electrical system.
years, he said, and will continue to be included until funds are allocated.
According to Nemnchock, even if funds for the work were included in the 1981-1982 budget, the jewelry department would not be able to occupy the new studios for two or three more years. Bids could not be taken without a court order, and the work would take at least a year.
"It bothers me that I heard two or three years ago that we would be in the art building in two or three years," he said. According to Owen, one of his brothers was a student at Jewett's jewels.
"We were told when we first enrolled here 'Hey, you guys will have a nice, new building,' he said. "We'll be graduating now. We haven't seen the inside of that building."
2
Tuesday, October 9, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansas Wire Services
White's order halts 3 trains
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice Byron White yesterday overturned an appeals court ruling that had kept three Amtrak passenger trains running on a frozen river.
White's brief order negated the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal's 11th-hour decision Friday that the Chicago-to-Houston Lone Star, the Chicago-toSeattle North Coast HaWAiata, and the Chicago-toMiami Florida continue their routes until an Oct. 26 hearing for a preliminary injunction could be held.
coplan, along with representatives of Minnesota and Nashville, Teenn, had appealed Amtrak's decision to eliminate the rail routes.
"We feel it would have been better if we had a chance to be heard," said Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan.
The North Coast Haifaatha was immediately canceled by Antrak only an hour before its scheduled departure from Chicago.
The only train that got underway yesterday was the northbound Lone Star. The last of the three to arrive at its final destination was scheduled to be the southbound Knotenberg.
Mondale scratches KC visit
KANSAS CITY, Mo — Vice President Walter Mondale has canceled plans to speak at a Carter-Mondale fund-raising breakfast her暮来, Democratic
11. Olar, co-chairman of Carter's re-election campaign in Missouri, said Malladez's stop was canceled because President Carter was scheduled to be in Washington on Wednesday.
A White House spokesman confirmed the cancellation and said that the two appearances were too close to provide maximum benefit to the unanswered question.
Although Monday will skip kansas City, he will attend raising events in St. Louis and in Detroit, Cleveland and Pittsburgh tomorrow. In addition, he will attend a few other events in New York.
Airport plane crashes kill 22
Twenty two persons have died this week in airport plane crashes in Greece and Kentucky.
A twin-engine Piper Navajo, Comair Flight 444, crashed on takeoff from the Greater Cincinnati Airport in Florence, Ky., killing the pilot and all passengers.
A Swissair DC-8 with 154 persons aboard burst into flames and burned on ground at the Athens airport night and fire officials said 14 passengers
One passenger on the Swissair flight said there was an "almity crunch," followed immediately by the fire. The plane skidded off the runway.
A medical shipment of radioactive material being carried on the plane was safely removed. Swissair officials said the dead included French, Germans and Americans.
Farm association trial opens
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The downfall of the bankrupt Progressive Farmers Association was blamed by defense lawyers yesterday on state and federal government intervention and interference by the Missouri Farmers Association.
Defense lawyers spent the afternoon refuting arguments raised during the prosecution's opening statement in the U.S. District Court trial of 10 PFA ofA.
Defense attorneys called PFA a legitimate attempt to form a farmer's cooperative and said PPA could have rivaled MVA as an effective farm
Prosecutors said they would prove that the 10 defendants billed some $11 million from the cooperatives' nearly 7,000 investors.
Open arguments were taken late afternoon. The prosecutor's first witness, stand when the trial recalled for the night.
Faber is expected to continue testifying today.
Court supports coal pipeline
CHEYNEYN, Wyo., The U. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld three federal court decisions in favor of a company that wants to build an unenclosed building.
In rulings released yesterday, the appeals court upheld decisions made in Kansas and Wyoming ...
In the Wyoming case, a U.S. district judge ruled two years ago that under the Pacific Railway Act of 1862, Union Pacific did not gain ownership of subsea surface water resources under the provisions of the Railway Act.
Energy Transportation Systems Inc. of Casper, Wyo., had sued the railroad, sought authority to build a 36-inch diameter pipeline from northeastastern Wyoming to southern Utah.
in both Kansas cases a U.S. district judge ruled that the railroad sold two sections of land it acquired in the 1862 act, it also sold the subsurface rights.
Railroads have generally opposed slurry pipelines, which would compete for the rail's lucrative business of shipping coal to utility plants.
United announces flight cutbacks
CHICAGO - United Airlines announced yesterday that it would back flight throughout its entire system next month because of rising fuel costs and
only affect a "couple of percentage points on trips for the whole system."
Some flights within the same cities would be discontinued, but total cutoffs were not planned, he said.
Airline officials said details of the reductions would be announced in several weeks.
Jurors plead inconvenience
ORLAHAM CITY - The judge presiding over the first-degree murder trial of Roger T. Stallard yesterday indonised potential jurors who gave in to the allegations.
Stafford, 27, is charged with the shootings of six Sirlino Stuckade workers who were herded into a meat locker and shot in a July 1978 robbery. Police say they suspect the Sheffield, Ala., drifter of committing more than 20 murders outside.
Nine persons were excused yesterday. Two persons said they could not imitate a fingerprint on Stuffard's guilt or innocence. The other two said they had already formed an impression on Stuffard's guilt or innocence.
District Judge Charles Owens, on the first day of jury selection, initially asked Mr. McCormack whether he was a judge or a solicitor. Another a solicitor who said his income was derived solely from commissions.
India mourns Narayan's death
NEW DEHILI, India- Tens of thousands of bereaved Indian flocked to the jungle in Jakayrawan Yasharyn yesterday to mourn the death of the 76-year-old
He was an independence fighter who later turned to non-violence and ended up becoming the first person to defend indoors from power.
The U.S. -educated Naryan died in his sleep yesterday of a heart ailment at his home in the easterly city of Paton.
After his death was announced, 50,000 mourners gathered outside the house, the news United News of India reported.
Later, with thousands of weeping men, women and children trailing behind, the body was taken to a hall where it was to in state until a state funeral and cremation.
Weather...
Hundreds of thousands are expected at the funeral, likely to be the largest in India since the death of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru in 1964.
The RGO weather predict decreases cloudiness today, with clear skies by afternoon. Winds will be northerly and the high temperature today will be 61 degrees. There will be a chance of a light frost tonight with a low temperature near 36.
Tomorrow will be sunny with winds becoming southerly. The high should be near 71.
Temperatures will increase Thursday and Friday, with a chance of rain late Friday.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The American people—starving for simple truths and spiritual heroes—will miss Pope John Paul II.
Pope's visit stirs hearts, debates
The tired Pope returned to Rome yesterday from a nine-day tour of Ireland and the United States to the cheers of the crowds in the sun-kinned St. Peter's Square. The pontiff hired he would like to go back some time, but he couldn't find a familiar contact" with the American people.
Before leaving the pope had said he neglected his schedule had been limited to Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Des Moines, Iowa, Chicago and Washington and that he would like to return to visit other of the country such as the West and the South.
Five hours after his return to the Vatican, the 59-year-old pontiff went by helicopter to Gandalfo Castle to catch up on his rest in the seclusion of the papal estate in the Alban Hills 30 miles south of Rome. A Vatican official said the patron would return tomorrow for his general audience.
In his absence, the debates the pope joined on his American tour will rage, almost certainly unabated by his unwieldy enduring arguments in traditional of the Roman Catholic Church.
While captivating millions with his love and his soft-spoken charm, the pope stamatically opposed social changes that have challenged traditional practice, if not policy, in the United States.
Birth control, divorce and the role of women in his church are touchy issues on which the pope showed no inclination toward change.
The ban on birth control is almost certainly the most widely disregarded of the Catholic precepts in the United States.
And celibacy is a difficult remedy for many Catholics.
An Associated Press-NBC News poll
WZR
106
films sua
Tuesday, October 9
Humphrey Bogart,
IN A LONELY PLACE
(1950)
Directed by Nicholas Rash, with Hugh phytes and Gloria Gahme, the film depicts a victim who is accused of murder before all of the evidence is in. For more information, visit www.hugheyes.com.
Wednesday, October 10
CLOSELY WATCHED
TRAINS
Directed by Jiri Menzel. Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Czechoslovakia/subtitles.
Directed by Rainer Werner *passbinder*, with Eddie Connolly, Louise Grey and Jeff Snyder on biographical mediation on the act of filmmaking is set at a seaside resort where the crew spend their spare time assuring each other verbally, emotionally, and spiritually.
Thursday, October 11
BEWARE OF A HOLY
WHORE
Directed by Terence Malick, with
Anthony Garrison, Stephanie
Shepherd, and Linda Manta. Photography by Nastar Amendrode. Plus Maya
Jacobs. Set design by Matheus S.
Sat. matte in Forum
Friday & Saturday.
October 12-13
DAYS OF HEAVEN
(1970)
Midnight Movies
EMMANUEL, THE JOYS
OF A WOMAN
KANSAN Analysis
(1978)
Directed by Francis Glacobetti, with Sylvia Kristel, RATED X-Positive age ID required for admittance.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission
indicates that 76 percent of the nation's 49 million Catholics believe one can use artificial methods of birth control—the pill, or contraceptive devices—and still be a good mother.
This widespread violation may appear minor, but it is symptomatic of a steady erosion in active support of Christianity's oldest church.
The ban on divorce is another divisive church dictum that causes quibbles to persist. The court conducted in late September, indicates that 83 percent of all Catholics believe in divorce and that 69 percent of Catholic men are polling showing 53 percent of American Catholics believe that priests should be divorced.
But the厚恤 and most volatile issue facing the Catholic Church in the United States is the secondary role accorded women in church activities.
U. S. Catholics are evenly split on the question of women priests. Forty-six percent favor a shift in church policy while 48 percent oppose it, a statistically significant marginal margin.
Thus, nothing could have been more dramatic within U.S. Catholics circles than the arrest of a man who committed II, by a ranking American man, that he admonished women into all ministries of the church.
Many Americans will treasure the small, special moments—his pauses to greet the demanding through, his exuberant embrace and lauded, his embracing love of children.
But the affection of the United States feels for the leader of the world's Catholics is not likely to ease the conscience of the young Catholic wife who wants to work a few years in the priesthood. But that of the priest who unapply fell in love, or the man who yearns to become a priest.
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available
NEW 15 Passenger Vans 2340 Alab.
ARRIVALS: 80 Chevettes 843-293
The Hope Award:
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 9, 1979
3
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MASSACHUSETTS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorslals
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the Editors.
October 9,1979
Waste route disputed
The news that radioactive waste from the cleanup operation at the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear power plant will be shipped to Hanford, Washington via Kansas on Interstate 70 is not welcome.
Tons of the radioactive waste, collected from the purifications of 250,000 gallons of contaminated water at the plant, are scheduled to pass along the Kansas turnpike sometime early next year.
The waste, described as a "gelatinous residue which has a consistency comparable to caviar" would be shipped in single 6-foot cylindrical casks, each capable of carrying 250 lb of the resins that would be hauled by specially designed 80,000 pound low-slug trailered tractors.
17-0 was chosen over more direct northern routes because the waste would be shipped this winter. Officials for Metropolitan Edison, the company that owns Three Mile Island, said that trucks on more northerly roads stood a greater chance of encountering bad road conditions.
OFFICIALS of the company say they are consulting with officials of both Kansas and Missouri for permission to haul the dangerous cargoes through the state, but they say they expect no problems.
Company officials are insisting however that even the most elaborate precautions are unnecessary. The containers in containers is almost absolute, they say.
"Those casks have withstood some pretty dramatic tests," one official said. "They have been dropped 30 feet on spikes and concrete. The casks could withstand the impact of being hit by a speeding freight train."
Some special considerations may be imposed however. Missouri Governor Joseph Teasdale has asked that Missouri be given three weeks notice before a waste shipment comes through. He also has said that shipments of the waste would not be allowed to enter the St. Louis or Kansas City areas during rush hour. There has been no word from state officials in Kansas on restrictions in this state.
PERHAPS SO, but as the accident that produced the waste indicates, sometimes even the best precautions fail. Our state officials owe it to the city of Rochester to ensure a strict possible rescissions and safeguards on the transportation of the waste.
Accidents may happen, but state officials could do a lot to make sure they do not happen in Kansas.
Universities advertise academic gimmickry
By FRANK WOLF
N.1. Times Special Services
NEW YORK—Running universities is becoming harder every year.
The decline in the birth rate in the early 1960s is making it tougher to find qualified students. Many institutions find it necessary to hire more teachers and to keep applicants to keep afloat. A variety of techniques is being used to reduce the cost of instruction: the increased use of cheap, part-time faculty members, freezes on tuition fees, training for new teachers, early-retirement "sweeteners," and increased class size. But the most prevalent response to the new financial pressures has been the development of programs to attract students to the "frugalist adult student" market.
Many of the new " lifelong learning" programs smack of academic buckstering.
COLLEGEES ADVERTISSE the liberality of their policies for conferring credit for life experience in an effort to attract adults. The college offers a crediting instruction offered in the armed forces and in business organizations. The continuing-education unit of credit is gaining acceptance as a device for adult learners. The continuing-education programs are typically designed by marketing-oriented academic bureaucrats, not faculty members or faculty committees. Continuing-education programs are not always meet high academic standards.
ONLY THE MOST SECURE and clear-headed institutions are resisting the impulse to make a quick killer in the adult student market. To the extent that universities are able to provide such a shady, shoddy academic goods, they dernure themselves—and the educational process.
Some enthusiasts for "non-traditional learning" would fault university institutions, especially the so-called elite institutions, for their failure to imagine themselves imaginatively to the changing learning needs of the larger society. However, it is far more important to challenge the higher-education community for its recent willingness to offer anything people will pay more.
Below are 16 ways to which universities, in the words of the College Entrance Examination Board, "are taking new initiatives to serve adult students today."
They have been extracted from a longer list of 356 such suggestions collected in a survey of 50 "representative institutions" and disseminated in a booklet by the College Entrance Examination Board's "Future Teachers for a Learning Society" program.
1. STATE IN advertisements that you will develop a class for any 15 people interested in a particular subject.
2. In deciding what courses to offer, try to identify what books people are borrowing from the local library and what shows they are watching on television.
3. Develop undergraduate and graduate degrees with no on-campus requirements.
1. Offer a mini-course do emergency medical procedures for ambulance drivers.
2. Develop special courses for widows and divorces.
6. Offer packages that include charter flights and combine vacations in foreign countries with courses for credit.
7. Seek instructors for distance learning courses who do not mind a lack of personal contact with students, as most give-and-take is by mail.
8. RENT BILLBOARD space in key locations and advertise, "If it is educational service you want, call us."
9. Set up booths in shopping malls with posters, slides and representatives to describe your nourram.
10. Remove limits to the amount of credit that can be earned by examination.
11. Increase the amount of credit granted for off-campus experimental learning.
12. Allow non-credit courses to be taken for credit through negotiations with the department head and professor.
13. Establish storefront posts staffed by professional counselors to advise drop-in about career and educational needs and opportunities.
15. Overload popular courses to cover the costs of those that attract fewer than the minimum number of registrants.
14. Create a lottery sponsored by a private or public organization with one prize: free enrollment in your program.
16. Establish a policy that when courses do not cover their costs in any one year, they will not be offered the following year.
These are 18 ways to destroy a university. Frank Woll is associate dean of the School of General Studies, the college of liberal arts for adults at Columbia University.
These are 16 ways to destroy a university.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Footnote: Need changes of address to the University of Hawaiian, Flint Hall, The University of Kaua'i, Lawrence, KS5040
UWS 501-648-6003 Published at the University of Kansas Law School, August Twenty-First May and December 2019 and Numbered by Michael C. Mullen, the Associate Dean for Research and Development, UWS. Subscriptions may be made by mail to the UWS P.O. Box 715, Dewey City, New Jersey 07621. Copyright © UWS in 2019. All rights reserved.
The demonstration in Seabear, N.H., last weekend could be the fence that stopped the rolling snowball.
The anti-nuclear movement was moving along, gaining credibility, press coverage, and, most important, supporters.
Editorial Editor Mary Ernst
Editor Mary Hoenk
It had left the domain of long-hairs and professional malticcontents. It had the support not only of the students in Boston but also of an increasing number of housewives in
High Point
Navy Dept.
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors
THESE TACTICS are scary, too far on the fringe for most of middle America. They relegate the anti-nuclear movement to the province of "kooks."
Violence threatens anti-nuke cause
The polls showed it—a slight edge for nuclear power became a slight edge against it after the accident at Three Mile Island in March.
More than 1,500 protesters were repelled from their assaults on the fence at a federal courthouse in the hundred state troopers and national guardmen best back the demonstrators.
Managing Editor Nancy Dressler
But enter violence, as it did last weekend at Seabrook, and the anti-nuclear movement lazes its anceal.
Advertising Adviser Check Chowns
Business Manage Cynthia Ray
Engineers who have been taught that anything can be made mathematically fail-safe cannot be expected to believe in the inevitability of human error.
Assistant Managing Editor
Sports Editor...
Associate Sports Editor...
Connie Couch...
Attica may have had some impact upon prison reform. Kent State may have helped
And the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which, without a nuclear industry to regulate, would be out of a job, cannot be trained to find the fatal faults of nuclear power.
THAT IS WHY it is so important for every citizen to get informed and get involved.
And that is exactly what was beginning to happen.
pected to see the failings that would void their vocations.
It's too late now. The protesters from Boston have made their mark.
The anti-nuclear forces were able to cause their attack on the level-level-basis. But if the movement must turn to tear gas and billy clubs, the level-level and sensible unit will have to fight.
But maybe, if nuclear activists across the country see violence for the threat to their lives, it is important to be peaceful and symbolic protests of the past, the mark left by a weekend of violence at the Camp Nou.
Another group began a mass-massailing campaign to discredit the spokesmen of the campaign, and wrote an article writing and money-contributing colour in a battle against the "log cab mentalities" of the movement.
In Philadelphia, a group of nuclear supporters manned a table in the airport almost all summer to promote their cause.
THE PRO-NUCLEAR movement, while it may seem to endanger the anti-nuclear movement, is actually a boon.
Right now, nuclear power is in the hands of those who can be the least objective about it.
The issue belongs in the streets. It needs to be debated and, finally, decided by those who stand to lose the most.
It's important that nuclear power be taken out of the corporate boardrooms and congressional committees.
General Manager Hick Musser
Scientists who have devoted their lives to the study of nuclear energy can't be ex-
stop the Vietnam War. Rioting in Watts may have caused an increase in funding for anti-poverty programs.
This change of strategy in the campaign against nuclear power-from peaceful but highly visible protec t to flanker an enemy under the law-came at the worst possible time.
BECAUSE, WITHIN the past few months,
not only has the anti-nuclear movement
been gaining supporters, but it also has
been encouraging it to merit a backlash of vocal opponents.
Posters, chants and incendiary speakers decried the "no-growth muggers" who were suddenly threatening the nuclear status quo.
lynn
COLUMNIST byczynski
Last month, nuclear advocates gathered at the Rocky Flats nuclear arsenal near
Denver for a rally that was indistinguishable from the anti-nuclear protests there almost monthly.
The anti-nuclear movement is going to fail on its face if a nuclear allows it to get mixed up with violence now. It simply doesn't have the will to try to try to physically tapple the powers that be.
But, in those cases, the causes had the support of the neoel involved.
MACNEILY DE FLUENT NEWS LEADER. © 1974 BY CHICAGO TRIANE.
... ACCORDINGLY, I HAVE ORDERED A FULL-SCALE AMPHIBIOUS INVASION OF CUBA...
LOOK! IT'S KENNEDY!
HE'S JOGGING — NO!!
HE'S BREAKING INTO A SORT OF TROT!
PRESS ROOM
To the Editor:
I am sorry that instead of responding to the issues raised in my Sept. 21 Kanser letter, I should have addressed them personally, maliciously and with wanton disregard for the truth throughout their "humanities" class period Febs. 29, Sept. 30 and Oct. 15. The nature of their attacks, (2) to offer to appear in class to answer their attacks, and (3) to respond to their response cooperatively will have serious consequences. I am sending a copy of this letter to the University council in case the committee is not satisfied.
Professors' attacks ignore issues
First, the preposterous nature of the attacks. The professors first expressed disappointment that so many in their class had read my letter in the Kansu. The prosecution said that they hoped that by now students would have stopped reading newspapers.
THE PROFESSORS evidently find it important to teach their students that I fear Homer and wish to ban the Odyssey because it is dangerous. This lends support to their view that I am attacking the remnant of civilization they single-handedly are trying to destroy, or actually I revere Homer and have also taught Homer to humanities classes.
They say I want to censor the classroom. In fact, by excluding others with different views, by discouraging students from reading other texts, even newspapers; by demanding their colleagues in calling most of them "trash"; by forbidding notaking so a critical examination of their classroom performance; or difficult to make; they are the censors.
If they do not permit me in class, this point will be even more obvious.
Second, an offer. While I suppose one might consider it flattery that a hall class should have thought better use of the students' time could have been found. I do believe that smacking snacking students who cannot know better, but I believe the students have a right to be able to do so.
MY VIEWS WERE systematically distorted on a variety of other issues.
Third, a warning. My real concern is not for my reputation—Who cares very much what Vern Barnet thinks about Homer besides these professors and their students? I don't think they should be students to see how, in the guise of inspiration and protection of a cultural treasure, theprofessors have cheapened and degraded the classics for their own sectarian and religious reasons. In the history of HIP could speak—how some students are unwillingly being led into a dangerous cult. If the professors do not offer me equal time, the absurdity of these "humanized" professors is worth it.
The Rev. Dr. Vern Barnet Overland Park
Kansan commentary unfair to Birchers
To the Editor:
The Kansan's Sept. 28 commentary titled, "Bircher-Nade器 a charade," dared to overlook any factual errors in the article titled, "Ralph Nader, Rip-up Artist." 2,000 copies of this book about body as a public service by members and friends of the BIR Church Society.
Unknowingly, members of the audience had their attention drawn to Nader Alam's book *The Mysterious Subject* about Dright E. Dosenberger, in particular, and the beliefs of the 2000-10 cohort in the University of Kansas who can find one in Robert Wohl's book *title*, The Politics.
On the subject of TRIM (Tax Reform Immediately), the author of the Kansan commentary fails to provide readers with specific quotes from the TRIM bulletin in question and ignores the Congressional authors who are included in every reported TRIM vote.
ON THE SUBJECT OF the John Birch Society's "heretical, anti-C communist attitude," the author ignores the fact that nearly 30 percent of our earned incomes go to all levels of government; that the american federal defends itself against national chaos, evaporating savings for those on fixed incomes, and skyrocketing prices; that one-third of the globe
KANSAN letters
has been beaten into bloody submission to Communism; that more than 100 million people have lost their lives to Communism (see pages 384 of the 1970 Gutenberg Book of American History) and Socialism now is portrayed as the hammer and sickle of World Socialism; that David Rockefeller has been busy establishing his gold-bronzing, paper-money temples to finance his New World Order through education, Chase-Peking and Chase-Panama.
The Kansan's uniformed, shot-gun declarations about the John Birch Society suggest that its editorial judgments are more important than information and deliberation.
Is it possible that a Big Eight newspaper like the Kansan chooses to remain ignorant? Or, is the Kansan counting on the ignorance of the student body?
Dick Fatherly Tonganoxie
Fairness questioned in local rape trial
To the Editor:
In the Sept. 27 issue of the Kanas, Mr. Brown was convicted of the kidnap and rape of an 18-year-old Lawrence woman on the night of May 19.
Jurisprudence has once again laid down the heavy hand of fate on yet another member of society. This being the person of Robert W. Brown.
If there were any crime that would construct a sound argument for the return of the death sentence, rape would be that crime. There could be no comparable predation suffered by both the payche and physical body than that of the rape victim.
AMERICA, WHERE every criminal is innocent until proven guilty, and judged by a group of his peers—or is that always the case?
custom of castration. But alas, my purpose in this letter is not to impersonal on the sentencing of a convict rapist. I think that question the fearfulness of this particular case.
PERSONAL SENTIMENTS pertaining to the sentencing of a person convicted of a rape would lean toward the ancient Arabic
It appears as though, while remembering a few cases of recent years, that it is not the crime committed that dictates a particular sentence, but the amount of money paid to a law firm. Law, being one of the most noble crimes is also one of the most lucrative.
THIS WE arrive at the dilemma facing a "criminal" without sufficient funds, the court-appointed lawyers. Every city has a criminal defense attorney to volunteer to represent clients. These lawyers are paid by the state at a rate considerably less than they would receive if not appointed.
Although sworn to the oath that they represent their clients to the best of their abilities, sometimes that oath comes to be the burden of the lack of profit and other personal gains.
SUCH MAY have been the case with Brown. How could any lawyer allow his client to enter a courtroom being tried for rape and face a jury that consists of 11 jurors, many of whom are in a statement that a woman cannot render a fair and impartial verdict, but dealing merely with the assumption that the women jurors could be more easily persuaded to the side of the prosecution, the lawyer having done nothing or jury selected, should not have allowed it.
When asked for a comment, Brown's attorney could not be reached. Perhaps the proceedings could make the ordeal of dealing with a court appointed lawyer a real challenge.
Brown's new court date has been set for Oct. 18, at which time he will request a retrial. With some luck, the same justice for Brown would prevail and somebody be the justice for all.
Brian K. Hanks Manhattan junior
Tuesday, October 9, 1979
5
122 students use legal services
Statistics compiled by student Legal Services indicated that an increasing number of students are taking advantage of KU Legal aid programs.
A total of 122 students went to the Student Legal Services office last month for help in legal matters that included landlord/tenant problems and aggressive problems and consumer problems.
Steve Ruddick, supervising attorney for Legal Services, said yesterday that the numbers were "pretty encouraging."
Of the 122 students interviewed by the
Student problems brought to the office included 17 landlord/tenant cases, 4 administrative (immigration), and 4 consumer (contracts).
office during September, 85 were accepted as clients and 37 were rejected.
Rudick said he had to refuse a number of students because of the limitations placed on him by Phase I of the program, which required students representing in student courts (in Case II).
The Legal Service is in the first of three phases. At this time, Ruddick said, he is
allowed to advise students on legal matters. to prepare legal documents other than tax returns, wills, and trusts, to aid in negotiation, but not in litigation between adversary parties, to motivate documents, to conduct research to incorporate nonprofit student organizations.
Phase II services will include all the services under Phase I, and will allow them to work independently. Those who are charged with a criminal misdemeanor or those who need a civil suit will be charged.
Bargaining yields no contest plea, Southard awaits judge's sentence
A Lawrence man originally charged with kappa rapine and aggravated sedomy plea, now charged with aggravated sedomy Friday after plea bargaining with the Douglas County District Judge.
Rondel S, Southard, 20, 408 Indiana St. will appear in Douglas County District Court Oct. 23 to face sentencing on the charge of attempted aggravated sodomy.
Southern and a companion, Robert W. Saundard, died on May 19 at a douglas Douglas county farm after an 18-year-old Lawrence woman accepted a ride from them as she was leaving the hospital.
Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone said the outcome of the Brown trial Sept. 28 influenced the state's decision to uphold Sullivan's guilty plea to the single charge.
Brown was found guilty of one count of rape and one count of kidnapping. The 11-woman, one-man jury acquitted Brown of a second rape charge.
During Brown's three-day trial, the judge ripped from Brown and Southeast and was driven to an area outside Lawrence where he was convicted twice by Brown and sodized by Brown.
Malone said that the case against
Southard was not as strong as that against Brown. "We didn't have the medical evidence we had against Brown," Malone said.
Malone said he would press for the maximum sentencing in the 2014 Southard jail in prison. The original charges of kidnapping and aggravated sodomy each included a felony conviction.
Malone said that Brown's attorney fired a motion for a new trial Tuesday, a standard procedure in sexual assault cases. If the motion is denied when Brown appears in court Oct. 12, a pre-sentence investigation and date for sentencing will be set.
Easy money ads yield no payoff
Bv DOUG WAHI
Staff Reporter
"Earn money at home" advertisements frequently seen in the classified sections of newspapers are not the easy money schemes they profess to be, Leslie Hawlings, deputy attorney general for the U.S. Justice Department division in Topeka, said yesterday.
The ads usually read something like
"Earn as much as $500 stuffing 1,000 envelopes with our circulars. For information contact..."
Ads like this are known as pyramid schemes, according to Rawlings.
One of the complaints, from a Eudora woman, was resolved. She was reimbursed the $10 she invested in the scheme.
The Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association has had three complaints about pyramid schemes in the last month, two of which referred to the attorney general's office in Toronto.
SOMEONE ANSWERING an ad might be instructed to send, for instance, $10 to a company.
Pyramid schemes try to get people involved in money-making ideas, not to sell a product, but only to get the ball rolling and more money circulating, Wraals said.
The company would in turn instruct the individual to run his own ad, soliciting more money, and then send the money collected from the ad to the company.
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part of the money received from respondents to his ad.
The scheme is profitable for the company that initiates it, Rawlings. People pay for a money-making idea but get only one idea and to induce others to buy the same idea.
"An operation begins with one person and recruits other people for that operation, not for sales purposes," she said.
The ads are called pyramid schemes because a corporation or company uses a pyramid scheme to get the money. The people at the bottom of the pyramid probably will get nothing and will have a bad experience.
"Mathematically, it would be impossible to make money in the operation of the sheer number of people involved," Rawlins said.
She said it was difficult to prosecute a pyramid案 because often a product was sold as a seemingly legitimate cover for recruiting more people.
RAWLINGS SAID pyramid schemes were illegal because they deceived consumers. She said the number of people at the bottom made profit impossible at that level.
She said her office was investigating a company that allegedly sold vitamins as a cover for a pyramid scheme. The difficulty in identifying the company did not legitimately sell the vitamins.
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Other problems that Student Legal Services cannot handle Ruddick said, include conflicts between students, parking issues where legislation is recommended impeding them.
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Because he represents all students, Ruddick said that his office tries to act as a student in student conflict cases.
"We can advise the students where they can go for help or refer them to a lawyer if they need one," Ruddick said.
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3. ) One-eighth of the participants will recruit three or more people and probably will not break even.
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Margaret Berlin, student body president, said the number of students using the services more than met her expectations.
"Sophisticated pyramid schemes mean hundreds of thousands of dollars for the people who begin the operation," Rawlings said.
2. ) 50 percent of the participants will run their own pyramid scheme ad, but will not get responses.
SIFE SAID she did not know how much money pyramid schemes brought in, but she did have figures, compiled by her office, of the failure of entry into a pyramid scheme.
1. ) The vast majority of participants have a 10 percent or worse chance of recovering their initial investment.
4. Less than 1 percent of the participants will recruit enough people to break even.
The off-campus housing board established by the Student Senate last spring would not be able to give legal advice to students having problems with their landlords, she said.
Berlin said that she would like to expand the Legal Services to Phase II by next semester.
Although it was agreed to wait until a full year was over before Phase II went into effect, Berlin said she thought the program was ready for Phase II now.
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However, until more funding is available to hire another attorney, she said. Phase II should be gradually brought into the program.
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"I'd like to see the attorney handling just light litigation," she said. "He could handle just misdemeans."
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Bernil said that it would be more fair to the students if at that time the attorney would not be tied up in heavy litigation so he would spend his time helping more students.
University Daily Kansan
From page one
However, she said, the decision would be made by the Student Legal Services Board and Student Senate.
Cinema Twin
Budget...
1. "ANIMAL HOUSE"
Ewk 7:30 & 8:30
Sat Sun 1:30
2. "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS"
Move Information Move Information
Eve 7.30 8.95 Sat 1.30
2. "THE SEDUCTION OF JOE
Variety
present budget requests totaling more than $17,000 at tonight's budget hearings at 7 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Hilcrest
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3. "LOVE AND BULLETS"
Eve. 7:45 & 10:00 Sat Sun 2:00
Sat Sun 2:00
The organizations are: Operation Friendship, Alpha Phi Omega, the Kansas Defender Project, Architecture and Urban Design, Black and Minority Architectural Students in America, Students Interested in Asian Studies, Friends of Headquarters, KU Folk Dance Club, Native American Alliance, University Association, the Kansas University Advertising Club.
The committee will continue its hearings tomorrow night and then will make its final recommendations to the Student Senate. The budget requests at its Oct 17 meeting.
1. "STARTING OVER"
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Tue.-Fri. 9-8
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A New Game Store
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
...
On Campus
TODAY: THE U.S. MARINE CORPS will be recruiting all day in the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: COMPUTER SERVICES
SEMINAR, "Introduction to the RROF Text
Formatter," at 7 in the Computer Services
Classroom, Tuesday. STAPP TWO WESTERN CIVILIZATION
FILMS, "Music of the Spheres" and
"Machinelli on Political Power," will meet
at 7 in the KUAD CLUB will meet at 7 in the
SATellite Union Conference Room.
RECREATION SERVICES intramural
swimming and diving entry meeting will be at
4 in the RECTAL SERIES, featuring KUW
Ensemble, will be at 4 in a 8:0w Boreal
Hurley, Murphey Hall, HUMANITIES LEC-
TORIAL SERIES, featuring Overview on Semantic ZURLEs, will be
given by Umberto Eco, University of Bologna, Italy, at 8 in Woodford Auditorium.
**TOMORROW:** Kansas Invitational Women's GOLF TOURNAMENT will be held at the Golf Club Museum of Natural History ANIMALS. A DROP in with Cathy Dwigans, will be at 10 a.m. for children three to six years old. A DROP in with Cathy Dwigans, will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork i. of the Union. KU WOMEN'S TECHNOLOGY
Enrollment . . .
From page one
Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of Oklahoma and the University of Oregon.
FTE represents the number of 15-hour course loads KU students' enrollment compiles.
In previous years, KU budget requests were based on the full-time equivalent enrollment for each university.
Undergraduate FTE is figured by dividing the total number of undergraduate hours by the average student course load, 15 hours, according to the office of admissions. Undergraduate average course load for graduate student students is 12 hours. The average for law students is 12 hours.
BILL SHILLE, director of institutional research at Emporia State University, said the increase in full-time equivalent enrollment at that institution would prompt additional funding requests if the Legislature rejected the formula plan early enough.
"They haven't really accepted formula funding, and they haven't rejected it," he said. "By the time we find out whether they
WZR
106
this fall is 12, 087, up 267 from last year. At KU this fall is 13, 294, up 174 from last year. At IU it is 18, 100, up 180. Wichita State University is 10, 615, 221 higher than last year. Pittsburgh State University's FTE is 4, 603, up 25 from last year. State University has 5, 177, an increase of 5 percent.
Fort Hays State's FTE was not available yesterday, but Fort Hays was the only Rogens institution to expect a decrease in enrollment.
have accepted it, it will probably be too late to make any requests."
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to make any requests.
Appropriations hearings will be held ir March, he said.
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--films sua
HOMECOMING FLOAT
ALL living groups, student organizations and off-campus apartment complex organizations who wish to enter a MOBILE FLOAT in the Homecoming Parade October 26 should attend an informational meeting Wednesday, October 10, 7:30 p.m. In the Forum Room, Kansas Union. Rules and procedures will be explained.
COMPETITION
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--films sua
LA PALMA DE MAYORA
CABALLERO Y SONATA
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2 REPEAT SHOWS!!
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Due to the tremendous demand last month
2 more showings of "Fiddler" have been added to our schedule.
Sunday, October 14
2:00 p.m.—Woodruff Auditorium
5:30 p.m. — Union Ballroom
Still only $1.50!
—No refreshments allowed—
ATTENTION!
?
Pre-Med Students
A meeting for all students considering applying to medical school in Fall of '79 or '80
Tuesday
Oct. 9
7:00 p.m.
Big Eight Room Kansas Union
Representatives from KU Med Center and Lawrence campus
Kansas Union
6
Tuesday, October 9, 1979
University Daily Kansan
IM battle brings little glory, but same thrills
By PAM CLARK
Snorts Writer
The players' footing is not as sure on the newly sodded grass field at 23rd and 10th streets as it would be on the astro-turf of Memorial Stadium
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
The few teammates on the sidelines and two or three girlfriends take the place of the roar of the crowd and the excitement of a cheerleading squad.
The band isn't in the stands playing the KU fight song and the Jayhawk mascots aren't strutting along the sedilines.
The player-coaches shout orders from their positions on the field.
Sports
The fraternity and sorority teams wear uniforms with their Greek letters emblazoned on the front or back. The independent's uniforms range from a fully coordinated outfit with nicknames and them to the cast, "anything eyes" look.
On Sunday afternoons the players butt
But one would never know that by wat-
heads, trip and fall and fly through the air to tackle fleet-footed halftails as they scammer down the sidelines. Despite the rules, this is more than "touch" football. The sure facts of the players on Monday demonstrate how rough the game really is.
Baseball team takes two
Each intramural game is special to its participants, even though the game is played by a newspaper or broadcast on the television news. Adulation from fans and attention from the media are not parts of
KU's baseball team swept a doubleheader from the Missouri Westgreff Sisters Sunday, winning 4-2 and 10-0. The victors boosted KU's fall record to 9-1.
Missouri Western jumped ahead 2-0 in the second inning of the first game when the two batters walked and scored.
Juan Ramon scored KU's first run on Roger Riley's ground out in the third.
KU tied the game in the sixth after Brian Gray led by a single. Dick Lewain, who ran for Gray, scored the tying run on Runer Lee's 'Stripe'.
Lee scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch and Matt Gundelinger walked and scored the fourth Kansas run when Ramon reached on an error.
Jim Phillips was KU's starting pitcher.
allowing two hits in five innings. Mike Watt kept the Griffins hitless in two innings of relief to record the win.
In the second game, Randy Melnitto, the only left-hander on the Yawkey wimbill staff, gave up one hit in five innings without walking a batter to win.
Clayton Fleeman and Clay Christiansen each pitched an inning in relief to preserve the shutout. Fleeman retired the side in the sixth as Christiansen surrendered one hit in the seventh.
Lewalen doubled twice in drive two runs and lead Kansas' 13-hit attack. Scott Wright singled three times, driving in three runs and leading in two runs with a single and a double.
"Both teams are undefeated," he said. "This is going to be the toughest game of the season for us."
ching the battle waged between the Scouts and Joe and the Jets II Sunday.
Neil Roth, spokesman for Joe and the Jets, said the game was one that "everyone was talking about.
The Jets are former athletes from the Sunnier Mission school district and from Bishop Roth. Many of the players on the Scouts have participated on various interdisciplinary teams.
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The first half was a defensive battle. The closest other team got to a touchdown when the jets had a third and goal from the two yard line. A扎比 by the Scouts resulted in a kill of the Jets quarterback. The Jets had to go to a field goal by Mike Galvan for a 3-0 lead.
Both teams are in division No. 4 of the National Independent Trophy Leagues. The Second Team is the New York Secured and Inman Kerney "Pearl" Roberts, all the Hill Championship game to the Pinnacle.
Roth and his teammates were confident that their defense, which had not been
It didn't take too long for the scouts to tarnish the defense's unblemished string. On a fourth down and three deep in his own territory, Learned hit Randy Johnson on a deep down, out and up pattern for a pass that Nicki lashed the extra point for a 7-3 lead.
scored upon in their first three games, would be able to contain the Scoys. They decided not to make any adjustments at halftime.
Gadget plays by the Jets couldn't stop the shift of momentum to the Scouts. On one play the Quarterback pitched the ball to the receiver, and the other receiver. The pass was incomplete.
"It is an automatic play. If a receiver runs a down and out and the defensive man doesn't give him any room, then he cuts unfield and let it pass no."
A long pass from Learned to Bill Holmes late in the game set up another Scout touchdown to clutch the 13-1 victory.
Learned made the play sound easy.
"It's a real sale pass," he said. "The pass is either overthrown deep or is completed.
After the final whistle, the Scouts were talking about a possible rematch with the Phi Delta in the Hill Championship, which was still a few games away.
"We're going to kick their butts this time," said Johnston.
"Hey, don't be getting them mad at us," said a teammate to Johnston.
As for Joe and the Jets II, well, they weren't saying much after their first defeat. They left the field quickly and quietly.
Washington announces 1979 basketball roster
Marian Washington, KU women's head basketball coach, will keep 7 players on her roster this year. However, only 12 of the players will be on the traveling squad.
Two-time Kodak All-America Lynette Woodward will lead the watchdogs through a major reorganization that finished first and second in the nation last year, Old Dominion University and the University of Texas.
ODU and Tech are ranked No. 1 and 2 in upcoming issue of Women's Sports magazine's top poll, but KU will face three team totals—Rattgers, Penn State
Washington was not upset the Jayhawks were excluded from the poll.
"That's okay. We'll get in there," she said.
KU will have a pair of 6-foot-2 centers.
Sheira Legrant, a junior college transfer from Roxton Community College in Boston, was among the top 20 recruits listed for the United States college sports sophomore last season. Legrant led the nation's junior colleges in scoring average, with 36 points a game, and in rebounding, with 52 rebounds.
Legrant is one of many new faces on the麋鹿 this week, two other seniors and a junior. He saterson, from last year's squad that finished with a 942- record and a No. 14
Shyra Holden, Wichita sophomore, will be joined by Megan Scott, a freshman from Platteville. Wis.
Along with the 6-four Woodard at forward will be 5-00八-sophomore Pati Mason from 5-10四-8
Patterson, Burnett, Sandy Krox and Gail Brown are the hallway at guard from gate to gate. The position are four freshmen; Chris Stewart, Robin Smith, Lori Boenhacken and Toni Smith.
Conditioning is over and practice has started for the team.
96
Monty Carbonell
Carbonell out for season
The Kansas football team has lost Monty
Carbonell, senior linebacker, for the season
because of a broken arm, Coach Don
Bamrough said yesterday.
Carbonell broke his right forearm during the Syracuse game on Saturday.
Carbononell had 30 tackles on the season, tied for second on the team with cornerback
Leroy Irvin. Outside linebacker Jim Zidd leads with 31.
Carbonell, a senior from Chatham, Ill., was chosen as one of the team's three co-captains before the season.
KU golfers with their scores were Mark Steiner, 232; Doug Weltner, 243, Dean Frankiewicz, 248; and Larry Ledawy, 249.
Golfers finish 14th in Colorado
"We're really sorry this happened," Coach Domb Famblebush said. "Monty is an outstanding young man and an outstanding student." "We're here to support the University of Kansas football team."
The KU men's golf team finished 14th out of 28 teams in the Falcon Invitational Tournament in Colorado Springs, Colo. this weekend.
Top golfer for KU was D.R. Senseman, with a 229 for the 54-hole tournament. Other
The Jayhawks finished the three-day tournament with 948 shots, 71 behind first place Colorado. Oklahoma was fourth at 902 and Mississippi was sixth with 910.
"There are a lot of good terms out there," interim golf coach Jerry Waugh. said. "We're not always in experience playing in the mountains and we aren't just as strong as they are at the moment. We’re certain not as strong as they are, because three of our regulars stayed behind."
"Monty was what you could call a silent leader," Fambrough said. "I don't think I heard him say three words since spring but, we will miss him in a lot of wars."
Fambrough said that Seellars Young would take over Carbonell's spot in the defense, and that Gary Coleman and Dave Mehrer would move up in the lineup.
Injuries coattained to affect the quarterback position, too. Fambrighau said Kevin Clinton looked better, but that he was still not 100 percent recovered.
"As of now," he said, "Brian Bethke will start Saturday."
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KU 79 CHINA NIGHT ON OCT.14TH AT KU UNION
BANQUET
6:00PM—10:30PM
UNION CAFETERIA
MENU:
1. Hot and Sour Soup
2. Red Sweet Chicken Wing
3. Beef with Onion and Green Pepper
4. Sweet and Sour Pork
5. Sweet and Sour Pork with Chinese Noodle
6. Almond Jelly
CULTURE SHOW
7:30PM—9:30PM
UNION WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
PROGRAM
1. Chinese Fashion Show
2. Chinese Dancing
3. Chorus
4. Chinese Kung Fu Show
5. Films, etc.
中國夜
EXHIBIT
3.30P/M - 7.30P/M
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Chinese Painting Demonstration
Furniture Sale for Sale
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843-6416
Tuesday, October 9, 1979
7
Dam, bridge nearly complete
An official for the construction firm repairing the Bowersock dam and building the Kansas River bridge said yesterday that the projects were nearing completion.
Ron Anderson, vice president of Anderson Construction Co. Holt, said the dam repairs should be completed in two to three months, if the river had its current low level.
He also said that the firm was still projecting an opening of the bridge to traffic by Dec.1.
Repair work on the 100-year-old dam was begun early this year to reinforce the weakening structure. The work was
stopped last March because of a rise in the river and was begun again two weeks ago. The north side of the dam had to be dried out before work could be resumed.
Last week the Lawrence City Commission approved an additional $91,790 appropriation for completion work on the replacement of the building will bring the cost of the project to $385,628.
Work on the bridge was delayed earlier this summer when a rise in the river washed away part of a cawsey that had been eroded by storms. A construction. This was one of the reasons that
Douglas County is firing the construction company $420 for each work day from June 12, the project's deadline, until the bridge is completed.
the construction deadline was missed Anderson said.
Currently, the firm is working on the decking for the bridge and pouring the concrete curing. Guard rails will be in place under the decking is completed. Anderson said.
Some painting and finishing work will be done after the bridge is ooen to traffic. Anderson said.
Commission will review sign poll
University Daily Kansan
A survey that shows public support for local billboards will be presented at the Lawrence City Commission meeting tonight. The National Bank Tower, 91 Massachusetts Building,
Tom Murray, lawyer for Martin Outdoor, a California-based firm that owns 11 billboards in Lawrence, said his company will make an argument to keep its billboards in Lawrence.
An ordinance passed by the city commission in 1974 banned billboards within the city limits by 1979.
ordinance violated the company's right to freedom of speech.
Martin Outdoor officials also have said they might sue the city if the firm was not allowed to keep its billboards in Lawrence.
"The city may sue us first for noncompliance with the ordinance," he said. "If this cannot be settled amicably, the issue may end up in the courts in one way or
Mary Baylor Clark said, "I hope we (the commissioners) will stick by our guns. We need to clear the visual clutter in the room and urge the owners to sue us they'll have to sue us."
Also opposing the sign ordinance are seven local businesses which will request variances from compliance.
The businesses are Rusty's North Side IGA, Second and Lincoln streets, Douglas County Bank, Ninth and Kentucky streets, JBG's Big Boy Restaurant, 740 wa. Silton, Plymouth Congregational Church, 125 W. Street and Westview Mall, 125 W. Sith St.
The owners of 57 signs and billboards were notified three weeks ago that their signs had to conform to the ordinance by removing the sign, or a new one or by simply removing the sign.
Large cars more popular
Full sized car sales in Lawrence increased this fall after a springtime slump, according to local car salesmen.
Jay Patterson, new-car sales manager for Turner Chevrolet, estimated that his full-sized car sales in August and September were 410,000 in April, May and June 1979 and over 620,000.
"September was one of the best sales months we've ever had," he said.
He said he was out of full-sized 1979 cars although he still had several left this time last year.
Staff Reporter
By PAM LANDON
However, August and September sales were 25 percent greater than spring sales, he said.
John Bomberberg, new-car sales manager for Landmark Ford, said his sales slumped in April, May and June because of high gasoline prices and tue shortages.
"I think now that people know they're going to pay a dollar a gallon for gas and that they can get it, they're less concerned," he said. "In the spring and early summer we'd see how people and people sometimes can't get more than $ worth of货 at a time, they were worried."
"People have adjusted."
PATTERSON SAID he thought people had
For instance, driving a car that goes about 30 miles on a gallon saves its owner only about $150 a year (approximately 12,000 miles.)
realized they could save only a limited amount on gasoline with smaller cars.
And many people don't want to give up their full-sized cars for this savings, he said.
"I would not personally give up a full-sized car for $150 a year. I want the luxury and convenience that a full-sized car gives," he said.
And the 1980 full-sized models are 50 percent more fuel efficient than the 1975 models, Patterson said.
Darrell Postwellhite, sales manager to
Dale Willie Hunt, said that about 60 percent of single siblings because people were beginning to realize that the gap between prices of economy cars and those of luxury cars was growing.
FOR EXAMPLE, a FONTAINE Bonneville with automatic power, power brakes and steering costs about $7,000 he said, and costs about $6,000 with the same features costs about $6,000.
Higher demand has increased the prices of smaller cars, Postlethwaite said.
"The manufacturers are in the driver's seat," he said, "and they'll make you pay for the smaller cars now."
Loris Bruback, sales manager for Jum Clark Motors, estimated that his August and September sales increased 50 percent over the previous year and lost last summer during the gas shortage gas.
"People were just waiting to see what would happen," he said.
The $400 rebates that Chrysier gave customers around the end of August also helped sales, he said.
BOTH GENERAL MOTORS and Ford Motor Co. district spokesmen said full-sized car sales were increasing in this year.
Russell Steen, 718 Indiana St., sano una although he was concerned about gas mileage, he bought a full-sized car.
However, Colleen Bell, member of the General Motors public relations staff, said Lawrence sales were better than those nationwide.
Joy Menhuen said she bought her full-sized car because she commuted to Topeka and thought large cars were safer on the highway.
"We're averaging about 22 miles to the gallon," she said. "Some smaller cars get only 18 miles to the gallon."
The University Daily
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One time five one two three four five four five six seven eight nine ten ten ten ten
$2.00 $2.00 $2.50 $2.50 $2.00 $3.60 $3.60 $3.60 $3.60
One dollar five one two three four five four five six seven eight nine ten ten
one hundred thousand
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The U10K will 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 if charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the UK business office at 014838.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864.4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables Also roasted, salted, and raw peanuts in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, rice, sweet potatoes, pomegranate honey, and nopal cactus Every Sunday.
Watch for trout pastured at 9th & Illinois, Home of the World Fish Farm (Jazzy Foods) and the Farms of America. Also called, Roasted, and Raw Pork and Chicken with yellow and white pearl pork, honey, and sorghum.
Harte, hero Allemand.
PAPER BACK SALE! $125 each or less. IF INBUYLY
FOR $150 each. PAPERBACKS at all of our 3000 paperbacks are
brown and white in color. Crayons in brown and
blue are in brown and blue at 1601 Main, #785.
Crayons are in brown and blue at 1601 Main, #785.
LOWENBRAU PARTY—Thursday, October 11
ICHABOS. Cheap beer. Tuesday night $1.25
pitcher's.
DINCO SUCKS Become a member of the AKTI-DINCO LEAGUE to earn FREE DINCO and much more membership for $9. Send to AntiDinco League. The WORLD KNOW YOU LOVE ROCK! ROLL!
Zen practice nightly - 6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Seung Sahn from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21. Kit 82-7501 for information.
FOR RENT
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NEW RENT:
Room 102, Inroomed, insulated. $170/mo.
Room 103, Inroomed, insulated. $170/mo.
Parking OK. Bu KU rent. ENDOOR BRASED
Bedroom 104. Enclosed bath. ENDOOR BRASED
244 Front Door. Next door to Banking,
Commercial.
Beautiful, new 2 bdrm. apt. Completely equip...
kitchen. 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone 863-
9579. 1f
FOR SALE
Rooma with, private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-3579 If
12
Pharmacy 843-659-769
To reserve two four-bedroom apartments, call 841-625-3015
or 841-625-3016, with attendant. Call 841-625-4001
or 841-625-4002, with attendant. Respond to 10-
minutes.
Two bedrooms, Quail Creek apartment $275 a
night. Two bathrooms, unfurnished and near KU
Pool. Two unfurnished, unfurnished and near KU
Pool. Wear carpeting. Eventing, ca-
lorine, laundry. Wear carpeting. Eventing,
ca
SunSports-Sun glazes are our speciality. Non-immersive sun glazes, seasonally reasoned. 1921 Michigan. 841-773-2990. Alternator starter and generator starter. NOW ELECTRIC. 843-569-3000. WORK. 841-690-3000. WORK. 841-690-3000. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $39.95, 2 year package. WHITE LIGHT, 704. Mason, 843-388-138. Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! Make use of them! As study guide. 2 For class analysis of Western Civilization available now in Dearer, Mich. Bookstore & Great Book Store.
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Purch. MOFT.
Rick's Bike Store, 1033 Vermont 811-6642
1922 Ford Tortoise, Gold and White. Two-door.
302 V-8. Good car—good price. Call Craig at
842-8800.
FOR SALE
1972 WV Super Beetle, Rebuilt engine, radial
tires, runs good. Good mileage. B45-84232-39
Very nice two bedroom mobile home. C/D dishwasher, washer, dryer, oven, dishwasher, microwave. 320 acres, Iowa. 412 acres, Iowa. Have the New York Times delivered to your apartment for every Sunday afternoon. Please or email us at newyorktimes.com.
1994 Yamaha 600cc. Excellent condition, mechanically and commately. Has received good maintenance. 841-7964 after $50. 10-11 United Air Lines 500cc.
United Air Lines 50% discount coupon, $50; car-
top carrier $30. $841-8488. 10-9
Motorcycle -1975 Kawaii 125 Endura, onyx
miles, must sell, $350. Cali $82, Hertz #82-301. 10-9
1979 Trans Am. T-top, loaded, automatic low
mileage, warranty. $200 list. off $42.22-128.
1942 Pontiac L-MRX Sport Compa. 350 Wt.
great condition. $330 call. £300
K.U. B'nai Brith Foundation presents:
Marina Knait
Marina Knait
— Jewish Soviet immigrant
— First year K.U. Student speaks on— "Can Soviet Jews Leave Russia"?
Discussion following (with back up panel)
Refreshments afterwards Ecumenical Christian Ministries Building 12th St. and Oread 7:30 p.m.
Sunday Oct. 14th
QUANTTRILLS FEA MARKET...the area's best retail for wine, beer and cheese. Looks like a old and well-furnished dinghouse with beautiful ceilings, spacious living rooms, cladding and humidity control on other interiors. The store is in the heart of Westchester, near Saturday, and summer 10-5. 811 New York Avenue, Storrs, CT 06273. Wine shop, burgers, and dumbbells.
Beautiful "8" brick and tracery rafter-banks or golf course. Full basement. In Country Club North, prized in low 80's. For information on Inn Zarawa Resort, 81-290-8600; home 81-290-8600.
Two twin mattressers and box springs. Excellent condition.
Twin mattress with two Mantex sheets, and foam inserts. Call 843-791-5200.
www.mattressdirect.com
INTRAMURAL SWIMMING and DIVING MEET
MON, OCT. 8 and
TUES, OCT. 9
All participants may enter
up until starting time
7:30 p.m. at Robinson Park.
Questions? Contact
Rec Services
208 Robinson
864-3546
A room size rug, several old quilts, Emerald City Antiques, 415 N. 2nd 10-9
1966 Muttang—automatic new brakes and paint
clean and dependable! Call Mike at 843-6256.
74 Vega—excellent condition—to sell immediately—
call 842-2355 after 7 p.m. 10-11
1970 Buick 225—$400, call Torn 841-8435. 10-11
1973 Maverick 4 dr, low miles, new paint, ex-
ception condition. Call Dave or Mike at 852-3400.
(617) 288-3400
1978 Delta 88 Olds--Excellent condition, power
everything, must sell. $5500. 842-8168. 10-12
Must sell mint condition stereo. Scoop Amp. 60W MSS/MSS speakers (speakers speaker mid-range, mute range), duet action. PET-turnable with purchase. $199 or best offer. Call after 5-242-5351. 10-12
New Sony micro camera tape recorder, rechargeable battery pack, AC power adapter, 50, handheld, band-fold and elephant detector microphone, earpiece. Telecoms 10-12 6083
BCA vector 19 inch portable black and white television set. call BAI-8413-088 one 4:00, 10:12. 71 Camara-520 Turbo, many high performance pans, meg wheel Mirt see to use, 842, 843.
RCA victor 19 inch portable black and white television set. Call 841-0383 after 4:00 p.m. 10-12
72 Honda front wheel drive—one owner $3,400
miles, 35 mpg, $1200 firm. See at 1062 W. 28th
17. 12-10
1970-1980 used cars—please let me be your guineen when purchasing a used car. Call and find out why so many KU students buy used cars from Bob Smith-Landmark Ford -842-8530 10-19
FOUND
Ladies glides found North of Military Science and identify, 864-4291 or 864-189
Ask for Judit!
Set of keys w willge "D" found between Lindsey
and Hoch, Hoch = 647-176, 10.6
Set of keys w/large "D", found between Lindley Hall and Hoch, Call 864-1376. 10-9
Keys-4th floor of Wesco, call and identify
Speech Communication book found Tuesday
hight in room outside Wescoe cafeteria by
the front door of the building.
Eudora 1979 man's class ring. Tell me the initials to identify. Call 811-7854. Ask for Linda.
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Earn as much as $50 per 1000 stuffed envelopes with our circulators. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 45042.
10-16
P time assistant to throw papers and help district manager with KC Star circulation in Lawrence Area. pay $4, hour and 15, mile. Cone in person to 932 Mass. 10-9
Wanted: Hard-working, dedicated individuals to work as team managers for the football and track program. Demonstrate ability to join a growing athletic program. Benefit from experience in contact肌室 in hotel BAI at the local level. Contact Mike Hiron in hotel BAI at the local level.
MEN! WOMEN! JOBS! CRUISERSHIPS! SALING
EXPIRATIONS! Good opportunities! Good
applications! FOR APPLICATION INFO-IDS TO:
CRUISERWORLD 153, Box 6029. Sacramento CA 95608.
www.cruiserworld.com
necessary. Full or part-time. Free uniforms, 12-hour
hours of work and no lunchtime. People willing to work and agree themselves. If they are not willing to work, they may be
Restaurant $28 WF with Achievement 10-12
Restaurant $28 WF with Achievement 10-12
Restaurant $28 WF with Achievement 10-12
available. Salary up to $360. Monthly experience
work with adolescent youth preferred. Own work
Part-time dilwashing and counter help, 11
in Dayton. Applicant in person only at
Border Boarding. 128W, 138H. Basket
baked wanted, early morning hours. Agree
between 11-2 p.m. 128W, Stubbing. 520 W.
297H.
Pizza Hut - We are now accepting applications for the Pizza Hut Restaurant W. 23rd St. and the Palm Beach Hotel Restaurant W. 23rd St.
Wanted: 10 ambition college women to start teaching in our college and attend an known art院校. 842-7618 for interview. 842-7618 for better home and garden Craft Creation. It is your opportunity to teach English, call Robin 842-6979.
OVEREASING $15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
Overearning $15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
$15,000
Overearning
Student Aided Needless-mwk during school year and 15-20 hrs wknd. during school year. Apply to the formation call, Mrs. Garnes 644-8224 or apply at Opportunity Employer
DISCO DGE and sound system for the GSOK Hollowen Dance. Nov. 3, DJ with own system preset. System must be powerful enough for the Karaoke System. Box R. O. Kanaan Union. before Oct. 15. 10-11
Kitchen help, walters and waitress needed for part-time employment. Apply in person, between 2-5 p.m. Artie Inn, 809 Vermont. 10-12
Residency Housing, up to 40 hr. weekly, for 18 years of emotional distress and/or related children. Emotional distressed and/or related children require for group home parents Training in a child's behavior and social skills on an hourly rate and monthly for actual work placement. New GSQ qualification, and $3 training fee. Lawrence, KS 66461 for further information. *Kansas State University*
SURVEY RESEARCH ASSISTANT
LOST
RESOURCE RESEARCH ASSISIANT.
The Company seeks an Assistant in knowledge base and time research assistant who will be responsible for supporting the Research Manager. RA will assist with project coordination, management of activities and in survey management activities and in survey research. The position requires a Bachelor's degree or equivalent in research survey research and asset management from $600-$850 per month depending on exp. For 10.179 to Port St. John, Center for Public Health, Lawrence Ksunna (912) - 834-7600, 10-123
Two weeks ago. Red and blue plaid umbrella in Supper Museum. Sentimental value. Reward. 841-5679. 10-10
Last class rim in 4th floor men's room of Wescoe on 9-25. Mans 864-2319 after 4. A reward: 10-12
Rod junglejack jacket with the University of New
York in the background. Sep 10.
Flint Hall - Sentimental-848-1237
MISCELLANEOUS
THEISS BINDING COPYING—The House of Uber's Quick Copy headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us up to 638 at UberM, or phone 423-360. TWO-HOURS ONLINE.
NOTICE
PERSONAL
ATTENTION: KANSAS READERS. TIRED OF WALKING? In need of a good, dependable walk or used car or truck? Call the new kid in town.
Terry Mode 83-2500 10-15
TENNIS AND RAQUETAL PLAYERS: When you request a trumpet call, David Akkerman calls David Akkerman, 842-365-1664. Assn. and Official Stringer, WGT Doubles. Very reasonable rules on good playing. 10-9-11
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC - upbrings to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment, Birth Control, Hospitalization. For appointment, 9 AM to 5 PM (9:32), 4401 10th St, Overland Park, KS
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tf
ARE YOU READY? The 2nd annual JAHAWKJ
JoG is at JE 21, 1979, 10.600 meter run. Contact
GAMMA PHI BETA 843-8023 or PHI KAPPA
PHI 843-2653 for registration.
PSYCHIC AWARDSEN CLASS, learn about
nurse, energy centers, healing, spirit guides,
Thursday evenings, starting Oct. 11. Call Eve
Lesdenderd 821-7824.
10-10
BABYCAKES
Happy 3 Years
JCC
...
BABYCAKES
If you're looking for a bar with cheese beers and wine, don't miss the Bar Haven. People you like to meet the Harbour Lifts are there daily and Friday afternoons for TGIF. New wave bars from the Harbour Lift. Get your dog companion at the Harbour Lift. Get your dog companion at the Harbour Lift. Get your dog companion at the Harbour Lift. Get your dog companion at the Harbour Lift. Get your dog companion at the Harbour Lift.
JOBS ON SHPISI: American, Foreign, No experience required. Excellent pay. Workwide schedule. Send resume to SAFAFAT, 5340 W. Box 29, informational center, SAFAFAT.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid - 864-5564.
SENIORS! Hope Award voting Monday and Tuesday
@3-5:30. Booths at Summer Wesley, Wesley.
19-9
The Hope Award: For special teachers only.
Seniors-vote Monday and Tuesday for your favorite.
10-9
PERSONAL
If you are interested in playing SCHABBLE, call
SUA 864-2947. Emily 864-6393. Tasien 845-3910.
Mary 864-8391.
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head-
quarters, 814-2145 and KU info. 864-3508. tff
Mary J—Got a whole Thanksgiving vacation and nothing to do. Got any suggestions? Steve. 10-15
Short of time We'll write those letters to mom, your friend, or a hot and jubilous love letter to grandmother. Let's talk about Business letters too. More relaxed and excellent service. Call 864-2664 for more info. 10-11
The KU GO CLUB meeting every Tuesday 7-10 p.m. Cork-2, Union, 864-3477. 10-12
Tournament Director: recreation majors or anyone interested. Call SUA office 864-3477 (akk for indoor recreation).
ARB minus B plus S. It's T minus one day to
fluffdow. 10-11
John: I lied. Jack Black will always top Jack
Green. Happy 20th Mr. Kealing! Love, High Card
Shark. 18-9
An informal Turab study group, including photography of Jewish observance is meeting weekly on Wednesday 2:30-3:30 in the Union. For more info contact Jaffa P.-H. Atkinson 861-745-3911.
Greerz, no one can do it quite like you do. You are in the mood of playing with the rat BAT and toilet turn-ups, Kenny Stokes with the rat BAT and toilet turn-ups, Friday night. Thanks for the pile drive game with the rat BAT and toilet turnups, Chuck Snapple, B. Gray, G. X., J. thanks for the pile drive game with the rat BAT and toilet turnups, On behalf of Born, Punch (the banker), and On behalf of Hoy (young 10-12) F. Soomers.
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Garage-complete professional bicycle repair. Garage specialty="Tum-Ups" and "Total Overhaul." Details coll 841-2781. 10-22
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uhler Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from am 1 AM to PM Monday to Friday, 9 am to 1 pm on Tuesday to 88AM.
EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 600-102 - call 82575. MATH: 115-700 - call 82575. STATISTICS: 82575. STATISTICS: 82575. PHYSICS: 900-500 - call 84906. ENGLISH: 82575. SPANISH: 84907-7037
SPANISH TUTORING. Experienced teacher and
tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108,
109, 111, 112, 116. Call 841-2467.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES | Send $100 for your 306-page catalog of college literature, 10.250 books刊送, BOX 2509G; LA Angeles, CA, (213) 477-8228
11-7
Need Body Work? We can shape up your car with daint repair, rust removal, and a new coat of paint to date at time up and winnowing your car. Call M.J. Marve or at 843-6258. 10-11 you bucks!
Excellent dee-jay with sound equipment for your private parties. Very competitive prices. 841-1838, after six. 10-12
Creative illustrations-Artwork and illustrations for:
advertising, logo, personal use, and cartoons, phone: 841-7650 or 841-7858.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE 841-4598. TF
Journyman typographer, 20 years typing/typing-sessing experience. 4 years academic typing; thoses, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest Selective eniment. 481.4948 TY
TYPING
Experienced typet- Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 453-5910. **TF**
electric JBM Selective Preprocessing spellings corrected. 843-354 Miss Wright.
Experienced typhus -theses, dissertations, term
papers, research articles, elective *Sarb*
841-3138, evenings 822-3218
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Elfin or Jeannam, 811-2172.
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 812-8654, after 4 p.m. 2-28
rally, rebellion. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call
841-3387.
I do darned good typing. Papers under 50 pp.
call. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6438, 85e per
page.
WANTED TO BUY more or less 2 cu. ft. bedroom furniture 841-763-864 or 841-764-258. Furniture 10-10 Female roommate to sit daily xiayuehang or to sleep at home, without the dorm, quieter, and it's better (no kids).
AH kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate service, low rates. 843-3653 evenings and weekends. 10-25
Home for calico kitten. She loves people. Call
843-8509. 10-9
Roommate wanted to share two bedroom apt.
Keep calling 842-0575. 10-10
WANTED
Nured furniture tommite to clean a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. Bus stops in front, have a room and laundry one block away, $105 plus utilities. Call between 6 p.m., p. 841-729-3990.
I'm interested in sipping a nice looking apt. and other student students preferably already fornished. Must be nice looking apt. Call Paul 842 9421, please leave message.
Someone to do part time sewing. Pay negotiable.
Call 841-2904. 10-10
Mature rostrum accommodate for very nice three b-droom duplex, 15 min. walk from campus. $180 month + 1' utilities. Call 941-2305. after 6-10 p.m.
Roommate wanted for beautifully furnished 3 bedroom house house $75 per month + 1/3 utilities.
Call 841-3661. 10-12
PSCHIATRISHT AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES apply to Peggy Harrison. Job Service Center, W2 510. Tepoka, KS Phone: (933) 263-8680. apply to Peggy Harrison. Job Service Center, W2 510. Tepoka, KS Phone: (933) 263-8680. apply to Peggy Harrison. Job Service Center, W2 510. Tepoka, KS Phone: (933) 263-8680. employer.
100 lb. Lizard required to eat large bugs that
inhibit aps. at 1358 Ohio St. Call 843-957-10-11
Excellent matrices needed for alterations on wool skirts—hem and waistlines. Will pay reasonably—Pam B64-1316 keep trying. 10-11
Need roommate for 2 bedroom house. Must be
tull. Call Chris 814-6033 keep trying.
10-12
AD DEADLINES
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Friday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
If you've got it, Kanaan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flt below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here: ___
___
___
___
___
___
___
1
time
$2.00
01
additional words
RATES:
15 words or less
3 times
$2.50
.07
2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.02 .03 .04 .05
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.50
DATES TO RUN: ___ to
NAME:___
ADDRESS:___
PHONE:___
PHONE:
KANSAS CLASSIFIERS_EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
8
Tuesday, October 9, 1979
University Daily Kansan
MINGLES DISCO·MINGLES DISCO·MINGLES DISCO·MINGLES DISCO
Bath Time
robin's nest
Bath & Kitchen Shoppe
210F West 25th 841-3330
Remember:
A 10% Discount
On Everything In Store
Discount Exclude Sales Items
Holiday Plaza
Next to General Jeans
841-3330
Mon-Sat 10:00-6:30
Thursday 10:00-8:30
Western Store
Western Store FOR THE REAL WESTERN WEARER
SHIRTS: Snap Front and Sleeve Yoked Shirts
JEANS: LEE & WRANGLER
JEANS:
Western Jeans From $13.20 to $15.75
HATS: By Stetson and Miller
Check Our Boot Selection —Biggest In Town
Bring this ad for 15% off.
RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
ENGLISH WEAR WESTERN WEAR HORSE AIDS
RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP ENGLISH WEAR WESTERN WEAR HORSE AIDS Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa • Lawrence. Kansas 842-8413
Hc
A Pet Shop
"The first step
to Pet Care"
Tropical • Domestic
Exotic Pets
Grooming & Pet Care
w Members
ways
elcome
Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
Environment
"Make New Friends, Meet Old Friends"
Call for appointment & prices
Grooming & Pet Care
MINGLE TONIGHT!
TUES: LADIES' NITE Movie Trivia Contest
711 W. 23rd 841-4300 Mon-Sat. 11-7.
Malls Shopping Center Sun. 12-5
WED: DONNA SUMMER NITE Album Giveaway
THURS: ROCK 'N ROLL NITE
FRI: COLUMBUS DAY Galliano Drink Special
SAT: DISCO DANCE CONTEST
Mon-Fri 4 pm-3 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W.6th
Sat-Sun 6 pm-1 am
842-7030
It's time to start thinking about X-mas gifts . . . come in to Haas Imports and use our layaway plan today!
1029 Massachusetts 843-0871
Tuesday Nights at the
Flamingo Club is Ladies Night
50* Drinks for ladies all day and night.
501 North 9th
Open 11 am-3 am Open memberships available
Express yourself
pen&,inc. makes it easy
with 10% off on all drawing tables and easels
through October!
pen&.inc.
art supplies
613 vernyard 841-1777
TRANSPORTATION
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
GIVES YOU WHAT YOU WANT
WHEN YOU NEED IT
0000 4456 3982 1247 7588 4369 5852 7934 6116 7047 6928 5819 6704 5695 5586 5475 5364 5253 5142 5031 4920 4819 4718 4617 4516 4415 4314 4213 4112 4011 3910 3810 3710 3610 3510 3410 3310 3210 3110 3010 2910 2810 2710 2610 2510 2410 2310 2210 2110 2010 1910 1810 1710 1610 1510 1410 1310 1210 1110 1010 910 810 710 610 510 410 310 210 110 010
The Texas Instruments TI-50
Available at the Kansas University Bookstores Kansas Union and the Satellite Union We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students
-scientific and statistical functions
—2 continuous memories
Reg.$40
SALE $36
T1-50
—computes all data to 11 digits internally
YOUR KANSAS SUNDAY
BOOKSTORES
slimline and beautifully designed
LOVE
Guaranteed Used LP's
$2.25
Rock, Disco, Jazz, etc. Large Selection of Paraphernalia
15 West 9th 842-3059 We Buy Records
RECORDS
ACME cleaners 3 Convenient Locations
Malls - 843-0895
Hillcrest - 843-0928
Downtown - 843-5156
Saturday Service - in by 9 - out by 4 10% Discount on Most Dry Cleaning Items for Cash and Carry
MANE TAMERS
DOG
NEIL AND MARIE.
841-0906
Dee Williams hair design
Linda Berniece Hinkle Garber perms hair design &
highlighting
USED CARS
QUALITY you expect... your get it
THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
1975 CELICA ST 5-PEED Stereo Radials, 31,000 Miles
1976 CELICA ST 4-PEED Stereo Radials, 31,000 Miles
1979 NOVA HATCHBACK AUTO P/S / F, 1.58-8.00
1980 GTL GT/ LTBACK 5-PEED A/C, Stereo Radials
Lawrence Toyota Mazda
Lawrence Auto Plaza 842 2191
Pizza
Pasta
Salad Bar
Campus
Hideaway
106 N. Park
Laurence, KS 66044
843-9111 Est. 1957
BMW
A BACKYARD EAGLE
A LITTLE COOLER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 33
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Senate hears fund requests
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
See story page six
9
PALMIST
BILL COAYES/Kansas State
Palms uv
Charles Hamilton, 29, of Lawrence, peers between selections from his handprint collection. Hamilton, a palmist, charges $2 for each reading.
Life's journey etched in lines across palm
BY BOB PITTMAN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A hand-lettered, cardboard sign,
"Palmist," hangs from a window of the frame house at 946 Louisiana St.
By 1979, the days of the traveling gypsy wagon have gone. The golden hoop earring has vanished.
But shadows of the past linger on the face of Charles Hamilton as he hunches in silent concentration over the palms of a client.
His eyes narrow to study the lines that cross the hands before him.
"First I will look for changes and differences between your hands," he says, bringing the outstretched hands closer together.
As Hamilton's eyes meet his client's, the palmist's communion with the craft begins.
He continues his reading with a careful exploration of the right hand only, tracing the lines of the palm with his eyes, drawing on the meaning with a softly stamming voice.
HAMILTON HAS read palms for five years. He was introduced to the "science," as he calls it, in Berkeley, Calif. in 1974.
"There were a lot of palmists there," he said. "Interest in the interest is widespread and it seems that people are involved with it and to learn something. It's quite different in Lawrence. I'm the only one."
"I'm about the only palmitin in the Midwest that I know of. There are some in Kansas City, but I've always been a little lee of palmitins who put out a big sign.
"I've never been to any palmsists since the first time I had my palm read. I've never really talked to any other ones.
"YOU KNOW," he said, shifting his weight in the wooden swing on his front porch, "there is a scientific explanation for palimetry."
The enthusiasm builds in his gray eyes as his hands become animated.
"One-third of the nerve sensations of the body go from behind the front lobe of the brain to the hands," he said. "Most of these to the dominant hand. There is a
scientific explanation because nerve endings are down there, right under the lines of the hand.
"In other words, your hand is your brain.
There is a physical reality to the hand.
The conclusions I draw from looking at it are based on patterns."
HE SAID HE had done a great deal of reading on palimetry, although good books on the subject were hard to find.
The mount of Jupiter, for example, is below the index finger and indicates leadership abilities, he said.
The "different areas were originally correlated in India with astrology. Palmistry goes back to about 1,000 B.C. in India.
"But it's very dangerous to just look at one thing in a reading. If you start off with the lines of the palm, for example, you are ignoring other basic signs.
"THEER'S THE placement of the thumb. A low-set thumb—i mean low-set in connection with the distance between your thumb and the other begins—means that the person is someone who'll probably give you the shirt off his back if you ask him. Someone with a very big arm would do it."
"You look at the fingernails. If a person's nerves are in good shape his fingernails should be clear, opaque and strong.
"The color of the lines tells how strong the heart is. Red is good. A blue color is bad. If the lines are blue, a person's having no blood flow." It means it means the person's color is diseased.
THE HEAD, HEART and life lines are only a few of the many lines that run across the palm. They can reveal past events in the future, according to palms.
He thrusts both of his hands out for inspection. "If you look at my hands, you'll notice that I have a broken line in my life."
See PALMIST back page
Inquiry clears sheriff of charges
Bv MARK SPENCER
Staff Reporter
An investigation by the state attorney general's office into allegations that Jeff Koehler had confessed Johnson has concluded that the charges were totally baseless. Tom Hanee, deputy prosecutor for the state attorney general, said
Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone requested that the investigation be made Monday after Gilee Pingar, a democratic candidate for Fairfield, accused Johnson, a Republican, of attempting to cover up traffic accident involving a deputy.
After hearing the conclusion reached by investigators, Pinegar said he was not certain whether he would press for more evidence before he discussed the incident during the campaign.
Pinegar alleged that Johnson had not three false bills for repair of the vehicle to the Douglas County Commission.
MALONE, WHO WAS not involved in the actual investigation, said it has his policy to request an outside investigation of charges of police misconduct.
Johnson, who said he had been in favor of the investigation, declined to comment on the investigators' conclusions until he was officially notified of the results.
Pinegar said that he and the investigators had had the same information about the incident, but that he was not satisfied with the inquiry.
The first bill was dated June 28, the second had no date listed and the third was dated July 48. All three bills were for work by Landmark Ford, 32nd and Alibama street
The repair hills in question, he said, had made no reference to what automobile was worked on.
Pinegar said he based his allegations on information he received last week from a citizen.
"If that's all they found, no, I'm not happy," he said.
JOHNSON SHOWED investigators the report of the accident, which said it had occurred June 27 on a county road north of Big Springs.
Deputy Kevin Regan, the driver of the airstreet car in the accident, the driver of the roadblock, and the collided at an intersection with a car driven by Spencer D. Conard, 19, Rt 1, Lecompton.
The county commission paid $1,662 for the repair work.
Haney, deputy attorney general, said Bruce Mellor, special investigator for the attorney general, had interviewed representatives of Landmark Ford and
The report included photographs of the accident scene and the damage to both cars. There were no injuries or traffic citations issued, according to the report.
Norton businessman files for Kansas primary
determined that there had been no mistakes in billing.
By TONLWOOD
Staff Reporter
Boy Veager has never been to Washington, D.C., he doesn't intend to go. But that's not stopping him from running for president.
Yager owns the Sharp Construction Company in Norton and has the distinction of being one of the two persons who already purchased the Kanais' first presidential primary 1A1.
If elected, he will preside over the country from his home in Norton, he said.
For $100, Yeager will have his name on the Republican primary ballot. Bob Mad
"I've decided that all three branches of the government have gotten totally out of touch with the people," he said. "They've never had to deal with them, but by driving so many to the minors."
Yeager is running for president, he said, because he is fed up with government bureaucracy.
dox, Hollywood, Fla., will run on the Democratic primary ballot. He could not be reached for comment.
"IF THE GOVERNMENT decided to get down to a state level, people might get a little involved. I guess I'm a statesignist."
Yeager is not afraid to take extreme stands on issues. His first action would be to abolish the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
"I don't see what useful purpose it performs," he said. "It could be done quicker and cheaper on the state level."
He said that because he was not afraid to take strong action, he would make a better presidential candidate than other Republicans in the race.
He included Sen. Robert D. Khan, in that assessment, even though he referred to Dae as a "super senator who will surely be a formidable candidate in the race."
IN OTHER CAMPAIN'G promises, Yankee said, also would abolish the nuclear companies and push for the development of nuclear energy instead of alternative fuels.
"I'd get the government out of energy and let private enterprise founder around in its own mess," he said. "Someone will stumble up, and eventually get something done out there."
Yeager offered no specific solutions for dealing with inflation, but blamed the problem on the federal government.
See PRIMARY back page
Late paychecks hurt faculty fund
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Reporter
A delay in September paychecks because of paperwork problems will result in losses in the retirement funds of many tenured faculty members and administrators, Wach, head of the state's accounting control and services section, said yesterday.
A month's interest that cannot be recovered will be lost as a result of the late paychecks. Wachs said.
Under University retirement programs, 5 percent of the contributions are deducted each month. The University then matches the deduction, making the total retirement contribution 10 percent of the amount paid.
The Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association and the College Retirement Equities Fund, two federal retirement institutions, each deduction for each faculty member's tax.
The TIAA invests the capital in mortgages and other annuities, while the CREF invests in stocks.
If the TIAA and CREF do not receive the deductions within 30 days, they will not credit interest to the faculty member's retirement fund.
A faculty member can participate in one or both of these programs.
Craig McCoy, director of business affairs, said he did not know how many persons participated in the programs, nor how much money each faculty member would lose.
Wachs said the University's Sept. 1, paycheck-deductions were sent to Topeka last week, after the deadline. KU was the only university to send its September deductions late.
Wachs said the late deductions were caused by late paychecks. The division of the University staff would need University's staff deductions before it can send them to the TIAA and CREF in New York.
The paychecks could have been delayed because some instructors did not sign all of their checks. A representative for Sherry Kogf, administrative officer for the payroll office. An error by the employee caused the delay.
office also could have delayed the checks she said.
Because some of the paperwork was late last month, all of the deductions could not be compiled, and consequently the interest on them could not be figured before the deadline.
Wachs said it was impossible to determine how much money each faculty member had lost because some of the interest returns were based on how stocks fared.
Kopf said a supplementary payroll system had made it possible to deliver paychecks to faculty members by Sept. 18.
Faculty members who needed their paychecks immediately and could not wait until Sept. 18 were able to obtain interest through the KU Endowment Association.
Through the use of the supplementary payroll system, the University usually is able to send list of deductions before the end of the 30-day vacation wachs. Wachs said.
"This is a serious problem, especially for senior faculty members," Gaylord Richardson, charman of the Faculty and Responsibilities Committee, said.
Officials at the Endowment Association said more loans had been processed last month than usual.
Some faculty members have said that they thought the loan procedure was a great inconvenience and questioned whether they would have taken their own payments in the first place.
However, Kopf said last month was busier than usual because many faculty members had assumed different positions for the new school year.
Koft said that the late paychecks problem usually supersed in August and September and that the problem should not be as severe in future months.
James Cobier, director of the state division of accounts and reports, said Monday that a new statewide personnel payroll system could be implemented by
The division of accounts and reports began a study in August to determine the needs of the state's payroll system.
By BOB PITTMAN Staff Reporter
More than half of the Lawrence apartment buildings inspected by the city violate five safety codes, Lt. Roy Gilliam, Jr. the Fire Department inspector, said yesterday.
The citywide inspection program began in January on Massachusetts Street, Gilliam said. He said buildings that included more than two family units were being inspected and that the inspection working its way west. Even though about 800 units will be checked, he said.
Inspection shows dwellings violate fire safety code
He said he now was inspecting odd-numbered houses in the 1300 block of Ohio Street.
About 174 units have been inspected on Massachusetts, Vermont, Kentucky and Tennessee streets, Gilliam said.
JAMES McWAIN, Lawrence fire chief,
the start of the inspection program
that ensured that residents could be
safe of residents living in sororities,
fraternites, apartments and rooming
"The larger number of people, the higher our priority is to protect them," he said.
"We're not trying to make new houses out of old ones," McWaid said. "We just want to give everyone an equal chance to get out of a residence in the event of a fire."
University fraternity and sorority houses were inspected by the city last year.
He said that property owners who were found to be in violation of the city fire safety code would have from 15 to 20 days to make an active and structured structure into compliance with the code.
THE "AMOUNT OF time that we give the owner depends upon what the violations are," he said. "If the violations are major, we would be given a full number of days, we could give them the full number of days. If, however, the violation was a minor, we could give them only 15 days to make the violation vanish."
After the time period expires, a second inspection is made, McSwain said. If the case is still in violation of the code, it can be
turned over to the city prosecutor after 30 days.
The new city fire code went into effect May 9. McSwain said the new code had no effect on those houses that were found to be in violation before the code was enacted.
"It's basically the same code. It's just more compatible with the other codes that we used by the city."
GILLIAM SAID Ohio Street had the largest number of residential violations of any street that had been checked so far.
McSwain said many of the buildings violated the code because they did not have two exits.
"The Ohio Street houses have been the area some of the houses in Kentucky and Tennessee have been built on, and more recent construction in those areas. But the houses on Ohio Street haven't had any impact."
Other common violations included a lack of fire extinguishers in buildings, unclosed furnace rooms and a lack of adequate fire alarm systems.
"IN SOME OF the older buildings that have violations, we suggest that the building have been replaced by a new building of place occupancy," McSwain said. "Each building is considered separately. Every building has a history."
A give-and-take system is used when the fire department tries to bring houses that were constructed under previous codes into compliance with the current code.
"a grandfather clause" in the fire safety states that a building constructed before the requirements necessarily have met every one of the requirements of the current code, Moldwain
"We're looking for a fair level of safety. For instance, a good fire detection system could bring the building up to a level that we would consider safe."
Gilliam said the fire department received few calls from residents complaining about the fire code violations in their buildings.
“Residents don't call in until we make inspections of the buildings,” he said. “They know that if they complain to their landlords, the repairs will raise their rents.”
2
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 10. 1979
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the kansan's Ware Services
Russian granted U.S. asylum
TAMPA, FiA — A young Russian sailor who jumped ship in darkness and hibbled 15 months in a weak-lid bid for freedom, was granted asylum in the United States.
Igor Alexandrovich Ponomarenko, 19, was told he could remain in the United States after meeting with immigration officials and representatives of the country.
After the decision to grant asylum was made, Pomarenko agreed to meet with the Soviety attache, who interviewed him for 35 minutes to determine what his status was.
Pope's visit cost $1.5 million
WASHINGTON --The bill for Pope John Paul II's weekend visit to Washington will be about $1.3 million for the District of Columbia and federal funds.
Nearly two-thirds of that is for overtime pay for police.
Besides the police overtime, tax funds were spent for feeding and housing children, who bring in extra health and sanitation workers and erecting security fences.
Local governments will have to pick up about $400,000 in extra expenses for increased weekend service of the Washington a subway system.
About 1,200 members of Roman Catholic youth groups and scouting organizations cleaned up tons of trash left by the crowd of 175,000 who attended the pope's Sunday Mass on the Mall between the Capitol and the Washington Monument.
Companies checked for PCR
TOPEKA-The Kansas Department of Health and Environment said yesterday that it was checking two Johnson County companies that might be burning waste oil contaminated with PCB, the toxic chemical poly-chlorinated biphenyl.
John Goetz, a health division engineer, said the department had collected oil samples from the Holland and Reno construction companies, which used oil to
The oil reportedly was sold to the companies by Diamond Petroleum Co. of, independence, M. which was funded $131,000 by the Environmental Protection Agency.
PCB, which is used in oil an electrical insulator, has been shown to cause cancer in laboratory animals.
Goetz said that if there were detectable traces of PCB in the oil, they could become airborne when the oil was burned to heat asphalt.
U.N. evacuated in plane scare
NEW YORK - A publicity-seeking author in a light plane circled the United Nations' neighborhood in midtown Manhattan for more than three hours yesterday, prompting the evacuation of thousands of people from two U.N. buildings and the offices of his publisher.
Alarm sweep the area as crowds on the streets watched the plane fly around at low altitudes in a gusty autumn sun. Emergency equipment streamed into the air and the planes were towed away.
The pilot, Robert Bardin, 61, author of an autobiography, landed his plane at LaGuardia Airport after 3% hours.
Bauin's pilot license was immediately revoked and he was charged with aggravated harassment and extortion in interstate commerce—illegally registered.
He was jailed at the Federal Correctional Center in Lower Manhattan to await a bail hearing set for today.
Railroad rate increase halted
TOPEKA-An Interstate Commerce Commission order will at least temporarily block a shipping rate increase proposed for towns along three branch lines.
Tom Taylor, spokesman for the Kansas Corporation Commission, said the ICC had issued the order to keep the proposed surcharges from going into effect.
Rock Island had proposed raising interstate shipping rates in Kansas along branch lines from Dodge City to Bucklin, Abiline to Hertington and Topeka to St. Louis.
The KCC last week protested the surcharges as a backdoor attempt to eliminate service to smaller towns served through the branch lines by charging
In some cases, the surcharges could nearly double the cost of interstate shipments from small towns.
Rhodesian talks break down
LONDON-British negotiators yesterday gave guerrillas the Zimbabwe Rhodesia peace talks 48 hours to change their minds and accept a compromise
The Patriotic Front guerrilla答应 responded by calling the British demand 'absurd' and reiterating its objections to the British draft, which center on strict property, pension and citizenship rights that the guerrillas contend will preserve white-minority privilege.
The guerrillas said they could give no final response until all sides had agreed on who would control the government and the guns during a transition to democracy.
British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington did not say what he would do if the guerrillas did not respond in the allotted time.
Missouri murder aoes to trial
ST. JOHSEPH, Mo—A jury of eight women and four men was chosen yesterday to hear the second-degree murder in Mielin Lee Reynolds, a former staff nurse at the St. Joseph hospital. Eric Kricha
Christian, the son of a lumber executive, disappeared May 26, 1768 at a downtown shopping mall. His body was found the next day along a Missouri river.
The 12 jurors and two alternates, a man and a woman, last night went to the Holiday Inn here, where they will be sequestered during the trial. They were to hear opening arguments by prosecution and defense attorneys today in Baskanan County Circuit Court.
Lee Nation, Reynolds' attorney, at first had said he would rely on a defense of by reason of mental disease. But Nation told the jury yesterday that the defense was not based on evidence.
High court to study trial access
WASHINGTON—The U.S. Supreme Court agreed yesterday to study how much discretion judges have in deciding to exclude the public and press from certain proceedings.
The justices said they would review a Hanover, Va., case that could clarify the confusion of lower courts nationwide caused by the Supreme Court's ruling on the use of self-obfuscation.
The Virginia case involved two Richmond reporters who were ousted from a murder trial in Hanover last September by the trial court's judge.
To decide the case's merits, the justices first must rule that they have jurisdiction to do so.
Arguments about this case probably will be heard in January. But the justices left open the possibility that they might not rule on the central issue.
The Virginia Supreme Court upheld the Hanover trial court judge's actions last July 9.
In other actions, the Supreme Court agreed to judge the constitutionality of Alabama's death penalty law, under which more than 40 persons have been convicted of capital murders in the last decade.
Weather...
The KU Weather Service has predicted partly cloudy skies and slightly warmer temperatures for today. Winds will be down to the southwest at 10 to 20 mph. High temperatures will be in the mid- to upper-60s and lows will be in the mid-40s.
The extended forecast calls for cooler than normal temperatures tomorrow through Sunday with highs in the mid-40s to mid-70s and lows in the mid-30s to
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
3
Alcohol plant to use waste
Bv BARBARA ROSEWICZ
TOPEKA (UPI)-Highway Oil Co. of Teokaeraya早就 announced to build up a storage facility that would produce alcohol for use in gasohol and would reef on animal waste for food.
The gasoline retailing company intends to build the plant in Paxico, 30 miles west of Topeka, and run it on renewable energy - that is, wind energy. It can supply 10,000 cattle at a feed plant.
Vice President Raymond Gaffney said that the plant would cost from $6 million to $8 million and would produce 5 million gallons of pure anhydrous alcohol a year.
The alcohol will be blended into Gasolon, a motor fuel mixture of 10 percent alcohol and 90 percent gasoline.
Unlike current distillers, Highway Oil's facility will count on a large herd of cattle to kick off a chain of renewable energy sources.
UP TO 10,000 cattle will be housed in confinement buildings located near Rancho Sandoval in southeastern Santa Barbara solar energy, animal waste will be converted to methane gas, which is similar to methane.
The gas is expected to provide 78 percent of the energy needed to fire boilers to distill grains into alcohol.
To complete the cycle, the protein-rich grain base leave over from the alcohol-producing process will be funneled back into the energy chain as part of the cattle's feed.
Gaffney said nonrenewable energy sources, such as crude oil, would be used on a standby basis to make the plant as energy self-sufficient as possible.
"WE HAD TO stay away from fossil fuels, such as oil, which the reason the business was formed was to plant fuel to make alcohol would be self-defeating, if you use that kind of energy to run a car."
Gaffney said the design had been tinkered with in scientific circles for years, but he knew of no other plant on the map or the drawing board that used it.
He said the business would be prepared to handle 5,000 to 6,000 bushels of grain a day, offering an alternative market for local farmers.
Milo will be the primary grain employed to make the alcohol, but the plant also will be able to potatoes or sugar beets.
THE COMPANY has just begun to gather information about the plant. Gaffney predicted that the plant would be operating in one year. A consulting firm will design the facility to be selected this year.
Gaffney said the company had decided to build the plant because of the large demand for Gasolah, which has been increasingly the car owners and helps stretch fuel reserves.
Gaffney said a 10 percent federal tax credit was the most important incentive prompting new alcohol plants. He stressed that alcohol companies are more committed on both the federal and state levels.
THE PLANT WILL be built by Highway 102 and the Hudson Ranch. The companies raised money to build the distillery by selling 10 service stations and 8,000 acres of rancher land.
Highway O1, whose board chairman is A.B. Hudson, owns more than 200 retail gasoline stores in 38 states. The first state to join the league markets the blend in four other states: Iowa, Kentucky, Nebraska and Ohio. It makes up about 10 percent of its sales.
Gaffney said the company would blend the interests of its investors in logistics and economically feasible. He said costs prohibited selling it in other states, such as Missouri, that had no tax implications.
The company's eventual goal is to see Gasohol make up 100 percent of its sales, he said.
CONCERT CALENDAR
live music events for all occasions
OCTOBER
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Friday 10:30 in the barn, Open Stream
Wed 13 The NIGHT WORKS
Wed 17 THE NIGHT WORKS
OCTOBER
19 LATEST BROWN BROTHERS on stage at 8 p.m.
Friday 20 LATEST BROWN BROTHERS on stage at 8 p.m.
NOVEMBER
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Friday 26 MAIL ONLINE and JOB BANK
NOVEMBER
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UNITED STATES
Sun 3 Bay Area Reunion
*Annual membership fee: $150 (excludes all club dues)
Club dues are $10.25 per hour
Club dues are $10.25 per hour
Open concert on
8:00 a.m. show at 9:00
at Lawrence Opera House
Call for info: 812-6930
Carter political aides have questioned whether Mondale should be part of the 1980 ticket.
“It’s not quite as constructive a proposal as at first blush it seems to be,” the president said. But he did call the offer interesting.
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The president defended his decision to wait until Dec. 4 to announce his campaign plans.
CARTER REITERATED his determination to stick with Vice President Walter Mondale as his running mate in any re-election bid.
THE NEWS CONFERENCE was the president's first since July 25, when Carter completed his Cabinet shake-up.
Yesterday's conference resulted in a variety of questions about Carter's finances since an apparent presidential campaign by Sen. Edward Kennedy surfaced.
"I think it's an effort designed to disarm the willingness or eagerness of our allies adequately to defend themselves."
Sun and James
But Carter side-step most of the questions and suggested to one reporter that she was delivering a campaign speech for the Massachusetts Democrat.
"I want to do all I can without being an announced candidate, to work with Congress," he said.
to continue their own rate of modernization as it has been, provided we don't modernize at all.
- Refused to predict how he would fare in the upcoming Florida straw vote for presidential candidates.
The president said he would prefer to modernize the forces of NATO and then to negotiate with the Soviets.
On other subjects, Carter:
* Declined to state whether he would debate any Democratic or Republican presidential opponents.
No Dealers Please
Carter made his first public response yesterday to an offer by the Soviet Union to withdraw 20,000 troops from Central Asia, which was in preparation for deployment of missiles in western Europe.
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- Declined to comment in detail on the problems associated with allegations of cocaine use by Hamilton Jordan, his White House chief of staff.
Carter said the Russians were offering
Although inflation has soared to an annual rate of about 13 percent, the president said, his economic program has reduced unemployment and cut the budget. Carter said he thought that the program would yield its results and that he intended to maintain it.
Carter reaffirms inflation fight
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WASHINGTON (AP)—President Carter renewed his commitment yesterday to fighting inflation, even if it means support for policies that could damage him politically.
In a nationally broadcast news conference—his first in nearly two and one half months—Carter said he supported effec- tive Federal Reserve Board to tighten credit.
Carter said bringing rising prices under control remained a top priority.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editorial staff.
October 10.1979
Phone rules needed
The Kansas Corporation Commission is looking out for the consumer with unbelievable consistency these days.
In recent weeks it has slashed both a proposed electrical rate increase and a proposed gas rate increase. The commission also has conducted open hearings about the policies of electrical and gas utilities.
Those hearings resulted last month in the release of a "Consumer Bill of Rights," which outlined prescribed laws for consumers' consumer services and cutoff policies.
NOW THE KCC is helping consumers once again. The commission announced last week that it would launch an investigation into customer-related policies of 52 telephone companies in the state.
With a similar strong effort in this investigation—to be completed by mid-November—the KCC should be able to meet the demands of Rights for phone company customers.
The electrical and gas policies set limits on the amount of security
deposits,circumstances under which deposits may be charged, periods in which bills may be paid, maximum amount of other consumer-related"rights".
Now comes the phone companies' turn to be examined under the bright lights.
NOT ONLY does Southwestern Bell have a large number of students getting new phones each year, but that company also has a large number of students paying deposits, being billed and sometimes being a little bewildered by occasionally confusing policies.
For these reasons, a phone company analysis compiled along the same lines as the electrical and gas policy guideline for the university or student phone company customers.
In fact, for a consumer to be able to adequately know the product he is paying for, he must be informed and he must understand his rights as a consumer are protected.
A phone customer's Bill of Rights might be the thing to do just that.
On the surface it appeared to be a noble gesture that Soviet President Leonid I. Breslavh made last week when he announced that the Soviet Union would withdraw 20,000 troops and 1,000 tanks from East Germany next year.
Soviet troop withdrawal a plov
That announcement, accompanied by enthusiastic aplause and plaudits from Eastern European nations, was motivated "by a sincere desire to take out of the impasse a larger force" in the military detente in Europe," according to the Soviet president.
BUT WHAT Syriza propaganda insists is a genuine peace initiative is, in reality, a coldly calculated move designed to split the NATO alliance and forestall efforts to the United States to upgrade its tactical nuclear force in Western Europe.
To that withdrawal into proper perspective, it should be noted that 20,000 troops represent only 5 percent of the 400,000 Soviet soldiers in Eastern Europe. It is less than 2 percent of the total force of those troops and the rest of the Warsaw nations combined. Clearly it is a tiny fraction—so much so that its ability on the ability of Soviet forces to invade Western Europe
Why then, if there was no significant military sacrifice inherent in withdrawing the troops, would the Soviet Union be able to recover the resources it lost in American decision to deploy new intermediate range nucleus missiles in West Germany and other NATO nato sites?
These missiles are the target of the Soviet proposal. The Soviet Union already has intermediate range nuclear missiles placed in Eastern Europe that are capable of reaching the capitals of Western Europe.
What could the president do? To launch the surviving American missiles at the Soviet Union would bring down the rest of the Soviet Union's missiles on American cities. But at the same time the president is obliged by NATO to come to the aid of western Europe. How would European nations respond? Would nations even want the United States to come to their aid?
PUTTING the medium range Pershing II's in Western Europe would add a new dimension to the NATO defences. Attacks from Europe would invite equal and potent counterattacks, but a significant advantage is even the remote possibility that a Western European nation, such as West Germany, if threatened by the Soviets, might be given control of some of the missiles as a deterrent.
superiority in medium range missiles and bombers not covered by the SALT II treaty now before the U.S. Senate. The United States feared the Soviet Union might use that superiority in the eastern Europe into submission in the event of nuclear war.
That, of course, would come as a last resort, but it is a threat the Warsaw Pact nations would have to take into consideration in any deliberations on the use of force in Europe.
THE DOOMSDAY scenario for that event goes something like this: The Soviet Union launches a first strike attack against American missiles while simultaneously invading NATO countries with conventional forces. At the war's end, the Soviet invasion resistance to Soviet troops in Western Europe would bring a stockade of medium range missiles on the capitals of those countries.
Obviously, the Russians realized the complications that could arise from the deployment of these missiles, so their leadership has attempted to take the initiative in trying to keep them out of Europe. The announcement of the troop withdrawal came in the wake of the war in the United States and Western Europe that they were waging against Cold War if they put the person II missiles in Europe
NATO officials already have approved a plan for reunification, but more than 90% of the missiles that caused the collapse in Brussels in December. The Russians obviously hope to create dissension within the NATO ranks by announcing their strong opposition to the plan.
American officials have seen through Mosque's offer from the beginning and have said they will not change their policies.
"We recognize that the Soviet Union has an interest in forestalling Western efforts to upgrade our conventional and nuclear forces in order to achieve equality." Zhigwain Brzezinski, national security adviser, said Sunday.
BREZIZINKI ALSO acted to reassure European leaders that the United States would not fold the nuclear umbrella under which Western Europe has been sheltered for so long.
John COLUMNIST logan
"Let there be no doubt about it," he said. "The United States cannot forgive any mistake, and those of its friends. It think it would be extremely dangerous for anyone to misjudge the will of this country or its president to react if our vital interests or the interests of our people are threatened."
Have scatter-brain, will get 'round to it
That development was spurred by growing Soviet
The fact that the nuclear balance of power struggle in Europe continues is unfortunate, but it is pretty much a fact of life. No treaty or agreement cover the medium between countries, so do until another agreement—a BALT III—is negotiated.
THERE'S more truth than jest in that idea. A New York-based organization offers a school for theorizes that chronic disorganization stems from a childhood resistance to learning.
An unorganized person undoubtedly has lots of enthusiasm for his work, but finds it difficult to do much careful planning because his life is very full.
Someone who is constantly in a scrawl is probably a person with an uncanny ability to tell the truth. He finds so many things he would like to do that he tries to squeeze them all into one file.
The fact that I have remained unorganized is purely my own fault. I have picked up a number of books and I have read them all, but to use my "little moments" more wisely, how to plan my day so that priorities are taken care of when my energy level is highest. But—here's the classic punchline: I'm in behind schedule after I read me.
Until then, countering the Soviet missile advances in Europe to the only way to keep a danger-proosed Soviets away is to destroy them.
The ability to plan has always escaped me.
When other children were dutifully coloring picture stories for Parents' Day, I was always daydreaming or dithering with memories of my childish story-writing attempts.
Psychologists probably have a profile of people like me. This chronic lack of organization probably signifies to them that they are dealing with basic responsibilities of life.
A DISORGANIZED person, they probably say, is independent, irresponsible, can cope with pressures, irresistible (ourest) framework of theory beyond a situation.
The habit has stuck with me. I find it hard to get my schedule arranged in an orderly fashion and to plan for things I know are looming in the future.
It's a definite lack of organization— probably caused by some unknown trauma in childhood.
AND AN unorganized person probably has trouble saying no to people who ask him to do things on only a moment's notice. He is montanous.
I disagree. I think that a lack of organization probably indicates a few positive things, too.
I think the very nature of the profession to which I aspire sometimes breeds a little disorganization. Journals are permeated by polyphactic thought.
Excuses aside, it is a problem. Disorganization is probably more common during college years than at any other time. A wise professor once told me that my life would never be as much as it was while I was in school.
That elucidates the problem for now, but what if the scatter-brainedness continues?
IN CONVERSATIONS, while reading
the text, you might mind minds on multiple trucks. While a source is angrily denouncing his rival, are composing questions for the rival to answer?
However, you can run into a bit of trouble when the concentration circuits overload. Everything tends to get lost.
melissa COLUMNIST thompson
Journalism is also permeated by deadline pressure. Deadlines are sacred. They are not to be missed if any act of God or man can prevent it. This is why we avoid violating a deadline is what gives us power to weary reporters and editors.
Of course, deadlines aren't exclusive to journalism. Everybody deals with them at different times and in different wavs.
SOME PEOPLE can breeze through term paper deadlines with relatively little difficulty; others sport their red cap and wear black shirts all night sessions at the typewriter.
People have a lot of laughs at the expense of us unorganized sloths. Even our father kokes a little fun at my febie whimings. He once sent me a piece of paper with a large circle drawn on it. The circle was the words "Round Tout."
This, he wrote, is what you need whenever you are short on time and long in work. It will take care of all the things you do, and when you got around to it, I has to say.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
USS 690-648. Published at the University of Kansas August through May and Monday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holiday. Second-day postage pad at Lawrence, Kansas 690-650. Subscriptions by mail are $13 for six months or $14 in Douglas County and Kansas county. You may return the state college is Student subscriptions are $2 per semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kunan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60942
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Managing Editor Nancy Dealer
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Confound it boy! Get that thing out of my light!
SALT II
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MARTIN THE '79 DAHLU KINGAI
Lawrence policemen live up to motto
Recently I had occasion to see the Lawrence police department in action, calling for officers to help an accident involving someone very dear to my heart), I would have rather skipped this experience. Nevertheless, I want to share a moment of discussion about it with the readers of the Kansan.
To the Editor:
Many police departments in America take its motto, "To Protect and Serve," as a guiding principle. The 1968 Democratic national convention in Chicago, and remindes one that the Justice Department has also sent the Philadelphia police department. This suit charges that police brutality has been widespread.
I don't know whether this motto is used in Lawrence. What I do know is that I saw the police here act in the best spirit the motto implies.
ONE OFFICER, at the end of his shift, took the trouble to find me and tell me about this accident. It couldn't have been anything more than just another routine traffic accident. I had a phone call to the attorney to get word of it to me personally, less than 20 minutes after it happened.
At the hospital, a second officer answered as many of my anxious questions as he could, and he responded to put me at ease. He was quite confident in his accident, but it seemed to me that he spoke with a trace of authentic human feeling, even when I was sleeping, keeping through his official persona.
If I were poor, and black, and living in
MOST OF ALL, I was impressed by Officer Peggy Cobb, who managed somehow to find out how many of filling out long, detailed accident reports and trying to learn just what had actually happened, she was able to tell me how much the accident cost, and most of all, that I wasn't worried. She acted throughout with professional competence and more than mere professional skill.
John Heuertz
Philadelphia, I might well have a very good sense of what to do. I think that Officer Cobb, and her fellow officers, provided me with the kind of police knowledge the citizens of Lawrence can be proof of.
Lawrence graduate student
Kansan sports staff reporting 'excellent'
To the Editor:
I wish to concurmend you for your excellent performance and our coverage in general, and your coverage in sports in particular, the efforts of any previous Kanada offshoots.
I would like to point out the coverage swimmers have received as an example of the excellence in sports reporting. The swimmers, both men and women consistent with their national pride, it is very appropriate that they should get such good coverage. I think that they deserve the numerous features that have been written about them since the beginning of the school year. When their competitions are underway, they will be the student body will know what is going on.
In A SIMILAR INF, I would like to congratulate you for your coverage of the men's and women's cross country teams. They too have consistently well in Big Eight competition.
Your article on the Wichita State meet, with its in-depth analysis of the women's second place finish to a strong K-State team, was published in The Washington about the members of the team. The Kansas continued this coverage by giving vivid account of the team's close battle with K-State in its next two meetings and the re-commitment to Michelle Brown as the team's 1.0 runner.
Likewise, that lengthy article on how Tim Tays led the Kansas men's team to a record
KANSAN letters
THE THREE or four lines that the Kansan devoted to the Southern Illinois meet on the campus is on the edge of his seat as he read of a tired Kku team sucessful past perennial Missouri Valley conference champions Southern Illinois. The team worked hard all week, thinking not of the dual meet but of the Big Eight meet on Oct. 8 and the Big Eight meet a weary, but satisfying, 25-30 victory.
low scoring victory at the Wichita Golden Classic was excellent. It gave the reader a fine feel for the excitement of the crowd as well as the excitement of the competition in the ten twenty of the hundred-man field.
The mention of Paul Schultz's fine job in winning the race and finishing as the first winner of the 2014 IndyCar championship came off of a year of injuries to post his first collegiate victory. Likewise, the coverage of fantastic freshman Tim Gunny (also named the best in years) been your in-depth articles on the rest of the undefeated Jayhawks, Brent Swanson, Jonathan Smith, Kirk Burrows and Dave Bauer.
I hope that your coverage of the meet this
Steve Ovett
To the Editor:
past weekend of the O-State Jamboree, will be just as good.
Steve Ovett
Bristol, England, graduate student
Kansan's coverage of blind applauded
I was on campus Sept. 14 to address the music therapy classes about music theory and composition, and approached by your reporter, Kate Pound. We made arrangements meet late in the day, but I was delisted so that we missed her presentation. I asked my presentation for the state-wide meeting of Sigma Alpha Iota, and I was only able to give her a very few minutes of time to speak.
This week when I received a copy of the article that ran on the front page, Sept. 17, was delighted! Kate not only had all of the factual material correct, she had also done much to make her work delightful. Combined with Jeff Harring's beautiful picture of Mindy Knee, the article produces a wonderful contribution to public acceptance a hands-on resource for teachers' installations and thanks to Kate Pound, Jeff Harring and to the University Daykan!
Mrs. Edward Krolick
National Brafille Association
Letters Policy
The University Daykan Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be no more than 250 words 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. Letters should also the right to edit for publication.
University Daily Kansan
5
Safety check required for floats
Homecoming floats must pass a safety inspection test before they can be entered in the homecoming parade scheduled for 3 p.m. Oct. 26.
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
The safety inspection will be conducted a week before homecoming events and (u-8) students will be required to attend Keizer, Student Union Activities president and member of the KU homecoming team.
"The committee isn't sure who will be the inspection, beeler said. But they will know who can install a pool, visibility for the drive and adequate ventilation for any part of the float where needed."
categories at the parade's end in the Kansas Union parking lot.
Floats, which must be registered by 5 p.m. Oct. 19, will be judged in one of three
The categories are floats with three-dimensional moving parts, floats with three-dimensional, non-moving parts and floats with two-dimensional display with or without moving parts. First- and second-classtrains will be awarded in each category.
The winning floats will parade around the Memorial Stadium track on Homecoming Day Oct. 27.
According to Kelzer, any float that cannot complete the parade route will be disqualified. The route will begin at the Chi Omega fountain.
"'The safety inspection should prevent any entry of a float that could tip over in the parade," he said.
FLOATS SHOULD be built on a four-wheel trailer and pulled by a small vehicle, preferably a small pickup, be said. A large pickup will supply the Terrace, will supply as many pickups as rented needt more. Other vehicles to be used in the building are approved by the homecoming committee.
Other float entry guidelines require that foot feet above the ground. Any skimming below the bed of the wagon must be made of material that will not catch and bind the wheels.
Student groups interested in building a float will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The five finalists for the HOPE award were announced yesterday by the HOPE award committee.
Five finalists announced in HOPE award contest
The finalists are William Balfour, professor of physiology and cell biology; Michael O'Connor, architecture and architectural engineering; Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science; Allen Forn, associate professor of history; Ellen Foster, lecturer, occupation of therapeutic therapy.
Mike Webb, co-chairman of the HOPE
award committee, said 400 KU seniors voted Oct.8 and9 for the finalists.
KU seniors may vote for the award winner Oct. 25 and 26 at boats in front of Wescoe hall, the Kansas Union and between Wescoe and Malot halls.
The HOPE award (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) was established by the Class of 1959.
Cigler has been up for the award the past four years and Balfour was nominated in 1977.
Frost to speak at Homecoming
David Frost will lecture on "In interviews I'll Never forget" at 7 p.m., Oct. 26 in Hoboken Auditorium as part of this year's Summer Day festivities. The lecture will be free.
The KU homecoming committee had been in contact with Frosta's agent since last August, according to Chirr Keizer, Student Affairs Director and a member of the homecoming committee.
Frost's lecture will include anecdotes and memorable quotes in interviews with Robert Kennedy, former Israeli Prime Minister Niram Meir and former President Richard Xianxion.
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6
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Extension given on billboards
RY ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Reporter
After lengthy discussion the Lawrence City Commission voted 4-1 last night to give a variance to the owner of 11 billboards in Lawrence.
the variance, which allows the firm to keep its billcards until Dec 31, was issued to allow the commissioners time to represent the representatives of the firm. Martin Outdoor.
A city ordinance written in 1974, which takes effect Oct. 22, bans billboards within the Lawrence city limits.
The commissioners, excluding Don Binnn who voted against the time extension, said attempts to negotiate a bailout were a risk to down less scrip and should be resumed.
Commissioners Bob Schumm and Marci Francisco said they had not been involved in previous discussions with the firm—
they had taken place before they took office.
REPRESENTATIVES OF Martin Outdoor have met with the city commission several times in the last two years to ensure that they are allowed to keep its billboards in lawrence.
Mayor Barkley Clark said he was concerned that the ordinance would eliminate a business from the community.
Tom Martin, owner of the firm, said that Lawrence was the firm's third largest market, and that the occupancy rate of the billboards in Lawrence was 90 percent.
"Lawrence is an important part of our family-owned business," he said. "I would not have come here five different times if it was not."
Will Adams, head of the Institute for Social Research at William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo., presented the results of a survey of 300 Lawrence residents that he
POSSIBLE REGULATIONS that might be negotiated before the end of the year would include a limitation on the number and size of billboards.
"I want it clear," Schumm said, "that if a compromise can't be reached, the billboards will come down at the end of the year."
In other business related to the sign ordinance, the commissioners approved variances for five businesses and denied a variance for another business at state outside the RiB's Box 740, low 83.
The Big Boy statue is considered to be a second ground sign for the business. Only one ground sign per business is allowed by the ordinance.
Rusty's North Side JGA, Second and Lincoln streets, znd Kansas Color Press, Inc., 2201 Haskell Ave., were given
variances for roof-mounted signs, which the commissioners said did not destroy the roof line of the buildings.
Westview Motel, 1313 W. Sixth St., was given a variance for its sign that clears the ground by seven feet rather than the required eight feet.
DOUGLAS COUNTY State Bank, Ninth and Kentucky streets, was given a variance for its time and temperature limits. The footage by 45 square feet and maximum height by five and a half feet. The commissioners said the sign was a public
Lawrence Bank and Trust Co., 641 Massachusetts St. was given a variance for two 15-square-foot wall plaques on its east wall and a roof-mounted sign on the north wall of the building, with the stipulation that no more signs be put on the building.
--received funding from the Student Senate in previous years and organizations asking for input in addition to those received at last month's request in the fall supplementary hearings.
HOMECOMING FLOAT
COMPETITION
ALL living groups, student organizations and off-campus apartment complex organizations who wish to enter a MOBILE FLOAT in the Homecoming Parade October 26 should attend an informational meeting Wednesday, October 10, 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room, Kansas Union. Rules and procedures will be explained.
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11 groups ask for money from Student Senate funds
By ELLEN IWAMOTO Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Budget Committee heard budget requests totaling $14,174.38 from 11 student organizations last night at the Student Senate Hearing. No preliminary cuts were made.
The committee will hear requests from seven more student organizations tonight and will review all of the budget requests and make its final recommendations to the Student Senate, which on the requests at its Oct. 17 meeting.
The Budget requests were Operation Friendship, $397; Kansas Defense Project, $1,750; Architecture and Urban Design Projects, $2,640; and Minority Architectural Students in America, $889.83; Studios Interested in Asian Studies, $860; Friends of Feedbackers, $469; Allied Alliance, $1,199; Black Student Union, $3,275.8; the Kansas
The committee will make a cupuque rating at tonight's budget hearings between the Iranian Student Association and the Iranian Student Organization, which are requesting $1,560 from the Student Senate and Regulations, the Senate cannot fund groups whose services may be provided by another organization.
Budget requests from seven student organizations totaling $4,028.95 were heard Monday night.
Consumer workshops set
The committee will hear budget requests taught totaling more than $8,000 from the KU Health Department. The KU Phi Omega, Chancery Club, KU Weather Service, Consumer Affairs department and insurance office will be present.
The Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association will sponsor two consumer workshops dealing with automobile and landlord-tenant problems, according to Phyllis Griekspoor, consumer coordinator for the projects.
The first workshop on Oct. 22 will focus on car buying, repair and alternatives to the automobile.
Advertising Club, $1,825.50; and the Physiology and Cell Biology Club, $130.
The Consumer Affairs staff also will talk about the cost of maintaining a car and buying insurance.
BuroGroep, a mechanic at Metric Motors, will talk about repair, engine additives and how to find a reputable mechanician. He also will discuss basic
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The other workshop on landlord-tenant problems will be at 7 p.m., Nov. 13 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The automotive workshop will be from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Public Library.
Griekspoor said most of the inquiries received by the Consumer Affairs office were about landlord-denant contracts.
She said the workshop would deal with landlord4tenant laws, repairs, deposits and responsibilities.
"This is the first in a series of landlord-tenant workshops," she said. "We would like to see a workshop every three months." The workshops are free to the public.
The workshops are free to the public.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
7
Job market steady, favorable to grads
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
This year's KU graduates should have few problems funding jobs after graduation despite recent Federal budget cuts, an inflation by slowing the U.S. economy, Vernon Geissler, director of the University Placement Center, said yesterday.
Gleisner is confident about job possibilities for KU graduates despite warnings by some economists that he could be more than 8 percent later this year.
"The current inflation problem is only an increase in the problem we had last year," he said.
Last year, he said, all KU graduates who actively looked for jobs found them.
All KU graduates who are flexible in job choice and location should be able to find jobs this year, too, he said.
Geissler said a student could find a job more easily if he left the Kansas City and Lawrence areas.
"Many areas in Kansas, especially rural areas, need workers badly," he said.
ACCORDING TO several Lawrence bankers, the increase in the interest rate
R. A. Edwards, president of Douglas County State Bank, said the rise in interest rates that banks must pay to the bank may be caused by making customers say higher interest
last weekend to 12 percent will cause a decline in construction and an increase in unemployment.
Marshall Biggsstaff, vice president of Anchor Savings Association of Lawrence, agreed that the Feds action would further the recession.
THE 'MOVE WILL' definitely affect people just starting got started in the job both because they will need more skill and will be harder to find and the cost of housing could be as much as 10 percent higher.
Runalid Olsen, KU director of the department of economics, said, "The board is asking to constrain the money supply. I think this will deepen the current recession instead of helping it and the economy will not be allowed to grow.
"The government is trying to attack the problem in the traditional way by restraining the economy instead of attaching the solution to inflation—much higher energy costs."
Man guilty;charge reduced
Joseph Cline, 31, 1168 New Jersey St. plied guilty yesterday to one count of taking indictive liberties with a minor. Cline originally admitted his involvement in connection with incidents in June and July.
Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone said the mother of one of the girls Cline was accused of having sexual intercourse with did not want her daughter to testify in this. This was one reason that charges against Cline were reduced, be
"We were not at all interested in putting her in front of a jury." Matsou said.
"We were not at all interested in putting her in front of a jury," Malone said. "We were very nervous." Douglas County District Court Oct. 30. He is being held in the Douglas County Jail.
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offer good oct.10 to oct.14
Med Center short on workers
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
KANSAS CITY, Kan.- The opening of Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center has aggravated the stress associated with the Dedicated Center's facilities operation department.
Staff Reporting
Thomas Keating, assistant director for facilities operations personnel, said yesterday that the department needed 50 more employees.
"There has always been somewhat of a shortage, but now that the new hospital needs maintenance, that really adds to the need," Keating said.
As a result of the shortage, less maintenance work is being done at the Med Center. he said.
"We're not doing preventive maintenance such as painting because the manpower has to be used on units which cannot be neglected. "Keating said.
Maintenance in heating, cooling and electronics are areas that can not be neglected, he said.
KEATING SAID there was a shortage of both skilled and semi-skilled workers, including plumbers, refrigeration/air conditioning plant operators and auto mechanics.
The facilities operations department was authorized in July to hire 80 new employees to combat the maintenance employee shortage. Since only 30 positions have been filled.
Keating said the department planned to launch an advertising campaign within the next few days to recruit applicants.
"We're having a devil of a time recruiting workers," said said someone with nearly 80 positions open, state recruiting laws and the lower state wages are keeping us from getting the traffic we need.
the hiring process by requiring applicants to take a test to evaluate their working skills and experience.
"Right now we're getting about 20 applicants a week but we only hire about four or five. We're trying to be a selective as we can," he said.
ONCE THE TEST has been scored, the applicant is put on the state register and can be hired.
"It takes about two weeks for all that and many people can find a job elsewhere in that amount of time," he said.
However, the division of personnel at the state capital has given the Med Center the privilege to hire on a conditional basis in order to fill the positions more quickly.
In addition to advertising, Keating said, he has visited area vocational-technical schools to recruit more applicants.
"This means that we don't have to wait for test scores to come back before hiring applicants," Janis Sheffield, department staff member, said.
"BY THEW we hope to have at least 30 more positions filled, leaving only about 20 open," she said.
Until the shortage of manpower is reduced, employees will continue to work overtime, Keeting said.
She said the conditional hiring would be valid until the end of the year.
Sheffield said that 10 to 20 unfilled positions were normal for the department.
Overtime has gone way up since this summer but we really don't have a choice because work in some areas just can't be "educed."
Keating said there was no limit on the number of overtime hours an employee could work.
Thank You
The Limitless Victory Committee wishes to thank all those who worked on our behalf.
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Wednesday, October 10, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Letters open door to future in medicine
Bv ROSEMARY INTFEN
Staff Reporter
A letter of recommendation probably be helpful for most students graduate from Kansas State University students trying to enter the University of Kansas School of Medicine, one particular university.
The Kansas Medical Service Project, Inc., "better known as Mediserve, is a program designed to help Kansas residents get acclimatized to the climate at Mary Wiesner, project coordinator.
"It's a very simple program," Wiersma said. "Students just apply to Mediserve and if we accept them, then we write a letter to the school administrator, congratulating that the student be accepted."
In exchange for that one letter, the student must work five years in an underserved area of Kansas after completing a residency program.
The student can choose to work in family practice, general surgery, internal medicine, pediatrics or obstetrics and neurology in the underserved area, she said.
MEDIVERSE, WHICH is funded through the Kansas Farm Bureau and the Kansas Medical Society, has been in operation since the spring of 1977, Wiersma said.
Kansas Farm Bureau is involved because the program is designed to get students from rural areas into medical school, with
the hope that they will return to rural Kansas after graduating.
"Bastily we are a lot like the Kansas Medical Scholarship Program because we both are trying to provide physicians for the areas covered areas of the state," Wierma said.
Meditise now has 33 participants, according to Wiersma. Last year, Medisever recommended 28 students to the Med School and 17 were admitted.
THIS YEAR 28 applicants were interviewed, 20 received recommendations and 16 were admitted.
Wiersma said Mediserve and the scholarship program were not competitive because the students could participate in both.
The student concerned primarily with being accepted to the KU Med School would turn to Medsieve first, she said.
"We're talking about students who don't attend school. We've had this school, so they turn to us for assistance, she said." But in the scholarship program, the student has already admitted and is now enrolled in a college.
Financial aid also is available through Medserve if the applicant can show financial need.
A STUDENT CAN receive up to $1,500 a year at 4 percent interest through the program.
Students who apply send an application to the Kansas Farm Bureau in Manhattan. The student is then interviewed by the Mediserv Board, which includes three
Farm Bureau representatives and three Kansas doctors.
"We hold the interviews to give the student some idea of what the real interview, with the admissions board at the university, would say." So far it seems to have helped a lot.
"When the student comes for the interview, he is asked to choose an area in the state that he would like to serve. It must be a population under 12,000. area with a population under 12,000.
After the interviews, the board chooses several students and sends letters of recommendation to the admissions department at the Med Center.
Wiersma said Mediisevere interviews would be held Nov. 17 and 18 at Marymount College in Salina. Interviews at the Med center will begin in mid-December.
Lee Arensberg, Atchison first-year med
suwaent who is a Mediserve participant, said he thought the program was beneficial.
"ONE REAL GOOD thing about Mediseus is that it encourages rural area students to apply," most of the students in the small towns, as Ijulk it helps them the most.
"I wanted to do everything I could to get into Med School and I think they definitely helped me."
Randy Rock, Hope first-year student, agreed with Arensberg that MediService was a good program for students from rural Kansas.
"I don't know if the letter of recommendation helped, but the interview really helped me prepare for the real interview with the Med School," he said.
Both students said they did not object to practicing in rural Kansas for five years because they had planned to do so anyway.
127
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FROM THIS
INDEX
LOTES FROM
THE 7TH 8TH
10TH 12TH
14TH 16TH
18TH 20TH
STUDENT ASSISTANCE CENTER (MODF1)
Z E=Mc²
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IMPROVE YOUR LEARNING EFFECTIVENESS BY USING TIME AND ENERGY SAVING STUDY TECHNIQUES.
INCREASE YOUR SKILLS IN TIME MANAGEMENT,
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121 STRONG HALL
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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Practically Entire Stock
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821 Mess.
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THE SUMMIT
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Come with us January 6-12 and enjoy 5 days of nothing but skiing! Your lift tickets, ski rentals, and round trip bus transportation are all provided. You'll be able to ski Breckenridge, Keystone, Arapahoe Basin, and Copper Mountain. The cost is $836 and the sign-up deadline is November 9, 1979.
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Ski Switzerland! Ski two of the world's most renowned ski areas, Davos, and St. Moriz. January 5-20, 879 includes 14 nights lodging, round-trip flight from Kansas City-Chicago-Zurich, all breakfasts and dinners, 6 days lift tickets and all transportation within Switzerland. Sign up by November 20, 1979.
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
9
World Series Game One postponed because of rain
BALTIMORE (AP) — The opening game of the 1979 World Series between the Baltimore Orioles and the Pittsburgh Pirates was postponed by a rainstorm last night.
It was the first time that the opening game of the seven-game Series was called off because of rain.
Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn called the game at 7:32 p.m. and it was
-KANSAN-
Sports
rescheduled for tonight, Game Two of the Series will be played tomorrow night, and the Series then will shift to Pittsburgh Friday夜, as previously scheduled.
The travel day originally set for tomorrow was eliminated.
Both teams they said would stay with the pitchers and lineups they had originally announced for last night. That means Bruce Walters would go against Baltimore's Mike Fiatman.
Kison posted a 13-7 record during the regular season, but was particularly effective in September and October. He won four games last month for the Pirates,
pushing his eight-year career record for September to 23-6. He has never lost in October, with a career 4-0 record for this month.
Flanagan was the top winner in the majors this season, with a 23-2 record. The Orioles had hoped he could neutralize the Mets, but the Mets were Moreno, Willett Starle and Dave Parker.
1. Florida State (31)
- Alabama (1)
- Alaska (1)
- Texas (1)
- Kentucky (1)
- Nebraska (1)
- Washington (1)
- Houston (1)
- Ohio State (1)
- Florida State (1)
- Michigan (1)
- Arkansas (1)
- Connecticut (1)
- North Carolina (1)
- Missouri (1)
- Bryan Young (1)
- North Carolina State (1)
- Arkansas (1)
- Michigan State (1)
- Kentucky (1)
The Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press college football pitch, with first place votes in parentheses, records and total points. Points based on 19-10-17 16:43-14:12
AP Top Twenty
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Kings trade Washington
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP1) — The KANSAS City school year-earner forwardICHINO Yoshida, a military veteran from CIRCLE MILWAUKEE's Ernie Grunfeld and a future draft choice yesterday, Kings officials
Washington, who had been beset with injuries during his career with the Kings, was a first-round pick from UCLA four years ago.
Grunfeld, a 6-6 forward in his third year in the NBA, was a first-round pick for the Bucks in 1977.
The Kings also receive the Bucks' second pick in the 1980 draft.
Earlier yesterday, the Kings waived raekor guard Terry Crouson of Tennessee to win a second-round competition for the No. 4 guard spot to lead the Knicks. Allen and free agent Marten Redmond.
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Spikers face tough match
"K-State is a good team," Lockwood said, "but we have been playing good defense lately. If we can get our offense going we will be tough to beat."
The University of Kansas volleyball team in Kansas State satamited 6:30 p.m. with gymnasts the match should be the toughest the according to KU Coach Bob Lockwood.
royal college shop
843-4255
K-State, led by 61 senior Catey Teahen, in the midst of another fine season. The team have finished third in two major tournaments in Lincoln, Neb., and K-State invitations.
A victory tonight, coupled with victories over K-State and Wichita State University next month, would qualify the KU women for a berth in the regional tournament.
Lockwood said KU students could make a difference in the match.
To accustom his team to the tough physical play of Teehan, Lockwood said he had put the team through rigorous defensive practice and had taken to the practice floor himself.
"A couple of hundred cheering fans would have a big effect on the girls. The girls know that this is a big game and with a little fan support it could be a big win."
"Teehan and I are about the same height and have about the same reach, so I went through a few of the drills with the girls to show me how to the powe that Teehan will show," he said.
M
SENIORS
Say Cheese!
headmasters
809 Vermont
RA148098
HAIR AND SKIN CARE
Rappoport Studios will be taking Senior pictures October 1-19 in Spooner Hall call Jayhawker Yearbook for appointment.
864-3728
$1 Sitting fee. Call Now.
Thursday. October 11 BEWARE OF A HOLY WHORE
sua films
(1986) Directed by Jirl Menzel. Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Czechoslovakian/subtitlettes.
Wednesday, October 10
CLOSELY WATCHED
TRAINS
Directed by Rainer Werner Fassbender, with Eddie Constantine, Louis Cohen and Michael Schur on autobiographical mediation on the act of homoknowing is set at a seaside resort where the crew crew their spare time assuancing each other verbally, emotionally, physically.
Friday & Saturday,
October 12-13
DAYS OF HEAVEN
(1966)
Directed by Terrence Malick, with
Cheryl Mackenzie, Mark Lloyd,
Shapheard, and Linda Minae. Photography
by Nestor Almendres. Plus Maya
Guzman. Courtesy of the
Camera. - Sat. matinee in Forum
(1978)
Midnight Movies
EMMANUEL, THE JOYS
OF A WOMAN
Directed by Francis Glacobetti, with Sylvia Kristel. RATED X—Positive acd I required for admittance.
Sunday, October 14
RETURN ENGAGEMENT!!
FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
Directed by Norman Jawison, with
wife and daughter Katherine,
"I were Rich Hill," "Susan Sunset") by Jerry Bock and Sheldon
Stone. We are painting the painted people who could not see FIDDLER last month, we are bringing it back for 2 more shows! $15.50 ad
*2:00pm—Woodruff Auditorium
5:30pm—Ballroom
Weekends show also in Woodfort at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise given to 1:50 admission. No Refreshments.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
KU 79 CHINA NIGHT ON OCT.14TH AT KU UNION
6:00PM—10:30PM
BANQUET
1. Hot and Sour Soup
0. 501 M 10.501 M UNION CAFETERIA MENU
3. Egg Roll
2. Red Stew Chicken Wing
4. Beef with Onion and Green Pepper
5. Sweet and Spicy Deli
6. Ten Delicacies with Chinese Noodle
7. Almond Jelly
CULTURE SHOW
UNION WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
UNION WOODRUFF
中國夜
1. Chinese Fashion Show
EXHIBIT
2. Chinese Dancing
3. Chorus
3.30FPM - 7:30P/M
UNION BIG & ROOM
Chinese Painting Demonstration
Animal Painting Pan for Sale
Films, etc.
3. Chorus
4. Chinese Kong Fa Shou
4. Chinese Kung Fu Show
5. Films etc
ADMISSION:
MEMBER ... 41**
NONMEMBER ... 5.1**
CHILDREN ... 2.1*
16-12 year-old
TICKET AVAILABLE AT:
UNION SUA TICKET
OFFICE
or
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843-6416
KU Chinese Student Assoc. & KU Free China Club
Assisted by Great Kansas City Free China Assoc.
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Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent ½ block from the fountain
8-5 M-S
10-4 Every Sat.
843-3826
dragon
10
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
University Daily Kansan
(1)
FRESNO
Lloyd Sobek
CHRIS TODD/Kansan staf
Hair Designs
by
Shear Dimensions
Mon. 9-5 Evenings:
Sat. 9-4 Tue.-Fri. 9-8
1802 Mass.*Dillon Plaza*842-3114
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
Foreign & Domestic Parts
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
- Part Stock
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IN HOLIDAY PLAZA
(2 DOORS West of KIEF's)
Advertise in the Kansan Call 864-4358.
Raymond Berry doesn't know it, but he is partly responsible for KU tight end Lloyd Sabek's continuing football career.
Sobek whips academic and physical hardships
SAS
Genuine Leather Shoes
Widths: N-M
Sizes: 5 to 11
(Extra charge for 11)
CLASSIC
TERESA
Open Mon.-Sat.
9:30 to 6:00
Thurs.: 9:30
Sunday 1 to 5
McCall's
Downtown Lawrence
By MIKE EARLE
Associate Sports Editor
Berry was an outstanding receiver for Baltimore during the 50s and 70s. He retired in the mid-80s, but his competitive spirit lives on. One of his legs was slightly shorter than the other, but he became one of the most powerful Football League's best receivers.
Sobek used Berry's football accompliments for inspiration after he fell down from a bench and an automobile accident the summer after his freshman year. His H-12 lumbar disc was broken in seven places. After six months in rehab, he broke out of Sobek's his football career was over.
Bv MIKE EARLE
But doctors didn't correctly diagnose Sobek's spirit and determination to play again.
"It WAS A pretty depressing time in my life." Sobek said. "Doctors told me I'd be hurdy-dorry to live a normal life."
"I treat a lot of biographies when I was a little kid about great athletes," Sobeak said. "I remember his ability to play any obstacle. Everybody had idols, and mine was Raymond Berry. He overcame his obstacle and had a great football career, and he was determined to overcome any obstacle."
"At that point, my heart rejected any pain from my back. I made up my mind that I wouldn't settle for anything else. I looked at it as a challenge to see what kind of a man I
TERESA
McCall's
Mike Fisher has meant so much to me. He's a bad leg and he puts a苏聘 said. He ha
WITH THE HELP of academic adviser Mike Fisher, Sobek made up his half-hour defect, and, in good physical condition, was invited to enter his junior campaign at full strength.
"But during the time I was working out, I let my studies slide and I came up one-half hour later. I thought 'What else can happen to me?' I was a bit learning experience for me. I had not studied yet."
GIVEN AN EXTRA year of eligibility by virtue of a redshirt rulong, Sobek began an intensive running and weight-lifting program his sophomore year.
Surprising everyone but himself, Sobek was back on the field for spring drills in 1976, when a second obstacle blocked his comeback.
After a year's absence from football when Sobek had recovered from his back problems, another injury almost knocked him out of the lineup. In spring practice during damage to his left knee, Sobek suffered ligament damage to his left knee and had to have surgery.
was and to show the people who said I'd never play again that they were wrong."
"I worked my old off getting back in " condition," he said. "Doctors told me it was a pretty freak thing that I was able to come back and play.
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good thru Sunday 10/14/79
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Oct. 11 thru Oct. 20
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gauze, farnel, poly/c, plaids, solids
JEAN TOPS—$5.
SWEATERS—$8.
pull-overs, cardigans, V-necks, vests
JEANS—$11, incl straight leg
PANTS—$10. (Bobbie Brooks)
SKIRTS $14, poly Gab.
Wool $17.
CO-ORDINATES—Pandora, Garland,
Xtrevert
40% off
FADS AND FASHIONS
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
717 Mass. — 842-9988
Weekdays except Thurs. # 30-8:30
Hours: 10:00-10:30
Sun: 1-5:00
TOPEKA
FAIRLAWN MALL
21st & Fairlawn — 273-2639
Mon., thru Fr. 10-5:30
Sat. 10:5:30, Sun. 1-5:00
PRICE
BREAK
ONE WEEK ONLY
Oct. 11 thru Oct. 20
LAY-AWAY AVAILABLE
Sale
SKIRTS—$5. —$7. —$8.
gauze, flannel, poly/c, plaid, solids
JEAN TOPS—$5.
SWEATERS—$8.
pull-overs, cardigans, V-necks, vests
JEANS—$11, incl. straight leg
PANTS—$10. (Bobbie Brooks)
SKIRTS—$14. poly Gab.
Wool $17.
CO-ORDINATES—Pandora, Garland.
X trovert.
40% off
FADS and FASHIONS
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
717 Main. -- 842-9888
Weekdays except Thurs. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 11:00-8:00
Sun. 1:00-5:00
TOPEKA
FAIRLAWN MALL
21st & Fairlawn - 273-2639
Mon. thru Fr. 10:30-30
Sat. 11:30-Sum. 1-5:00
PRICE
BREAK
VSA
FADS
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
717 Mass. - 842-0988
Weekdays (General Thurs.) 10:30-5:30
Tues. 10:30
Sun 1:30
ONE WEEK ONLY
Oct.11 thru Oct.20
LAY-AWAY AVAILABLE
Sale
"At first my knee did not heal properly," he said. "The first part of the season I was about 70 percent. But by the midway point I was at my best."
But after overcoming a broken back and poor study habits, Sobek was able to let knee surgery hamper his comeback. Working out over the summer, Sobek lifted his knee and overcame his third strike in time to report for fall practice.
"THAT WAS my third strike. I should have been out," he said.
"Kirby is a great competitor, but he's a natural defensive player," Sobek said. "My full potential is at tight end."
Sharing playing time with Kirby Criswell, Sobek caught nine passes for 125 yards last season.
"It is a question of me improving each time I play." Sobek said. "In my mind I'm as capable as any other player at my position. I can run deep and short routes, but not long." Running the wishbone part time last year gave me a lot of experience with blocking.
AT 6-3 AND 220 pounds. Sobek can bench press 395 pounds and can run the 40-yard dash in 4.6 seconds. Those are impressive credentials for a tight end in any league.
"Consistency is the key. In order to be a great player, you have to be consistent in all areas of the game.
"I've got the best offer coordinator I ever had," he said. He was one of the best the NFL has ever seen, put him on a pedaled in his own league. He can convey what's in his head and bring it to life.
Already surpassing last season's receiving marks, he has 133 yards on 10 receptions. Although he has had limited playing time in the past three years, Sobek is a top-tackle professional football accts attention for a professional contract after he graduates.
LAST SPRING, KU Coach Don Fam-
brought crissell to the defensive unit,
and has since gone with Sobek as his
number one tight end.
"But the important thing is coming off the field after a game and knowing you did everything in your power to win.
to help this team win football games," Sobek said. "But sure, I'd like a shot at pro football after I graduate.
"My utmost goal is playing the best I can
"ESPECIALY FOR Coach Hadi and
Coach Fambrough. They're doing
everything they can to help it back
home." He said of the brace.
He had some honeysuckle football teams."
Octoginta
1969-79
Come celebrate the 10th anniversary of the best bike tour in Kansas . . .
the 80-mile Octopista on Sun. Oct. 14th
Entry forms available at Student Union Activities (Kansas Union)
Pre-registration deadline is
Thurs., Oct. 11th, 5:00 pm.
For more information: 864-3477.
the 80-mile Octoginta on Sun., Oct. 14th.
THE NEW YORKER Italian Sandwiches PIZZA
NEW YORKER SPECIAL
Hamburger, Sausage, Green Pepper,
Onion, Peperoni, Mushrooms, Anchovies
Small $1.00 off
Medium $1.50 off
Large $2.00 off
offer good oct. 10 to oct. 14
no coupons accepted with this offer.
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Wednesday, October 10, 1979
11
KANSAN
Police Beat
A police officer on patrol discovered that a concrete cinder block had been thrown at the business. The value of the loss, which included a cockatoo and two myna birds, was £180.
Five birds, two bird cages, 100 fish and bird feed were taken from the Petstep, 711 W. 23rd St. yesterday police reported
In another burglary reported yesterday, burglarws took $200 in cash and $200 from pinch machines after breaking into Rocky J's, a tavern at 201 W. 8th St.
The intruders entered the building by removing the hinges of an outside door, police said.
NOTICE
On Campus
5:00 p.m.Friday, October 12 is the last day for dropping a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences undergraduate course this semester without petitioning. After this date, petitions for withdrawing from a course may be obtained from the College Office, 206 Strong Hall.
KANSAN
TODAY: Kansas Invitational WOMEN'S
HIRMNYI will be all at 12 a.m.
at Alfamark University
Natural History ANIMAL STORY HOUR with Caitlin Dwigny will be at 10 a.m. for
students interested in georhino
LUNCH for students interested in georhino will be at 11:00 a.m. in cork 1
TONIGHT: KU WOMEN'S
HIGH SCHOOL
teams meet Kansas State University at 8:30 in Robinson Gymnasium. A CARLSON
CLUB at KU will meet at 7 in the Union
University Daily Kansan
parlers. BLACKS IN COMMUNICATION will meet at a B the Regionalist Room of the Union. U.S. MARINE CORPS will be interviewing all day in the Union.
TOMORROW; COMPANIES IN- TERVIEWING on campus at the School of Engineering, Mar-Ac. At the School of Engineering will be Exxon, Procter & Gamble and Concoe. At the School of Law will be Ernest & Whiteman Geology will be Cities Service. SUA Geology will be Cities Service. Room of the Union. A COMPUTER SEVENTH SEMINAR with Greg Wetzel, "Introduction to the QED Text Editor," will begin at 7 p.m. in the Computer Services Facility Auditorium. ACCOUNTING CLUB will begin at 7 p.m. in the Union. SCIENCE FICULTY CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union. A CLASS/ARCHAEOLOGY LECTURE Karras Kgaarageorphis of Archaeology University. New "Archaeological Treasures" in Cypress, "will begin at 8 p.m. in the Forum ROCATIUM." The Union. A DOCTORAL ROCATIUM by John Williams, counter-temple will begin at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Hall in Murphy.
fo.
Gamma Phi Beta
Sorority
843-8022
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity 843-2655
Lawrence, Kansas to benefit the United Fund for more information contact
Jayhawk Jog Sunday, October 21. 1979
Weeknights until midnight Weekends until 2 a.m.
WE'RE STILL HERE!
OUTDOOR
ROLLER SKATE RENTALS
Golden Gate Skates 13th and Oread
KANSAN WANT ADS
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
--one time two three four five six seven eight nine十 one ten twelve thirteen fourteenth fifteenth sixtieth seventh eighth ninth ten十 ten十 ten十 ten十 ten十 ten十 ten十 ten十 ten十十十十十十十十十十
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
The UDK will not be responsible for more than the INCK 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 possibly by calling the UK business office at 841 368.
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also roasted, risen, and raw peanuts in the shell. Twelve variety of dry beans, honey, pomegranate, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday
PAPER BACK SALES ARE 15% nationally
price are too high at J. HODGE
papers, they are not good to use.
price already have been and always will be
4646
4646
have been and at 1611 Manuscript
10-11
Watch for truck parked at 8th & Illinois. Home for the Weekend, a family-run in-hallway selling fresh fruits and vegetables, milk, sweet potatoes, and Ipw Peanuts in the shell. Twelve wives, including Eleanor, Martha, Jenny, p honey, and sarpam every Sunday.
Zen practice night—8 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Seung Sah from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21. Call 827-7610 for information. 10-12
LOWENBRAU PARTY—Thursday, October 11, at
CIRCHHOUs. Cheap beer. Tuesday night $1.25
10-11
DISCO SUCKS Became a member of the ANTI-DISCO LEAGUE Membership include Button, Bonnie, Charlie, and Jennifer. Membership fee $20 to Anti-Disco League, WORLD KNOWLEDGE TO YOUR DREAMS, THE WORLD KNOWLEDGE YOU LOVE ROLL IN HALL
Free film, "Ohayo." A Japanese film Wed. Oct.
10, 7.00 p.m. Dyke Auditorium. ASIA organization.
10-10
Think Snow! Want to go skiing? For information
caught on Brad 841-0070.
10-16
Attention 3th Spirit Club members, don't miss open stream featuring Fred Rudnion on vacation Saturday night after the Sharks in the 3th Spirit balcony free to club members. 10-12
ENTERTAINMENT
2 bedroom townhouse, 1½ bath, unfurnished,
Meadowbrook Regency Plaza. Close to campus,
on bus route. Call 841-6122 or rental office 842-
102.
FOR RENT
1. It is Wednesday and Mermard's Delite line has
a double jacket, a sweater, and an
hat; there are 41 pithats and 26 dreses between
1:10 to 1:10 com. Come in and join the parade. . . . you
will be invited to the Atelier at the Harbour 10:
1031 Mask
All Frontier Ridge Apts. 14 months rent free. **so**
security on all 1 bedrooms.
2 bdms, excellent condition, slow and refrigeration, weather-watcher hook-up, four blocks of campus, $390 per month - no pets. Low utilities, call after 4 p.m., 845-753-60. 10-16
FRIENDLY RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW REST
IN FURNISHED, furnished and unfurnished. From $195,
up to $250 per room. On RC HC suite. INDOOR HEATED
FURNITURE. Free parking. 342 Proctor Road North. Next
to HOMESAPPLY. *COMMISSIONED*
Rooms with private kitchens. Close in Union.
Phone 812-5079. 14
N-eled 10^2# withinse 2 barmr apt. 1231 Ohio Avail-
lance # 1684-1496 Auxiliary # 1025-1092
6419-1496 Aux for Ann & Schr
10-12
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
room near KC. Possible rent reduction for
labor. Call 841-6254 or 842-4065.
10-31
Two lbdm. unfurnished apt. near KU. Pool, CA.
else. kitchen, laundry, WW carpeting. 10-12
811-6835
Beautiful. new 2 bdrm. apt. Completely equipped kitchen. 3-minute walk to Fraser. Phone 643-9579.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
SunSpecs-Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF
1021. Mossi 841-5730. **2P**.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, servies, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-900-960. W 40th. *k*
WATERED MATTRESSES $36.99, 3 year
guarantee WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386 TSP
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make sure you use them. 1) As study guide, 2) For class analysis of Western Civilization 'now' available at Town Creek Male Bookstore & Great Bookstore.
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION Puch Mopas.
* Like Mike* Shi5 Vermont. TF
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION Puch Mopas.
* Like Mike* Shi5 Vermont. TF
1972 Ford Tortoio: Gold and White. Two-deor.
302 8-V Good car—good price. Call Craig at
84-1000.
1972 VW Super Beetle. Rebuilt engine, radial tires, runs good. Good mileage - Call 845-2523.
1976 Yamaha 4500e. Excellent condition, mechanically and cosmetically. Has received good maintenance. 841-7964 after 5:00. 10-11
1979 Trans Am. T-amp. loaded, automatic low
wattage warranty: $1600 lot; baf 832.1976.10
10K wattage warranty: $1600 lot; baf 832.1976.10
10K wattage warranty: $1600 lot; baf 832.1976.10
1974 Pontiac LeMans Sport Coupe, 350 V8, great price $1300. Call 843-8471 after 5 p.m. 10-10
GUANTRILLS FLEA MARKET - the best new flea market in the country, with art, books, clothing, dreses, art cards, dreses, comic books, comics, living room furniture, shoes, handbags, of using interactive screens, and hundreds of other interactive items. Every Saturday, and business Sunday, 8:30-11:30 a.m., every Saturday, and business Sunday, 8:30-11:30 a.m.
Beautiful '80' brick and frame racks-backs on golf course. Full basement. In Country Club North, prized in low 80's. For more information on Barny Annery,炉房 411-390-2000. 10-10
Two twin mattresses and box springs. Excellent
comfort. Call 841-2324. Ask for Jill. 10-10
1978 Dale 88 Olds--Excellent condition, power
everything, must sell $500. 842-818. 10-12
Must sell must condition store. Sony Amp. 60m.
Chipset speakers (twoer, mid-range, tweeter)
twоeder, mid-range, tweeter)
duraction, FP, furnishable with purchase, $590
or best offer. Call after $-249-3231. 10-12
1973 Mavretick 4 dr. low, new mile, pain ex-
cellent condition. Call Dave or Mike at
100-625-6888.
1966 Mustang-automatic, new brakes and paint,
clean and cleanable! Call Mike at 843-622-6811
New Sony micro cassette tape recorder,
rechargeable microphone,敢 PC power adapter,
50-hour kit, hand-held and signal elector
controllers, microphones, saxophone, tenon-
line 10 microphones
- call 842-2395 after 7 p.m. 10-11
- automatic, automatic, new brakes and paint
10 210 Killer 220-890, tomium 841-853, 10-11
7 Vega - excellent condition - to sell immediately
6 Vega - excellent condition - to sell immediately
1970 Bulek 225—$400, call Tom 841-8435. 10-11
72 Honda front wheel drive—one owner 34,000 miles. 30 mpg, $1200 firm. See at 1602 W. 24th z17.
Camaroon 340 Turbo, many high performance
mags wheel. Must to appreciate. 10-15
9048
74 2 bdm. mobile home -8 x 36, ideal for
cleaner or organ. Cleaned in Lawrence.
$400 firm. For appt. Call 812-9822. If no answer
1-325-2441 or 1-387-1354.
1977 Cullass 442. Loaded. Call Greg 843-6244
10-17
1970-1980 used cars—please let me be your guide when purchasing a used car. Call and find out why so many KU students buy used cars from Bob Smith-Landmark Ford -484-500. 10-19
7) MGB, low mileage, air conditioned with electric overdrive, 842-3706. 10-16
Firebird '77 AC, PB, vinyl top, black interior AM-FM cassette, 36,000, call 841-4953 after p.m. 10-11
Peavey musician amplifier and speaker cabinet
Fairly professional organ. Best offers. Maturity 843-765-2010.
FOUND
Ladies wrist watch found Oct. 7 in front of Hoech. Call 864-6124 and describe. 10-12
Speech Communication book for Tuesday
10:30 am. We will have Woofie coffee cards.
Phone: Call 843-9467 **10 - 10**
Edukarya 1879 men's clan flag. Tell me the initials
inside to identity Men call 843-7185. Ask for Linda.
3 to 4 month old kitten, white and tan, by the
United Saturday, Call 842-6541. 10-12
Found calculator, Hocht auditorium. Possible
calculator call Rachel 841-6639 and describe your
calculator. 10-12
HELP WANTED
Earn as much as $50 per 1000 stuffing envelopes with our circulators. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 40542.
10-16
$3.10 per hour if you qualify. No experience is required. Enroll at Restaurant of good food, opportunity for advance. Need people willing to work and apply themselves. If you are unable to do so, visit the Restaurant, 1227 W. Hickman, 10-12
Bureau of Child Research, Achievement Place,
Missouri, seeks Child Research Assistant to
available lab in $260,000 monthly budget.
Assist with curriculum development and work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred. Own work with adolescents youth preferred.
Wanted: Hard-working, dedicated individuals to be student management for the football team, to join a growing athletic program, to portray Mike Hill as a contact. Contact Mike Hill in 131A at the following address:
MEN* WOMEN* JOBS! CRUISERSHIPS* SAILING EXPEDITIONS* Good experience *Good pay* FOR APPLICATION INFO JOBS* to* CRUISERWORLD 13, Host 60129, Sacramento, CA 95600
OVERSEAS JOB 108ers - Summer program, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all funds $350.
monthly, expenses paid. Sightseeing,
Travels I, JC, Box 124-K, Corona CA
CA 92635. 10-29
Baker waited, early morning hours. Apply between 11-2 p.m. 3 p.m. St Subst, $30 W. 32rd
Floor.
Part-time dishwashing and counter help, 11 a.m.2-p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Apply in person only at Border Handling, 1528 W. 23rd. 10-16
DBCO DJ and sound system for the GOSK Hailwater System. Systems must be powerful enough for the system. System must be waterproof, or O. K. Aseman Unison, before 12, or O. K. Aseman Unison, before 10, or Kitchen help, waitresses and waiters needed for the system. Room size is 8-5 p.m. at Archer Uison, 809 Vermont, 10-12 Relief Housephones, up to 40 hrs. weekly, for the system. Emotional disturbance or or related children need relief housephones. Quenchments for group home people. Training in family home parenting desirable. Salary range based on home parenting desirable. Hours applicable. Date of application 12. Oct. 15 starting hours. Applications deadline 12. Oct. 15 references to Trinity Foster Home, 1011 Vermont, Dr. Rick Wuestenberg, 809 Vermont, 864-3712, Dr. Rick Wuestenberg, Administrator, 864-3712.
The Center for Research in Aerospace & Earth Sciences (CRES) at Columbia University is a long-term research assistant who will serve as an academic research assistant, a research manager, R.A. will supervise survey interviews, research management activities, and other duties as an aerospace research assistant. CRES will conduct research experience and administrative work from 800-4500 per month depending on expertise. April 15, 1979 to Paula Wright. Center for Research in Aerospace & Earth Sciences (CRES) at Columbia University is a long-term research assistant who will serve as an academic research assistant, a research manager, R.A. will supervise survey interviews, research management activities, and other duties as an aerospace research assistant. CRES will conduct research experience and administrative work from 800-4500 per month depending on expertise. April 15, 1979 to Paula Wright. Center for Research in Aerospace & Earth Sciences (CRES) at Columbia University is a long-term research assistant who will serve as an academic research assistant, a research manager, R.A. will supervise survey interviews, research management activities, and other duties as an aerospace research assistant. CRES will conduct research experience and administrative work from 800-4500 per month depending on expertise. April 15, 1979 to Paula Wright. Center for Research in Aerospace & Earth Sciences (CRES) at Columbia University is a long-term research assistant who will serve as an academic research assistant, a research manager, R.A. will supervise survey interviews, research management activities, and other duties as an aerospace research assistant. CRES will conduct research experience and administrative work from 800-4500 per month depending on expertise. April 15, 1979 to Paula Wright.
SURVEY RESEARCH ASSISTANT
Cooks wanted immediately. Day and night shifts.
Experience preferred, but will train. Call for appointment.
Village Inn Pancake House, B21 Iowa,
482-3251
10-16
LOST
Red jersey jacket with the University of New
York Mets' logo. Postcard. Fint Hall - Sentimental - 484-116
10-11
MISCELLANEOUS
Two weeks ago. Red and blue plaid umbrella in Spencer Museum. Sentimental value. Reward. 841-5679. 10-10
Class lass ring in 4th floor men's room of Wrexham Hall on 10.5.2013 in 4th floor men's room of Rework. 10-12
THEISS BINDING COPYING-The House of Ubica's Quick CENTER is headquarters for thumbnails and copying in Lawrence. Let us use it at BB.MA, or phone 456-308. TheUs is
NOTICE
Enroll Now! in Lawrence driving school: receive driving license in 4 weeks without a highway paint test! Transportation provided, drive now pay later. 82-6051 10-12
ATTENTION KANNAS READERS. TRED OF
WALKING? In need of a good, dependable
new or used car or truck? Call the new kid in town.
Terry Mode 832-300. 10-15
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS
"SONGS FOR
EVERY OCCASION"
birthday, anniversary,
get well, congratulations,
secret admirer, and more!
841-8515
PERSONAL
Reward: $55.00 for information leading to the
designation of a bicycle chiari. No quail-
ties. Call 841-967.
Vets get ready to party hardy, G.I. bill. 10-19
ABILENE ALUMNI: Attend Homecoming and dance Oct. 12 10-12
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid 864-5664.
TENNIS AND RAQUETTE BALLPLAYERS. WHEN the request jumping Call David B82-762-MG. Member Arsenal, Asn. and Official Stringer WGT Cuddles. Very reasonable rules on good grip and splits.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC - upbrings up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling Tubal Ligation For appointment Doppler screening 404-3600 1401 St. Overseas Park, KS
ARE YOU READY? The 2nd annual JAYAWAKJ
JoG is on Oct 1, 1979. 10,600 meter run. Contact
GAMMA PHI BETA 843-8223 or PHI KAPPA
PHI 843-2653 for registration. 10-12
If you're looking for a bar with cream beer, pool or wine, you can find it at the Harbour Lakes. You're probably people you'll like. The Harbour Lakes are day and night attractions for TALF now. Many of your friends will go to Harbour Lakes for their ship together at the Harbour Lakes.
PSYCHIC AWARNESS CLASS, learn about anan, energy center, healing, spirit guides, Thursday evening, starts Oct. 11. Cal. Five Lesdenen 82-7842.
JOBS ON SHIPPIN American, Foreign No experience. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Summer job or career. Send for information to J.B. Walters 8532 Bott St. 209 10-17 Washington 8532
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid -804-5564. 1f
If you are interested in playing SCRABLE, call
SUA 841-2847 Entire 841-6925, Tinsan 843-2830,
743-2831.
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head-
quarters 81-235 and KU info. 864-256-306.
**TASK:** Analyze the data in Table 1.
The KU GO CLUB meeting every Tuesday 7-10
m; Cork, 2-11; 864, 341-77. 10-12
An informal Tsuruh study group, including philosophy of Jewish observance is meeting weekly on Wednesdays 2:30-3:19 in the Union. For more info contact Jadith P. Huller 864-259-3782.
Short of time? W write these letter to mum, your friend, or a hot and jubilee love letter to that special someone, for you inquire, w忽略 what is missing. Call 844-6246 for more info. 10-11
Greizer, no one can do it quite like you do. You've got to eat something like the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon made the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon thanks for the fridge. Mr. Burdick thanks for the fridge. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. weekend well we use ag in guest host wine. Greizer, no one can do it quite like you do. You've got to eat something like the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon made the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon thanks for the fridge. Mr. Burdick thanks for the fridge. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. weekend well we use ag in guest host wine. Greizer, no one can do it quite like you do. You've got to eat something like the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon made the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon thanks for the fridge. Mr. Burdick thanks for the fridge. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. weekend well we use ag in guest host wine. Greizer, no one can do it quite like you do. You've got to eat something like the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon made the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon thanks for the fridge. Mr. Burdick thanks for the fridge. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. weekend well we use ag in guest host wine. Greizer, no one can do it quite like you do. You've got to eat something like the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon made the Hat and toilet turbuns. Kwon thanks for the fridge. Mr. Burdick thanks for the fridge. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. (Bernard) Demerson D., nc exhibition. weekend well we use ag in guest host wine. Gre
Mary J--Got a whole Thanksgiving vacation and now to do Ggt any suggestions? Steve. 10-15
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not. Check Campus Vets. 118 B Union. 664-
4478.
Tournament Director; recreation majors or any one interested. Call SUA office 864-3477 (ask for indoor recreation).
Mary J--So I'm asking already but this'd better be good. If I wanted to be bored I'd go home.
- Thanksgiving, Steve. 10-15
SK1! Aspen, Copper Mountain, or Breckenridge,
for information call Brad 841-0070. 10-16
10-Tomorrow is Thursday—read your book—
I'm ready for it—are you? Evil Person Underneath.
10-10
SMITM & WESSON-Model 66 Stainless Steel
357 Magnum Revolver 6-inch barrel new $150.
842-7158.
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Garage-complete professional bicycle repair. Garage specialty="Tune-Up" and "Total Overhaul". Details call 841-2789. 10-22
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Whirle Quick Copy Center, Alice is available from A to 5M to Monday to Friday, 9 AM on 1 PM on Tuesday to 838 Mast.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $100 for your 300-page catalog of college researcher. 10,250 topics listed. BOOK 20597; Los Angeles, CA, 90252) (213) 477-8226. 11-7
SPANISH TUTORING. Experienced teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 106,
109, 111, 112, 118. Call 841-2467. TF
EXPERT FUTURING: MATH- 1002-102 call 65783
. MATH- 1153-1049 call 76573 STATISTICS
call courses (MATH- 1002-102) to 1000 call 65783
. MATH- 1153-1049 to 1000 call 65783 ENGLISH
call courses (MATH- 1002-102) to 1000 call 76573
Excellent e-desay with sound equipment for your
very competitive prices. Very competitive prices.
8188, 8189, 8190, 8192, 10, 12
Creative Illustrations-Artwork and illustrations for: advertising, logos, personal use, and cartoons, phone: 811-7550 or 811-7550, 10-15
GRLS GIRLS GRLS for your choice
call Elite Club Dancing Service 864-2827 10-16
TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
Jozmnyman typographer, 20 years typing (typing experience, 4 years academic typing, thesis discussions to universities. Latest Selective equipment. 845-4844. T7
Typist/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Call 842-9127. TIF
Experienced typist—Quality work, reasonable rates.
Call, Call Engine, at 412-831-5916
Experienced Typist--term papers, theses, mime,
electronic IBM Proofread, Proofreading, spelling
corrected. 943-8548 Mrs. Wright.
TP need some typing quality? Do work low, rate
low.
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-6854, after 4 p.m. 2-28
TYPING
Experienced typlet—theses, dissertations, term
subjects; experimentally selected electrics;
864-3138; evenings 822-210.
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, occur-
able, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call
841-3387.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing self-correct Selectric. Call Elsen or Jeannus. 841-2172.
I do darned good typing. Papers under 50 p-
only. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6438, 85c per
page. 10-17
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate service, low rates. 843-3655 evenings and weekends. 10-23
I would like to type your term papers, theses,
disertations, etc. Reasonable rates. Karen 842-
3332
10-16
WANTED
Someone to do part time sewing. Pay negotiable
Call 841-2904.
10-11
Mature roommate necessary for very nice three
bedroom, duplex, 15 min. walk from campus,
$100 per month; utilities Call 841-3205 after 6
p.m. 10-11
Need mature roommate to share a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. Bust stops in front of a pool and laundrystor one block away. $85 plus utilities. Call between 6-9 p.m. 841-3124.
Roommate wanted to share two bedroom apt.
Keep calling 842-0755. 10-10
WANTED TO BUY MORE or less 2 cu. ft. refrigerator 841-760 or 842-1244 Furniture 10-10-10 Female refrigerator monthly, call 842-2577; its better than the dorm, quieter, and it better food.
500 lb. Lizard required to eat large meat
1000 lb. Lizard required to eat large meat
1338 lb. Lizard Call, 843-9579, 10-11
PSYCHIATRIC AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES WORKERS WANTED by Topka State Hospital, Boca Raton, FL. 98021-4235. 1-Wi 512 W. Biq., Topka, KS; Phone: (1) 329-518-3981; Mn赞助encourages to apply. An equal opportunity employer.
Need roommate for 2 bedroom house. Must be
idle. Call Chiril 841-0833 keep trying.
10-12
Roommate wanted for beautifully furnished 3
bedroom house $75 per month + 1/3 utilities.
Call 841-3661. 10-12
Excellent seamless堤 needered for alterations on
seamless-pomp 864-1316. keep trying. 10-11
I'm interested in sharing a nice looking kit with other student students generally already furnished. Must be nice looking kit. Call Paul 842-1941, please leave message.
Want job as house cleaner. Good worker. Referees: Call Suan K.6128. If not home, please leave number and I’ll call back. 10-15
Uppercase student preferred New house and
room ($250) and 1.3 l/utilities 842-620
842-620
10.16
Moving to New Mexico, need a roommate for Jawayher Towers. Call 842-355-1700, 7:00 p.m.
Female looking for same to share nice 2 bdrm.
apt. from now until end of first semester. 841-
8693 after $ 30. 10-12
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12
Wednesday, October 10. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Law students watch police beat
By JENNIFER HOLT
Staff Director
Although this past weekend was the second day of an excursion to chase scenes, robberies and thefts, four year-old KU law students witnessed how Lawrence police lay their lives on the streets.
The law students, who are among 30 enrolled in a Legal Aid Clinic class in the KU Law School, have been riding with Lawrence police officers as part of a new program to get a first-hand look at how the patrol handles problems while on patrol.
"The program teaches you that being a policeman is not always a game of copes and robbers and 100 mph chases." Eric Gillis wrote in The New York Times that always has to worry about his own life because he never knows when, for example, someone he's giving a ticket to might be on the street.
Leslie Schaefer, Wichita, said, "My ride
Saturday night made me see the policeman's job in a different light. The program helps me to sympathize with policemen and their day-to-day grind.
STAHL AND SCHAFFER agreed that the program helped establish a rapport between law enforcers and future lawyers who could share better perspectives of a police officer's job.
Schaefer accompanied one of the officers who answered a suicide call about 1 a.m. Sunday.
"I thought the police handled the write-up of the suicide very well—at least from what I could tell," she said. "They were not going to do anything to make assumptions or miss anything. Of course, there was a lot of standing around and waiting for them, too, while the police photographer and doctor worked. And then they used the usual amount of paperwork involved."
BRENDA WEST, Nekoma, said her ride Saturday night was fairly routine, even
though she was with an officer who answered her emergencies building 1, building 2. The officer she said, detained two suspects for aggrievated battery and assault and took them back to the police station.
Then she rode with the officer to the hospital to check on the man who had been beaten over the head with a club.
"I really felt I learned a lot by going with them to answer the call," she said. "I also got a word feeling following them around in public." She found that in curious bastenders as the officers did.
Although Friday night also was fairly routine for Stahl and Dee Wichita, each said she enjoyed the chance to see how policemen worked.
FOSTER SAID, "It was kind of boring because not much was going on. However, I was impressed with the officer I rode in." The police department's technicalisms of law, I asked him a lot of
questions to see how frank he'd be with me, and he was real honest.
"In fact, I think he enjoyed giving me information about mob control and the ways the Lawrence police handle crowds, especially after the Antrak train wreck."
While she rode with the officer, he palied over a speeding motorist and shot him in the chest. She screamed female, a call about a domestic dispute and a call about a jujuine who allegedly fired a gun at the officer.
Meanwhile, Stahl rote with an officer who answered calls concerning a domestic violence case and complained of a brick thrown through the window of a local bar, a traffic accident near the entrance.
Schafer said, "I've learned through this program that policemen have a way of getting their information rightly up on law issues. Maybe I can better understand their job and help make it a bit easier."
Palmist...
From page one
left hand," he said, pointing to a tiny, jagged break in the line.
"In my right hand, the line is clear and straight. I had a lot of problems when I was a child. I suttered a lot, I was insecure. It was a very difficult time."
"But as you can see, I've cleared that up, and I've gotten my life into focus. It shows up in my hands."
"WHEN I SEE weaknesses in a person's palm, I always encourage them to be strong in their will, and if there's something it is something about it. I try to be positive."
He said he handled each client individually on the basis of his own personal interpretation of the person's character.
"I see if I worry lines in their hand. I'm going to approach the subject very carefully," he said. "But if the hand is rather crude, then I'll be able a bit biter."
"Scoffers!" Hamilton asks, "Oh, yes,
and then I do have scoffers but only
very rarely. I can be a boaster to be a
boacher, then I try to be fairly
accurate about dates, and that usually con-
cure."
"IF I TELL them that they were very upset and feeling insured and worried a lot before I could see her, I got divorced, and it happened to be true, then that eliminates the skepticism rather than the doubt."
He said that when people stopped by after seeing his sign in the window and asked for a
reading, they seemed surprised to meet him.
"They usually expect a gypsy," he said. "They usually don't expect a man. People are usually suspicious.
"I don't get many housewives. Usually it students or people sort of on the fringe of society. People who are very established in life will not usually ask to have their palms read."
"BUT THERE ALWAYS will be some people who'll be thinking about their hands, and who they are. There'll always be hands. And there'll always be pattis." And there'll always be patis."
It took several years before he became confident reading hands, he said.
"All the books in the world will not tell you
the diversity of people's hands. Everyone's personality is so different. No book can tell you all of it. You learn to read hands through reading hands."
HAMILTON WORKS full time at Reuter Pipe Organ Company, making wooden organ pipes and, he said, he reads palms in the room. "We learn by benefit—to learn how to deal with necrosis."
"I have been charging $2." he said. "I've found that I usually charge something because people don't appreciate it unless they have to pay something. It's rather
He looks down into his own palms, as if for an answer.
"That's reality," he laughs. "It's a strange world we live in."
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
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"Ohayo"
Herb's
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Tonight Wed. Oct. 10
7:00 p.m.
sponsored by ASIA Association of Students Interested in Asia
Student Legal Services are Available .
1) Advice and consultation on any legal metter.
2) Preparation, drafting and review of contracts, leases and other legal documents
3) Recommendation for the formation of a subordination of litigation.
4) Incorporation of bona fide non-profit student organizations.
212 Carruth-O'Leary
Wednesday Night Walk-In
212 Carruth-O'Leary phone for appointment 864-5665
Wednesday Night
Student Senate Offices Student Union 105B (3rd Floor) Time 7:30-9:30 pm
Road for brt in student union
HELP!
--see Capt Goodman on campus in the Kansas Union, main business, on 8, 9, and 10, in OCT 79
ZZB.
We're ready to help you solve our literature problems with a complete stock of Cliffs Notes covering frequently assigned novels, plays and poems
Cliffs Notes are used by millions of students nationwide to earn better grades in literature.
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14280 Crescent's block from the fountain
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Jay Bowl
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9 Ball Tournament Race To Five single elimination Open To KU Students & Staff
Entry Fee $5.00 60% prize fund
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Deadline Friday Oct. 12, 6:00 p.m.
Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION
Primary
"The federal government blindly goes on throwing money around. I think when we start decentralizing the federal government to allow it to operate in a more going on, then infusion is come to subside."
From page one
In dealing with foreign policy, Yeager would abandon the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks with the Soviet Union.
"I SEE NO reason for it," he said. "I'd rather have a strong defense and let the chins fall as they may."
Yager said his campaign would center on the slogan "We've got too much government in the economy and not enough economy in the government."
--hair lords
So far, the slogan and some bumper stickers made by his friends have been the extent of his campaign, which he said probably would be "low-key."
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next to General James
Yeaer said he planned to finance the campaign himself, but could not estimate how much he would spend. He refuses to accept any contributions because he does
He is not sure whether he has much backing from the state Republican Party, he said, because he does not know any of the state party leaders.
MERLYN BROWN, executive director of the state Republican Party, said, "We've heard of him. We think he has a pretty good record. He can certainly can't take Sen. Edward Kennedy."
Yeager could have saved himself $100 by submitting to Secretary of State Jack Bryer the petition to elect a new lieutenant. Either the $100 or the 1,000 signatures would have qualified him for the nomination.
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Jumping Fish
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No.34
10 cents off campus
Orioles nip Pirates, 5-4
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
free on campus
See story page nine
Thursday, October 11. 1979
TOM PARKS
Hairy Problem
that hampered her sketching session yesterday in front of Watson Library. The winds caught her hair and his sketch paper, intertwining her work.
Marilyn Maynard, St. Louis freshman, fights off both the strong winds and cold weather
IHP 'defamation' to be discussed
Staff Reporter
Bv DAVE LEWIS
Representatives from the American Association of University Professors and Teachers will meet tomorrow to discuss a "dadematif" handout distributed at Wesco Hall earlier this month.
The handout criticized a Humanities 104 course and urged students enrolled in the course to drop it.
Richard Hardin, chairman of the Integrated Humanities Program, said
yesterday the handout was an infringement of academic freedom.
The handout, anonymously distributed at Wescoe Hall on the first day of classes, urged students enrolled in Humanities 104 to drop the course because students allegedly could not ask questions, take notes or approach to what they were taught in class.
"We want to come out with a statement that expresses our concern," Hardin said.
T. P. Srinivasan, chapter president of the AAPU, said the possibility of taking legal
MIKE DAVIS, university general counsel, said a freedom of speech depended on the circumstances of the incident.
disciplinary action within the University would be discussed.
"If someone wants to stand on the *newwalk* and say something a bad teacher, you get closer to the classroom and to disruping it, the case becomes very
Davis would not say whether the University had authority to take legal action
on "defamatory" handouts but said he would interest involved parties.
Srivinasan said he hoped the University would include distribution of "defamatory" handouts in future grievance procedures.
Grievance procedures handle grade protests, faculty protests and a variety of University disputes, but the grievance department has no distribution of "defamatory" handouts.
SRINIVASAN SAID. "It is quite conceivable that the grievance process in the See HPF page eight
See IHP page eight
KU approves anti-racism march
By JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
Staff Renorter
An anti-racism Homecoming Day rally and march was approved yesterday by the University Events Committee.
The committee said the International Committee Against Racism and the Progressive Labor Party to marry Market Estuary July 27 on behalf of the official Oct. 27 on the Watson Lawn lawn at noon and to march down Jayhawk Boulevard toward the downtown Lawrence at
Paul Showalter, a member of InCAR from
Showalter said the demonstration would celebrate the 128th anniversary of John F. Kennedy's death in a Maui Ferry, W. Va. A simultaneous march, also sponsored by incar "MHAR in the Perry" is planned for July 15.
the demonstration was not designed to disrupt homecoming and that the march was scheduled for 1:30 p.m. to avoid inundation with traffic going to the football stadium.
"They've been pretty cooperative," he said. "I think they wanted to give us a chance to rally and march off campus as soon as possible so they could go on with homecoming."
Kansas City, Mo., said yesterday that he had expected the committee's approval.
The marchers have the Lawrence Police Department's permission to march, but still need City Commission approval to use a sound truck, he said. InCar has asked the commission to consider the request for equipment at its meeting next Tuesday.
SHOWALTER TOLD the committee that
Two hundred members from midwestern cities will arrive the morning of the protest and hear speeches on marching conduct on the Watson Library lawn. Showalter said,
Showalter said inCAR also would distribute leaflets hoping to attract about 200 Lawrence residents to the demonstration.
Organizers hope to attract 400 demonstrators to the march. Showalter said.
DETECTIVE SGT. JEAN Longaker of the KU Police department, a member of the KU Police Department, said the demonstration might be difficult to provide because most officers would be on duty.
Senate to consider investigation
See PROTEST page five
A possible Student Senate investigation of discrimination by the Iranian Student Association will be discussed tonight during the final fall supplementary budget
Staff Reporter
The Senate Budget committee will review allegations made last night by Hossain Moussa of Iranian Students in Iranian Student Organization, and determine if an investigation or discrimination is
Bv ELLEN IWAMOTO
last spring and the ISO is ineligible for funds.
A question of duplication of services between two organizations arose at Monday's meeting. The organizations were called in last night to discuss their organizations and answer questions from the audience.
organization were at the hearing last night at the request of the Budget Committee. The organization requested a request of $1,500 its first request for Senate funds. The SA received funding of $650
However, the ISO last night accused the ISA of being a light institution instead of providing cultural services. Conversely, the ISA accused the ISA of being a religious group.
The organization representatives agreed that, in principle, the purposes and goals of the ISO and ISA were the same.
Mahalati alleged that the ISA held closed elections without any publicity, thus not enabling her to campaign. So did the ISA's activities primarily were political and thus would be negligible for them.
Two representatives from each
After the representatives discussed their organization's services for more than an hour, the committee voted unanimously that the service of services existed between the two organizations.
Both organizations said their goals were provide educational, cultural, social and emotional support to Iranian students in Lawrence, and to help new Iranian students with housing and language training.
But Mahalati said, "In reality, what actually takes place is not the same as what is on paper."
The duplication ruling means the ISA will retain the $855 it received from the Senate
Steve Cramer, a Budget committee
Group may look into private club charges
member, said. "Obviously there is friction between two groups, and both sides recognize the difference in diplomatic way to solve the problem without confrontation is to conduct an in-
The investigation will be based on a section of the Senate Rules and Regulations which states, "No funds shall be allocated to the Student Senate. If request is issued to be . . . in the judgment of the Student Senate, discriminatory in matters of race, creed, religion, nationality
By JUDY WOODBURN
If the Senate Budget Committee recommends an investigation be made to the Student Senate Executive Committee, the committee will be involved in the investigation.
Staff Reporter
See BUDGET page five
He said his decision to make the recommendation had been prompted by investigations by two metroropolitan television stations, including the Kansan of inconsistent membership application distribution at Shenanigans, 910 Mississippi, and Baliwilleau, 860 W. B4th
Michael Bailey, director of the Kansas Commission on elections, said he will investigate the commission's investigation alleged membership discrimination at two private clubs in
"On the basis of what I've seen in the Kansan and on WIBW-TJ. Topeka, there certainly is a basis for investigation," she said. "It's really way means that discrimination actually exists."
The law, Kansas general statute 44-1009,
subsection C-1, prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, sex, physical handicap or in place of public accommodations.
The second metropolitan television station conducting an investigation into alleged discrimination is KCMO-TV, Kangas Civ. Mo.
According to Kansas Administrative Regulation 21-4-6, private clubs with Class B liquor licenses are subject to the Kansas public accommodations law.
The owner of the clubs, Joseph Mandacina, Kansas City, Mo., declined to comment on a potential investigation of allelized discrimination.
James Dorsely, compliance supervisor for KCCR, said that in most cases, the commission began investigations when commissioned by individuals allelic discrimination.
Bailey said he would recommend that at complaint be filed on the commission's behalf at its next meeting, which has been scheduled for Oct. 25 in Kansas City, Kan.
The Kansan began a check into private disco club membership policies after a black KU graduate told the Kansan he had participated in scholarship to Shenanigans without good reason.
"But if a matter such as this one about private clubs is brought before the commission, the commission would decide, vote, decide to initiate an investigation without a complaint or file a complaint in its
The second night, a white student was given membership application forms at the library. The third night, given a form at Ballwickle, and was told to shenanigans to return during business hours to receive the form. The two other black students were given forms by both clubs
At the request of the Kansas, three blacks, two Iranians and a white student participated in the two day check, which began Sept. 11.
State officials said there was no law limiting the number of memberships that could be sold by private clubs, and ABC would not have to limit membership sales in private clubs.
Ray Sanukes, director of human resources at the PwC Institute made routine inquiries about membership policies at Shenangnia and Bullwinkle after the results of the Kansan check were presented.
The first night, a black graduate and an art student met in Seattle to apply online forms at Shenanigau. The first Iranian student also was denied a form at Balkwinte's. that the black man, who had been told of his status, requested a membership application form for a friend later that night and was given
A door attendant at Shenanigans had told both men that state law prohibited the sale of any more memberships. A sign posted on the entrance gate said members whose membership sales and renewals were
suspended until further notice, by order of the Alcoholic Beverage Control of Kansas.
Samuels said, however, that he had not found any evidence that the two clubs were discriminatory in their membership policies.
HE SAID Mandacina told him that it was not the policy of either club to discriminate.
Bush says Demos will pick Carter
BY TONI WOOD
Staff Renorter
George Bush, Republican presidential candidate,篮壁 Sen. Edward Kennedy's liberal voting record yesterday, and predicted that the conservative candidate was unable to President Jimmy Carter in his battle for the 1980 Democratic nomination.
"What's Ted Kennedy ever done?" he asked. "He's never held a job in his life, except as a Senator to vote his convictions."
Bush was in Topeka for a GOP $23-a plate fund raising lunchroom to promote his candidacy to more than 100 Kansas Republicans. He is the first presidential candidate than Sen. Robert Dole, who to stop the struggle in the 1800 struggle for the White House.
When Bush described Kennedy as "left of George McGovern," the crowd broke into a long ovation.
He spoke almost sympathetically about Carter, saying that although the president meant well, he had been a weak leader.
"One of Jimmy Carter's greatest shortcomings is that he never dealt with any foreign countries." he said.
Carter is wrong in thinking the Soviets would not continue negotiations in the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, Bush said.
Bush said that he favored a SALT II treaty, but that he would make some tough amendments, including verification of Soviet compliance. He said that with enough "annoyance," the U.S. would come back to the bargaining table.
"THE SOVIETS' economy is in trouble and they're in an arms race," he said.
He also criticized the way Carter handled the Soviet combat troops in Cuba.
DESPITE CARTER'S weaknesses, Bush said, the president will win the Democratic presidential nomination because he is less liberal than Kennedy.
"Carter said the status quo was unacceptable, and then he accepted the status quo two weeks ago."
Bush said Soviet combat brigades were not in Cuba while he was Central Intelligence Office head. However, intelligence officials have said the combat brigade was established in Havana in 2012.
Bush has had background in several types of government work. He has been CIA Director, United Nations ambassador, an envoy to China and a Texas
George Bush
PETER A. BARNES
Congressman. He is reported to be worth $1.3 million.
He became a millionaire by founding an oil construction business in Texas. However, because he sold his business in New York, he did not have a bait-favoring oil company.
BUSH TOLD the group not to believe popularity polls that rate him far below other presidential candidates.
"Pollls today are irrelevant unless they adversely affect the ability to build an organization or adversely affect the ability to raise money," he said.
HE SAID his low rating in the polls had not hurt his campaign, because his organization was stronger than most politicians and almost as much money as Ronald Reagan.
"I BELIEVE we're going to surprise those who have higher ratings in the polls," he said.
Bush's campaign strategy is simple: fight hard to win the early primaries and caucuses to establish name recognition
Bush will be entering the first caucus in January in Iowa, where he says he has public officials and a committee of 1,100 working in his behalf.
Bush said that he would enter Kansas' April 1 presidential primary, but he would wait to file his name with the Secretary of State.
He declined to criticize Dole, who also has announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination.
"I like Bob Dole," he said, "but I'm not going to wish him well in this endear. He's not going to do as well as me."
2
2 Thursday, October 11, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Security tight for Castro visit
NEW YORK—Fidel Castel is expected to arrive in New York today for a visit that has spawned an extraordinary security operation to protect the con
A U.N. spokesman said Castro would add the U.N. General Assembly at noon tomorrow. Other details of Castro's visit, including his arrival time and how much time he was allowed to spend there, are not available.
Plans for for the visit have been shrouded in secrecy, partly because of the security problems associated with the Cuban leader.
Strict security measures are to be put into effect, with city police, Secret Service, Cohan and U.N. security forces combining to protect Castro.
Castro will bring her personal army of 210 aides, many of whom are expected to be armed. More than 1,000 police are to be used, including police helicopters,
Castro will speak to the 128-assembly both as Cuba's head of state and as chairman of the 90-member non-aligned nations movement.
Acquitted woman still in jail
GARDEN CITY - A 28-year-old mother of four children, acquitted on grounds of insanity in the theft of her death by a 9-year-old son, is remanded in the Finney District Court.
Attorney John Wheeler argued that the law requiring that people acquitted on grounds of insanity be committed to institutions without hearings denied the right to vote.
Wheeler had asked that the woman, Elizabeth Jo Locklear, be released, but authorities said yesterday she would remain in custody pending her transfer to
Locklear was acquitted last month. She was accused of killing her son and threatening to kill three others to prevent her husband from dividing her.
Airlines cut employees, flights
Beset by declining air traffic and soaring fuel prices, two airlines have announced layoffs and flight backups.
Trans World Airlines yesterday said it planned to lay off 138 Kansas City, Mo. employees by Oct.28.
An airline spokesman said the furloughs would be the final round of layoffs for TWA. The airline has laid off about 2,500 employees nationwide and 528 in
Some of the employees may be recalled next spring or summer, the spokesman said. TWA employs 9,600 people in Kansas City and 36,000 nation-
In Dallas yesterday, Braniff International announced the termination of its one flight daily serving St. Louis, Kansas City, New York and Hartford, Conn.
Future uncertain for qasohol
WASHINGTON—Gasolold with alcohol from a coal-fired distillery could curb national gasoline consumption by up to 5,200 barrels a day by the end of 2014.
But the study said the long-term future is unclear for the blend of 90 percent baseline and 10 percent alcohol.
The study, issued by the congressional Office of Technology Assessment, said that today's most energy-efficient distillery operating on a premium fuel—like oil or natural gas—saves energy in producing alcohol for gasoline—about one gallon of gasoline for 30 kilograms of gasolol.
Although the nation could increase yearly gasolol production 500 times in the next decade, the study said that level probably never would be reached because of uncertainty over prices for grain need to make alcohol, costs of switching from high-octane fuel to gasoline and the improvements that would reduce the need for high octane fuels like gasolol.
'Klansmen' rile auto workers
DEARBORN, Mich.—More than 1,000 auto workers have signed petition demanding that PTO be allow for Motor Co. two supervisors who reportedly marched police officers to the parking lot.
Workers said the two supervisors donned the white hoods and walked through the trim section of the Dearborn Assembly Plant Sept. 27.
In response to the supervisors' action, two white and four black workers
During a physical action, two white and four outweaker workers staged a brief walkout Sept. 28 against petitioners who have also demanded that no disciplinary action be taken.
A Ford spokesman said the company reported the incident and considered it "highly inappropriate." The supervisors meant the incident as a joke, the
Ford has reassigned the supervisor who took the lead in the incident. No decision on whether to discipline the six protesters has been made.
EPA alleaques PCB nealigence
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—An Independence, Mo. company is accused by the Environmental Protection Agency of improperly handling waste oil containing the deadly chemical PCB by allowing the oil to be sprinkled on roads at a Johnson County landfill.
The EPA complaint, filed Friday, also accused the company, Radium Petroleum Co. of improper labeling, distribution and storage in Independence of waste oil containing polychlorinated biphenyls—PCBs—a chemical formerly used in certain oils to absorb heat.
An attorney for the EPA said Tuesday that the $131,000 fine being sought against the company was the largest request for penalties in the nation for a
PCBIs, which do not break down in the environment, have been banned because they caused cancer and, in large doses, nerve damage or death in test
Pope requests nuns' loualtu
VATICAN CITY—Pope John Paul II urged Roman Catholic nuns yesterday to be loyal and never "irrated or embittered." with his leadership.
The pope's words were interpreted as an indirect reference to the dramatic request that women be allowed to become priests an American man made the decision.
Sister Theresa Kane called for equal 'reverence and dignity for all persons' and appealed to John Paul to admit women to 'all ministries in our church.'
During a mass for members of the Vatican Council of the Latiya who had just completed debates on the role of women in the church, John Paul said, "Women have a right to be educated."
Carter assures water rights
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — President Jimmy Carter, embarking on a two-day trip to the western United States, assured Western governers yesterday that U.S. troops were on the road to victory.
Carter said that, with the exception of specific federal and Indian water rights, "the states must allocate their water resources in the manner best suited to their needs."
Carter told the members of the Western Governors Policy Office that the 'environmental and water needs' key concerns in tapping coal and oil have been addressed.
The trip to the West launched a period of increased travel for Carter, who plans to visit six states in 16 days.
Correction
A story in the Oct. 8 issue of the Kanan, "ASK chooses issues; Glover advises reps"—it was incorrectly reported that the KU delegation withdrew a resolution on South Africa divestiture. The resolution was not moved to be included by the assembly.
Weather...
The KU weather service has predicted partly cloudy skies for Thursday with highs in the mid-80s and lows in the mid-40s. Winds will be out of the north and north-west at about 10-15 mph. The extended forecast calls for highs Friday in the upper 70s.
Carlin to meet on records law
TOPEAK, (AP) — Members of Gov. John W. Davis and his administration, new executives for suggestions on changes in the state's open records and criminal records have filed a motion.
Bill Hoch, Carlin's press secretary, arranged the meeting yesterday after growing media criticism of the laws.
records law was actually a closed records law and that Kansas had done more than any other state to close records from public scrutiny.
The Kansas Legislature's interim
counselman, Barrie E. Kline,
scheduled a hearing next Thursday on
that would open more records to the public.
Merritt and others are expected to testify in
the hearing.
Merritt, executive editor of the Wichita-
Beagle-Eacon, has said that Kansas' open
members and the news executives will be after the hearing. Hoch said.
He said that he asked Merritt to invite other media representatives and that the governor's office also might invite others interested in changing the law.
The meeting between the governor's staff
Carlin signed into law last session a bill that closes information about arrests that do not lead to convictions.
However, court clerks find it impossible to separate the confidential information from public records.
Hoch said Carlin was interested in suggestions on amendments that might reduce or eliminate problems reported had been made to access to public records they once could see.
"The goal of the law was admirable," Hoch said, "but nobody foresaw the problems it has caused.
"The governor wants to see whether we can achieve the goal of the law and still protect the public's right to know."
Unseasonable snow blankets East
By the Associated Press
An unusual, October snowstorm surprised the East daytime, burying summer's foliage with accumulations of up to a foot. The rain-soaked linden trees toped onto power lines.
It was the earliest snowfall of the century in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., where more than 72,000 utility customers lost their power by March to 3 inches deep made drain traceres.
It was the earliest snowfall on record in Newark, N.J., and a low temperature of 37 made it the coldest October 10 since 1955.
Snow in varying amounts was reported from the Virginias to New England, but
especially hard hit were the mountain communities of Appalachia.
Numerous minor accidents were reported on slick roads in several states. In New York, a school bus carrying 23 high students crashed into a dirt-moving vehicle and killed one person. Pleasant Valley, N.Y. Several students and the driver suffered cuts and bruises.
IN WEST VIRGINIA, where the storm dumped 12 inches in Cananda Valley, the Monaghona Power Co. reported 10,000 to 20,000 people last their electricity in several counties when tree limbs snapped under the wetness, wet snow and ripped down power lines.
In Virginia, a power company reported 78,000 customers were without power, including 17,000 in the Harrisonburg area where the snow was 10 inches deep.
In Baltimore, where the Orioles and the Pittsburgh Pirates were waiting to get on with the World Series after being raised out of day, morning ramps were changing to snow.
Elsewhere in Maryland, snow was thick on the ground. Baltimore Gas & Electric co. reported weather was knocked out to the northwest, west and northeast of Baltimore City.
The weather service said it was the earliest snow in the Washington area since Oct. 5, 1892.
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An unofficial record also was set in the Blue Hills area south of Boston as temperature plumbers 20 degrees in 24 hours. Falling in Boston, Worcester and Springfield.
Among the few who benefitted were the ski resorts of New England. The Killington Ski area at Sherburne, VL, opened dayday, the earliest in the history of the area.
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The first move is your turn. To qualify for the qualification test, you must successfully on the Professional Qualification Test (POT). The POT will be administered on November 17, 1979. You must, however, attend a qualifying exam.
By scoring well on the POT, you will be regarded as an important participant with an NSA certification. We will discuss the specific role you will play in providing security for your organization's security or producing vital foreign intelligence.
The PQT helps to measure your potential for career opportunities in such diverse fields as.
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Communications — Scientifically designed, tested and managed cryptographic system ensure the maximum degree of security in an environment around the globe. Since cryptography is a rather unique pursuit, the training of new employees is extensive and
Other Opportunities - A limited number of applicants may be selected for management support areas such as the development of Resources Management.
Register Now For The PQT
Pick up a PQ bulletin at your college placement office. Fill out the registration form and mail it before November 3. Messages are sent on November 17.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday. October 11. 1975
2
Market rallies after plunge; trading high
From Kansan wire reports
NEW YORK—Franked activist rockets and bond markets at the end of 2016 were yesterday in a convulsive reaction to the Federal Reserve's new plans for clamping down on borrowers.
However, Vice President Walter F. Mondale said in LS. Louis last night that the chaotic trading on the stock market appear to have slowed by late afternoon.
"Toward the end of the market today," he said, "a lot of institutinal investors came back on the market and the price lifted on about 20 points as a result.
"That suggests a lot of the large institutions investors felt that the stock market had dropped too far, and were worried about it. And they thought there were a lot of good buys."
Trading volume at the New York Stock Exchange reached a record 81.62 million shares, far outstanding the previous high of 66.37 million set Aug. 3, 1978.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, off about 28 points at mid-admittion, rose by 1.9 percent to decline at $49.82. That left the widest increase in 48 points of a loss more than 48 points since Monday.
Monday said such conditions were anticipated by the administration. So we need to keep the economy going we're trying to do in a prudent way, without having some effect in the short run on all of it.
"We think the initial reaction to this substantial effort by the Federal Reserve
Board has been quite encouraging, including the stock market."
Bond prices likewise came under intense pressure as the markets absorbed the shock of new record levels of interest rates. Tuesday, many of the nation's banks announced unprecedented increases of a full $1 trillion in lending rate, from 13% to 14%.
In world markets, the dollar dropped in foreign exchange, giving up some of its gains of the past two days.
The price of gold bounded over the $400-anounce mark on billion metals propelled by speculation about the latest U.S. gold auction and fears of more oil price hikes.
The gold price catapulted overnight by a record $25 to $14.90 an ounce in Zurich. In London it jumped $18.50 to $410 at the opening. The London price in the morning
was fixed at $409.25 and by afternoon was fixed at $413 an ounce.
Despite all the turmoil, many Wall Streeters continued to praise the Federal Reserve's decision last week to bring out new guns in its battle against inflation.
Many conceived that the new steps raised the odds of at least a moderate recession in the country, and this time for such important industries as housing construction and auto manufacture.
But they argued that whatever short term pain might result could be more than offset by the benefits of being against rapid infiltration, which many economists regard as a ticking time bomb.
this week did not qualify as any kind of "crash" like the devastating slide of 1929, when stock prices lost nearly 50 percent of their value over a few short weeks.
And they said the market's sharp declines
This week's slide, by contrast, represented a loss of between 7 percent and 8 percent, as measured by the Dow Jones average, through mid-afternoon yesterday.
"There is no earthy reason for a stock market panic," said Heinz H. Biel, a veteran market analyst with the brokerage firm of Janney Montgomery Scott Inc. (JMN) in a very constructive move. If it is successful, will avoid a major depression in the future."
"The Fed is running some risks here, but they are calculated risks," said William Griggs, a credit expert at the J. Henry Schroder Bank | Trust Co.
Club...
From page one
Any investigation will now be in the hands of the KCR, Samuels said.
John Sheppard, manager of Sheanigans, and Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's, said membership sales at both clubs were still frozen. Comeau said Bullwinkle's still was accepting applications for actual sales, but know when actual sales would be resumed.
Sheppard declined to elaborate on membership sales at Sheanigans.
Clarence Dillingham, professor of social welfare and former acting director of affirmative action at KU, said he was familiar with the alleged discrimination in Lawrence.
"I would hope that any investigation be conducted with the good faith and cooperation of everyone involved."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editor staff. Signed columns represent the views of the authors.
October 11, 1979
Aye for dissension
It may bother some people that Lawrence City Commissioner Marci Francisco turns up on the losing side in many city commission votes.
But Francisco is not bothered, and for good reason, that of the first 228 votes taken by the commission, 59 were split votes and she was responsible for 34 of them. That means that the other four commissioners combined for only 16 votes. The failure did not include routine acceptance of proclamations and bids for equipment and services or disagreements on federal revenue-sharing allocations.
THE REASON for Francisca's lack of worry or concern about her voting record is that it speaks for itself—and for a large number of Lawrence residents and KU students who might have represented on past commissions.
Commissioner Ed Carter says Fran-isco's record video shows that there is "at least one commissioner who feels her constituency is maybe a little more restrictive than the rest of us." He proposes that perhaps the other commissioners should try to adopt a 'citywide' approach to issues.
Carter may be correct. The truth of the matter is that Francisco does represent the interests of her constituents—including many KU students.
But representing the interests of her constituents does not preclude the possibility that those interests may, in fact, be helpful to the city as a whole.
FRANCISCO HAS been consistently favorable to neighborhood issues and other issues that have a direct and often beneficial effect on KU students.
What Francisco's dissension means is that the interests of the city of Lawrence are not always as cut and dried as they may seem.
Some of the commissioners may be taking a "citywide" approach to the issues and may be willing to make certain commission for the benefit of the whole city.
"SOMETIMES I know why they (other commissioners) aren't going to really pay attention to why I'm voting as I am, but isn't it nice that at least it's part of the record that there isn't total agreement?" Francois said.
Achievements to stay after Kreps leaves
Juanta Kreps' term as secretary of commerce will end at the end of the month when she steps down for personal and family reasons. But her presence, and success, will leave their effect on the president and the nation's major businesses.
But that kind of approach sometimes systematically excludes certain interests of the city that may not contain light as the commissioners.
Indeed, dissension is a critical and vital part of the democratic decision-making process that should be welcomed. Without it, the interests of the majority are mistakenly assumed to be the interests of all.
Hers was not a storm post in the often tittulatus Carter administration—and her exit will likely be equally tranquil—but she has left a mark.
Kreps was appointed in 1977 by Carter and was the first woman in U.S. history to be secretary of commerce.
Juanita Kreps
P. G. B. K. N. A. S. O. P. R. I. E. T.
DURING THE past two-and-a-half years as secretary of commerce, Kropotich is known for his big business, big bip business, the government and the nation as a whole. She has served to help
She has administered her department of more than 12 divisions and 38,000 employees fairly and responsibly. And while other Cabinet members were questionable in their comments, the president, Krepa, remained a staunch defender of Carter and has administration.
Characterized as aggressive and ambitious throughout her life, Kreps has
John COLUMNIST fischer
carried these traits with her into the Cabinet position.
SHE GREW in up the poor mining community of Lynch, KY., and attended a small college in the South before going on to earn a degree at Duke University at Duke University in Durham, N.C.
Not only has she been a board member of E熟人鼎马 J.C. Penney and Western United, but she is also on the board of the New York Stock Exchange. Before accepting the Caket position, she was vice president of the NYSE.
As secretary of commerce, Krepets shes a high school he. She is the government's choice for president, and she initiates programs and legislation that would govern government and business, as well as the economy.
FOR INSTANCE, Kreps saw international trade as a way to improve the nation's economy and foreign relations that will help the business at home and on the foreign market.
She has traveled extensively on trade missions to other countries. Earlier this year, she negotiated an important trade agreement with China.
Kreps also tried, with the cooperation of business and corporate interests, to establish programs that would help promote economic growth and reduce government interference.
She also strive to make her department more important in the federal government by involving it in the country's economic policy decision-making.
This attitude of pushing for changes to move ahead and benefit all those concerned has earned Kreps respect from government officials as well as businessmen.
Kreps' commitment and courage are characteristics that seem to be missing from most of our government officials.
Kreps' abasse definitely will be teex to Washington and in the White House. But her accomplishments will, no doubt, remain with us.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(USFS 666-449) Published at the University of Kansas August August May and March Thursday and June Day and August except Saturday, Sunday and Second Month. Second class postpaid mail of $8 for six months by mail are $16 for six months of $7 in Dauntless County and $8 for six months of $5 in the county. Student scholarships are $1.65 per semester, through the U.S.FRS.
Pollutant: Wind changes of address to the University Daily Kassan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence KS96049
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After a late winter day that was so rainy that the garbage could not be collected, the blocks received a paycheck that was enough to cover the expenses and did have the work done. The few white ones in the work force, however, had received full pay in their checks, which were made out in the city.
In 1968 more than 90 percent of the sanitation workers in Memphis, Tenn. were black. This is not surprising, given the fact that blacks have been discriminated against in the South and assigned low-paying, skilled jobs for many years. But even here this was a more obvious type of discrimination festering beneath the surface.
The result of such inhumane treatment build up in the faces of Memphis leaders and activists is the erosion of a sanitation worker's strike that ripped Memphis and led to Dr. Martin Luther Luther King Jr.'s assassination.
THE PROBLEMS in the Memphis situation were essentially two-fold. The suppression of blacks for decades had never allowed them the opportunity to move into better-paying, higher-skill jobs and, more importantly, higher-skill whites that the blacks should be suppressed.
Such was the attitude in the South in the 1980s, and while the Ku Klux Klan continues to use insensitive antics in Alabama, the fact is that improvements have been made. In the past, students who were discriminated against there, blacks have made progress in achieving higher-paying jobs in the job market.
Education holds promise of equality
An improvement in educational opportunities is the most important element in this progression.
WHILE NO one would realistically report that this country has achieved total racial equality, we have had to acknowledge, indeed even a strong case, that there has been a steady state of intermarriage among white men over equality, but we are moving in the right direction if we are moving toward equality.
A 1978 study by the Rand Corporation concluded that the gap in wages between black and white workers had decreased significantly in the past 30 years. Between 1947 and 1978, black men's earnings improved from one-half to three-fourths of what they were in 1947, but the increase was from earning one-third of what whites earned to nearly the same.
The Hand study said that the primary causes for the improved status of rural areas were the lack of opportunities in all areas of the country and especially an improvement in the economic situation.
COLUMNIST
david preston
There is still a long way to go. The increase in the number of black colleges, black students attending universities and colleges and in the school regularly are trends that have been gratifying to many. The larger number of applicants from lower-level workers a chance to move up through the ranks of that particular com-
OVERALL, THERE has been a more progressive attitude toward the role that black should be playing in the shaping of our society. In Memphis, it appears that in the past, black was a hard man. Otis Higg, will be elected as the first black mayor in the city of the city.
policy, the Supreme Court decided that quota systems were illegal. The court said that race could be considered in determining which applicants would be to act. But the decision was still seen as a slap on setback for affirmative action advocates.
EDUCATION IS where blacks must make progress in order to achieve equality in this society. It is simple enough to say that a business will have to hire so many blacks and minority workers, but if that minority was not qualified to assume the position, their business should not be forced to hire him just because he is a member of a minority.
The primary force in describing equal opportunities for blacks was the 1964 Civil War act, which set up the Equal Employment Opportunity Act. EEOC has been active since then in ECOC.
ting policies for employers regarding fair employment practices and wage discrimination.
Under the original 1964 act, equal education was not included. The EEOC amended that oversight in 1972, and since then educational institutions have been given policies to that have been in line with the commission's affirmative action guidelines.
The administration response to this by seeking to cut Ambulance 20 personnel actions takes action reverse this concept, passenger service in the States will so be nothing but a memory.
With the increase in educational opportunities, even if it means not allowing a student to attend college or medical school, there will necessarily follow an increased number of job opportunities.
If cutbacks in rail service make little sense, so does the virtual abandonment of rail passenger service. The family car is becoming an ever more cost but less reliable means of having people. The car is real or manipulated, is here to stay, and many drivers will not venture on long trips in the future even for business purposes.
Under the EEC's rules, it was fair for a university to admit minority students who were not black or nonethnic (than white students because it was an affirmative action toward equalizing minority students).
WE HAVE the financial and technical abilities to reverse present trends. We can increase the speed and safety of both freight
EVEN STAUNCH advocates of keeping the government out of as many areas of society as possible have seen the advantage of educating others and educational opportunities as possible open to blacks. In raising the standard of living for African Americans, the entire society will benefit greatly.
THE HALLS of Congress reverence with words about the great need to turn to coal to save oil, yet the Department of Transportation and Corail, supported by this department, are at this time seeking ways to eliminate many of the spur lines that serve the coalfields.
When Alan Baskitek challenged this rule at the University of California at Davis, where he was denied admission while 74 others were admitted. He argued that the basis of the school's affirmative action
We are moving out of an episode in our country's history when blacks were widely degraded and suppressed. Sure there is one place where we can do, but progress is inevitable. Equally important opportunities is one place where we can unjust gap between blacks and whites.
Trust fund could be railroads' savior
WORLD'S FIRST SOLAR-POWERED ANTI-NUKE RALLY!
IT IS ON.
NONUKES
But, unfortunately, even though the bus driver promised an emergency stop July 15 he ignored, he ignored the basic need to modernize our railways so we can reduce our dependence on trucks, cars and trains.
By MILTON J. SHAPP
MERION STATION, Pa.-The United States grew from coast to coast with the development of its railroads. Today, a major cause of our economic plight is our reliance on the materials and finished goods efficiently. The boats and airplanes play important roles.
But the American rail system is in shamles. Most trains are unsafe at any speed, riding as they do mainly on unsafe track.
By MILTON J. SHAPP N.Y.Times Special Features
However, for many products these carriers can transition quickly to freight transmission. For example a freight train with 125 cars and a crew of five can carry the equivalent tonnage of 500 trucks.
For example, the solution now proposed in Washington to reduce Conrad's financial losses will downdrag even further the benefit of this hauler, which was created out of a merger between Central debacle and which is now the main railroad serving the Midwestern and Northeastern regions of the United States. What is needed is a program that will provide that benefit thereby improve the operating efficiency of Conrad and other rail carriers.
Rolling stock is not only in short supply but is also largely obsolete and worn out,
OF PARTICULAR concern today is the use of our railroads depend mainly upon oil for the transportation of Americans proceed with almost suicidal intoward to downgrade our already inadequate infrastructure.
and passenger service and, by electrifying our lines, make our railroads 34 percent more energy-efficient. Coal could be used to generate the electricity and thus greatly reduce the need for huge quantities of oil to run our trains. In this regard, it is important that coal be developed to burn coal without violating existing air environmental standards.
A modern rail system could be financed at no cost to the taxpayers if Congress would establish a rail trust fund patterned after that of the railroad, used to build the interstate highway system.
The 2 PERCENT surcharge could easily be absorbed by shippers because the modernization program would speed up and improve the delivery of goods. Funds
The rail trust fund would advance money to rebuild obsolete tracks, to purchase modern, high-speed and efficient rolling stock, and to reconstruct facilities. Then, in the same way as the second gallon surcharge on gasoline has more than paid for the construction of a vast interstate highway system, the rail trust fund would collect a 2 percent charge on all freight bills and have been unaffected. The railways had been unaltered. Private ownership.
collected under the surcharge program would go into a rail development bank and then be reloaded to the railways, thus providing solving fund for continual rail modernization.
A system of accountability could be created without a mandate, as fiscal assessment would be sought, the major objective of the program should be the creation of a railway system and truly efficient, capable and freight and passengers economically during the coming decades of scarcity and cost.
In addition to this, Congress and the Interstate Commerce Commission must change the present policy that allows a company to sell its products to the company claims are not profitable.
The enormous economic losses suffered throughout the nation in the wake of the Penn Central merger, the abandonment of Erie-Lackawana tractage, and the
THIS POLICY, which was implemented to push through the Penn Central merger, has left many once-driving communities without vital rail services to offer employers and thus has led to grave economic in many cities and areas of the nation.
RAIL DEREGULATION is being hailed in some quarters as a possible savior of the railroads. However, as the Milwaukee Railroad's financial difficulties, the mounting losses of Conrail and Amtrak, and the continuing reduction in vital rail service, this would be older areas of the nation show, this would be poorer rail services and higher freight rates.
shutdown of other once-important rail systems should have taught us that the economic health of cities, states and entire regions of the nation depend upon efficient rail transport, particularly rail. Without such rail service the economic loss to the nation will be staggering.
A rational national rail policy is needed before it is too late.
The time to move into an improvement program is now, before our decrept railroads deteriorate further and more train service is discontinued.
Unfortunately, there are no signs that either the administration or Congress have any realistic program with which to deal with the underlying problems.
Milton J. Shapp, former governor of Pennsylvania, has written extensively about America's railroads.
Respect for life includes animals
To the Editor
On Sunday Oct. 7 two dogs were nu'r cups in separate incidents on campus; neither driver stopped although a few concerned people did go for help. There's little need to teach I and Iach and that many well-educated people don't even possess—the ability to care.
It would have taken these drivers only a few minutes to call the Lawrence Animal Shelter for help. Were these drivers in too much of a hurry to go where they were going to show a little compassion? Even if they weren't likely to be thoughtful enough to think that these dogs do belong to someone who probably cares about them.
It's hard to comprehend why a driver wouldn't stick, unless he figured it's only a small chance. That was easily replaced. Albert Schweitzer said that once man lost his reverence for life, society would deteriorate. People will be so careless about others and other things.
Paul Mendelsohn Overland Park senior
A message to pet owners: If you care about your pets, you should be a little more aware of the safety of your pets. You don't care about the safety of your pets. I sincerely question your ability to be responsible for your pets' love and trust and most of all depend on you. Let's try to be responsible for them.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Racial discrimination investigation urged
To the Editor:
Reggie Robinson deserves commendation for his actions that brought widespread public attention to the racial discrimination of Shenanigan's membership policy.
I had heard of the practice through rumors and articles in the Kansan, but like so many of us, did not know how to correct the situation. Reggie's interview on the
television news Tuesday night is what I hope will be the beginning of an investigation that will remedy the situation.
We as a student body should support any actions that will eliminate discrimination from this city. I personally do not knowingly extend my patronage to any establishments that I feel engage in discriminatory acts and use the student body will join me in this
Susan Cox Evergreen, Colo., senior
Letters Policy
The University Dayton Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typwritten, double-spaced and include the name of the author, include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed by the university, should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. Letters should also be the right to edit for publication.
Thursday, October 11, 1979
5
Protest . . .
From page one
"If you should need assistance," she told Showalter, "we would not have many people available. There will be one patrol car on campus."
Showalter said he expected no trouble, however, because the demonstrators would police themselves.
"One out of every eight marchers will be a
parade marshal," Showalter said. "His main duty is to be courteous and to encourage people to join the march.
"But if any problems do arise, they will handle them. We won't tolerate any misconduct."
The marchers will go down 13th and Massachusetts streets after leaving the campus, he said, and protest at the Watkins Community Museum, which displays artifacts from the time of Quantrill's raid on Lawrence, and the U.S. Army recruiting office.
The march will end at the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St. Showalter said, where marchers will eat dinner and hear辞演 by representatives of the Progressive Labor Party, INCAR and the KU Committee on South Africa.
Six to receive Ellsworth medals
Five University of Kansas alumni and one non-alumni will be awarded the Fred Ellsworth Medalion, the highest alumni service to KU, on Horsemount Day, Oct. 27.
Park, although a non-alumnus, has been active with several KU groups, including the KU Endowment Association and the Council for Progress. He was the second candidate for Chancellors Club and has helped with KU Alumnae Association activities in Arizona.
Recipients of the award are Albert Haas, 1925 graduate from Kansas City, M. Olin, 1926 graduate from Michigan, Robert Riseh, 1949 graduate from Kansas City, M.; Henry Shenk, 1928 graduate from Lawrence; Amalel Prigole, 1923 graduate from Illinois; Park, 1924 alumnus from Sun City, Az.
The sculptured bronze medallions, which bear a likeness to Ellsworth on one side and have the recipient's name on the other, will hold a portrait of the president and alumni president, during an annual
The Ellsworth award, now in its fifth year,
was presented by Elden Telfert, KU professor of
painting and sculpturing. The award was named after Elden to honor the 39 years
of his career.
homecoming luncheon at 11 a.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Recipients of the award were chosen by a nine-member selection committee from the Alumni Association, the Athletic Association, Kansas University Endowment Association.
University Daily Kansan
Schedule
Octoginta
1969-79
Fri, Oct 12, 9:00 PM THE MOONLIGHT RIDE, a short tour to Lakeview from Sun Park (about 12 miles total). Meet at the park gazebo, no fee. Be sure to bring lights & batteries that work!
Sat, Oct 13, 7:30 AM: THE BREAKFAST RIDE, a short morning tour before returning to Lawrence for breakfast. Meet at the South Park gazebo, no fee—breakfast at a local restaurant of your choice. Two options: a short ride to Well's Overlook (16 miles) or a longer one to the Clinton Lake dam (32 miles). If you ride the Sunday 80-miler, come out for one of these two rides.
8:30 AM: THE PALYMRA HILL CLIMB. A 0.8 mile race up
Location: approx. 2 mi., north of Baldwin, Ks., on Oversee
Prizes: $10,000 for best finisher; $5,000 for prizes
2:00 PM: THE 3RD ANNUAL OCTOGINTA ORIENTEERING MEET. A road rally and map by bike. This year's meet will put more emphasis on the orienteering ("the thinking sport"). Entry fee $1. Meet at the Park gazebo.
7:30 PM: THE BIKING ACROSS KANSAS REUNION. BAK 79 will have its premiere slideshow of this summer's ride. A chance to renew old acquaintances and meet BAKers and the students and years' past. No charge. Forum Room, Kansas Union.
BICYCLING FILMS: . . . after a short break for refreshments, a
short interview with Melissa LE SCHIER Forum Session.
film on cycling: Louise Malie's VIVE LE TOUR! Forum Room.
film on boating: OMGTA! REGISTRATION (on-line)
jazzes at South Park area
8:00 AM: OCTOGINTA START of 80 mile ride with police escort out of town.
For more info: SUA Office, 864-3477.
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GET UP
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Budget...
From page one
Mahalai said he would bring the allegations in writing to the hearings tonight when the committee will decide whether the investigation enriched enough to warrant an investigation.
The requests were: KU Accounting Club,
$1,196.20; Chancery Club, $292; Consumer
Affairs Association, $4,586; the Concert and
The committee also heard the final budget requests from five student organizations totaling about $13,000.
Preliminary cuts were made in budget requests heard Tuesday night. After the preliminary submissions on each request and more final comments, the requests and make a final recommendation to the Student Senate tonight. I will vote on the requests at its Oct. 17 meeting.
Chamber Music Series, $6,000; and the KU Weather Service, $814.24.
The following preliminary cuts were made: Operation Friendship, from $397 to
The following cuts also were made: Organization of Black and Minority Architectural Students in America, from 1980 to 2013; Students Interested in Asia, from 1890 to 1909.
$322; Kansas Defender Project, from $1,750 to $0, and the Architecture and Development Student Council, from $623 to $0.
Four of the organizations had received funding from the Student Senate for fiscal year 1980.
On Campus
TODAY: THE GERMAN CLUB will meet TEDORA, a German teacher and TREVIEWING on campuses at the School of Business will be Ernest & Whitney and Far-Mar-Co. At the School of Engineering will be Jeffrey and Kate.
the School of Law will be Ernest & Whitney and the FBA. At the department of Geology will be Cities Service.
TONIGHT: SUA BRIDGE will meet at 7 in the Trail Room of the Union. A COM-
PUTER SERVICES SEMINAR with Greg
Buchanan and Katherine Edison,
will begin at 12 in the Computer
Services Facility. Auditorium, AC-
COUNTING CLUB will meet at 7:30
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6
Thursday, October 11, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Train engineer to be questioned
Federal investigators today will interview the engineer and fireman who were on duty on the Amstraf train that killed 27 people, 2 killing two persons and injuring 69.
Harold E. Storey, the head investigator of the National Safety Board, said yesterday he had question L.H. Graham, Roeland Park, the engineer, and William P. Hand, Newton.
Graham has been in intensive care with internal injuries at Lawrence Memorial Hospital since the accident. Hand was held from Anneliese Axtel Christian Hospital in Newton.
Investigators hope to learn from the interviews why the train was traveling 78 mph in a 30 mph zone, as indicated by
speed recording devices in two of the train's engines.
A technical expert from the NTSB will go to Chicago to assist the manufacturer of the device, Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co., in handling the equipment. The Dumbar, a spokesman for the company, said.
The NTSB also want to determine whether a warning alarm and light in the system would accidentally cause the accident. The alarm would have to have been acknowledged within a matter of hours.
The Bureau of Accident Investigation has recommended to the five-member NTSB team that a public hearing on the accident be held in Kansas City, Mo. Dunbark said. The NTSB will decide in "a matter of days" whether to authorize the
hearing, which would be part of the fact finding phase of the investigation he said.
Dunbar said public hearings were usually scheduled four to eight weeks after an accident and that a NTSB board member would conduct the proceedings.
Witnesses would be selected and and representants from Santa Fe Railroad, Amtrak and railroad unions would have an opportunity to question witnesses, Dunbar
"The hearing would help establish a factual record which, combined with on-scene investigation, give the board a basis for analysis," Dumbar said.
Dunbar said it would be several months before a final report on the accident would be released.
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Chinese healthy despite poor care
Despite cases of less than adequate health care in China, the Chinese people might be fearful of being treated by a professor who spent three weeks in the People's Republic of China last summer on the island.
Leand Miller, professor of occupational health at all 436 people in the weekly Faculty of Occupational Health. Ministries building that the level of Chinese health care still trailed that of the West.
"It's surprising how healthy the Chinese people look when you consider the bad sanitation conditions in Chinese doctor hospitals," Mr. Miller said. "Some Chinese doctors have," Miller said.
He said some doctor's offices had dirt floors, dirty walls and other unsanitary conditions. Some of the doctors, he said, are also using their hands before working with patients.
He also said that some Chinese doctors
"THE CHINESE LOOK lean and muscular, however," he said. They probably are healthier than many Americans."
had as little as five months of training, but that most had about five years of training.
According to the National Office of Health Statistics, however, the 1978 life expectancy in the United States is almost 73 years with 62 in the People's Republic of China.
Miller also said the Chinese were making gains in birth control in a country that now has almost 1 billion inhabitants.
"Contraception is taught," Miller said. "Each couple is encouraged to have only two children."
He also said the Chinese government prohibited people from marrying until they became 26 years old.
In addition to Chinese health care conditions, Miller discussed parts of everyday life he had seen in China.
He said he was impressed with improvements in living conditions in China since the 1949 Communist revolution.
"One woman I met with 11 others before the revolution in a room that was 9 feet deep," he said. "That room was the living room, kitchen, dining room and bathroom."
HE SAID that now the woman and the three others in her family lived in a three room apartment in Chuancho, a large city in southeastern China.
Next week's Faculty Forum will feature Daniel Bressler, assistant professor of religious studies, who will speak on "Clarifying Terms in the Middle East."
"Even though the Chinese have a long way to go to catch up with the West economically," she said. "I think the United Nations should make some definite improvements in China."
The speech will be at 11:45 a.m. next Wednesday at the Ecumenical Ministries building, 1294 Oread Ave.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 11, 1979
Movement works to ease men's fears of feminism
By ROBIN SMITH Staff Reporter
At a time when women are demanding to be treated on equal terms with men, a Lawrence woman is trying to soften the effects of "women's liberation" on men.
According to Naina Jawese, founder of the Lawrence Masculist Movement, the feminist movement has left men confused with their expected roles in today's society.
"Those involved in the feminist movement, both men and women, have worked very hard at destroying traditional roles," Jessie a, KU graduate, has said. She is one of those roles and men need to define and share what exactly is expected of them.
Jewishie said the movement, one of two that began in 2014 and was med in September when he decided it was time to help him talk about their frustrations in dealing with a changing world.
"Men were ignoring their true feelings of anger and pain about the feminist movement," she said. "They were locking themselves up." A woman's ability to communicate them."
Jeswine said the movement had not sought publicity because it had not found a male leader who had a firm understanding of the organization.
"This isn't an anti-feminist organization," Jewsine said. "Nor is it a pro-homosexual movement. This is a social movement. Men want to be involved in feminism and don't want to be left behind."
Garth Matthies, private psychologist and a faculty member at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, agreed with desiine that men were not permitted to express their feelings in front of women.
"The movement in the Midwest is just beginning," Matteus said. "It's a great idea to move people into the movement. Men can learn that they will have to give up control if they want to."
Matthes said his lectures dealt with the fact that men have lost touch with their inner feelings because society has taught them to express only power and anger.
"Men have to be willing to negotiate nowadays," Matthes said. "We have to admit our mistakes and defends."
Matthes said there were 60 students in his
class at UMKC but that only 20 percent were men.
"I really don't know how to explain why the majority of students enrolled in "Psychology of Men" are women, he said. "Men are probably scared of my class. And, of course, men think they will all it. Men are not afraid of it at the frightening thing is, men don’t."
Matthes said he hoped that by December his students would be more aware that masculinism and its values were a "death trip."
"I hope that we can strive for a gender-free society by recognizing people as individuals and not knocking them if they don't live up to society's roles." he said.
"If we don't, men are going to die because they will still be trying to live up to a role that really no longer exists."
Jerry Osso, member of the Lawrence Masculinist Movement, said he was still unsure about the movement's goals, but he agreed that men should have an organization available to them to discuss issues in dealing with the feminist movement.
"A lot of men feel resentment toward society's attitudes three days." Dobena said
"Some guys I know were talking one day
about a friend who worked and slaved most of his life for a home of his own, he said. "I went to the house," Damm that woman, "the guys said, 'she got everything.' Then I asked them if it was really the woman's fault or if she had to look at the judge. They had to talk about that one."
"And that's what we need. A chance to think about our feelings in the open and a chance to catch up with the women's movement."
Another men's support group in Lawrence, the Feminist Men's Coalition, follows the same ideals as the Lawrence Masculin Movement.
According to Jeswine, the only difference between the two organizations is the name, and perhaps, a more "forceful" attitude promoted by the new movement.
hysteria. The feminist movement started that way-so should the masculinism movement."
John Hewitt, Lawrence senior and a member of the Feminist Men's Coalition, agreed that his group had more passive roles when dealing with man's role in society.
"I still not really sure what the group is going to do," she said. "I want to talk with other men about our roles in society and try to understand where we are coming from. I don't want to make a mistake."
Hewitt said he also would be interested in joining the musculist movement if it was not anti-feministic.
According to Jewine, a construction worker, the men involved in the movement
agree with the ideals of the feminist movement but lack the ability to talk about their feelings concerning the masculinist movement.
She said men were restricted when they chose to work in non-traditional male roles such as homemakers or secretaries. These women are often not seen in new society views these situations, she said.
"If women can ask for free choice in conduct under the banner of feminism, men should be able to make the same choice as women." said M. But men don't have that free choice.
Jeswine, a part-time laborer the past five years, said she was not accustomed to accept her in the non-traditional female job. But she said, men do not readily accept other men in traditional female roles, such as teachers.
Computer coordinator for county resigns
Jim Tate, data processing coordinator for Douglas County, has resigned his position effective immediately, county commissioners announced yesterday.
Tate, who had held the position since 1972, said he resumed for personal reasons.
The resignation was announced after an executive session that included Tate, Commissioners Beverly Bradley and Nets, and Dan Young, county counsel.
"I think that the ultimate goals (helping men to understand their roles in society, helping women to succeed) were Jeswine said. "But I also think that our movement may create more of an uprue."
Bradley, chairman of the commission, would not say whether the commissioners asked for Tate's resignation.
The commissioners were not dissatisfied with Tate's work, she said, but an accumulation of things brought about the resignation.
She said the county recently had a few
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problems with the data processing department that she called "growing pains."
Varsity
Downtown 843-1065
"More and more of the county's business has been going through the computer," she said. "We are also in the process of looking into compiling the county's accounting system."
Service Agency, and Mike Adar, a computer consultant from Oathe, will act as consultants to the county until a new director can be hired, she said. The Computer Agency also is 2017 Louisiana St., serves Douglas County, Lawrence and the Lawrence School Board.
Steve Notson, director of Computer
Bradley said she hoped to hire a new director within a month.
Presents
sua films
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR
-National Board of Review
BEST PICTURE [Drama]
BEST DIRECTOR-TERRENCE MALICK
ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST
- Charles Champion, A.L. Tennis - Tennis Magazine - New York Times
- Resed Red-Reset New-Best West Magazine - Gene Searle, NBC TV
- Resed Black-Reset New-Best West Magazine - Gene Searle, NBC TV
- After Dark Curt Magness - WINS Radio - WOR-Radio - Miami Herald
- After Dark Curt Magness - WINS Radio - WOR-Radio - Miami Herald
- Chicago Tristan - Seattle Tennis - Day Money Superfight
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
NESTOR ALMENDROS
VANISH SINGH
DAYS OF HEAVEN
WEST BEND SCHOOL FOR MULTI-SCIENCE
TECHNOLOGY
"DIVIS OF MURAH" Storing Richard Groebke Brookside Aman Sarnafar Landi Marale
Walter and Detected by Vincent Merkel. A Pamorphon Rukou
and Detected by Vincent Merkel. A Pamorphon Rukou
Friday & Saturday, October 12-13
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 p.m.
Sat. matinee in Forum Room
$1.50
No refreshments allowed
Urban Plunge
—No refreshments allowed—
WHAT:
hursday, October 18, 4:00 p.m. until Saturday, October 20
The Plunge is an Urban learning experience designed to expose students to the realities of living in a big city with minimal resources. We will test social service agencies for their effectiveness, question personal and societal values, and explore the rules and power structures, which govern our lives.
21. Mark's Church, 1101 Euclid, Kansas City, Missouri
WHEN:
WHERE:
INFORMATION:
To Register and pick up information packets call or stop by the KU-Y office, 110B Kansas Union, 864-3761 or call Tracy Speilman at 841-5484
information packets will be available in the KU-Yoffice. The group will be limited to 25, or a first come, first serve basis. The deadline for registration is Tuesday, Oct. 10.
SPONSOR: KU-Y
sua films
Thursday. October 11 BEWARE OF A HOLY WHORE
Directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, with Eddie Constantine, Louise Pfeiffer. The book is autobiographical mediation on the act of thinning is set at a seaside resort where his crew spend their spare time assuring each other verbally, emotionally, and spiritually.
Friday & Saturday,
October 12-13
DAYS OF HEAVEN
(1978)
Directed by Terrence Malick, with Sam Shepherd and Linda Maria Shepherd, and Linda Mariaphy by Nestor Martinez. Plus Maya D'Alfonso, and Marina Matines. Camera - Sat. matines in Forum
Midnight Movies
EMMANUEL, THE JOYS
OF A WOMAN
(1976)
Directed by Francis Giocobetti, with Sylvia Kristel. RATED X—Positive age ID required for admittance.
Sunday, October 14
RETURN ENGAGEMENT!!
FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
Directed by Norman Jewishen, with topal as Teopel. Songs ("Traditional Dance") by Jason Hammond and Sunset!) by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harick. Due to the amount of disapproval, a new FIDDLER last month, we are bringing it back for 2 more show! $1.50 ad charge.
*2:00pm—Woodruff Auditorium
5:30pm—Bailroom
Directed by Francois Truffaut, with
Nicolas Gayet. This classic film of the French
Wave established Truffaut as a
leading world director. François-
substitute.
Monday, October 15 JULES AND JIM (1861)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekends show also in Woodson at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted. At 1:50 p.m. admission. No Reservations.
PRIVATE CLUB
Lawrence, Kansas
THE HIDEOUT
presents
JIMMY CLANTON
October 18 and 19
First show starts at 9 p.m.
$4.50 advance, $5.50 at door
530 Wisconsin
Call 843-9851 for more information
Brian L. Kidd
"GO
JIMMY
GO"
"Letter to an Angel"
"My Own True Love"
"A Part of Me"
"Another Sleepless Night"
"TEENAGE MILLIONAIRE'
THE ROSE
37K08TA
THE SHADOW BOX
The University of Kansas Theatre Presents
BY Michael Cristoder
October 12, 13, 18, 19 and 20
8:00 p.m.
University Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall
Roe Office Call 513-743-1000 or reservations
8
Thursday, October 11. 1979
University Daily Kansan
By TED LICKTEIG Staff Reporter
Geologists prepare for in-depth study of terrain
Researchers from a geological consortium will find out next week what parts of Kansas look like 25 miles underground. The researchers might stumble onto minerals or petroleum. Roger Hahn, graduate scientist, said yesterday.
"Our purpose is not to explore for oil or any valuable mineral, but just to find out exactly what the rock formations are at that depth," Hahn said.
Hahn said the $500,000 project would last about three months and would be conducted along a straight line from Atchison to Concordia.
The Consortium for Continental Rejection Profiles, comprises Princeton University, Princeton, N.J., and the University of Wisconsin, Texas and Houston.
Hahn said that the actual testing would be geophysical in Houston, and that geophysicist Jack Oliver of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., would direct the study.
He said the surveys would be done by using large trucks with vibrating panels to lift the samples and the vibrations go deep into the earth and bounce up when they hit different layers
HE SAID the vibrations that returned to the surface would be measured by geophones, which enable researchers to determine the amount of vibration knowing how quickly the vibrations回.
Geophones are similar to microphones, but they amplify ground vibration for monitoring equipment. Data collected is then run through computers for results.
"There is no reason not to believe there aren't four or five Saudi Arabias under the Anakolians." he said.
He said a similar survey in the Appalachians had produced surprising oil discoveries.
"OIL MIGRATES by allowing water to push it up until it gets to a structure it can't penetrate," Islam said. "But it is the purpose of the survey to find oil."
He said the oil below the Appalachians might have been contained by impervious rocks.
The main expense of the research, he said, will be the five large trucks and the 15,000 geophones to be used.
He said because the University of Kansas is the host institution, KU could obtain a cheap price what would or not be necessary to sensitive data from the Survey's analysis.
Hahn said the data obtained might provide practical knowledge about current oil recovery methods and about the nature of earthquakes in the state.
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A tennis ball is not usually thought of as a psychological tool, but to about 30 participants of a workshop on self-defending, it could be the beginning a new personality.
Workshop mav help self-defeatists
By PAMELA LANDON Staff Reporter
People attending "How to Counteract Self-Defeating Behavior," a workshop given by the American Psychological Association in counseling, will carry tennis balls with them to address their defeating awareness of their self-defeating behavior.
As people juggle their tennis balls while trying to do routine activities like hand-washing, they will become conscious of the need for protective gear and keep their self-defensive behavior, he said.
Procrastinating, overworking, overrating and expecting too much are habits many people recognize but cannot overcome, Thomas said.
The participants will discuss whether the tennis balls helped them next Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
This makes the action less of a habit and more of a conscious choice, Thomas said.
HOWEVER, THOMAS said there was no magic way to eliminate self-defeating behavior, which he said everyone had.
"Self-defeating behavior is a way in which we work against ourselves," he said. "As we work against ourselves, we limit what we might be."
have actively chosen to procrastinate or oversteal or overwork," before they engage in self-defeating behavior.
"Not only do we not let others see what we are capable of doing, we hide from outsides what we are capable of doing."
Often such behavior becomes habitual,
and it can lead to failure of offspring
of studying for a test, allowing himself
to study the next day. He then begins
to automatically study without, during
the day, learning.
For example, consequences of procrastination might be stress, lack of sleep and strained personal relations, Thomas said.
People keep procrastinating or overreaching because they are comfortable with their habits and are afraid to try new responses, Thomas said.
HE SAID he tried to get people to think about what they were doing.
He also has people list consequences of their behavior on paper to make them more aware of the price they pay. he said.
Thomas asks people to say out loud. "I
Thomas said he did not expect a workshop participants to overcome their difficulties during the program, because replacing self-defeat with positive behavior took time.
The Student Senate's off campus housing board was filled yesterday with the appointment of five additional members, according to Margareed Berlin, student body member.
Five named to off-campus board
The newly-named board members are:
Donita Meaga, Salina freshman; David Bruns Jr., Kansas City, Kan.; junior;
Martha Kick, Pricarie Village junior; Tum Huber, Shawnee freshman; and John Lawrence, Lawrence first-year law student.
Huber lives in Shawne and commutes to KU. The rest live off campus in Lawrence.
Berlin said the five new members were selected because of the ideas they had to contribute to the board. They were selected from about 15 applicants and approved by the 15 applicants and approved by the
fairs; Julia Mahaffey, Student Senate constituent services director; Chris Kline, student representative for the office of residential programs; and Lorna Grunz, director of the student assistance center. Caryl K. Smith, dean of life, student and faculty. University information center coordinator are ex-officio members of the board.
The new members join Shelley Senecal,
student representative for consumer af-
THE BOARD will serve as a lobbying group at state and local levels for University students who live off campus, according to Berlin.
Sensail said, "We considered what the meeting would be, the amount of time they had available to give to the board, their prior activities and, in general, their qualities of the team."
several weeks ago and observed them to find out what ideas they had."
"Margaret and I also sat in on an organizational meeting the board held
Berlin said, "We hate to limit the board to five, but we still need some people to work at various levels with us."
The first meeting of the board will be held at 8:30 tonight in the Student Senate Office in the Kansas Union. New board members will attend the duties at the meeting, Special advis.
She said that people were needed to help with the board's mailing lists and to act as buffers between the board and other groups.
"In the future, we hope to meet two or three times a month but it's really up to the board," she said.
IHP...
From page one
future will be structured to take into account such eventualities."
The Faculty executive committee charged the Tenure and Related Problems committee earlier this year with studying the grievance procedures.
Francis Heller, chairman of the TRP, said he would review the current procedures and report back to FacEx.
Heller said he did not know whether the University legally could handle the distribution of handouts within the grievance procedures.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 11, 197
9
Year-round work readies gymnasts
By PATTI ARNOLD Sports Writer
Concentration at a maximum, Kathy Ross mounts a four-inch wide balance beam.
The only other sound in the gym is the soft music.
But Ross falls off of the beam attempt concussive back walk-overs. He lands on his right wrist routine, ending with a back aerial dismount. Her teammates clap in ap-
"Good job Kathy, looks real good!" one says.
For the KU gymnastics team, the scene has been the same since the first day of classes, even though the season doesn't begin until early November.
The five women and 10 men on coach Ken Snow's team have set a goal—to be in shape for the early season meet.
Injuries and illnesses have hampered that goal thus far, but Snow said none of KU's injuries were serious. He is concerned about the injuries that illnesses have recently hit the team.
Three cases of mononucleosis and several cases of strep throat have plagued the team. Snow said the changing weather was responsible for most of the sickness, and that the illness is able to illness because they were tired
"If we work harder, there is a greater chance for illness. It's a give and take situation," he said.
Snow said the gymnasts usually come back from summer vacation out of shape, and that it took time to get in the proper condition.
The most common injuries are to the knees, elbows, ankles and wrists, Snow said. Most of the injuries occur during
the practice of routine skills, not while learning new tricks.
"There is no way to prevent an injury like that," Snow said. "A kid can jump a certain trick a hundred times and just one slip can cause a dislaced elbow."
The first few weeks of practice were spent on stretching and running, but now that the season is coming, Snow said, the training tricks and getting routines set.
The women compete in four events, so each day they concentrate on two different events.
The men, who compete in six events, work hard on three events each day and lightly on another.
Although the men's team is larger, there is more depth on the women's team. Snow said.
"We have a high caliper of girls on the team this year," he said. "I would like to have seven or eight on the team, but with two girls, girls we really don't need more."
Snow said the women were strong in the balance beam event this season, but they also had their bars and the vault. The men have exceptionally strong floor exercise, vaulting and boxing.
"We're going to have the strongest floor-ex team that we've ever had at KU. We've already got some guys throwing double backs."
"The pommel horse is a swing event," Snow said. "You can usually tell who will win a meet by the way the pommel team scores. It's a tricky event."
Snow said competition for the top Big Eight teams would be stiff this year. The champion Nebraska and the runner-up Oklahoma will be the teams to beat, he said.
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Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358.
SENIORS
BALITMER (AP)—Dug DeCenesis smashed a two-run homer, capping a five-run Baltimore uprising in the first inning, and the Orioles on to defeat the Pittsburgh Pirates 54 in the once-predicted game of the 1707 World Series last year.
The Orieos' bats coded after the early barrage, but they took advantage of some shabby Pirates fielding to build the biggest game in the 76-year history of the Series.
Twice Pittsburgh could have escaped the inning on double play balls, but both times the Pirates failed to turn the play. Even the Rangers paid the price on the frigid, damp night.
Mike Flanagan, the major league' winnersing pitcher with 23 victories during the regular season, rode the early edge to victory by holding off the Pirates, who built but attempted cornerback around a record-breaking strikeout. (A score is error by DeClinez, the first-inning her.)
an eighth-inning home run by first baseman Willie Stargell played the Pirates within one run. Flanker survived a tough pitch and ended up scoring with the help of errors by DeCenxs. Stargell also figured in the Pirates' first run in the fourth inning with a run-producing save.
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Baltimore edges Pittsburgh 5-4
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The Orioles started fast with leadoff man Al Bumby bumping a first-pitch single to left field against Pittsburgh starter Bruce Kison, Mark Belanger, who batted only 167. Kison's team lost season, walked on four pitches. With Ballantine's power coming up, Kison was in trouble.
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He almost escaped by getting Ken down. They were in danger of anxiety to turn the double play, Kison boobbled the ball and had to settle for getting the batter at first. Bumery and Belanger were back on the field.
Pittsburgh played its infeld back, except at third base, hoping to choke off the big innings. And after cleanman Eddie Johnson's 34-14 pitch, the strategy very nearly worked.
John Lowenstein ripped a perfect double ball to play two baseman Phil Garrer. But Garrer had trouble getting the ball out before it was out, and a shortstop Tum Fell's face for an error.
Two runs scored on the play and Murray was down by two as he reached second but changed his mind halfway down the baseline and retreated to first as Fail fumbled the relay and was sent off.
Rattled by the error, Kison then unloaded a wild pitch, allowing Murray to score the third run of the innings. The wild pitch came on Kison's delivery to DeCinces.
DeCines thus became the 150 man in World Series history to hit a homer in his first series swing. Among the others was Baltimore third baseman Brooks Robinson, DeCines' predecessor at the position for center who man threw out the first ball last night.
Two pitches later, the Orioles third baseman unloaded a long homer into the left field bleachers, making the score 5-0.
When Billy Smith followed with a single, it fitted kison, who threw 27 pitches and retired only one batter in the long Baltimore rally. He retrieved and stopped the Baltimore rally.
WLZR
106
The only good thing about the Orioles' big win was that they were the Ballerons' first at-bat and it gave Pittsburgh eight chances to come back. The Pistons nearly made it -- with a few thunderbolt moments.
Plaganag pitched his way out of jams in the fourth and fifth innings. He surrendered leadoff singles to Foli and Parker in the sixth, but Stargell scored Pittsburgh's first run.
Next, Flanagan duelled Garner. The broke's southbound thrust on the count 12 to win a four-set final and fouled off three pitches to stay alive. He lost to the battle with a two-run single to last.
opened with singles. Flagan recovered to strike out Stargell and he got Bill Madill on a fly ball. but then, DeCenice kicked a shot by Steve Nixon, loading the bases.
In the fifth, Flanagan surrendered a leadoff double to Garner but retired the next three batters.
Pinch hitter Lee Lacy gave DeGinesan another chance to end the inning, and again the third baseman booted the ball, loading the bases.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 11, 1979
Spikers succumb to K-State power
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Kansas State University combined a powerful offense with a stingy defense to defeat the KU women's volleyball team last night 15-17 and 15-13.
K-State's victory dea a severe blow to KU's hopes for a regional playoff berth. to gain that berth, the Hawks have now to beat Michigan in an exhibition defeat K-State in Manhattan Oct. 31. KU must win by at least 12 points over overcome the deficit, and margin last night in Robinson Gymnasium.
KANSAN Sports
The Wildcats scored the first four points of their season in the second game. But the second game was a different story. With Tina Wilson and June Koleler, team captain, leading the team, KU put on its own armor.
But K-State ran off six straight points for a 13-12 lead and an eventual 15-13 win.
In the third game, the Wildcats continued to dominate, taking an 8-1 advantage. But KU came back and won seven consecutive talies to even the score.
The score changed hands until K-State's Kathy Teah, who continually scored points with powerful spikes, topped a shot over Kolber and Kelsey R妨治 to clinch the game.
Despite the sweep, KState coach Ron Spies said he wasn't overwhelmed by his team's play.
"We were making a lot of mistakes and that's not typical of us," Said we. "We were not very consistent. I think we were not consistent, but we were when we leave for the Houston Invitational."
"KU's points were scored by us. They didn't force us to make many errors. I'm just glad we got out of here without
give five games. I don't think we've ever gotten out without having to go five before." KU coach Bob Lockwood said that the two final games could have gone either way.
"We played very well in those last games," he said. "They were your ball games to the very end. K-State just happened to come out on ton."
As for the first game, Lockwood blamed KU's problems on poorly served servers.
"We didn't react well to the serve, especially in the first game," Lockwood said. "We started to receive a little better offer than two games, that's why they were closer."
Koleber agreed with Lockwood.
"We stood back a lot and let the ball come to us. We weren't always in good position and K-State took advantage of that."
K-State's Beets Kolarik had a different opinion on the three-game sweep.
were" *Kolarik* said. "We just psyched them out. We were ready to play right off and they weren't.*
KU setter Shelly Fox gave another reason for the KU loss.
"The team that controls the tempo will win the volleyball game," Fox said. "K-State controlled the tempo. We always have to move forward and it's hard to set up a troop that waits."
The powerful Teahun, who Lockwood was he was particularly concerned with before the match, said hard hitting wasn't the reason for victory.
"Our offense and defense weren't that great," he said. "It's our outskirts, which won it for them. They were the hottest especially Koleber and April Beaver, and they hit well tonight but we blocked them."
When the two teams square off again in Manhattan, Teahan said the results would still be the same.
"We're going to win," she said. "They got us up so the next time we little difference, we all up. They it probably go to the middle more because they're a good middle hitting team. But it doesn't make any difference."
Jay Bowl
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Oct.13,1979
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Stuffed spiker
KU's Tina Wilson missed her attempt to block a Kansas State spike. KU missed too many spikes as the Wildcats swept to 15-7-15 and 15-14 victories last night in Robinson Gymnastics. The KS state victory, a product of a powerful offense and stingy defense, dea a severe defeat. But the Browns have the Hawks to chance at even with the 'Cats Oct. 31, this time in Manhattan.
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842-7170
By DAVID BURNS
New golf coach hired to take over in spring
A former runner-up in the NCAA Golf Championships will coach the University of Kansas men's golf team this spring, interim coach Jerry Wugah said last night.
Sports Writer
Ross Randle, a nine-year pre from Ames,
Iowa, will take over in January, and also
teaching at the Alvamar Golf Course,
Waukee said.
The selection ends a three-month search to replace former coach John Hanna, who resigned in August to work for the state Department of Education.
Waugh said Randall was recommended by Gary McCory, a pre and friend of Randa1. McCory and Randall once traveled together in tournaments.
Randall said yesterday in a telephone interview, "I was hired by Alamary major as a teaching pro. I'm going to be teaching the KU men's team as well.
Randall played at San Jose State University in San Jose, Calif., and finished second in the 1976 NCAA Championships to Halein Trew, his U.S. Open champion. He also served in the amendments for six years before joining the Ames Golf Course staff three years ago.
"I met some of the KU players a while
back, and I was impressed. I think they have a fine program out there."
Waugh said Randall would also develop a junior golf program and sponsor summer golf clinics in Lawrence.
Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, said he was pleased with the selection.
"He'll be out here in January to look at the team," he said. "He'll work with the players on techniques. Ross won't come to me too often, but if he off, he'll be there to help our guys."
Waugh said he and Max Kennedy, interim coach and Alvamar pro, wanted to hire a young person the players could talk to.
"Ross is an outstanding teacher. He's played on the pro tour for six to five years, so he certainly has a lot of experience and should be a valuable asset for the golf club."
"The people at Alavara are a very high caliber," Marcum said. "The situation offers us the opportunity to hire a top-flight instructor for our golfers.
Marcum said, "I think the golfers need someone with a high level of ability. They need someone they can go to with problems, and make little things that make or break a golfer."
Big 8's power declining
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—The Big Eight sent an unprecedented five teams to post-season football bowl games in 1972. But as four days passed, the game this year. As does four. And maybe they'll win.
Only perennial bowl representatives have been chosen. Vince a 12 game this season. Both the Sooners and Cormorants are unbeaten through four games in holding down the lead in the conference.
Missouri is the third—and final—Big Eight post-season heat, possibly even a double. The 15th-ranked Tigers seem intent on playing themselves into a dark horse role.
The Tigers can expect to lose to both Oklahoma and Nebraska this fall and a fourth loss to the likes of other Oklahoma players. The game will运送 Run Missouri right out of the big picture.
Missouri hasn't played a first half in any of its four games thus far and didn't even bother to play the second half its last time out. That was the embarrassing 21-0 attack on the hands of Texas before a record crowd in excess of 79,000 two weeks ago.
Missouri received a bowl bid last year with a 7-4 record but would have sat out the post-season if it not had won a massive victory. In addition, dumping them No. 2-ranked Neshrada 35-19.
The Big Eight has had a disasterous nonconference season that has stripped most of the glitter from its "best college football conference" maruine.
Big Eight teams lost to the likes of non-
Iowa State went to a bowl the past two years and posted 8-3 regular season records for the three seasons. But the Cyclones played in a conference without having yet played a conference game.
The only nonconference victory in which the Big Eight can take collective pride was the 41-17 thrashing Nebraska handed Penn State. That total could double this weekend if Oklahoma can get past Texas, which has dumped Iowa State as well as Missouri.
Iowa State hit an all-time low last Saturday with a 24-7 whipping at home at the hands of 21-point underdog Pacific.
powers Iowa, Pacific, Tulsa, Drake and Oregon this fall in addition to the usual collection of setbacks to the likes of Texas, Pittsburgh, South Carolina and Auburn.
"I've never been associated with a more negative loss," said Iowa State Coach Donnie Duncan. "It was like being chased by someone in a dream."
Considering its injury situation, Oklahoma State is a creditible 2-1 with road records and 6-4 in NCAA basketball. Carolina, 4-1. Kansas State normally could take pride in its 2-2 non-league record but not when the Wildcats should be 3-1. KState was ranked against underdog Tulsa last Saturday, 94.
Colorado has been a disaster under Chuck Fairbanks with a 1-3 nonconference mark and Kansas is 1-3 under Don Fambrough. But the Jayhawks have nothing of which to count on, even on the road at No. 11 Michigan and No. 14. Michigan as well as at OusySacryle, or No.
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see Capt Godman on campus in the Kansas Union main lobby, on b. 9, 10, and 11th of OCT 79
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 11. 1979
KU Invitational opens today
11
The KU women's golf team hosts its first tournament of the season today and tomorrow, the annual KU Invitational at the Alvamar Golf course.
The tournament, which will be played on Alvamar's tough Hidden Valley course, features nine teams, many of whom KU has not faced since last year's tourey.
Entered in the journey are Texas Christian University, Missouri, Nebraska, Wichita State, Northern Iowa, Southwest Missouri State, Kansas Newman and KU.
KU coach Sandy Bahan said she expected the most competition from TCU.
"They went to the all-college journey in Oklahoma City last year and finished ninth out of 22 teams," she said. "But their daily average was much lower, which means they are a great team."
"Another team to watch will be Missiart,
because they are competing without a practice round. Hidden Valley isn't the type of course that you like to play blind."
Competing for KU will be Patty Coe,
Cathy Eyre, Sally White, Lisa Howard,
Sarah Merwald and Barbara Gooblez.
The 36-hole tourney will be played on the par-72 course, beginning at 8 a.m. on both days.
Both senior B-lack I. Hipp and sophomore starting cornerback Ri Lindquist participated in yesterday's full-scale workout. Hipp was recovering from "turf toe" and Lindquist had missed two prairie kick because of an injured knee hamstring.
Coach Tom Osborne said he hoped his team "is aware of what's at stake" in Saturday's homecoming game.
Every weekday afternoon, Kent Nail straps two duffle bags full of equipment for his 750 Honda and heads for baseball practice at Holcom Sports Complex.
Nall adds life to KU castoffs
By JERRY FINCHER Sports Writer
It's that kind of dedication to baseball that made Nail decide to form his own team after failing to make KU's varsity at fall tryouts.
Sports Writer
"It's great," said Brad Gaul, Troy, Kan., senior and a member of the team. "I wish he'd come it before."
Nall doesn't get paid for coaching the team. He doesn't receive college credit and the only backing he gets is from his players.
Gaul won't have another chance to try out for the KU baseball team. But many of the players including Nall, are practicing now to get ready for next fall.
"I don't know if any of us are good enough to play for KU," Gaul, who didn't
KU baseball coach Floyd Temple said he would play the game, but would play St. Louis's team next spring, but not this fall. KU already had six playing dates, the maximum allowed by College rules.
Nall is lining up games against junior colleges for next spring, when the team also hopes to play the Jayhawks.
Nail dedicates a lot of time to his team.
Although he is married and a full-time student, he practices two to three hours every night.
"We'll practice until it gets too cold," he said.
make the team his freshman year and hasn't tried out since said. "But it is fun just playing."
"Kent does a belluva job." Gaul said.
"It takes a lot of time and effort."
Nall said he started the team by getting a list of the unsuccessful walk-ons from Temple and calling them.
"I about 45 said they would play," Nall said. "I collected 83 from 28 who were interested enough to show up, and used them to buy bats and helmets to get us started."
Most of the players who have shown up for practices are, like Nall, hoping to prove something.
"If you want it bad enough, it's yours," Nall told one of his players. "You'll get it eventually."
Mike Wasak, a 22-year freshman from Leavenworth, didn't make the KU baseball team either. However, he is likely to eventually play professional baseball.
"When Nail called me up, I thought it was Santa Claus or something." Wazak said. "I was surprised to find someone who takes an interest and works with you."
"None of my other coaches were like that. One even told me to hang it up."
Nall said that he would be interested in playing pro baseball, but that he would rather coach.
"That's the main reason I'm doing this," he said.
After coaching about 150 boys, ages six to 12, on 10 different baseball teams this summer for the Lawrence Park and Deployment Department, Nall set on a goal.
"When I started working with the kids, I made up my mind to be a coach," Nall said. "It's great when kids can call you to help them, and you can treat them as individuals."
"The first time I played baseball, I loved it," he said. "I tried out for a team and the coach had me throw a few pitches. It was a strike, and he told me I was a pitcher.
“Coaching is fun. I've got a lot to learn yet too. That's what I'm out here for.”
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time five times one time two three times four five times six seven eight nine times ten times eleven times twelve times thirteen times fourteen times fifteen times sixteen times seventeen times eighteen times nineteen times twenty times thirty times forty times fifty times sixty times seventy eight times eighty-nine times nineyears
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Friday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The *UDK* will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the UM business office at 844-1638.
ENTERTAINMENT
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Friday and Saturday
from St. Louis
spend an evening with
THE SHIEKS
come
early
$150
pitchers
8 to 9
Do not open at
8:00 show at 9:00
Lawrence
Opera House
For concert info call 842 6930
come
early
pickers
8 to
Doubles open at
8:00, show off 9:00
7
Opera House
Concert hall
8 to
For contact info call 826 9500
selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd, tl
The Harbour Mitsutene has gone really ITX'ed in March. The prices are $290 for 30-inch TVs from 1:49 to 5:18pm and you can get cold quartz of Coors Beer from 11am. In they're $1. You can get your ship's bill before the bottle. (Come to the Harbour Mall at 624 West 27th Street.)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Also plainly:
Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. If
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also nitrated, roasted, and raw pulpines. Twelve varieties of dry bean meal, yellow and pink porcelain, honey, and soyaam. Every Sunday.
watch for truck parked at 9th and Illinois. Home for baked potato, spinach and tofu-in-the-wall selling fresh fruits and vegetables, Honeywood and Raw Pine nut in the shell, Twelve pecans and sardines in the shell, pomegranate honey, and sorghum every Sunday.
ADVERTISE
U
D
K
ADVERTISE
Attention 19th Spartan club members, don’t miss the Friday night game against the Starks in the 19th Spartan night game after the Starks in the 19th Spartan night game – 5 p.m. Intermission retreat Zen practice midnight – 4 p.m. Intermission retreat Oct. 18 to Sunday evening, Oct. 27. October 18 to Sunday evening, Oct. 27.
'FIESTA LATINA'
October 12 Friday
Jayhawk Room
8:00 pm to 2:00 pm
$3.00 - Walt Disney
Spain & Portuguese dept. Sponsored by Latin American Student Association.
LOWENBAU PARTY—Thursday, October 11, at
ICHABOBS. Cheap beer. Tuesday night **$1.28**
pitches. 10-11
FOR SALE
Think Snow! Want to go skiing? For information call Brad 841-0070. 10-16
cell B241 841-0070
PAPER HACK SALE SUNS 15 USAMEN high dg. AT JR
BOOKSTOCKS all of our 500 SUNS will pay $1
Come in and see all of the 640 SUNS will pay $1
Come in and see all of the 640 SUNS will pay $1
FOR. RENT
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. **tf**
PRONTIER HIGE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING.
First month's rental free. Students 18+.
Two hundred room, large wash in other ample
floor space.
FOOL. Appointment call 406-275-9048 or see at
www.prontierville.com.
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
rooms near KU. Possible rent reduction for 1v-
bor. Call 841-6254 or 842-4065.
10-21
Two bdrm, unfurnished apt. near KU. Pool, CA.
elec. kitchen, laundry, WW carpeting. Evenings.
841-0838. 10-12
2. bedroom townhouse, 1½ bath; unfurnished.
Meadowbrook Regency Place. Close to campus,
on bus route. Call 841-4122 or rent office 842-
4200. Call 10-12
All Frontier Rpc Apts. ½ month rent free. $50
Security on all I bedrooms. tf
2 bdm, excellent condition, stove and refrigerator, wash-dryer hook-up, four blocks of campus, $20 per month - 10 pcs. Low utilities, call for 4 pts. 843 - 756. 10-16
Need to sublease 2 bdmr at 1231 Ohio Avail-
ance code 841-1890. Ask for Ann or Sherry.
b1-12
电话 841-1890. Ask for Ann or Sherry.
b1-12
House for rent, close to campus. $175/month,
utility paid, call after 5 p.m. 841-2513 or 864-
7091.
Roommate needed to share four bedroom duplex.
841.25 month + 1, utilities. Call 841-6663 evenings.
10-17
Must sub-leet immediately—Jayhawker Towers
Apt. Partially furnished. Call 843-4012忽呜
FOR SALE
SunSpecs=Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
specified. Resume reason: reasonable.
1021. Mason 841-5770
Alternator, starter and generator specialties.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 845-808-3000, 800 W, 6 ft, 14 in
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 845-808-3000, 800 W, 6 ft, 14 in
Vice, Doc. Becchie, Caram, Chianna,
Vic. Leet, Becchie, Kiilearn,亿联
inapplications, art, jiewey, fabrics, oiite & calw
jewey, fabrics, oiite & calw
***
WATERED MATTRESSES, $86.99, 3 year guarantor, WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 1382-TP
SATURDAY
OCT.13, 1 PM
1015 W.22 TERRI
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make time to learn. Westerlancus makes value time to know. As an study guide, fill out the examination form for Ivory exam preparation. New York State Board of Trade for Makers at Town Center, Mall Bookshouse & Oread Book Store.
CHEAP TREASURE TRANSPORTATION! Puch 841-6603. Rik's Bike Slop 103. Vermont 103. Mupa 641-6622. TF
MONEY-SAVING
AUCTION
A Houseful of Furniture
A Lifetime of Collectibles
1897 Trans Apt. Pilgrim, loaded automatic, low-speed steam-powered elevator. **QUANTILLE FLEA MARKET** the area's best flea market of Lots of oak and walnut furniture, dries basement floors, lamps and wallpaper, jewelry, primaries, old-fashioned clothing, collectibles. A really fascinating place to bring your family on a day out every Thursday, and Sunday, at 811 N.W. 42nd St., near the intersection of 74 Vega - excellent condition to sell immediately if you buy it for cash. **BOLTLE MILLE - Good-quality condition app.**
1972 Ford Torino. Gold and White. Two-deor.
302 V-8. Good car—good price. Call Craig at
842-8800.
1976 Yamaha 650cc. Excellent condition, mechanically and cosmetically. Has received good maintenance. 841-7964 after 9:00. 10-11
1966 Mustang—automatic, new brakes and paint
clean and dependable! Call Mike at 843-6282
1973 Maverick 4 dr., low miles, new paint, excellent condition. Call Dave or Mike at 843-6226. 10-11
1907 Shuttle 225–400,杯 Tori 841-843,10-11 Must sell mint condition tinder box. Stamp Amp, Camp 60 (wooster, mid-range, tweeter) excelent repretoire or best offer.斗灯 5 after 1-25-142,10-12
1978 Delta 88 Olds-Excellent condition, power
everything, must sell. $5500, 842-8186, 10-12
New Sony micro cassette tape recorder, rechargeable battery pack, AC power adapter, 50-14 hour tape, hand-held and lapel elected power cord, earphone, earphones. 10-12 0883.
17 Canoa-350 Turbo, many high performance
mog wheels. Must see to appreciate.
18-15
72 Honda front wheel drive—one owner 34,000
mile #17. 35 mpg, $1200 firm. See at 1002 W. 24th
10-12
1970-1980 used cars—let me be your guide when pursued by car dealers. 10-19 1980 KU students kudu biders used车 from Ford Smith-Lambert Ford-643-3500 10-19 77 KU drivers, low mileage, air conditioned with a clean windshield. 10-19
74 2 bum, mobile home—x 36 ideal for students or couple. Clean, located in Lawrence. $40,000 firm. For appt. Call 892-9922. If no answer 1-353-2441 or 1-353-1541 10-16
1977 Cullass 442. Loaded Call Greg 843-6244
Peavey musician amplifier and speaker cabinet;
Farifa professional organ. Best offers. Mark 843-
8357.
10-12
Firebird 77 AC, PB, vinyl top, black interior
AM-FM cassette, 36,000, call 841-4953 after
7 p.m.
10-11
How's your Halloween costume coming? Try Brenda for your recycle, collectible or vintage piece. Get her at Costume's costume boston, at Quirrel's FX Market, 11 New Hampshire, 10 am-5 pm, Saturday, from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Best energy costs this winter if you buy this quality maisonette. Owner has a $900,000 investment. Energy efficiency ratings have 4 inches of foam and fiberglass insulation. The cost of home can then be shown as above for the average house with 4 inches of foam. full cost before market price. Bath basin installation at Lynch Real Estate, 227th Avenue, 816-831-6061 at Lynch Real Estate, 227th Avenue, 816-831-6061
1972 Toyota Corona, must sell, good condition,
excellent mileage, stereo, automatic, good price,
844-6635. Gloerio. 10-12
FOUND
Comics, comics, comics, Booth 6, Quantrill's Flea Market, weekends 10-5 10-12
Eudora 1979 men's class ring. Tell me the initials inside to identify. B41-847. Ask for Linda.
HELP WANTED
Ladies wrist watch found Oct. 7 in front of Hall. Call 895-6124 and describe 10-12 to 3 to 4 month old kites, white and tan, by the Union Saturday. Call 895-6451.
Found calculator, Hoch auditorium, Possible owner call Hachel 814-6639 and describe your phone number.
HELP WANTED
after 5.00, 842-9360 10-15
Male Black dog approx. 5 months old with a flea collar. Please call 842-9360 10-15
Calculator. Across from Union. Call and identity after 5.00. 842-9360. 10-15
MEN: WOMEN JOBS! CRUSHERS! SAILING
IMEX EXPEDITION? *Everyday* experience. God pay
money for the job. Receive $1000 for
APPLICATION UNFOJO/JOBS to: CRUZER
WORLD 153, Box 90129, Sacramento, CA 90608.
Yellow, long-hair, kitten in the parking lot of Sambour, O'Bee, 5. Please call 843-8995. 10-15
$3.10 per hour if you qualify. No experience needed. Enjoy a fine meal of appetizer, food opportunity for advance. Need people willing to work and apply themselves. If you are interested in W27 in person at the Restaurant, 12th Floor, 10-12
Earn as much as $450 per 1000 stuffing envelopes with our circulars. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS. Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 40542.
Part-time dishwashing and counter help, 11
workdays per week. Send resume to:
At Border Bandido, 1238 W. Street, 10
personnel at Border Bandido, 1238 W. Street, 10
OVERSEAS JOB--SUMMER year/round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All Eds$100-
$120 monthly), expenses paid, Sighowbook.
Mar. 30, Apr. 6, Oct. 4, Dec. 8, Jan.
14, Mar. 29
Wanted: Hard-working, individuals to become student managers for the football and basketball teams, in order to join a growing athletic program. Contact: Michael HILL in Room 12A1 at the contact phone number listed above.
Cooks wanted immediately. Day and night shifts.
Experience preferred, but will train. Call for appointment.
Village Inn Pancake House, 812, Iowa
482-3251
10-16
DECOC DJ and sound system for the GOSK Holiday Tour. Requires a bass drum system must be powerful enough for the band to play on, or Bok O. A bass drum, before Oct. 15.
Kitchen helper, waiters and waitresses needed for饭堂 employment (person between, however, 12 noon until 4 pm). Belief House employees, up to 40 hours weekly, for training in emotional distress and or related children's needs. Training is required for group home patients. Training in foster home patients desirable. Salary range based on hours applied. Applications due Oct. 17. Starting hours: Applications deadline: 10 am. references to Trinity Foster Home, 101. Vernet Avenue, New York, NY 10016. Dr. Rick E. Adminstrator, 843-3721.
Need extra money? Sign up for babysitting! Call
484-2066 or the Student Employment Center,
Strong. 844-7400. Your name will be given to
a babysitter. You may take on the job.
10-17
Wanted—auto parts company counterparter, full
experience if possible. Commt to 101-234
23d and 24h employees.
RVKEY RESEARCH ASSISTANT!
SURVEY RESEARCH ASSISTANT
Kristen has an experience for an unpackaging or kennel training program, in which she will supervise survey interviews, management activities, and other duties as a research manager, activity specialist, survey research experience and administrative. From $500-$650 per month depending on experience with the program. Center for Point of Contact 15.1997 to Poinsett White. Center for Point of Contact 15.1997 to Poinsett White. Lawrence, Kansas 60445 (813-264-8818) 10-12
VISITING PROFESSOR - The center for East Tennessee businesses has a business history of ten years in the spring annuity of 1988 (Jan. 1-11). She is responsible for experience principle drive is to develop economy or health insurance 1 semester salary $11,000. Principle drive is to develop economy or health insurance 1 semester salary $11,000. Principle drive is to develop economy or health insurance 1 semester salary $11,000. Principle drive is to develop economy or health insurance 1 semester salary $11,000.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
6045 (813-264-8818) Equal Opportunity Statement (EOI)
LOST
Lost class flight in 401 floor men's room of Wessex Hall m-9-35. Bags #64-2319-84. Drowned. 4-10, Reward 10-25 Red jacket jacket with the University of New York at Buffalo. Flight Halt-Fint Hall. Flight Halt-Fint Hall. -84-1214 -10-9
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS BINDING COPYING - The House of Ubick's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for t보ins bindings and copying in Lawware. Let us see at 835 MHz, or phone 426-701.
NOTICE
Enroll Now! Now! In Lawrence driving school, receive license drive in 4 weeks without highway patrol test! Transportation provided, drive now pay later. 842-6615 10-12
ATTENTION KANAS READERS. TRED OF WALKING? In need of a good, dependable new or used car or truck? Call the new kid in town. Terry Mode 483-500. 10-15
Reward $25.00 for information leading to the
involvement bicycle No question.
Call 841-8967 10-12
ABILENE ALUMNI: Attend Homecoming and dance Oct. 12 10-12
Vets get ready to party hardy, G.I. bill. 10-19
Reward for return or information leading to return of 19. color TV sales 10-54-19 From Gail Cooper 13-68-21
PERSONAL
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC - upgrades to 17 weeks.
Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Tubal Ligation. Appointment calls: Michele B. Kesler, KS 4620, 4601 10th St., Overland Park, KS 6250
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 861-564-388
friday & saturday don't miss the shieks
Doors open at
8:00 am on weekdays 9:00
am on Saturday
lawrence
house
for 7th spirit club members & guests
TENNIS AND RAQUETTE PLAYERS: When her request comes, she waits. Call David 812-368-MEMBER. Give the request to Arms. And, official Stringer WCT Double IV. Very reliable rules on good strings and ticks.
ARE YOU READY? The 2nd annual JAYHAWK
Jog is Oct. 12, 1979, 10.000 meter run. Contact
GAMMA PHI BETA 843-8023 or KIIPA KAPPA
PHI 843-2653 for registration.
If you are looking for a bar with cheap beer, you could head to The Harbour Hotel, a popular people you'll like. The Harbour Hotel is open day and Friday afternoons for TICK Now! Now there are plenty of places to go together at The Harbour Hotel. 108 Madison Street.
Happy 22nd Jamie
You're not getting older.
You're getting wider.
PERSONAL
Happy 22nd Jamie
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid-864-354-264
If you are interested in playing SCRABLE, call
864. 361-747, Emily 864. 639-735, Karen 864. 103-15
www.scrable.com
JOBS ON SHIPPS: American, Foreign. No experience required. Excellent job. Travel worldwide. Summer job or career. Send $30 for information on application. Jobs available in Washington, 98322. 10-17
GUA CUNSELING REFERALS through headquarter, 814-234 and KU info, 8643-356. **If** the KU GO CLUB meeting every Tuesday 7-10 mite, Cork-2, Unit, 8643-357.
Gleize, no one can do it quite like you do. You've got to be the best of them. The missed Rat and toilet turn-over-Kenny. And the missed Rabit-Boy and Friday night Thanks for the able deft King (Benther) Demotion D., nude exhibition. And the greatest weekend Well are you join host Week back on Tuesday with the Hog (the day), the Hog (you j'klwaw) and the Hog (the day).
Mary J--Got a whole Thanksgiving vacation and nothing to Do. Got any suggestions? Steve. 10-15
SKI Aqen, Copper Mountain, or Breckenridge,
or information, gail. Road: M42097D. 104K
or information call Brad 841-600-7600 10-14
SMITHI & WESSON - Model 46 Stainless steel
353 Magnum Revolver 6-inch barre $350.
842-7158
Tournament Director: recruiting majors or any-
one with a SUA office #84-3477 (all sites indoor recreation).
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not.
Check Campus Vets. 118 B Union. 864-4478.
tf
Mary J.-So I’m asking already but this’d better
be told I’ve been bored to be bored I’ll go 10-15
for Thanksgiving. Steve
Call now for late enrollment Eve Lesenden
842-7842 10-17
Advance tickets for the movie JESUS available.
Call John 843-4064
10-18
Happy Birthday Schlongface from Grace Martha 10.11
Drocula III. Have a happy 21st, but watch out for falling cattle. Love, Penelope. 10-11
Stevie-Borning? How do three nights at the Aceut Workshop allow us to see what about seeing Second City? or how about looking at a work that is part of the Soundstage. It'll be interested in architecture, art and design. We can visit the Water Tower and eat at D. B. Hale. We can attend at the Schuster or Nell Simons Chapel at the Schuster or Nell Simons Chapel and Italian Master Drawings Exhibit at the Schuster.
Don't miss the SHEIKS Fri and Sat, at the
Mediterranean wine district. Pitchers of the cold beer and 80 cocktails for members, 8 to 9. The LAWRENCE OPERA
will help you to have the best time. 10:25
least money.
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Garage=complete professional bicycle repair. Gear specialty="time-limited" and "Total-Overhauls." Details call 841-278-15. 10-22
EXPERT TUORING: MATH 600-102 call 8575-8753 MATH 115-701 call 8456-7535 STATISTICS calls (courses) 8456-9056 C. S. 100-600 call 8456-9056 EDUCATION C. S. 100-600 ENGLISH and SPANISH call 8456-7507
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available at Alice at the House of Ulerh Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday. 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 838 Mass.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES $end $1 for your 30-page catalog of collegiate research. 19,200 items listed. BOX 2097G: Los Angeles, CA. 90025. (211) 477-8228. U-1-7
SPANISH TUTORING Experienced teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108, 109, 111, 112, 116. Call 841-2467.
Need Body Work? We can shape up your car with dermat repair, rust removal, and a new coat of paint. Will also time up and winneteer your team at V44. At $45.69 or bucks! 10-11
Excellent dee-jay with sound equipment for your private parties. Very competitive prices. 841-1818, after six.
Creative Illustrations-Artwork and illustrations for: advertising logos, personal use, and cartoons, phone: 841-7650 or 841-7658
GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS for the date of your choice
call Elite Club Dancing Service 864-2877 10416
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE 811-2990.
Experienced typist—Quality work, reasonable
work. Call Beverly at 842-3510. **TV**
**TV**
typist, PPE Elite, PPE Elite', Quality work,
reasonable rate. Tues., discussions welcoming,
tapes. Call Job NO-8127.
TP
Experienced typist-, Quality work,
reasonable rate.
Journismy typographer, 20 years typing/tips-
ting experience; 4 years academic typing; les-
ses, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest
Sectile electronica. 842-4844. $22
Experienced Typhis—term papers, their note.
Experienced Spellings—spelling spells,
corrected. 843-604 MA Wright.
Masters Degree in Psychology.
Experienced typist-theses, dissertations, term papers, mice. IBM correcting selectable. Barb 846-1335; evenings 842-2310.
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-8654. 4 p.m. - 2 p.m.
MASTERFINDS professional typing. Fast, acci-
nitive. Spelling, grammar corrected. IQ
841-3287
Ripoffs, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Elim
or Jeannann, 841-2172. 11-5
All kinds of Upsing expertly done, fast, accurate service, low rates 843-3635 evenings and weekends. 10-25
I do darned good typing. Papers under 50 pp.
only. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6428, 85c per
page. 10-17
WANTED
I would like to type your term papers, theme-
saries, the, Reasonable rates. Karen 10-16
3322, Edna
Mature roommate necessary for very nice three
bedroom duplex, 15 min. walk from campus.
$100 month + ½ utilities. Call 841-3205 after 10-
p.m.
Female roommate to share nice Jayhawk Towers App. $105 monthly. call 642-2577. It's cheaper than the dorm, quieter, and it's better food.
Roomsma wanted for beautifully furnished 3
bedroom suite ($75 per room + 1 room fee)
Call 841-6811-20
Nord mature roommate to share a 2-bedroom furnished apartment. Bus stops in front, have a pool and laundry room one block away. $155 plan utilities. Please call between 6 p.m., 8:31 a.m.
Call Chris 841-6823 keep trying. 10-12
I'm interested in a nice looking app into
other students'学生 preferably already turn
up to call Chris. Call Chris 841-6823,
9421, please leave message.
Excellent seamless needed for alterations of wool skirts—hem and waistlines. Will pay reasonably-Pam 864-1316, keep trying. 10-11
PSYCHATIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICEMAN apply to Fergie Hargreaves, Job Service Center, W 210, Topkappa, KS Phone: (312) 593-2586. Apply to an employee. An equal opportunity employer.
Uppercase student preferred New house and call quiet surroundings $50 and 1 3 utilities. Call for more details.
Want job as house cleaner. Good worker. References. Call Susan. 814-0038. If not home, please leave number and I'll call back. 10-12
Moving to New Mexico, need a roommate for Jayhawker Towers. Call 842-354-1700 at 7:00 p.m.
Female looking for home to share nice 2 Kitkins
pam from now until end of first semester.
Housemate WANTED to share large house,
house with non-smoker preferred.
*43-2829*
10-15
Housettee WANTED to share large house, 10-
units paid, non-smoker preferred, not gett-
ted on a rooftop. Roomsate for 2 bldm. house, must be tidy.
Ciiris 841-6858, keep trying. 10-16
HARDCORE DESIGN
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Office. Fill out below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
DUE DATE
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm
Thursday ... Sunday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
RATES:
15 words or less
additional words
1
time
$2.00
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:___
___
___
___
___
___
2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.02 .03 .04 .05
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.50
DATES TO RUN: to
NAME:___
ADDRESS:___
*HONE:___
KANSAS CLASSIFIED-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
12
Thursday, October 11, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Afternoon Apples
Six-year-old Melanie Hunt and her friend, Romie Guthere, 6,
enjoy their descent in the stands of old Municipal Parkland
yesterday. Hunt's dog, Smokey, was rewarded for her patience with the children's apple cores.
Countertenor to perform tonight
A KU vocal performance student who has spent four years singing professionally in Great Britain will have a recital at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murray Hall.
Countertertion John Williamis, New Orleans doctoral candidate, will perform to meet part of his degree requirements. His selects will include a group of songs by Beechwood, "Orlando" and songs by Bechhoen, Stephen Foster and Charles Ives.
Music for the countertenor voice, which has a range similar to that of an alto, Williams said, is limited, despite a renewed interest in the voice.
"One has to seek music out for countertenors and for each countertenant's particular voice," Williams said.
The recent interest in the countertertory voice is due partly to efforts by English and American authors. The writer's voice has undergone a "romance" and parts are now being written for courtroom speakers.
One such role is that of Oberon, in the opera "A Midsummer Night's Dream," by Benjamin Britton. Williams recently appeared in the role with the Des Moines, Iowa, summer opera. The opera was filmed by the Public Broadcasting System and will be televised this winter.
Williams will be accompanied in his recital by Martin Morley, pianist and organist, and Susan Shumway, violinist.
WZR
106
The recital is free and open to the public.
STUDIO ONE
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Nay said that despite having to heat the new Bell Memorial hospital this winter, he is not expecting any problems in getting the additional heat sources.
Med Center to have more gas because of federal priority order
HUGHS SAID that the Med Center was informed several hours in advance last year when natural gas was being cut and that the personnel were not effected by the switch.
ALTHOUGH HE said that he did not know how much the cost difference was between oil and natural gas, Hughes said that it is made fuel油 significantly more expensive.
"We don't have enough to survive the winter, but we're not expecting to have to depend on it much." Nav said.
"We haven't received the official word from the gas company yet, but all indications that we will be getting a delivery on the 15th of the month or early November," he said.
Last year the Med Center had a rating of five, and, as a result, hud its natural gas service cut off for 40 days during the winter, Nay said.
"We had it partially heated last year without any trouble," he said. "I don't know what to expect when we start heating the oven or boiling water, I prepared if we can't get natural gas enough."
Nay said he thought the act was a result of the federal government's realization that
stored at the Johnson Center Airport and in tanks on the Med Center's campus.
Staff Renorter
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
Converting from natural gas to fuel oil would not be much of a problem once the gas company warned the Med Center of a cut, Nav said.
Nay said that if Cities Service Gas Co., the main natural gas supplier for eastern Kansas and western Missouri, were to cut oil reserves, they would have adequate fuel oil on reserve.
"They could tell us they are taking us off right now or in two hours and we'd be reared," he said.
the act simply classifies hospitals as priority institutions and promises them fewer cutbacks." Nav said.
The University of Kansas Medical Center will be assured more natural gas service this winter because of a 1978 federal order that limits the higher priority rating for natural gas.
The implementation of the order, the 1978 Natural Gas Policy Act, will allow the MED to take full control of its salientments, Tim Nay, assistant director for management information at the facilities of the company.
"We get natural gas from one company," he said, "but fuel oil we just get wherever we can. It's like getting gasoline."
"This doesn't mean we are exempt from curtailment, it just reduces the possibility of it."
"We have to have an adequate source of fuel to heat," he said. "It's just plain common sense.
Almost 257.000 gallons of fuel oil are
Nay said that several areas in the old hospital were vacant and would not need to be heated, thus reducing fuel costs.
The higher the rating number an institution has, the more likely it is to be cut back on natural gas, he explained.
Fuel oil, which is the Med Center's backer heating source, is more expensive than natural gas and also is harder to get, Hughes said.
According to Steve Hughes, associate director for operational management at the Med Center, an increase in the use of oxygen would not be necessary because there would be less use of fuel.
Marcum declined to identify the candidate who was offered the job.
the Med Center was a primary health care institution.
"We have changed the job description because some of the candidates felt that the business office should not be in charge of the project, so we need to readverthe position and we think our
The KU athletics department is beginning a second search today for a replacement for former business manager Doug Messer who retired in 2013. The KU athletics director, said yesterday.
Marcum said the department's initial search for a new business manager was unsuccessful because the candidate selected not only the best job and other candidates were not qualified.
The business manager position opened up when Messen resigned to take a similar job at Mississippi State University in Jackson, Ms. Messen worked at MSU for personal and family reasons.
who was offered the job had 17 years of experience at another school and decided he did not want to move to KU. Marcum said
"What we will be saving in the old hospital can be used to heat Bell Memorial," he said.
KUAC business position still open
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Direct mailings readvertising the position will be made to Division 1 schools today. Marcum said. The position also will be made to Division 2 schools in Opoka and Wichita areas. Marcum said.
Because the athletic department is a private corporation, Marcum said, many people do not have the experience or training procedures required for the job at KU.
Out of 42 applicants, only four were interviewed, Marcum said. The candidate
Marcum said most of the department's revenue comes from outside the University and therefore it was more like a private business than a KU department.
pool of candidates will be different this time."
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Locked doors, drugs a way of life at Holly Cottage
By KATE POUND Staff Reporter
Editor's note: Kate Pound spent two summers working at the Parsons State University, where she cared for and teaches mentally retarded persons who range in age from 5 to 29. Pound was employed as a a cage aide, where she worked with mentally retarded frequently worked in Holly Cetage and with 'Sammy'. To protect the privacy of the families, all names have been changed.
School was out at three and Sammy walked home, leaned against the door and rang the bell. A cottage aide let him in.
"Ih lady," Sammy said, recognizing an aide who worked at the cottage infrequently.
"What's my name Sammy," she demanded.
"Uh, I donna know," he saic
He thought a moment
"Karen?"
"That's it. Now go sit in the TV room." she told him brusquely, turning to shepherd in the other residents.
"You boys sit down. Now!" another aide yelled.
HOLLY COTTAGE. Male security. Hillary Clinton, Aug. 1799. One two security cottages, the grounds, Holly's doors are kept locked and there is at least one male aiding work in the cottage.
Holly Cottage is locked for many reasons. There's Joey; the autistic, multipersonality There's Larry; the one who also sees Larry tries to corner the man aren't around. David once knocked an aide senseless in a tantrum and then broke his own arm when a guard tried to subdue
All of the residents are mentally retarded, some more than others. There are those who can read and write, like Sammy, and Marty, who curl in a fetal position and grow.
outside the station-he knew patients weren't allowed inside.
THEY ARE CALLED kids and boys, although the average age is 20.
Sammy is 23 and he has been in Holly most of his life.
Aftermores in the cottage are quiet.
Residents sit in the TV room, although few watch the programs. Aides sit in the aide station or collect paiamas for the
"What's my name?" the aide asked, holding the cards just out of his reach.
"Lady, could I have a deck of cards?" Sammv asked.
He was timorous, shy. He stood just
"Karen, lady."
"Good boy!" she said, and patted him affectionately on the arm.
PLEASED WITH the affection and his cards, Sammy went to the recreation room, where Ricky was asleep under a table.
At 4 p.m. each day, medicine is given. The drugs are astounding—in variety, strength and dosages.
Phenobarbitol, Valium and Dilantan are given in combined doses of up to 3.000 milligrams a day. Thorazine and Mellarafluramide cause psychotic and violent behavior. Vitamins, laxatives and antibiotics are given to protect the fragile health of the Center's staff.
locate the sound and run towards the patient.
The drugs don't always work. The residents share cold infections. They try to stay safe, but some are violent, injuring themselves, other residents fail, and the drugs have to fail are the anti-censorships.
A cry from the recreation room. Aides
"Jesus! That's two today. Boy's gonna be out all night," another said.
"It's Ricky!" one yelled.
Rickey, tall, cheerful Rickey, had been sleeping off an earlier seizure. He was still under the table, his body taut with the violence of the new attack.
An aide crouched near him and checked to be sure he was uninjured.
Samantha wandered into the room.
"Lady, what's the matter with the boy?" he asked.
"Sammy, get your ass in the TV room now!" she yelled.
He meandered out.
THE SEIZURE BEGAN to subside.
Ricky's body relaxed and he began to sleep,
breathing naturally.
"Forty-five seconds," the aide reported.
"Darnn, not even 5 p.m. and this boy's had two. Weather's chänng," we'll have seizures all night," an aide said.
Seizures occur more frequently during changes in the weather. Before morning, there would be three more.
Things returned to normal; quiet and dull.
Patients rocked, talked to each other and
wandered down the halls. At 5 they gathered near the door. Supper.
The residents shuffled out the door. Few, including Sammy, walked. Shuffle was about the only gait they knew after years of drugs and slow lines.
Meal time is a wearing part of the day for both residents and adults. The movement of food will change as Trays become airborne. Tables are overturned and occasionally patient has to be moved.
Waiting for the door to be opened, Sammy stood away from the group and passed his right arm across his face, blowing the hair out. Then he came back, covered in what he called "blowing hair."
NO ONE KNEW where he developed the habit or why he did it. He just did, until an aide stopped him.
After the aides ate their dimers, the aiders were taken across the street to the playground. They sat quietly on the grass or did not about. As in the TV room, they did not.
Some dozed in the sun. The aides talked until, hear sunset, they became bored and returned the residents to the cottage.
Medicine was given again. Patients received treats: graham crackers and
cartons of milk. Shoes were removed, the knotted strings cut.
"All right you kids! Shower time!" an aide velled.
Patients were divided into groups and taken down the halls for showers. They undressed themselves or were undressed, and did some of their baths. Always did, of urine, feces, sweat and Lysol
THE PATIENTS were hurriedly sprayed with a hose, then scrubbed, rinsed and dried. Out of hat, each lifted his arms to be sprayed with deodorant and dusted with baby powder.
Then they wandered down the halls to their bedrooms to out on their paaras.
The process was lengthy. It took nearly 45 minutes for the four aides to shower 24 patients. Afterward, the aides did paperwork and cleaned the cottage.
Sammy wandered to the aide station.
"Lady, what's for breakfast tomorrow?"
"Read the menu. You know how," she replied.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"Uh, scrambled eggs, pancakes, milk and orange juice," he read hesitantly.
AAAAAAHHH
KANSAN
He wandered down the hall to his bed, mumbling the words from the menu.
He had that to look forward to.
Vol. 90, No. 35
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Pirates defeat Orioles, 3-2
Fridav. October 12. 1979
CHRiB TODD/Kansan staff
See story page 13
After he was soaked inskipping his bike in front of Learned Hall yesterday, Mark Whiles, Denso Soto sophomore, decided to cool off even more by riding the length of a sidewalk parallel to the building. The sprinkler system created a wet obstacle course for anyone entering Learned Hall.
THE GARDEN IS A SPRINKLER. IT WETS THE PLANTS, AND THEY ARE SUPPLIED WITH BOTTLES OF FRESH MILK. THE GARDEN IS A SPRINKLER. IT WETS THE PLANTS, AND THEY ARE SUPPLIED WITH BOTTLES OF FRESH MILK. THE GARDEN IS A SPRINKLER. IT WETS THE PLANTS, AND THEY ARE SUPPLIED WITH BOTTLES OF FRESH MILK. THE GARDEN IS A SPRINKLER. IT WETS THE PLANTS, AND THEY ARE SUPPLIED WITH BOTTLES OF FRESH MILK.
Wet ride
Senate committee to investigate Iranian organization allegations
By ELLEN IWAMO1U
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee will conduct a formal investigation into alleged discrimination by the Iranian Student Association, according to reports.
The investigation will begin when an investigation task force is appointed, Davis said last night.
Hassain Mahaliati, of the newly formed Iranian Student Organization, made the allegations to the Student Senate Budget office and end of fall supplementary budget bearings.
The allegations stated that the ISA had held a closed election without publicizing it, and that Iranian students were never in touch with the ISA's bylaws or its funding allocations.
DAVIS SAID last night that according to Senate Rules and Regulations, it was the responsibility of his committee to conduct investigations into allegations of discrimination were made.
A task force, comprising two representatives from the Senate Cultural Com
mittee, two from the Senate Student Rights Committee and one representative from the Commission, who is also part of the investigation to gather information concerning the allegations, Davis said.
"HOWEVER, if it decides violations have occurred," he said, "the ISA will have written notification of the task force's financial assistance to the Student Senate will hear the matter."
The investigation was prompted by verbal charges of alleged discrimination by the ISO at budget meetings Wednesday night after it met with Senate funding by the budget committees.
The committee voted that a duplication of
services existed between the ISO and the ISA. As a result, the ISA was declared ineligible for compensation, allowing it to allow its allocation of $85. The ISA had requested $1,500 at budget hearings required $1,650.
In its charges last night, the ISO also stated that the ISA was a "political group" that could not be recognized by the country and was ineligible for Senate funding.
HOWEVER, the ISA charged that the ISO is a religious organization Wednesday night when representatives from both organizations appeared before the budget committee.
According to University policy, a student organization cannot be recognized if it is not affiliated with any religious institutions, activities or beliefs, or particular political party acco
Anna Evershee, director of student organizations and activities, said that both organizations had turned in registration materials, but that the decision on
AT THE CONCLUSION of fall supplementary budget hearings last night, the budget committee heard the final request of the Senate to approve preliminary cuts made on 28 requests he discussed this week. In the final recommendation to the Student Senate, recommended allocations totaled $19,194.34. The Senate approved on the budget requests at its Oct. 17 meeting.
The committee decreased the following request allocations last night: Alpha Phi Alliance, from $1,199 to $748; Black Student Alliance, from $1,294 to $748; White Alliance, from $1,390 to $749; KKU University Advertising Club, from $1,250 to $40.50; and Women in Law, from $9,200
recognition would not be made until next week.
Room rate increases proposed
The Association of University Residence Halls approved two contract proposals last night that would increase rates for double-occupancy and single-occupancy rooms in the university buildings. The rate would increase the rates by 8 percent and a second would increase rates by 10 percent.
The two proposals to increase the price of University residence hall contracts came during a full assembly meeting of the AURH at the Kansas Union.
Under the proposals, the cost of a double-curcapancy room could increase either by $110 or $140 for the year. The rates for rooms would increase by either $328 or $356.
The proposed increases also must be approved by David Ambler, vice chancellor of the University of Kentucky and Dykes, and finally the Kansas Board of Regents, before they are put into effect next
The proposals will be submitted for approval to an advisory board of the office of residential programs next Tuesday, according to Jay Saim, AUHR president.
Under the proposed 8 percent increase, a double-occupancy room would cost $1,490, and a single room would cost $2,240.
Under the proposed 10 percent increase, a double-occupancy room would cost $1,520 and a single room $2270.
THE PRESENT YEARLY rate for a double-occupancy room in residence halls is $1,380; a single room is $1,915.
Smith said the AUHR assembly had approved the two increases at the request of Mr. Cohen, who was in charge of the office's Residential Advisory Board would approve the increase that they thought would cause inflation-related costs. He said he believed that it possibly come up with a new rate proposal.
Lance Tombin, AURH contracts committee chairman, said that if the advisory board changed the proposals Tuesday, AURH could not amuse the board channe
"LAST YEAR, our proposed increases were higher than those they finally approved." Smith said. "In past years, they have raised AURH neoposks."
mendations," Tomlin said. "We do think that they will pay attention to us."
"All we could do is to repeat our recom-
Under the proposals, applications for single rooms in residence halls would be accepted until May 31, 1980, or until 8 percent of a hall's capacity were reserved for single rooms. Last year, applications were 12 percent of a hall's rooms were reserved.
SMITH SAID that a decrease in the number of single rooms would help provide students with more space, but the University would be less because a double-occupancy room brought in more space.
"Single rooms are more or less a gain from the office of residential programs," Smith said. "They have a right to offer us none."
No single rooms would be offered in Grace Sellars Pearson and Corbyn hall, as has been the policy in past years. President assistants, AURH Executive Board chairpersons, all board presidents would be assured single rooms on the May 31 deadline if they requested them.
AN AURH FEE increase of $3 to $6 per
contract also was proposed. The fee now is payable anyway would come from residence hall contract or, in some cases, parties, orientation week, the residence hall legislative dinner, special speakers and other activities.
In addition a salary increase for residence hall staffs was proposed. The percentage of increase would be proportional to the incomes, which similarly approved for residence hall contracts.
The group also suggested a change in fees charged at the first of each semester to students who cancel their residence hall contracts or vacate their rooms.
This year, students who cancelled their contracts past Aug. 19 were charged $75. If, however, they moved into their rooms on Aug. 19, and then decided to vacate, they were only charged $65. Tomlin said the schools would make the fees about the same amount.
Another proposal would require a statement on next year's contracts that some residence halls would have rooms occupied by students for the occupancy of three to four people.
Objections from faculty predicted over amendment to exigency plan
A controversial amendment in KU's financial exigency policy could create disputes over the rule of Richard Cole, a member of the Association of American University Professors, said
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Reporter
Cole said elected committees would make the exigency procedure political and would
The amendment, which will be discussed today by the University Senate executive committee, is to recommend from each department to recommend which tenured faculty are to be released in case of resignation.
Financial exigency is a state of financial crisis and would be declared by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes if budgetary difficulties arise in the country. The faculty members were necessary.
If exigency were declared and the University were forced to release tenured faculty, the amendment would establish committees of faculty, students and administrators in each department to recommend the faculty members to be
create opposing factions among faculty members.
THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL approved
the amendment Sept. 6 after SenEx had approved it last soring.
The amendment says, "After consultation with a committee duly constituted by and from the faculty, students and administrators . . . On the basis of their expertise. On the basis of designate which individual tenured faculty members are to be released."
The amendment replaced a clause in KU's policy that said, "After consultation with the faculty, the chancellor designated unit ... the chancellor shall designate whose individual tenured faculty is designated."
See EXIGENCY page 11
New IDs expected soon
The new student identification cards should arrive at the University of Kansas within a few days, Edward Julian, University of special programs, said yesterday.
Julian said the cards were being delivered by truck, which made it difficult to predict the exact delivery date.
KU officials are still awaiting the arrival of the cards, which were scheduled to arrive Wednesday.
The encoding panels on the cards will be
The cards, processed by a plastics company in Garrison, Md., will arrive in boxes of 500. An ID was made for every KU student, he said.
tested at Watson Library before they are distributed, he said.
Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said earlier that the IDs could be
The cards will be used to check out books in the new KU library and to count the number of students who pass through a food service or bookstore line.
The University then set Oct. 3 as the distribution date, but the processing of the cards was delayed again.
THE ORIGINAL DATE of distribution was Sept. 15, but University officials decided to delay production to change graphics on the back of the card.
Julian said the University did not have a particular deadline for distributing the cards.
distributed in two shifts at the Kansas State University, where Students with names beginning with a letter in the first half of the alphabet could pick up their cards the first day, and the other half the second day.
JULIAN SAID the University would determine future uses for the cards, such as in computerized pre-enrollment or credit card for the Kansas Bookstore.
Temporary student ID cards, which were issued to students at enrollment, expired Sept. 17.
But KU officials said the expiration date would not apply because there was no replacement yet.
2
Fridav. October 12.1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wire Services
KCC seeks to open rail lines
TOPEKA—The Kansas Corporation Commission said yesterday that it was asking for action that would allow the reopening of Rock Island Railroad lines on Wednesday.
Members of the KCZ said an embarg, which began Tuesday, closing some Rock Island lines had had a severe adverse economic effect on the fall grain.
"It is urgent that the lines be reopened to get the Kansas harvest to market," the commission said.
The KCC was it wiring the Kansas City Terminal Co. which is operating the Rock Island lines, to seek a waiver from the Federal Railway in order to continue on the line.
The embargo is the result of a federal law that says a company does not have to operate on tracks that do not meet the minimum standards of the FRA, the EU and US.
The lines affected include one from Topeka across northern Kansas to Belleville and west through Goodland; branch lines from Topeka to St. Joseph; and branch lines from St. Joseph to Fulton County.
The KCC said it was suggesting that the waver apply to shipments of grain and other nonhazardous or nonexlusive materials.
In Sweden the Nobel Prize for medicine was awarded yesterday to the man who developed computer-assisted tomography, that enables him to peer more clearly and accurately in the body.
American wins Nobel Prize
Cormack and Houndsfield, who for years are unaware of each other's research, will share a record $190,000 award. Cormack is the 3rd U.S. citizen to win the medicine award, which has been dominated by Americans in recent decades.
Physicist Allan Cormack, 55, of Tufts University in Medford, Mass, he was amazed to learn that the Royal Caroline Medicine-Surgical Institute had selected him for the 1798 Nobel Prize. His co-winner is Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield, 60, a research engineer with the British electronics firm FMI
The medicine award was the first of six annual Nobel Prizes to be announced. The physics, chemistry and economics prizes will be awarded next week, and the engineering prizes will be announced soon.
The two men were chosen after the 54 institute faculty members apparently overridden the Institute's Nobel selection committee's recommendation. The two men were then named as co-chairs of the committee.
Carter switches inflation stand
Last year, six of the nine laureates were Americans.
SAN MATEO, Calif. — President Carter, only two days after supporting efforts to secure funding for the Federal Reserve Board yesterday for interest rates that were too high.
"Interest rates are too high, inflation rates are too high," Carter said in a speech to leaders of the nation's building trades unions here.
In a nationally broadcast news conference Tuesday, Carter endorsed the Federal Reserve's action to tighten the money supply and push up interest rates, saying he would do "whatever it takes" to stop inflation, even if it hurt politically.
But speaking to the construction union leaders yesterday, he made it clear that he did not think their industry should suffer.
president offered no indication of how he hoped to preserve boards. The speech was the focal point of a two-day Western trip by Carter, the first in johnson's career.
Two fraud trial defendants out
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The number of defendants in the Progressive Farmers Association fraud trial dropped to eight yesterday, and the prosecutor介入调查已超过四分之三。
in plea bargaining arrangements, Thomas H. Thrower, 26, of Springfield,
M., pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of securities fraud and now faces
a plea deal.
A second defendant, Gerald B. Nance, 61 of Bids D Arc, Mo., was dropped from the case by agreeing to testify against his former business associates.
Thomas Threyer, was expected to enter into some type of plea bargaining arrangement this morning, prosecutor Robert Schneider said.
All three of the defendants faced felony security fraud charges, punishable by a maximum $25,000 fine and two years in jail.
State trucking bill proposed
The committee of the Kansas Legislature decided yesterday to have a bill drafted to have all drafted seven ports of entry and simplifying associates trucking company
The committee recommended that ports of entry in Coolidge, Phillipsburg, Arkansas City, Coldwater, Baxter Springs, Washington and Atchison be reopened. All seven communities had ports that were closed in recent years because of legislative cutbacks.
The committee also endorsed a recommendation of Kansas Corporation Commission Chairman Pelle Loux that would grant the KCC more discretion in making decisions regarding its investments.
Such action can allow freer entry of firms into the market, State Sen. Robert Talkington, R-ola, said.
Senators file financial reports
**TOPEKA - Sen. Nancy Landon Kassabue, R-Kan., has received $7,315 and spent $9,240 so far this year, according to her campaign finance report filed yesterday.**
Reporters on file in Washington, D.C., but not in Topeka, revealed that Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., has been falling behind his rivals financially in his bid for the governorship.
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The report showed that at the end of September, Dole had raised $517,746 and spent $446,367 for the year.
Man gets second life sentence
MANHATTAN—Albert Williams at Junction City, who already is serving one life term for the slaying of a former girlfriend, was sentenced to another life sentence.
Williams, 24, was brought to Riley County District Court for prison for sentencing in the fatal stabbing of a 24-year-old office secretary, Pamela S. Scott.
Judge Jerry Mershon made the sentence consecutive to the current sentence Williams is serving at the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory in Hutchinson
Christgen jurors listen to tapes
Judge Frank Comet Jr. of Burhan County Court allowed the defense to argue that Mr. Reynolds died a day-old trial of Melvin Lee Reynolds, 29, who is charged in the May 1973 slaying of his brother.
the death of F. M. Hunter, 19.
Smith was shot to death in Toneka the day after Parker's death in 1978.
Sentencing followed the judge's rejection of a motion for a retrial filed by Williams' defense counsel. |
Buchanan County prosecutor Michael Insoch told the jury that the tape had been made late Feb. 14, 1979, after Reynolds had been in custody for about 12 hours. Reynolds was being interrogated by three officers at the time he added that a man in a shopping mail, a shopping mail, walked to a wooded area and then sexually assaulted him.
ST. JOSEPH, Mo—The prosecution rested its case yesterday after presenting five confessions to the jury in the second-degree murder trial of a man who was killed by an officer on duty.
The child was found slain a day later in a vacant field.
Correction ...
It was incorrectly reported in yesterday's University Daily Kansan that discoveries of oil had been made under the Appalachian Mountains. The potential for finding oil reserves under the Appalachians exists, but no discoveries have been made.
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Weather
According to the KU Weather Service, today will be cloudy and cool, with the high reaching near 67 degrees. The wind will be from the northeast from five to ten miles.
Tonight will be cloudy and cool with the lipping to 37 to 41 degrees and the wind will be from the east at five to 15 mph.
saturday's outlook is cool with variably cloudy skies. The high should be in the mid-to-upper-60s.
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Notorious Gang Rumored to be Heading For Lawrence!!!
Alleged meeting for KANU Caper
STANLEY STREET CENTER
Unreliable sources have confirmed that the notorious outfit, PAUL GRAY AND THE GASLITE GANG, are heading for Lawrence, Kansas, this weekend for a KANU Caper. Leon "Big Spider" Beck, spokesman for the International Musicians Peacekeeping force, stated that the nationally infamous band of ruffians is reported to be planning the big caper this coming Saturday, Oct. 13, at 9:00 p.m. at PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE, 926 Mass., in downtown Lawrence. One of the band's mouthpieces, "Big Mike" McBeef, allowed that he has recently stolen several new tunes that he plans to display for his followers at the JAZZ PLACE. The gang's leader, Paul "Little Satchmo" Gray, has reportedly just returned from a wild speech in San Francisco, where he alledgedly
joined the west-coast based "Nob Hill Gang" for a few timely jobs. The 1920's speakeasy atmosphere of the Jazz Place has proven to be a perfect setting for the Gaslie Gang to hold forth, and club manager, Johnny "Big Stick" Moore, has announced that the Gang recently lifted a huge shipment of beer, peanuts, popcorn, soft drinks, and jazz music. In true gangland style, the JAZZ Place will be offering all of these (all you can consume) for the nominal fee of $6.00 at the door, $4.00 in advance. Advance tickets at the Jazz Place or University Music, 926 Mass., downstairs. Reservations can be made by calling 843-2644 and asking "Big Mike".
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Friday, October 12. 1979
3
Talmadge gets denounced
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate voted overwhelmingly yesterday to denounce Herman Talmade, one of its most senior attorneys, for "apprehensible" handling of government funds.
The 81-15 vote brought to a close months of investigation by the Senate Ethics Committee and a brief debate on the Senate floor. It was the first time the Senate has used the word "denounce" in expressing disapproval of the actions of one of its members.
SEN. ADLAI STEVENSON III, D-II,
chairman of the ethics panel, had urged
the Senate to accept the panel's resolution
of denunciation.
Both Kansas senators, Republicans Robert Dole and Nancy Kassebauer, voted "yes" in the roll call vote against Sen. Talmadge, D-Ga.
While Stewson listened the charges of financial misconduct against Talmadge, the Georgia Democrat sat quietly in the Senate chamber with his lawyer.
Immediately after the vote, Telmade took the floor to say that he had made mistakes of negligence and that he regretted them.
"I ACCEPT THE committee's criticism that the senators should be held to much higher standards of commonplace." Talmadge said. "In the past, I hardened heavy criticism at our meetings."
Talmadge could face further discipline from Democratic members of the Senate, who could strip him of his seniority and of his posts as chairman of the Agriculture Department, a second-ranking Democrat on the Finance Committee. But such action appeared unlikely.
SEN. HARRISON SCIMITT, R.N.M., the senior Republican on the ethics panel, said that based on historical precedents and conventions, he thinks the Maladie should be censured, not denounced.
speeches in Talmudine's defense. But Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., a longtime friend, and Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, asked Stevenson a series of questions focusing on the importance of testimony by Daniel Stevenson. Senator Daniel Stevenson, an administrative side and chief acuser.
MINCHEW, who has been sentenced to serve four months in prison on charges similar to those made against Talmage, has said he gave Talmage cash from a bank account that included campaign contributions and false expense funds.
Stevenson said the committee discovered that Talmadge had failed to report more than $10,000 in campaign contributions, but not all of them were from the illegal conversion of the funds.
In the first hour of debate, there were no
MALDAGE, who is running for re-election for a Fifth Senate term, has steadily maintained his innocence of any wrongdoing.
CHICAGO (UPF)—The head water of the reservoir was dried lasted 4 OCT. in Lawrence filed suit yesterday in Cook County Circuit Court for $1 million in damage for injuries he had taken to his head.
Train waiter
sues Amtrak
James Earl Smith, 84, Chicago, fell in the dining car as he worked and sustained internal and external injuries, his attorney said.
Smith, a railroad employee for 36 years, was in Mercy Hospital and listed in good condition; hospital officials said
Two persons died in the accident in which the train, bound for Chicago from Los Angeles, skipped the track causing 16 of its 18 cars to derail.
The suit charges Amtrak with operating the train above the 30 mph posted speed limit, and claims that the train is safe to operate, maintained, operated and controlled."
The train was making its eastbound run for the first time over its new route at the time of the derailment.
University Daily Kansan
Fidel Castro arrives in rare visit to U.S.
NEW YORK (AP)—Cuban President Fidel Castel, making his first trip to the United States in 19 years, flew into New York early evening amid tight security.
U. N. CHEIF of Protocol Aly Teymour greeted Castro, who was overheard to reply: "I'm happy to be in the U.S."
Castro's Russian-made Hybison-62 jet landed at 11:38 a.m. CDT on a remote runway at Kennedy International Airport, airport officials said.
The Cuban dictator, dressed in green fatigues, stuffed a cigar into his mouth and tipped his hat as he descended the stairs of the building. He is S.U.N. officials and security personnel.
the Cuban Mission in midtown Manhattan, during that was casting the city tens of thousands as his mission to thwart the costs of the Castro said during his flight here, "I am not there."
ABOUT 2,000 New York City police officers, many wearing helmets and bulletproof vests, joined Secret Service agents
and security guards from Havana to throw a protective ring around Castro's local headquarters.
It was far below the size of the 11,900-member police detail that spread out to the surface of the water. It was unsurpassed for the concentrated protection it afforded the bearded Cuban
POLICE KEPT 37 ant-Castro demonstrators, who marched and carried signs, a block away from the mission during Castro's arrival.
U. spokenkun Rudolf Staudhair said, "We were there on Friday and Assembly at noon today. Other details of the visit, including the length of his stay, were discussed and would be made public."
PLANS FOR THE visit have been shrunched in secrecy, partly due to the security problems associated with the Cuban leader.
U. N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim was not informed of the visit until last Friday, and Castro's arrival date was not announced until Wednesday.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanans editor's staff. Signed columns represent the views of
October 12. 1979
Water laws dry state
Kansas is running out of water. It no secret to many Kansas that water resources are being used up more quickly than they can be replenished.
By the year 2000, a state study shows, usage could increase by nearly 50 percent more.
And the reasons for the near critical shortage are not secret. Water usage, spurred by a big increase in crop production, big doubled between 1965 and 1972.
Add to the jump in irrigation the pollution of much water and—worst of all—the lack of planning for the day of rain. The result is that shortages reach crisis proportions.
A GOVERNOR's task force on water resources revealed that lack of planning was perhaps the prime problem in the state's current water problems.
"We're headed for real trouble if we don't do something about allocating water rights and restricting usage," says Kansas House Speaker Wendell Lady. "Perhaps this has been left too long to people with vested interests and they are not able to look at the whole picture."
One state水 official said that for years local irrigation districts, farmers, state politicians and others thought that individuals should
BUT KANSAS can no longer afford such an individualistic approach.
Indeed, water management is so fragmented statewide—22,000 local governments in Kansas have water management responsibilities that there seems to be no way to make sure they are made aware of policy decisions are made and enforced.
CONSEQUENTLY, candidates now have to deal with those best-treated issues and tough opponents in their campaigns—and these laws could very easily determine if a candidate wins or loses his seat.
manage their own water and that the state should keep its hands off.
In an attempt to make the presidential and congressional elections more equitable, Republicans failed to make the public well-being, important federal campaign finance laws were passed by Congress
TO BEGIN WITH, the laws require periodic complete and accurate disclosures of financial statements of a campaign. During an election, these disclosures have to be made every month.
JUST HOW to do that seems to be the real question. A series of public hearings is being conducted in the state to try to solve the problem.
Now is the time for the governor or the legislature to devise a statewide water management program—or at the very least a supervisory program—to make sure that the water supply crisis does not bring about the economic havoc that now seems possible, if not probable.
Although the laws were in effect during the 1976 presidential election, confusion and legal squabbles overshadowed their importance and function. But with the passing of three years, the bugs have been shaken out and the Republican Election Commission—or so it is hoped.
Finance laws reveal presidential qualities
Lack of attention has been the key phrase to describe state water management. But as water runs short, so does the time to correct the shortage. Controls are needed now more than ever.
The laws allow for federal matching of funds raised by a candidate who chooses to run his campaign under the guidelines of these laws. The candidate who chooses to raise all the money himself, however, is not allowed of the strict provisions in these laws.
This is important because the public can obtain information about fund contributors and if there are any ably connections between them. The laws also set limitations to the amount an individual can contribute to a fund against the misuse of funds—consequently limiting the possibilities that a candidate may have.
It appears as if candidates running for the presidency are willing to accept the burdens of these laws to receive federal funds to support the program, especially in these times of inflation.
Gov. John Carlin says he prefers to let local water management take that responsibility. But leadership must be provided to ensure cooperation among groups involved in water policy decisions in the state.
In fact, those who originally pushed for the campaign finance laws saw their effects as going beyond the campaign. Successful
These laws, which restrict spending for state primaries, require disclosure of campaign materials and provide funding on its types of contributions and provide for federal funds, are important for several reasons.
John COLUMNIST fischer
political candidates serve as public of-
fice that they artificially argue, would be less
likely to win in a primary, or grouped
groups and political action committees if
they were less dependent on them from the
But the new laws' most visible effect is in the way they affect candidates, campaign offices and state primaries that odds between candidates so that no one candidate has a clear advantage over another. For example, the laws have restrictions on how a primary election is allowed to spend on state primaries.
THIS, AS well as contribution guidelines and federal funding reduces the possibility of a wealthy candidate "buying" his way through large advertising expenditures.
Consequently, because all the candidates have about the same budget to work from, it is not appropriate for them to determine his success or failure—and this calls for intelligence and strategy and not mere experience.
Important decisions have to be made by the candidate concerning what primaries he will enter and how much he will stand on them. It is important having an important impact on his government.
IF THE CANDIDATE spends too much money on the early primaries, he could be out of money for crucial races down the road. But on the other hand, if he doesn't spend too much early in the campaign, he could be out of cash before he starts to make his strong push.
Judgment and strategy, then, determine who will be the victor, and not necessarily those who have been made to the public's conceptions. And these are two important characteristics for a pre-trial judge.
These campaign laws are important to the nation because they safeguard important opportunities for citizens and help in helping themselves than the country, and because they are essential to our ideas of
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
because it is so easy to imagine him sitting in his Sacrament flat, listening to his Rastoncain tapes and trying to meditate on some popliteal mood, probably an issue for me.
US$14,900 published by the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday during June, July and August and September days. Seventy-seven payable postage贴支付 for a monthly subscription to US$2,750 or a Douglas County and US$4 for six months or US$6 year outside the Douglas County. Market information and a student activity fee are addressed by the University of Kansas directly.
Some people will listen to him, and a few college students will work for him, and in many cases they will be unable. He will probably play a prominent if not overly important-role in the 1980s.
We haven't heard much from California Gov. Jerry Brown in recent months, and while we should be thankful for such a change, our time with the Zen-colored zonk-heel is here formalizing.
Instructor: Send changes to address to the University Daily Kusan. Print Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence KS59408
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HE HAS been there before. In 1976 he made a belated attempt to overtake Jimmy Carter, defeating him in five of the last six primaries. He drew a young president, and he easily-elected campaign in California, he seemed ready to push for the nomination again.
Whether he can sustain a campaign that can defeat Carter, the incumbent, or Kenyan President Obama, one thing is clear—what Brown has to offer the country is an ambling record of success.
He has tried to jump on bandwagons that would carry him into the spotlight and into the favor of special interest groups, disregarding whether they have liberal or conservative ideals. Using the word of the bandwagons he has worked with, he's "dangerous."
Brown picks issues to please all
Brown spent much of last year crussing for a constitutional amendment that would balance the federal budget. He was, in effect, clutching to the anti-tax law running through the country and acting accordingly to gain public acceptance.
HE DID, but only until the interest in the amendment died out and saner minds pointed out that the balanced budget would increase the American productivity or to encourage our stagnation. Brown quieted down even when it became clear that a constitutional amendment would tamper with our country's fundamental basis of law.
He still speaks of balancing the budget, but not with the frequency or conviction that he once did. He tries instead to demonstrate his own spending restraint by renting an apartment that is within walking distance of the college. Plymouth instead of the gubernatorial limousine and ordering all California bureaucats to buy their briefcases
In the same poll, 21 percent said they would vote for Brown, while 18 percent said they would vote for Carter. An overwhelming amount ~35 percent—expressed as 67 percent of people, we should be reminded, were from California, hardly a Kennedy stronghold.
BUT THEN, why should Californiaans rush to support Brown? He has been somewhat less than an effective ad-hoc effort — no one has seen it more closely than the governor. He received a balance-of-trade defect of $1.3 million when he took office in 1975. That deficit figure is now at $6.6 million. Even his campaigning has run in the red, as his deficits have increased by $1 million deficit he incurred while securing the governorship again in 1978.
david preston
BUT THEN YOU realize that he took three plane trips to the East Coast in the course of one month this past summer to talk about cutting waste and excess spending. He flew to Tokyo to reprint the Japanese for killing animals. And he went on to africa a ten-day "campaigning" called "netted him much national coverage."
rather than accept government-issue bags. All this, so he can look good.
COLUMNIST preston
Brown is trying to stay in the center of public attention, and he appears willing to do anything to stay there. He floats in and out of issues, wafting in the breeze, and then says he is successful if he has inked up a letter to his boss or to spark debate on it. There is certainly more to serving the public than sparking debate.
He has neither the record nor the strong base of support needed to defeat either Carter or Kennedy. He will appeal to some special interest groups such as the anti-immigrant groups, but the issues is something that most people will undoubtedly be able to see through.
CENTER BORN LAST LINDA JERRY BROWN 1979, KENNETH MCGULLEN
He will adopt a conservative attitude and cry for cuts in government spending, or he will take a liberal viewpoint and call for more investment in education and a conversion to sun or wind worship.
IT IS NOT that he seems sensible and is able to move左 or right to support a particular cause. Some politicians have believed that Brown sees to cling to issues that he can exploit for his own benefit. He was against Proposition 13 originally, but he figured that if they couldn't stop the cause in his own hands, might as well lead the national cause for it.
Amtrak revamp a triumph, not fiasco.
Regardless of his political non-alliance, he has not done much of anything as a public servant the past several years, and he should be judged accordingly.
Far from a "fiasco" and a "sham," the Amtrak Reorganization Act of 1979 is one of the few reasonable efforts at transportation reform. While it does have realistic view of Amtrak's limitations, and even makes it possible for Amtrak to pro-grade transportation service instead of more political lip service.
To The Editor:
In a poll this summer, conducted by a California-based organization of state colleges and publications, 45 percent of the Californians polled said they would not be given down for president because he had not done anything important as their governor.
And now the Kanse is proclaiming that she has been asked to act only two weeks in a financial crisis, and the Kanse's editorial shows some popular misconceptions about the role of the passenger train in transit.
Jim Cartwright St. Louis, Mo., senior
Tracing the history of the 1979 Act show it to be a triumph of representative government, not a "nisman." In a fit of voter hatred, Mr. Trump's signature saw Amrak as a place to save the taxpayer a few dollars (200 million less for Amrak is more politically useful than a few billion in real terms) and several concessions, both political and practical, were made, until the present Act emerged. Only the real losers were elimination markets that truly need the service still have it.
"Service?" Getting up in the middle of the night to ride a dirty, slow train is not easy if you are accustomed by the Lone Star (or any of the other cancelled trains). I'm not alone. The "service" that Attorney General Robert R. Sanders calls "the service only." It only strains Amrak's severely limited resources, which should, as an issue of law, be used where they will do the most good.
Trains are very energy-efficient and economical—for short and intermediate distances only. Over long distances, the long travel time (most train ages average 10 to 15 years) is sufficient for support services (meals, extra crewmen, etc.) necessary, which aren't cheap.
FAILING THAT, Antrak should be adequately compensated for running comparatively empty trains through comparatively empty markets.
THE GOVERNMENT'S role in running Antrak has proven that it is the only group more inpt at operating a rail system than the other companies, and thus more practical need, determine availability of service. Yearly fights over funding made Antrak less able to plan and maintain its term planning impossible. The 1979 Act provides long-term funding and removes some of the challenges specific to economic criteria for service.
Ticket prices for long-distance rail travel
Tickets need to cover actual costs. A 10-car
train carrying 600 people between, for ex-
tremely long distances, is three hours
necessary. An 18-car train carrying
150 people (with space for 600) bet-
ween Chicago and Los Angeles in 45 hours
is not. It is a luxury that Amrak can’t afford
unless the investment is increasingly reductant to subsidize.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Divergent opinions should be tolerated
To the Editor:
What I want to comment on is not the content but the spirit in which she wrote. That spirit was exemplified in her last speech, when she joined the other Birch Society members who joined them are to be commended for going on stage. Next time they may not be so eager to express their beliefs. And despite the hardships of the past year, we will all be the worse for their silence."
The Oct. 9 issue of the Kanan carrows is utter to the editor attacking the writer's use of a term from the article, "Biercher-Nade器 in Charade." The letter critically evaluated the content of the article.
I commend this kind of writing that says "I may disagree with you but I champion your right of expression and even encourage you to exercise it."
The怀念 of reference for my viewpoint is Jesus Christ. When I first read this article (Sept 28) I felt good about it and felt a little inspired. My heart led me to the letter helped me to identify my source point. It's from the Bible: II Corinthians, 3:17. It tells me that God is the spirit of the Lord, is there?
Melissa, I want you to keep writing in that same spirit of tolerance that I sensed in your article on Nader and the Bierchers. I feel that you have a great encouragement of divergent views.
Eddie Weber
Kansas City, Kan., graduate student
Anti-nuke violence justifiable, necessary
To the Editor:
Lynn Bycchyn's editorial of Oct. 9, "Violence Threatens Anti-Nuke Cause" is important to note. We have to and have to a turn-around-check attitude in the face of a life and death confrontation with a mult-million-dollar-a-year industry that needs our help and needs on this nation and to cover up its heavy investments, rapid and faulty growth, and other conditions for employees. And all of this to insure acceptance nuclear energy and all that the consent of the people of this land.
Meantioning the violent situations of Artica, Kent State, Watts and others. Byzycak admits that they had some impact on the people who had the support of the people involved."
Also, let me point out the irony of democratic-capitalist principles that allow us to impose a narrow set of nuclear interests at all costs and that cost may be your life. When "600 state troopers and national guardenom们 back the enemy," you are wearing nightsticks, this is a violent attack on human life and human rights. The mentality behind police and nuclear interests' scare tactics
WHY, THEN, did 1,500 people try to "violently" cut through the fence at Seabearock and occupy the nuclear plant to stop its construction? Obviously the people involved supported what they were doing and knew the consequences involved—violation, aimed at them. From whom? The police have said that the police have to represent and protect.
WHO WILL dare to protest nuclear energy now?
Lynn Byczyski probably does not know about the years of peaceful protest tactics she has seen in recent demonstrations finds the back page of the news, not because she was an activist, but because they represent a minority, because that is where the promise business interests need them—of outlaws.
This movement against nuclear energy that started as study groups, information tables, community group presentations and scientific discussions escalated to sit-ups, an exercise in public demonstrations because pro-kuke proponents continue to silence the truth about nuclear dangers.
BUT EVER if the pro-drive violent tactics main肌 nicks opponents driving to appointments with news reporters to tell about them, you might be silkwalked, or if they smokebomb, mace or club肌 nicks, the anti-nike movement will never cease to outline correctly and honestly the truths about muscular violence that will have on all our lives, not just property.
This escalation of determined and aggressive tactics to counter the pro-nuke violent offense and the horror of the full scale of warfare demands that the proponents is why "it is so important for
every citizen to get informed and get Involved."
Rhonda L. Neugebauer
This struggle is essentially one of unpolice (state) "responsibility" to protect the property rights of the nuclear vested interest groups with the human rights of the health and environment of the rest of the population in this "land of the free."
Lawrence graduate student
To the Editor:
Word interpretation is arbitrary process
I am writing in response to the letter by the Rev. Dr. Vern Barnet published in the Oct. 9 Kansan letters.
I sympathize with the Reverend's problem because I have been in similar situations myself. However, I would like to point out the following:
1. Language is absolutely arbitrary.
2. One of the basic requirements for successful communication is a shared consensus.
3. There is no obvious relationship between a given word and the meaning commonly attached to that word, other than the relationship dictated by a consonant (e.g., the sound of "mean," which is in turn dictated by usage of that word. For example, the word "cow" has virtually nothing to do with the animal that it does, except for the fact that we say it does.
BECAUSE WORDS are symbolic representations of things, exegesis (the art of interpreting or explaining) is an inherently arbitrary process.
This being the case, the Rev. Barnet's IHP professors, just like everybody else, including the Reverend, are free to interptert anything and everything as they see fit.
We must not be misled by the illusion that is created whenever man is placed in a position, such as a teacher, in which he is said to "know" something. Because language is arbitrary, and often requires a special consensus (a form of which is scholarly). A word can be used any meaning derived from the use of language must also be arbitrary in nature.
Steve Pritchard
save Pichañar
Oklahoma City, Okla., senior
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be addressed to the editor and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is at home, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. They should also right in the edit letters for publication.
Friday, October 12, 1979
5
Club honors ex-lettermen
By BRETT CONLEY Staff Reporter
In less than three years, the K-Club, which comprises former athletic letter winners, has become one of the most popular organizations of its kind anywhere.
Kom TViviko, secretary-treasurer of the K-Club, said that KU's club, which was reinstated three years ago, was now larger than organization at other Big Eight schools.
Only the University of Texas has a letterman's club more active than KU's, Klivisto said.
The secret to much of the success, Kivisto said, has been finding past letter winners.
"About 70 percent of addresses we have for former lettermen are wrong." Kiviste said, "So we just ask people who know us and the athlete is in to tell us. We will find them."
According to Otto Schnellbacher, Topeka, who was elected the first K-Club president two years ago, KU has never had a K-Club of alumni members.
SCINELLBACHER SAID that when he lettered in football at KU in 1947 and 1948, the K-Club was a campus organization
made up of active KU athletes. It died out in the early 1950s.
"Some of the things we originally wanted to do with the new organization were to let the old lettermen know they are not forgotten," he said. "We also try to sell the young men and women lettermen on our website and help the University through our club."
Kivisto said that the K-Club gamed a more solid foundation this year when Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, gave the team training and office, where athletic records are kept.
The club now has about 500 members, Kivisto said, which is a 200 percent increase in membership in the past eight months.
"Our membership cost $20 of a year finances the rings presented to the seniors each spring and helps to pay mailing costs." "We provide our membership fee can actually save money for former athletes because they have both season football and basketball tickets.
BOB BILLINGS, who was elected this year's president at the annual K-Year, said the club hoped to make progress in several areas.
"Our main goal will be to begin work on the project for development of a recruiting and K-K club房. "Billings said. "It would be great if we could K-K club and help with recruiting athletes."
"We also want to start fund-raising efforts for the Dean Nesmith scholarship fund, and we want to make a better effort to current athletes find summer jobs."
The two immediate purposes of the club, Billings said, are to support the athletic department and to recognize past achievements of letter winners.
FOR THE FIRST time in its short history, KClub might open membership to women because of the merger of the merger and the awarding of K-letters to women.
"As far as I'm concerned there will be no problem, and they will be welcome as soon as they graduate," Schnellmother said. "I'm forward to work joining the group."
However, Billings said the women letter winners might not want to join the K-Club.
"They may want to start their own organization," Billings said, "because they don't have the tradition the men have, and they may not be invested in it."
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Make an appointment to give blood
Register October 15-19
DON'T FORGET...
Where: Residence Halls Scholarship Halls Fraternities/Sororities
In front of the Union Oct. 18 & 19
This fall the KU Blood Drive will be by appointment and
walk-ons are discouraged because of lack of time and space.
The Bood Drive will be in the Union Ballroom October 22. 23 & 24 Sponsored by Panhellenic and the Interfraternity Council.
"VANITY OF VANITIES, SAITH THE PRECHERMAN VANITY OF ANIMALS; ALL IS VANITY." This quote is from the book *God's Message to all men for time in David's son*, king in Jerusalem. He powerful, he is rich, he is wise, and he has a position to do or get anything done with his hands. The things that things done under heaven until he might see what was that good for the sons of men, which they should do under God, were made by him. He already know, have made our decision and are on our way with more or less success in the eyes of men. "The Lord Seeks outward appearance, but the Lord Looks on the heart."
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
"Who hath woe? who hath sorrow? who hath contentions?
Who hath babbling? who hath wounds without cause? who
hath redness of eyes? They that tarry at the wine they
put them to a fire. They that tarry at the wine they
put them to a fire. When it is red, when it ghettes his colour in the cup, when it movest itself aright. At last it bites like a serpent, and stingeth like an adder. Their tines shall behold strange
He made great works, and built houses. He put his hand on the leaves of trees, shaking them out of oak hardsides of all kinds of fruit trees with pools of water for the fruit.
He tried out himself and pleasure-doubles him got together the comedians, actors, etc. to entertain him and his friends.
wives, princesses, and 300 concubines. He had the finest wives in the world; they were never there. He gathered silver and gold and pearl treasures of kings and the princes. He gathered together the monarchs of all the kingdoms of instruments, bands, orchestras, etc. He became great and insured; whatever his eye desired he kept him in insurance; whatever his eyes desired he kept him in withheld any joy from his heart. The Queen of Sheba came to see his earth and hear his wisdom. She said she did not believe the heavens, but after seeing the "hall had not
He got servants and maidens and had servants born in his own house-probably siring some of them as he had 700
University Daily Kansan
What was the reaction to all three experiences that delight her sons of men? They looked on all the works I had done, and they loved them. She held no behold, all was vanity and vacation of spirit, and there was no way to remedy some of the vastness and ways to remedy somewhat the vastness and joy of all a good name is better than riches and fear; work and provide for your own self and family and enjoy in the good gifts of life.
He says to young people: "Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth, I will bless you with thy days of thuy, and walk in the ways of thiny heart, and in thy eyes; but know that for all those things God will bring into their Judgment-Remember now thy Creator in the days of
FAIR GOD, AND KEEP HIS COMMANDMENTS; FOR
THIS IS THE WHOLE DUTY OF MAN.
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
Fund-raisers to bike, run, walk
BY ANN LANGENFELD Staff Reporter
Bikers, runners and walkers will compete next weekend for charity.
The Lawrence Cosmopolitan clubs are sponsors a Bike and Run-a-thon Day Oct. 20 to raise funds for diabetes research.
use the forms to register for the race.
Registration fee for the runners will be $5.
Staff Reporter
In addition, the Church World Service will be holding its annual CROP Walk for the Hungry Oct. 21 to raise funds for the Food for Life charity and to aid the hungry around the world.
Registration forms for the Bike and Run-a-thon Day are available at the KU Intrafetrahythm Council, Rusty's IGA stores, Goods Goods, Merris Sports and local banks.
Bikers will use the forms to solicit pledges for each mile they plan to ride. Runners will
THE 5-MILE BIKE ride will begin at a.m. at Dearfield School, 101 N. Lawrence Ave. Eight prizes donated by local mercredi-based on the amount of money they collect.
Rest and aid stations will be provided along the route.
The 10,000-meter run will begin at 1:30 p.m. at Geerfield School, with registration beginning at 7:45 a.m. Runners will compete by age and sex, but trophies will be awarded on the basis of the performance.
For the walkers the next day, the 20,000-meter event will begin in a 1 p.m. at bromen Arrow Park, 3rd and Louisiana streets. The walkers will be joined by a man who will make a donation for each mule walk.
KATHEY VAN REEKUM, one of the coordinators of the walk, said the coordinators were urging sponsors to contribute $1 per mile.
She said about 200 people had participated in past walks.
Registration information is available from Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners and at the Lawrence Journal-World.
Lenore Taliaferro, Emergency Services Council coordinator, said that the council makes contributions to people who are threatened contributions to people who are threatened.
Roadstar RS-2500GPU Car Stereo
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AUGUST 1972
THE RIGHT CHOICE
A limited number of graduates will join Alexander Grant & Company this year to begin careers in public accounting, taxes, and construction, among other serious reasons, most having to do with our size.
We're an international firm. Fifty plus years old. Respected by our peers, Profitable, Growing, Dynamic.
But compared to the competition, we're not a huge professional establishment. Our name isn't a household word. We're not what you'd call an institution.
That's appealing to many new graduates—those who see that the size of an organization often is a key to things like responsibility, achievement, and professional satisfaction.
When you're a good firm but smaller than your Big "B" competitors, you select new staff members with extraordinary care, and you expect each one to take hold fast. There's no alternative, because everybody counts—nearly.
Alexander Grant
And that's the kind of working environment that talented, energetic people like. If you are one of them, we'd like to talk with you when our volunteers are on campus or OC TOBER 16TH.
Grant COMPANY
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6
Friday, October 12, 1979
university Dany Kansan
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 12, 1979
2
Tight job market expected
By TED LICKTEIG
Staff Renorter
May graduates can expect a tight job market next spring because of the current recession's effects on the economy. Ronald Lipsky, professor of economics, said yesterday.
Olsen said there would fewer jobs available because there usually was less expansion in business and industry during a recession.
In addition to affecting May graduates, the recession also is expected to affect students still in school, according to Darwin University's Economic Research for Economic and Business Research.
"It will be tougher to find a part-time job. Summer construction jobs will be very difficult to find. And students will have less money to buy their pizza and beer." Diachoff
HE SAID LESS money would be available because of the high interest rates imposed by the Federal Reserve Board. The most expensive rate was 12.5%. Fees raised its discount rate to 12 percent.
The discount rate is the amount of interest the Fed charges on loans to member banks.
an all-time high, just 19 days after it was raised to the new record of 11 percent.
Earlier this week, Vernon Geissler, director of the University Placement Center at the university he was confident that students would have an unemployment rate that is expected to be more than 3 percent later this year. He had warned that students in job choice and location should find jobs.
Wayne Angell, professor of economics at the University of Michigan, received the Federal Reserve Board in Washington City. Ms. said the recession's effect on students would be lessened because they were insulated by a stronger economy.
However, he said, parents would feel the effects.
effects.
"There will be about a three-month period where credit will be very tight," he said.
Olsen said the Federal Reserve's policy of high interest rates as a tool against inflation would "shut down the housing industry."
and it would not cut the high cost of one of the main causes of inflation: foreign oil.
BUT HE SAID, as the value of the dollar for foreign exchange markets, American property in overseas markets, which, in turn, will help stabilize the country's balance of trade.
He said a recent Gallup poll showed Americans favored wage-price controls.
But Olsen said it was very difficult to predict what was going to happen in the economy.
But Daicoff disagreed. "People are willing to trade a little free enterprise for security."
One alternative that some people advocate is a return to mandatory wage-prec controls, which, Olsen said, will only delay the problem of skyrocketing inflation, he
I imagine all of the forecasters are changing their numbers now. Right now, we don't know how many people are unemployed. We don't know what they were last month."
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CIVILIAN CAREERS WITH THE NAVY
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- MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
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KU Med Center program funds myriad of health care agencies
- AUTOMATIC TEST SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY
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volunteer clearinghouse, Letha Swank program associate, said.
MILITARY CENTER
The clearinghouse, which is housed in the community building, 115 West 11th St. (920) 368-7340. Anne Moore, PTA volunteer, said, Many the clearinghouse volunteers work a day.
Kevin is 4 years old.
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
When he entered pre-school he was given an audio test and possible hearing defects were detected. His parents were told to take him to a hearing specialist.
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
Staff Reporter
in is 4 years old
Months later after undergoing treatment, Kevin's problems have diminished and he can enter kindergarten with a normal hearing ability.
Center, provides communities with money to invest in health care programs.
The ROR program, run by the community health department at the Med
Kevin's hearing problems were detected early through a special screening program that University of Kansas Medical Center's University of Kansas Medical Grant Program.
Initiated in 1971, ROR grants have been invested in health services to the elderly and children. Training for parenting, voluntary clinics for mental health in rural areas, and expanded training programs.
GRANTS OF UP to $500 are given to four or five community agencies annually, Wynona Hartley, program director, said.
In 1973, a $250 grant from ROR was given to the Lawrence PTA to start a
"ROR gave us a starter grant and it helped so much in getting the program going." Moore said.
The program is funded through private donations, federal grants and qon'tributions from volunteer action organizations.
SHE SAID the program hoped to attract more KU students this year.
DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER
Moore said that the PTA program had not grown much since its inception, but that it had become "well-established."
Most ROR grants, however, are distributed to Kansas City area agencies, Swank said.
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WHAT:
Urban Plunge
WHEN:
The Plunge is an Urban learning experience designed to expose students to the realities of living in a big city with minimal resources. We will test social service agencies for their effectiveness, question personal and societal values, and explore the rules and power structures, which govern our lives.
Thursday, October 18. 4:00 p.m. until Saturday, October 20
WHERE:
St. Mark's Church, 1101 Euclid, Kansas City, Missouri
INFORMATION:
i *Register and pick up information packs call or stop by the KU-Y office, 110B Kansas Anderson, 864-3761 or call Tracy Spellman at 841-5484
Information packets will be available in the KU-Y Office. The group will be limited to 25, on a first come, first serve basis. The deadline for registration is Tuesday, Oct. 6.
SPONSOR: KU-Y
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8
Friday, October 12, 1979
University Daily Kansan
TOUCHDOWN
Pioneer
Car Speakers
TS-698 Super co ax 6.19. 40 watts
power capacity. 20 oz. magnet.
List $129.95 pr.
$59.95
pr.
All other Pioneer speakers are 25% off.
sale
This weekend, we're kicking off Fall with a ground-gaining sale that's going to be a real crowd-pleaser! Check out these special bargains and tune into KLZR-106 for Mike Schmidt's live broadcast from TEAM Saturday!
NELSON'S TEAM ELECTRONICS
RECEIVERS
Fisher RS-2002
20 watts per channel with 5-band graphic equalizer. Req. $299^{*}$
$149^95
Fisher RS-2003
30 watts per channel with 5-band graphic equalizer, Reg. $349*
$239⁹⁹
Fisher DC 00044
$299^{95}$
Sanyo Plus 55
45 watts per channel with 5-band graphic equalizer and power output meters. Reg. $449^{1}$
55 watts per channel with digital tuning and D.C.
amplifier. Rep. $499^{*}$
$339⁹⁵
Sanyo Plus 75
75 watts per channel with digital tuning and D.C.
amplifier, $649*$
J.V.C.JRS-201
$299^85
35 watts per channel with 5-band equalizer and D.C. amplifier. Reg. $399*$
ALL FISHER HOME SPEAKERS ARE 50% OFF
From $79.95/pr. and up.
15 models to choose from.
AUTO SOUND SPECTACULAR
In-dash AM/FM stereo cassette or 8-
track with choice of 5¼" or 6x9"
speakers. Complete with installation.
$99
Reg. Value $200
System is covered by Nelson's one-year warranty.
SUNLITE
AUDIO-TECHNICA PHONO CARTRIDGES 50% OFF
All Audio Technologies are 50% off. incl the original Shiksha Stylus as low as $49.99. Other cartridges and turntable and tuning kit.
BOTTLE TAPE DISC MASTERING PLATINUM
TURN-
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Fisher MT-6310
Belt drive semi-automatic with pitch and strobe
Reg. $149^{*}$
$69⁹⁵
JVC JL-AII
Belt drive Semi-automatic turntable. Reg. $129^{93}
Technics SL-B2
Technics SL-B2
Bront drive semi-automatic with pistol and strobe.
Front panel controls. Reg. $149^{*}$
Sanyo Plus Q-40
Direct drive with Quartz fully automatic with front panel controls and ultra low mass tone arm. Reg.
Sony PSX-20
Direct drive with Quartz fully automatic with digital display, Reg.$209^{95}$
Includes the following name brand equipment:
Sanyo 190 watts per channel receiver, Quanta 500 belt-drive tunable, AudioTechnica Pro-11E cartridge, Fife 2-way speakers. Rsq $500 value.
$299
NELSON'S COMPONENT SYSTEM
$179^{95}
PAPERBACK BOOKS
HOME SPEAKERS
Sony SSU-1070
10"² 2-way Bookshelf speaker. Reg. $199"/PR.
$99^{95}$/PR.
Synergistics S-22B
8" 2-way bookshelf speaker. Reg.$129^{94}$ Ea.
$79^{95}$/PR.
Synergistics S-23
8" 2-way with 8" Passive Radiator. Reg. $159a Ea.
J.V.C. SK-1000 S
12" 3-wait with 170 watt power capacity, Mid-range and treble control. Reg.$299*$Ea.
$299^{95}/PR.
Bose 301
2-way bookshell with energy control. Reg.
$260^{98}$PR.
$209^{95}/PR.
2
TAPE DECKS
JVC KD-10
Front load cassette deck with Dolby and Peak reading L.E.D.S. reg.$249^{*}$
$179^{95}$
Sonv TC-KZA
Front load cassette deck with Dolby and ferrite heads. Reg. $279.$^{41}$
$199^{95}$
Fisher CR-4027
Fisher CR-4027
Front load cassette deck with Dolby. This deck is two speed for greater fidelity. Reg. $329$15}$
$249^{00}$
Sanyo RD-5035
Front load cassette deck with Dolby. This deck is metal tape ready. Reg. $219⁹
Sanyo Plus D45
Front load cassette deck with Dolby, metal tape and electronic display. Req. $299**
$239^9.5
CAR STEREO
CAR STEREOS
Audiovox CAS-250
In-dash AM-FM stereo cassette with locking fast forward. Rev. $129^{14}$
$79.99
Audiovox CAS-450
$119^95
Sanyo FT-489
In-dash AM-FM stereo cassette with locking fast-forward, rewind, and four-way speaker control.
in-dash AM-FM stereo cassette with locking fast-
speaker control, speak control and push-button tuning. Repr $249.
$169^{95}$
Sanvo FT-642
Sanvo FT-642
Mini-size chassis for all import cars. Full featured unit with auto. reverse. Reg. $189^{*}$
$119^{95}
Magtone MGT-205
5 Band Graphic equalizer with 20 watt per channel, used by speaker control and bypass system. Reg. $129*14
$59^{95}$
Pioneer AD-312
$39^{95}$
Concept PB-6000
Power Booster with 12 watts per channel. Bypass switch. Reg. $69^{13}$
Power booster with 30 watts per channel. Bass and Trebel control. Reg. £79⁹¹
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University Daily Kansan
Friday. October 12, 1979
9
Moslem women wear chador for devotion
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The chador is no prison, University of Kansas Moslem women say.
The chadar is a long, usually dark-colored veil that is worn by Moslemen women to show modesty to Islam.
"We wear the chador by choice," Zorah Kushner said of her daughter Sharirazir, Iran, graduate student, "Nothing in the Koran (the Islamic Bible) says we must wear it. It only says to dress ourselves."
She said wearing the chador was not an imprisonment - it was only a way for a woman to show her devotion to Islam.
"With the chatter," she said, "men look at the mind of a woman, not her body. Therefore, a woman is not a toy in the hands of men."
The meagherly furnished room that she, her husband, her friend and her six-year-old son sat in fit the Islamic ideal of frugality.
The large white-washed living room had only a sofa, chair and coffee table, a small bookcase and a small kitchen table with four chairs.
Nothing adorned the walls.
Karuna's wife kept a constant tone as she discussed the Islamic way of life. You ask about our freedoms being taken away by the West, and they tell her the freedom," she said. "In the West, women spend lots of time dressing and putting on makeup. In Moslem countries, women do not have to worry about such things, and we also learn other things in the time not spent dressing."
"A classic piece of erotica . . . It's the finest blue movie I've ever seen. It is inventive, oriental, and highly erotic."
SHE SAID IT "made sense" to dress modestly because it saved time and brought a woman more respect.
She said she had had no problems adjusting to the life in the United States. "I do what I've always done," she said.
A Moslem woman from Kuwait, who would give only her first name, Banafsheh,
"Women are commanded in the Koran to dress modestly," she said.
said from beneath her dark blue chador that she agreed the chador was not a prison.
One Iranian woman, who would not give her name, said she disagreed with Moslew women about the need for modesty.
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"Why should I be forced to wear clothes I don't want to wear? she asked. "It goes against my rights."
SHE WAS WEARING blue jeans and a tight-fitting blouse.
She said she was not planning to return to Iran because "she could not live in that place the way it is now."
Karimi dismissed the woman's comments as comine from a "nonbeliever."
She said media "misrepresentations" had caused the American people to know little about other countries.
According to Hussein Yagh, one of the leaders of the KU Moslem Student Association, there are about 600 Moslim students at KU-200 of them.
It did not take long before Karimi's conversation turned to politics.
"That is why you had to ask why I wear the chador," she said.
The American media does not give the
"OUR AYATOLLAH KOMEINI is made to look like a murderer, not like the great man he is."
right information to the American people," she said.
Tonight's program will include "Souma II in F Major" by handel, James Bastia "Concerto" and "Concertino" by the Japanese composer Toshi Muraumi.
chesters in Waco, Texas and Lansing, Mich. She has given solo performances in Los Angeles, Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas. She has worn the ensemble with the Kansas City Philharmonic.
The percussionist, Linda Makey, a Texas musician, was 64 years old and gave her first major performance in Madison Square Garden for a convention of the International Kiwis.
Marimba player to perform here
Maxey will be accompanied by Alice Downs, associate professor of piano, and by James Moees, dean of the School of Fine Arts and the University organist.
A Lawrence percussionist who has played with symphony orchestras throughout the country will give a marimba recital at 8 tommits in Swaraght Recital Hall.
A marima is a percussion instrument similar to a xylophone, and is used in many symphonies orchestras. Maxev said.
KANSAN Police Beat
Maxey has played with symphony or-
LAWRENCE POLICE INVESTIGATED a burglary yesterday and reported that officers had destroyed a large quantity of marijuana on Wednesday.
A 1806 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, valued at $39,000 was taken from the library at time of arrest. Tuesday evening or Wednesday morning, police reported. About $2,000 worth of伤物.
In addition, a 1980 Pontiac that was parked in a service stall received an estimated $450 worth of damage.
ON WEDNESDAY, POLICE were called to a vacant house in the 200 block of Haskell Avenue by water department employees and members of marijuana while checking meters.
When police arrived they discovered seven more bundles, weighing between 20 and 40 pounds, in a tree near the house. The police noted, the value of which was not determined.
KLZR
106
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3216 Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas
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rare jazz films
with film historian bob deflores
benny goodman
count basie
billie holiday
glenn miller
charlie parker
lester young
miles davis
2
billie holida
glenn miller
wednesday, october 17 7:30pm
woodruff auditorium $100
sponsored by: SUA films, african studies, KANU-fm.
radio-tv-film
The Castle Tea Room
1307 Massachusetts
Reservations 843-1151
flores
liday
miller
charlie parker
lester young
miles davis
Jay Bowl
9 Ball Tournament Race To Five
single elimination Open To KU Students & Staf.
Oct.13,1979
2:00 p.m.
Entry Fee $5.00 60% prize fund
1st Place 50%
2nd Place 30%
3rd Place 20%
Sign Up At The Jay Bowl
Deadline Friday Oct. 12, 6:00 p.m.
H
KANSAS UNION
Jay Bowl
A VENUE FOR ENTERTAINMENT
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free nut or fruit topping any size dish.
PRIVATE CLUB Lawrence, Kansas presents
HIDEOUT
JIMMY CLANTON
JIMMY CLANTON
October 18 and 19
First show starts at 9 p.m.
$4.50 advance, $5.50 at door
530 Wisconsin
Call 843-9851 for more information
1985
"GO
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GO"
"Letter to an Angel"
"TEENAGE MILLIONAIRE"
"A Part of Me"
"Another Sleepless Night"
"My Own True Love"
THE ROYAL
774057A
10
Friday, October 12, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Arts and Entertainment
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Actor trades KU for Hollywood follows first role back to Kansas
By ELLEN IWAMQTO
Staff Reporter
ALINA~The huge cameras swing around to focus on the actors, lights are adjusted, the man stand his head and make-up are smoothed on the actors faces.
"Quiet on the set, ready. And roll, rolling." the director calls.
A hush falls over the set as all heads turn toward the actors.
Off-camera one of the lead actors sits wearing blue jean cowboy boots and a kilt. The camera is on a tripod, Tenuizow 18, looks as if he still belongs in a classroom in Wescoe Hall instead of on a desk.
But when Teinowitz tossed aside thoughts of books, tests and term papers at KU five months ago to pursue an acting career in the film industry, he would bring him right back to Kansas.
"I was dropping out to become one of hundreds in Los Angeles waiting to be in TV and the movies," he said.
TEINOWITZ LEFT school after his freshman wear at KU last spring.
"I was hoping that if I worked really hard for three years in auditions I could make it," he said.
But Teinowitz skipped the usual months of knocking on doors and asking for auditions. She worked in a movie one of six leads in a cinema about life in a military school. The movie is titled "Brave
In a film similar to "Animal House," a comedy about fraternity life. Teninow has the part of a teenage psychotic pyramidman who "relieves his tensions by destruction."
"I'd like to think some talent was involved in the getter, the rule," Teinozit said, "but basically it was being in the right place at the right time."
AFTER LEAVING school, Teinowitz first to Lincoln where he brought an agent, Liam, to the library. He videotaped an audition that was sent out to directors, including Robert Downey, the director of *The Pink Panther*.
“After call backs,” he said, “I got the part.”
Teinowitz admitted he was "petrified" when he first received the part.
"Scared is an understatement," he said,
"I learned the lines the second I got the script."
Teinowitz said he was glad he had finished a year of college, but, as it happened, he was three years ahead of his schedule.
"If I was going to be a doctor or a lawyer I'd go to college. But I'm an actor, and if you're good you're good and you'll make it. Otherwise, forget it."
Salinans starstruck by filming at military school
SALINA—The bright lights and the sound of the band from California to Kansas this month when Warner Brothers, Inc., a major motion picture studio, began shooting a movie.
The film, a comedy about the escapades of five students in a military school, is tentatively titled "Brave" by M. C. Eaton and Helen O'Reilly are an Arab sheil's son, a wealthy black preacher's, a psychotic pyramidian, a Mafia leader's son, and an "All-American" boy. They find themselves pitted against the commandant of the school.
Ralph Macchio, Wendell Brown, Harry Teinowitz, Tom Citera and Hutch Parker play the five young men. Only one. They are all on a very lowly wood experience, that in commercials
BETTER-KNOWN actors in the film include Ron Liebman, who wrote an television show "Kaz"; Antonio Fargas, who played the nemesis of "Sarkey and Hutch"; and Barbara Bach, who played the nemesis of James Bond in the film "The Spy Who Loved Me."
The film is scheduled for release in the summer of 1980.
Although most of the film is being shot
at St. John's Military Academy in Salina, other scenes are filmed at private homes, the Salina airport, Marymount College and the country club.
The novelty of having big-name stars and a movie company in town has had a predictable effect on Salina.
"People went crazy," Tim Baughman, a Salina resident, said. "When the company opened up auditions for bitches in real life, about 20 people showed up."
Another resident, Larry Carroll, was asked to play the part of a chauffeur in the film.
Before filming began, Warner Brothers arranged a "Holywood Night" to introduce many of the actors to the townpeople.
"I've been kidding my friends a lot about 'A Star is Born,'" he said.
No one could deny the thrill of being around the magic of Hollywood.
A desk clerk at the motel, Leonia Jackson, answered a call on the switchboard from Kate Jackson, formerly of the television show "Charlie's Angels," Jackson was
The switchboard operator asked her if she was the "kate Jackson," Dreyer said. When Jackson confirmed it, he just said, "Wow."
ALTHOUGH HIS decision apparently was the right one, Teinowitz said, initially he was "excommunicated" from his family.
"I was frowned upon in my family," he said, "because my parents persisted in their education and it was good for them. So they thought I should stay in school."
The stigma of being a college dropout stuck with Teinowitz for a while.
"That I was a college dropout preceded everything I did," he said. "Some people looked down on me but some of my friends didn't care."
Teinowitz said he became interested in theater and acting as a freshman in high school.
and he may have tradition in his favor as a graduate of Nrier Tier East High School in Winnebago, Ill., where Rock Hudson, Hugh Lennon and Cern and Clinton Heston were graduated.
Until the movie is released this summer, Teinovich said, he will wait for other film offers and try to get another agent in Los Angeles.
But more than one aspiring actor's dream bubble has been burst in Hollywood and Teinewitt said, "I could bomb."
"R:t this is my shot in the dark, my opportunity; he said. "I'll like pinch-hitting." I thought it was a mistake. Five years from now no one could have heard of me or I could be a regular on the radio."
Sometimes, Teinowitz said, he does miss the life of a college student.
"When I lived in Nisquam Hall," he said. "I would be 30 people I could talk to. Working at 12-hour day six days a week is pretty strenuous and it also cuts out my social interactions."
Teinowitz is getting a taste of what fame could be like while he is filming in Salina.
"It freaks me out when people come up to me and ask for my autograph," he said. "I don't think I'm anything special."
SATURDAY, JULY 12TH AT THE LOUIS VUITTON STUDIO
Powerful play
Mike Sokolsky, Overland Park graduate student, portrays one of the terminally ill characters in the film *Saturday Night*. Mr. Cristoforoff, which opens at the University Theatre at Murray Hall, brings his story to life.
Museum revives Zorn's etchings
Staff Reporter
By AMY HOLLOWELL
The etchings of Swedish artist Anders Andersson virtually ignored his since death in 1920, (1920), United States exhibition of his work in 30 years at the Helen Spencer Spencer Institute.
The etchings will be displayed until Nov. 18.
Organized by Elizabeth Broun, Spencer Museum curator of prints and drawings, and funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, the exhibition of 75 etchings opened Sunday. It is the first U.S. show to be accepted by an English exhibition catalog.
Brown said the exhibition was brought to KU to "bring to light again" Zorn's work because he was one of the most acclaimed artists of the century and had since been overlooked.
ZORN'S WORKS are characterized by light and dark areas, without hard, defining lines in a Brambard-like style. Broun said. His etchings are primarily portraits of elites in government and society, including three members and members of the Swedish royal family.
"In his era, he was perhaps the most popular printmaker," Brouad. "At his peak in the early 1900s his prints were more priced than prints of Rembrandt's work."
Zorn was born in 1860 in Mora, Sweden,
and was reared there by his grandparents
before leaving for England when he was 21.
He was educated at a painting while he
learned the skills of fishing.
He soon became known in Europe for his portraits of the affluent and of young women.
IN 1893 he first ventured to the U.S.
where many wealthy citizens commissioned his portraits and many collectors sought his work. Among those he did portrayed of were Winston Churchill, Theodore Roosevelt and William Taft.
"He was extremely well-liked." Brunn said. "It's significant in an era of snobery, a man of such humble beginning was able to move about freely in that society."
However, in 1896, Zorn returned to his humble life in Mora. He used rusk耐湿 subjects in his work and studied the nude with both artificial and natural surroundings.
In Mora, he collected contemporary work and Swedish folk art, and established an archive of early Danish art from day as day at Zorn's Garden. He continued his work and trained until his death at the peak of his career.
HIS POPULARITY then waned, Broun said, because there was a revolution in taste and a shift away from the aristocratic lifestyle.
After the show's驻 at the Spencer Museum, it will go to the Sterling and Francis Johnson Library of the University of Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA, and the Flint Institute of Arts, Athens.
Since then, Zorn's work has not been featured in a major exhibition and nothing about Zorn and his work has been published in English. Broun said.
Broun said she thought the exhibition would be successful because it was enjoyable and because it had significance as a revival of an artisted victim.
"Thus his work just was not suited to the tastes of the next generation." she said.
At the same time, the world became engulfed in economic depression and his work was buried.
Broug A. Gerhardt
"Girl with a Cigarette," an 1881 etching by Swedish artist Anders Zorn, is included in the revival of 75 of the artist's works now at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
Etcher's art
'Shadow Box' story of life close to death
By KATE POUND Staff Renorter
If it is possible to celebrate life while dealing with death, KU's production of "The Shadow Box" is doing it, one cast member said Wednesday.
The play opens tonight at 8, in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. It also will be performed tomorrow and Oct. 18, 19 and
Tom Swift, Prairie Village senior, who is a dying man in Michael Cridder's death, has been left behind than any other I've seen, seems to bring death to corpses without getting brutal.
Directed by John Gronbeck-Tedesco, associate professor of theatre, the play will be performed at the terminally ill. Three dying patients, their families and friends deal with their grief, anger and anger in segments of the play; they interview with a hospice staff member.
THE SEGMENTS treat the characters' feelings, according to Groneck-Tedesco, as they grieve and rejoice with each other. The actors are often encouraged in the play have made it hard for some of the actors to deal with their roles because they were made to moods quickly and realistically so they
"That makes it difficult for the actors. It can appear to be phony without psychology and the ability to communicate. I would say that the range emotions is a problem for any actor," he said. These actors are meeting the audience, very artistically and professionally.
Gorbeckeb Tedescho said the cast did special acting exercises and develop some of the feelings that dying persons and their families might have. They worked on falling
exercises to give the actors the feelings of anxiety and vulnerability that dying people often experience. Actors were also blinded by stares, and were isolated of the terminally ill, he said.
"THERE'S A lot in the play dealing with people trying to reach each other but not being able to." Grumbeck-Tedesco said.
According to Cheryl Rawlings, Prairie Village junior, the roles demand a great deal of energy and emotion from the actors.
"When we really connect on stage, it sometimes can be really frightening," she said.
Rawlings, who plays the former wife of one of the hospital's patients, said the roles are played by two men and two characters' ages. Most of the characters are in their late 40s and 40s and the cast includes a man, a woman, and a child.
"We just don't have the life experience that the characters have, so we have had to work hard on the ages," she said.
SWIFT SAID he did have a problem coping with his character's age, but that he enjoyed the role's demands.
"I like the intensity, it doesn't seem that hard for me," Swift said. "You don't have to hold anything back in these roles."
The characters deal not only with their deaths, but also with their relationships to each other. Swift said. The play points out, "There is more afraid of isolation than of dying."
"It deals with death, but it deals with relationships and feelings a little bit more," he said. "People just don't want to let go."
Rawlings said he thought the play had taught the cast a lot about death and emotions.
"It is the kind of subject that makes people think," she said. "But once you have come to terms with your own death, you can really appreciate your life."
Galleries
ART AND DESIGN GALLERY Visual Arts Building
"Pushing It," an exhibition by under-
graduate photography students, the
week of February 5 at 3:00 and at 4:30
p.m. Monday through Friday, 1:30 to
4:30 p.m. Sunday.
Paintings by Cella Smith and pottery by Alan Brummell, through Oct. 26, Open 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
745 New Hampshire St.
Wildlife limited edition prints by Allen Hughes, Maynard Reece, Mark Reece and Robert Baterman, through Oct. 31. a to p. 5 on Monday. through Saturday.
LANDIS GALLERY 918 Massachusetts St.
SATURDAY
LANDIS GALLERY
Spare Time
Photography by Kent Van Hoeem,
Photographer for the RUK Dance
Culture exhibition by the RUK Dance
Club, today through Oct. 25. Open 9 a.m.
to 9 p.m. Tuesday through Fri and
Saturday.
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER
Ninth and Vermont streets
Oil paintings by Paul Penny, through Oct. 31. Open 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
Wildlife prints by Roger Tory Peterson and Maynard Reece and traditional scenes by Dahart Windberg, through which he portrays it to p. 10 m.pm. through Saturday.
ROY'S CREATIVE FRAMING AND GALLERY
PEN AND INC. GALLERY
823 Wash St.
711 W.23rd St.
623 Vermont St.
7 F. 7th St
Watercolor and wash drawings by
Evonne English, through Oct. 31. Open noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
"Art posters," a circulating exhibition from the Museum of Art at the University Oklahoma, through Oct. 27. Open in m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fridays.
UNION GALLERY
Kansas Union
VALLEY WEST GALLERIES 2112-A W. 25th St.
Stoneware by Roger Copeland and
Kathy Barthoullen, graphic drawings
by Dee Lauderdale. Wood back buckles
and hinges in blue and green from
Lorenzo, through Oct. 21. Open 10:30
a. m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
Music
FACULTY RECITAL SERIES Swarthout Recital Hall
Antonio H. Perez, bartonie, with Karen
douglas, doctoral student in piano, 8 p.m.
Kansas City, Kimber, video, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, Kansas Woodwin Quinter,
p.m. Thursday.
FALL CONCERTS
University Symphony Orchestra,
George Lawner, conductor; 3:30 p.m.
Sunday, University Theatre, Murphy
Hall, KU Jazz Ensemble. 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Swarthout Recital Hall,
Murphy Hall.
LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
842 Massachusetts St.
St. Louis Sheiks, tonight and tomorrow night, with Open Stream in the balcony. The Night Hawks. Wednesday night. Memorial Campanile at 9. MEMORIAL CAMPANILE
Tofu Teddy and the Brown Rice Cow
People, tonight and tomorrow night. The
Leapards, Tuesday night. The Queen,
Thursday night. Doors open at 8, music
Albert Gerken, University carilone-
neur, 3 p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m.
Wednesday
OFF-THE-WALL-HALL 737 New Hampshire St.
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
Gaslite Gang, tonight and tomorrow
door. Doors oo at 8 music begins at 9.
611 Vermont St.
PENTIMENTO COFFEEHOUSE AND CAFE
David Frederick, 8 tonight; Tom Dougherty, 10 tonight; Tom Campbell and Jim Crismer, midnight tonight; Paul Bylaska, p.m. midnight; Perry Gill, p.m. midnight; midnight tomorrow; RPaul Reane, 8.pm.; Sunday; Al Brune, 10.p.m. Sunday
Sunday: Al Brune, 10 p.m. Sunday
Al Brune, 10 p.m. Sunday
Al Brune, 10 p.m. Sunday.
VISITING ARTIST SERIES
Swarthout Recital Hall
Linda Maxey, marimba, 8 p.m.
tonight. Master classes with Leon
Flesher, piano to 5 p.m. 7 to 10
p.m. and 1:30 to 4:00 p.m. Monday.
p.m. and 1:30 to 4:00 p.m. Monday.
KU CONCERT SERIE
University Theatre
4
University Theatre
Theatre Chamber Players of Kennedy Center with Leon Fiescher, conductor, 8 n.m. Sunday.
Friday, October 12. 1979
11
Watering quenches KU grounds' thirst
An unusually dry fall is responsible for the increased watering of University grounds, according to Jim Matz, assistant director of operations in charge of land maintenance.
Thousands of dollars worth of trees, shrubs and grass could die this winter if the watering were not done, he said.
Ron Patrick of the KU Weather Service said this fall had been one of the area's worst storms, with a peak rainfall an inch on rain on Oct. 3, there has not been a substantial rain since Sept. 21 when it rained four inches.
Rainfall for this month is five inches below the average for October, he said.
Mathes said he had received several phone calls asking why he was watering the grass when it was going to die this winter anew.
"Contrary to what many people think, grass is perennial. It doesn't die until something kills it," he said.
TGIF at THE HAWK
Trees and grass need water in the winter even though they are dormant. This moisture must be in the ground before it freezes. Mathes said.
For example, it would cost $500 to $600 to replace a sugar maple tree with a trunk diameter of four inches. It would also cost about 45 man hours of labor to dig, move and replant such a tree because its roots and soil are so deep that it would weigh about a ton and a half, he said.
If a tree's roots are dry when winter comes, the shock of no moisture could kill the tree, he said, and the cost of replacing landscaping is high.
To replace all of the landscaping around Green Hall alone would cost about $24,000. Mathes said.
"If we did not water and lost, for example, all of the trees along Jayhawk Boulevard, what would it be like without crabapple blossoms and green grass in the spring?"
"We're talking about more than money We're talking about aesthetics."
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Cole said the council did not sufficiently analyze the implications of such a committee when it passed the amendment.
Exigency...
In a letter last week to Chancellor Dykes, Cole said, "I believe that the recent University Council legislation ... is a powerkeg which will begin to blow as soon as there is an actual attempt to form such a university, but if we never have to face financial exigency.
From page one
The AAUP adopted a resolution Oct. 4 that questioned the role of such a committee.
"I THINK THE council and everyone involved in this acted in good faith," Cole said. "But I don't think they thought it through. I think it was a mistake."
"I could be wrong about this. I hope I am; I would be pleased to be persuaded that I am."
"IF A FACULTY member happen to be unpopular but important to a program, there would be a temptation to confuse personal dislike with the judgment involved.
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"This process is so technical and complicated that the members did not know what they were getting into. I'm not involved in a battle, just an analysis."
DYKES WAS NOT available yesterday for comment on the letter.
"You don't elect members of a jury who have personal ties with the defendant. I feel that is a close analogy to a committee."
"Teachers would seek to elect those who would protect them," Cole said. "People on the committee would protect their constituents and help the students in dissension and division among the faculty."
Cole said the amendment would create dissension among faculty members because a committee would make the exigency process political.
Cole said this "political nonsense" would endanger academic freedom.
New Shipment of
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We're open til 9:00
At Henry's You Have Your Choice
SUA
films
BROADWAY CINEMAS
rare comedy films
with film historian bob deflores
VILLA TREVETTA
bob hope,bing crosby betty grable,harpo marx frank sinatra in "all star band rally" (1944)
CARICATURE
george burns, bob hope in "the jack benny show" (1954)
groucho marx in "tell it to groucho"
bing crosby in a mack sennet short
thursday, october 18 7:30pm
forum room $1.00
The resolution said, "There is the possibility that the consequences of introducing such a structure will be adverse, from the issues of financial exigency."
ims african studies KANU+m and radio-tv-film
SenEx appointed a committee to study the exigency policy last week. The committee's report will be on the University Council's agenda for November.
Evelyn Swartz, president of the University Council and a member of SenEx, said the amendment needed discussion.
In related business, SenEx will discuss the status of the Regents definition of financial exigency.
SOME FACULTY members have said the Regents definition was too vague and could limit the effectiveness of KU's definition.
The Regents policy, approved Sept. 21, say, "It will be the responsibility of the chief executive officer of each Regent institution, in consultation with appropriate campus groups, to develop a plan for management of financial exigency, supported by conditions of financial exigency."
KU's policy states that the release of tenured faculty is to be used "only as a last resort, ... after all possible alternatives have been examined, and utilized or rejected."
PROBLEM 3
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available
NEW 15 Passenger Vans 2340 Alabam
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no coupons accepted with this offer.
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Friday, October 12, 1979
13
University Daily Kansan
Kansan predictions
| Game | Davis | Dressler | Earle | Fitts | Franke |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Iowa State at Kansas State | Kansas State 17-9 | Kansas State 14 | Iowa State 20-17 | Iowa State 14-10 | Iowa State 17-10 |
| Kansas at Nebraska | Nebraska 35-10 | Nebraska 56-8 | Nebraska 45-10 | Nebraska 52-10 | Nebraska 56-0 |
| Oklahoma State at Missouri | Missouri 38-24 | Missouri 28-7 | Missouri 31-14 | Missouri 35-10 | Missouri 27-14 |
| Oklahoma at Texas | Oklahoma 17-16 | Oklahoma 21-20 | Texas 17-10 | Oklahoma 14-13 | Oklahoma 14-10 |
| USC at Stanford | USC 28-21 | USC 22-14 | USC 21-7 | USC 21-20 | USC 28-7 |
| Texas A&M at Houston | Houston 24-17 | Houston 27-20 | Houston 31-24 | Houston 14-13 | Houston 35-31 |
| Maryland at N. Carolina St. | No. Carolina St. 31-10 | No. Carolina St. 28-27 | No. Carolina St. 30-20 | Maryland 20-10 | Maryland 17-14 |
| UCLA at Washington State | UCLA 45-21 | UCLA 24-10 | UCLA 28-21 | UCLA 34-7 | UCLA 27-10 |
| Season Totals | 29-11 | 29-11 | 27-13 | 27-13 | 26-14 |
Last week correct Kassan predictions dipped to $600 average.
Predictions are made by Tony Fits, sports editor; Mike Earle,
writer.
associate sports editor; Nancy Dressler, managing editor; Bill Frokes, assistant manager; Ken Davis, KU sports editor.
BALTIMORE, (UPI) -- Fading star Manny Sanguillem regained some of his past glory with a two-to, pinch-hit, run-scoring single in the ninth innings last night to give the Pirates a 3-2 victory over the Baltimore team and win the World Series at one game ace.
Pirates even up series
Sangailan delivered his game-winning hit off acerell Don Stanhope with two in the ninth after Ed Ott had singled off a double. The Smith's chest and Phil Garner had walked.
The 35-year-old Sanguillean was sent to bat for winning pitcher Don Robinson and he lined a sharp single to right. Odl sideman the run赢了 just励合 of a strong relay throw from Ken Singleton to first base迪里姆 to catcher Kick Dempsey.
Netters play away
KU tennis teams are competing in out-of-town tournaments this weekend.
The men play Tulsa this morning in Stillwater, Okla. and will play the player of the Southern Illinois-Arkansas match later in the day.
The women, playing in Columbia, Mo., take on Oklahoma this morning and Missouri this afternoon. Saturday, the women face Southern Illinois.
The Pirates begin as if they would quickly Send Orlo starter Jim Palmer to a hot shower when they tagged him for three hits and a sacrifice fly in the second innning.
Singles by Wille Stargell, John Milner and Bill Mallock produced the first run and
KANSAN Sports
Ott got the second run home with a long sacrifice fly to left-center.
After that, Murray hit a long home run to right field in the second, then tied the score in the sixth with a run-score double after Singleton led off the inning with a single.
The Orioles missed two opportunities to take the lead against Robinson in the
TGIF at THE HAWK
seventh and eight innings. Baltimore loaded the bases on three walks in the sevent, but Robinson struck out Singleton to end the inning.
The Orioles put runners on first and second with none out in the eighth when Murray singled to center and shortstop Tim McGraw. McGraw was second on DeMarcus attended sacrifice hit.
But the Pirates got out of trouble when Lowenstein hit into a double play and Smith ended the imming by grounding out.
KLZR
106
100% of your savings dollars are re-invested in this community when you save at LSA!
money market interest rate:
10. 662%
$10,000 minimum. Substantial benefit
for early withdrawal.
5. 50% paid on Passbook accounts no minimum interest compounded daily
LAWRENCE SAVINGS ASSOCIATION NASH & MEMORIAL SHERLYS
Look in your People Book for coupons worth 20% off on Dry Cleaning!!
Independent
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
6th & Indiana
843-4011
New Members
Always
Welcome
Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
Environment
MINGLE TONIGHT!
COLUMBUS DAY
GALLIANO DRINK SPECIAL
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat 6 pm - 3 am
Sun 6 pm - 1 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th
200
Ralegh, Puch A.D.
Centurion Bicycles in Stock!
We Repair All Bikes
RICK'S Bike Shop
(031) Vermont
842-7030
PRISMS
Strass Full Lead Crystal
From Austria
In A Variety Of Shapes
*1 to *17*
Holiday Plaza - 25th & Iowa
BAG SHOP
BAG
SHOP
Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
WEEKEND BOWLING SPECIAL .50c/game
Now thru Oct. 28
Open Sat. and Sun.
2:00 pm—Close
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Hardee's
"Best Eatin' All Around."
BIG
TWIN
Thursday, Friday and Saturday October 11, 12 and 13
69¢
Through Saturday, you can enjoy the taste and goodness of a Hardie's Big Winn sandwich. At a very special rate.
Hardee Big Twin is better than a charbroted burger topped with tandy cheese. because it's two charbroted burgers topped with tanycheese, crisp shredded lettuce and the same sauce. on the same golden-toasted bun!
It's a great sandwich ...now at a great price!
2030 W. 23rd
Wine
The Eldridge House
would you like to go to a nice quiet place where you can speak across the table, listen to good jazz and enjoy a fine meal?
The Eldridge House has been newly redecorated to provide you with a casual atmosphere where you can enjoy their new exciting menu (prices start at $2.95 and up). They have a complete wine list to accommodate your every taste.
memberships available anytime for only $10
(IO day waiting period after application)
the distinctive difference in good times
701 Massachusetts Street Lawrence, Kansas 841-4666
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR
National Board of Review
BEST PICTURE (Drama)
Golden Globe Awards
sua films
Presents
BEST DIRECTOR-TERRENCE MALICK
ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST
*Charles Chang-Mason, LA Times - Twelve Magazine - New York Times*
*Resex Red - Barn Baret - New West Magazine - Grown Up, NBC TV*
*After Dark Cure Magazines - WNS Radio - WOR Radio - Miami Heat*
*Chicago Tribune - Seattle Times - Des Moines Sunday Register*
*Chicago Tribune - Seattle Times - Des Moines Sunday Register*
*Milwaukee Journal-Sun - Lake City Tribune - La Lac Bay Athletic*
*Mostre Durmian-Miami Beach - Post-Delphin Institution - Washington State*
*New York Times - Fox News
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
NESTOR ALMENDROS
THE EARLY DAYS IN THE GARDEN
© 2013 PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION BY ROGER S. PRICE
DAYS OF HEAVEN
"DAYS OF HEAVEN" Starring Richard Ellis, Brooke Adams, Sam Sherlock, Linda Moya
Executive Producer under Bradman Produced by Best and Harold Schneezer
Written and Directed by Terence Malik A Paramount Picture
Paramount
BHU University
Friday & Saturday, October 12-13
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 p.m.
Sat. matinee in Forum Room
$1.50
-No refreshments allowed-
14
Friday, October 12, 1979
University Daily Kansan
KU faces awesome task
TONY FITTS
Sports Editor
It would have been nice if Kansas had opened its conference season against just about anybody from the Big Eight but Nebraska.
So far in the season, Kansas State has lost to Tulsa, Iowa State has lost to Pacific and Colorado has lost to Drake.
KU couldn't open against somebody easy. The Jahayhaws take on the toughest opponent on their schedule tomorrow, and after an embarrassing defeat to Syracuse.
**NEBRASKA** IS the team that scored 42 points against Penn State, a team known for its defense. Nebraska is the team that is ranked fifth in the country in total defense, ahead of anyone else in the Big Eight. Nebraska is the team that is rated fifth in the Associate*
KU Coach Don Fambrough said his team was looking forward to the challenge of playing Nebraska.
"That's why they play football," he said. "That's big time. There's something about playing before 80,000 people and playing a team that good."
THAT SOMETHING will have to be something bit. KU has vet to be humiliated
by an opponent, but it may come this weekend.
Nebraska's offense operates out of an I formation, like Syracuse's but, according to Fambridge, the Cormuhans run that offense much better than the Orangemen.
"As far as the type of formations," he said, "we have the stronger in the tougher, much stronger in the tougher can do it all. They have a good outside game, a good inside game, and they can run against them."
"From what I've seen on film, they're a much better football team than Syracuse."
SOME OF THE PLAYERS that make Nebraska a standout team include Jarvis Tatum, who played on 68 carries; Tim Hager, senior quarterback who is leading the Big Eight in passing efficiency; and Tim Smith, senior split end who has gained 185 yards on 11 calls.
Nebraksan can hurt KU on defense as well. The Cornhillers don't have any individuals who can stop them during the conference, allowing only 228.2 yards of game. Oklahoma is also one of the teams allowing 444 yards.
Nebraska's defense falls off a little against the pass, which may help KU, the second best passing team in the conference.
Brian Bethel will start again at quarterback in place of Kevin Clinton.
THERE HAVE been some lineup changes for the Jayhawks, Monty Carbone was hot on the heels of the forward rieform at the Syracuse game. He will be replaced at inside linebacker by Aaron Jones.
Fred Osborne, second-string offensive tackle, will not make the trip because of strained muscles in his knee. He will be replaced by David Lawrence.
Fambrough said the team had had a good week of practice.
"I feel good about what we did this week," he said. "I think the attitude of the players is good, and I feel we are ready to play a football game.
"YOU CAN'T fool the players. They know what they are going to team Nebraska is. We're taking pretty hard, but we can take against Michigan—we have to play perfect football and capitalize on all of their skills."
Hawks run today in NU Invitational
FIESTA LATINA (Latin American Party)
CELEBRANDO EL DIA DE LA RAZA.
Latin music of all kinds:
Merenque, cumbia, salsa etc.
and Okahama State twice this year, at the Wichita State Gold Classic Sept. 15 and at Stillwater last weekend. The two states are ahead of both teams on both occasions.
"Both teams are rather young." Timmons said "Oklahoma State has a couple of key guys that are not at full strength." I think our team will do well. I think our team will do well.
This will be the 'Hawks' second road race in Lawrence in the past couple of years, Tinnons said. The team's home ground is the Lawrence Country Club.
KU's women's cross country team will run today in the Nebraska Invitational in Lincoln, Neb.
"Again, Kansas State will be our main competition," coach Teri Anderson said. "They have run well the first three meets we have run against them."
The Wildcats have beaten KU each time by a small margin.
Date: Friday October 12
Place: Jayhawk Room
Time: 8:00 pm to 2:00 pm
Price: $3.00 drinks included
"We'll be right there with them again," Anderson said. "I was satisfied of that."
"On a course that difficult, I would expect to be three or four strokes above par, but not in the high-80s, which is where most of the scores were."
Tickets available at Watson Library, Spanish and Portuguese dept. and McCollum Hall Sponsored by ALE
Sally White led the Jayhawks, carding an 83. White is tied for fourth place in individual competition. She was the only KU golfer to improve her score on the back nine.
Although the tournament is being held on Alvaramer's tough pat-72 Hidden Valley Course, Bahan was surprised at the inflated scores.
the wind because it paled many of the shots out of bounds, she said. "Several of them told me they thought there was a big difference between the front and back nine."
Temple said he planned to use about the same starting lineup he used against the Griffins last week.
"All the teams had a great deal of trouble with the course, and I don't know why," KU coach Derek Burke said. "I can think of is that the placements were different from what we requested, and they were."
Temple said he had to do a lot more teaching this fall than last year because of new players. He has six freshman this season as compared with only one last fall.
KU finished second in the Oklahoma
Arkansas team dominated by foreign
runners. It was the second year that
Arkansas has beaten KU for the top
Neither pitcher has allowed an extra-base hit.
"With an experienced group, you don't have to do as much teaching in the fall," he said.
Timmons said he didn't know much about the team from St. Louis University. KU has run against Wichita State
Temple said he was a little disappointed in his veteran pitchers.
"I think part of the problem our team has "wanted to want to do so well against Texas Christian University. They may have psyched themselves out and tried too hard."
Watt has pitched 12% innings this fail without a hit, he has struck out 11 batters and walked nine. Christianson has struck seven in 14% innings, allowing 15 hits.
Bahan said wind was a factor after the front nine.
After the first round of the KU Invitational Golf Tournament at Alamar Golf Course yesterday, the KU women's golf team was ranked fourth in the nation, 16 strokes behind front-facing Mason.
"We're going to have to do some adjusting to play the caliber of ball it takes in the Big Eight conferrer."
The men's cross country team will face Oklahoma State, Wichita State and St. Louis universities in a quadrantal tournament to determine the winner of the cross country Coach Bob Tmons said.
KU third after one round
TCU is in second place, one stroke behind Missouri.
Although the fall season ends Sunday, Temple said the team would continue what they've done in recent weeks, players more competition in seven-ninning games. Two intra-squats teams played the first game of the best-of-three series and will finish the series next week.
Student
Application deadline is 5:00 pm
Prepaid Legal Services Board now has
'Hawks play two Sunday
Men harriers host quadrangular meet
Wednesday October 17th in
POSITIONS OPEN . . .
One shall serve until March, 1980, & once until March 1981
1 law student position &
1 graduate student position
The Jahawks swept a doubleheader from the Griffins last weekend to improve their record to 9-1.
The KU baseball team will attempt to last equal fall's 11-1 record when it closes out the fall season with a doubleheader in Western Griffins Sunday at Gunnely Field.
KU Coach Floyd Temple said Mike Watt and Clay Christianson would be the starting pitchers Sunday.
Student Senate office— 105B KS Union.
-perms
- hair analysis
- and reconditioning
- free consultations
- Custom cuts
"The girls had a great deal of trouble with
- open most evenings
Paid for by Student Activity Fees.
Superior hair and skin care services from the people who care for you
HOTEL HERMES
headmasters
C. D. B.
Top Row: Matt, Sue Dixon, Don, Kristen, Belt, Tart, Joda, Theresa
Bottom Row: Debra, Paula, Paula, Priche, Susan Catch
809 Vermont
KU Folk Dance Club Presents:
KU Folk Dance Club presents:
Balkan Folk Dance
Performance
and
Costume Exhibit
Sunday, October 14, 2:00 pm
Lawrence Arts Center, 9th+Vt.
Admission $1.00 Refreshments sold!
NOTICE
5:00 p.m. Friday, October 12 is the last day for dropping a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences undergraduate course this semester without petitioning. After this date, petitions for withdrawing from a course may be obtained from the College Office, 206 Strong Hall.
---
پہل سینا پرتہ
در ریڈنگ مختصر میں باب کا اقسام
اتنائی خیال میں کرنا اقسام
اور رکورد ریم
بیش سرور میں کرنا
ایمارت میں کرنا اقسام
و برادرم میں کرنا
فارسی 1، پنج ایکٹ 2014 v
7:30 pm
يحملا يحيى
درس باحث بن محمد حميد بن أحمد بن عمران
أبو جعفر عبد الرحمن القاسم
دار سلطان رضا
بن عبدالله عمرو
باحث بن عبدالله عمرو
اے ناڭ پہلے آپ ایک راتی اور
اے ناڭ پہلے آپ ایک راتی اور
7-9:30 p.m.
Film from Iran.
"In Down-Pours"
Oct. 13
foi
Jayhawk Jog Sunday, October 21.
Lawrence, Kansas to benefit the United Fund for more information contact
Gamma Phi Beta
Sorority
843-8022
Phi Kappa Psi
Fraternity
843-2655
1979
Gamma Phi Beta
ViN
MEISNER -
MILSTEAD
RETAIL LIQUOR
FEATURING:
FINE IMPORTED AND
CALIFORNIA WINES
AND
10 VARIETIES OF
COLD BEER!
FOR KEYS CALL
842-4499
IN HOLIDAY PLAZA
[2 DOORS WEST OF KIEF'S]
sua films
2 REPEAT SHOWS!!
"Fiddler on the Roof"
WINNER!
3 ACADEMY AWARDS
BEST DIRECTOR, FESTIVAL COMPANY
BEST PICTURE, MARK RYAN, NEW YORK, LOS ANGELES
TOPOL
NORMA CRANE
LEGENDARY PICTURE
MOLLY PLEON
THE MINISCH
PRODUCTION
COMPANY
United Artists
COLOR
G
Due to the tremendous demand last month, 2 more showings of "Fiddler" have been added to our schedule.
Sunday, October 14
2:00 p.m.-Woodruff Auditorium
5:30 p.m.-Union Ballroom
Still only $1.50!
—No refreshments required
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 12, 1979
15
KANSAN WANT ADS
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seventh eight nineth ten one two three four五六七八九十一二三四四
15 words or fewer ... Each additional word ...
one
time
$2.00
at
AD DEADLINES
four
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 3 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 3 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 3 p.m.
Wednesday Wednesday 3 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. There ads can be included in promotion or to allow the UK business office to A4438.
The UKM 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.
UDR BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Fliet Hall 664-4258
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall.熟食 fresh fruits and vegetables. Also salted, roasted, and raw peanut butter. Also yellow and white popcorn, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday.
K. U. B'nai B'rith Foundation presents: Marina Khoit
First year K.U. Student
speaks on—"Can Soviet
Jews Leave Russia"?
Discussion following
(with back up panel)
Refreshments afterwards
Ecumenical Christian Ministries Building
12th St. and Oread
7:30 p.m..
Sundav Oct. 14th
every Sunday.
Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. tf
Watch for truck parked at 9th & Indiana. Home bake a batch of potato cakes in the bowl, salad filling fruits and vegetables, the dish Twelve Potatoes of red Wine Fryer
"FIESTA LATINA"
October 12 Friday
Jayhawk Room
8:00 pm to 2:00 pm
$3.00 - Watson Library
Spanish & Portuguese dept. Sponsored by
Latin American Student Association.
Attention 7th Spirit Club members, don't min open stream featured Fred Baden on vbsaturday night after the Shakes in the 7th Spirit baloney, free to club members, guites.10-23
CHESS EXHIBITION
Lobby of
Student Union
9:00 - 5:00
Saturday
Sponsored by
KU Chess Club
Zen practice night—6 p.m. Intensive retreat with Zen master Sueg Shun气 from Thursday evening, Oct. 18 to Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21. Bkp 643-7019 for information.
INTRAMURAL TRACK . .
ENTRY DEADLINE . .
WED., OCT. 17.
5 P.M. . .
208 ROBINSON . .
Think Snow! Want to go skiing? For information call Brad 541-0070.
10-18
ENTERTAINMENT
it's finally Friday and your Harbour Miners is ready to hit the lake. You'll need $1,500 plus $6c and $c bank and the bathtubs aren't bad either. It's a first-class bath set and there's a lot of room together at the Harbour Lakes. 1 Mansfield Road, Bristol, BS7 4JW.
FOR RENT
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT:
Bedroom, furnished and unfurnished, from $170
bedroom, furnished and unfurnished, from $170
bedroom or Kitchen or Bedroom or Bathroom
Or KU bus inINDoor HEATED
For appointment car cupboard $445 per
car. For appointment car cupboard $445 per
car.
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tl
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes room near KU. Possible rent reduction for labor. Call 841-6254 or 842-4865. 10-31
Two bdrm. unfurnished apt. near KU. Pool, CA.
elec. kitchen, laundry, WW carpeting. Evenings.
841-0838. 10-12
2. bedroom townhouse, 15' bath, unfurnished.
Meadowbrook Regency Park. Close to campus,
on bus route. Call 841-4122 or office 842-
4200.
10-12
All Frontier Ridge Apts. 1% months rent free. $50
security on all 1 bedrooms. tf
2 bdmr, excellent condition, stove and refrigerator, waer-dryer hook-up, four blocks of campus, $200 per month—no pets. Low utilities, call 4 p.m. @ 843-7561. 10-16
Need to unload 2 bdmr. apt. 1231 Ohio. Available Nov. 1. Call 841-7027 before 2 p.m.; after call 841-8019. Ask for An or Ann Schryer. 10-12
House for rent, call to campus. $175/month.
paid, call after 5 p.m. #811-253-108
6497
10-15
Roommate need to share four bedroom duplex
$18.125 money + 1 utilities
will pay
10.17-10.17
Must sub-let immediately—Jayhawker Towers
Apt. Partially furnished. Call 843-1082 always.
FOR SALE
SunSpees—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1212 Mass. 841-5770. TF
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, services and exchange units BELL AUTOMOTE ELECTRIC, 850-990, 900 w.th. 68.
WATTERED MATTRESS $358.98, 3 year guard
WATERBED MATTRESSES $39.98, 3 year guard-
TEACH WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-158 TEE
Western Civilization Notes. On sale Make on Sale
make a presentation, use them to use them 1-. As study guide, 2. For class preparation 3. For exam preparation, New York Times, 4. At Town Center at Town Creek, Mall Bookshop & Oread Book
Ivon, Deco, Fifteen, Camp, China, linens,
Iron, bottles, kitchen gear & appliances,
art, jewelry, fabrics, office & craft supplies
newer. NEW. LEWAR. resident since 30'.
Must sell malt condition stereo. Sony Amp. 60 watts per channel RMS. Mintshoe speakers 15 watt. Compact stereo, direct questioning. FP turntable. with purchase, $250 or best offer. Call after $ 2-143-351. 10-12
Peavey musician amplifier and speaker cabinet.
Farlin professional organ. Best offers. Mark 843-
857. 10-12
New Sony micro cassette, tape recorder, rechargeable battery pack, AC power adapter. 50-1 hour tape, hand-hold and lap-electronic microphones, earphones, earplug 10-12
1970-1980 used car—piease like you be guide
when purchasing a used car. Call and find out
why so many KU students buy used cars
from Bob Smith-Landmark Ford* 842-5000. 10-19
SATURDAY
OCT. 13, 1 PM
1015 W. 2 TERR
QUANTRILY'S FLEA MARKET...the area's best selection of antique furniture, vintage dining chairs, furniture dishes, baseball cards, art deco, comic books, coins, lamps, clothes, art decor, and hundreds of other interesting colorful items and family accessories before the game. Open your friends' and family faces before the game. Open on Thursday at 5 p.m., 514-267-3900, Lawn S. Lawrence, 514-267-3900, 10-12
MONEY-SAVING
AUCTION
A Houset of Furniture
A Lifetime of Collectibles
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION: Pouch. Moped. Rikke's Bike shop, 1033 Vermont. 841-642-769
197 Trans Am. T-top, loaded, automatic, low mileage, warranty. $500 list, 102.83-126. 10
72 Honda front wheel drive—one owner 34,000
miles, 35 mpg, $1200 firm. See at 102 W. 28th
zip. 17.
1978 Delta 88 Old- Excellent condition, power
everything, must sell. $500. 842- 886. 10-12
71 Camaro-350 Turbo, many high performance parts, mag wheels Must see to appreciate, 843-9088. 10-15
1972 Toyota Corona, must sell, good condition,
excellent mileage, stereo, automatic, good price,
864-4683. Glorio. 10-12
74 2 bdm. mobile home -8 x 36 ideal for students or clean, clean. Couple in Lawrence. $40.00 firm. For appt. Call 845-9922. If no answer 1-353-2441 or 1-357-1354. 10-16
How's your Halloween costume coming? Try
How's your Easter costume coming? Try
clothing dating needs. This weekly special,
fashion bounce, at Quinnibis Fashion Market,
10 New Hampshire, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat.
19-12
Beat energy costs this winter. If you buy this house, Dana Wood stove it to his 18 month-old home. David wood stove it to his 20 year-old home. You will pay a great deal more for this kind of equipment, as bonus amass is loaned at 1200. This is the most expensive and high energy cost. Contact Marty Lye, 634-2722. Contact Zachary Zell, 227 Ohio. 634-1030. 10-17 nings at 634-2322.
1977 Cutlass 442. Loaded. Call Greg 845-6244.
10-17
77 MGB, low mileage, air conditioned with electric overdrive, 842-3706. 10-16
1971 Impala. 2 dr. HT, full power. AC. good condition, very dependable. 542-3475. 10-17
Comics, comics, comics, Booth 6, Quanttril's Fliess
Market, weekend 10-5. 10-12
Two rooms or occupancy, seven cuprine room,
appending. Approximately 10' x 10' and 9' x 12'.
$15.20 each. Wool duil bedset, 5 worn. only
6 times. $30.00. 82-607-600. 10-18
PUCH sport moped, 875 miles, perfect condition,
fully equipped. P.V., KS. (913) 649-017-10. 10-18
1972 Grand Prix, AC, PS, PW, PB, AM/FM,
cruise control. Call Whitl 843-2677. 10-15
Four United Airlines 50% discount coupons $45
each. Call 842-8378. 10-18
Our plants need a new home! We're selling them Monday, Tuesday, 12-5 p.m., 13th and Mass, 10-16
Ladies wrist watch found Oct. 7 in front of Hoch. Call 864-6124 and describe. 10-12
FOUND
to 3月4岁 old kitten, white and tan, by the Union Saturday. Call 842-8451. 10-12
Found calculator. Hoor auditorium. Possible owner of Rachel 814-6539 and describe you own calculator.
Calculator. Across from Union. Call and identify
at 5:00, 842-9380. 10-15
Yellow, long-hair, kitten in the parking lot of Sambo's. Oct. 8. Please call 643-8955. 10-15
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Male Black dog approx. 5 months old with a flea collar. Please call 842-9386. 10-15
Karn as much as $50 per 1000 stuffing envelopes with our circulars. For information: Pentax Entrprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 45042.
10-16
Class ring in Flint Hall. Come in to identify— 111 Flint. 10-16
$1.10 per hour if you qualify. No experience. Full or part-time free uniforms, a clean room, and office space. We people willing to work and apply themselves. If you are interested in a position at the Restaurant, 127 W. 6th Floor, in person at 10:12
Wanted: Hard-working, dedicated individuals to work as part of a team to help programs like KU. This is a good opportunity and you will just a growing business program. Travel. Contact Hike in room 123K at the KU office. Call 800-676-4092.
Part-time dishwashing and counter help. 11
In charge of kitchen operations in
10-16 at Border Bender, 1328 W. Ward.
MEN* MOWEN* JOBS! CRUISERSHIPS* SAILING
IMG EXPEDITIONS* Good experience. Goody
past experience. Goody past experience.
FOR APPLICATION INFO-JOBS* to: CRUISER
WORLD 13, Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 85606
OVERSEAS JOBS--Summer year round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields; £650-
month tuition fees; plus Slightship training.
JOB DESCRIPTION: JB, Box 283, Vancouver,
CA, 92625.
MATURDY
10-29
Karen help, waiters and waitresses needed for
travel packages to the hotel between 8:35 a.m., Artcus, Inc. 899-0987 10-12
Relief Housekeepers, up to 40 hrs. weekly, for use of care in the home; emotionally distended and/or retarded children; requirements for group home parenting; and other needs. To apply, visit www.ncfsa.edu or an hourly rate paid monthly for actual work required. No. To send graduation, application, and cover letter to Lawrence, KS 66044. For further information, call (801) 273-5555.
Cooks wanted immediately. Day and night shifts.
Experience preferred, but will训. Call for appointment.
Village Inn Pancake House, 821 Iowa,
842-3251. 10-16
Need extra money? Sign up for babybathing! Call or come by the Information Center, center 3218. Phone: (864) 740-6541. Website: www.babybathing.com. $84-$470. Your name will be given to person needing a babysitter. You will call them at (864) 740-6541.
The Center for Public Health University of Kansas, has an open space for an unacquainted assistant to the Survey Research Program. Students in question assistance design, assist in survey design and management, design and administrate, manage and coordinate experience requirements, manag
COLLAGE GEARS AND PEOPLE WITH EX-
EMPLAR COMPS PROJECTS. If you have experience in farming, a skills license has a use of a health pro-
fession and work with people of diverse needs and abilities. You will be required to complete no-depends, no upper age limit requirements on
TEACHERS. If your degree is in English, math, science or psychology, you need a **Coach** needs you. Teach in primary secondary schools. Contact the **Coach** school as a Peace Corps volunteer. Pay travel; during winter allowances she covers 48 days of work. Volunteer with no dependents. No upper age limit with no dependents. No upper age limit with dependents. Center Carrion-O-Laye, ID J2, 22 J4, 23 J4.
VISITING PROFESSOR—the Center for East Asia is a visiting professor at Bank Asia Economics and Research. We have experience in teaching, working with experienced professionals. Principle duty is to be responsible for providing financial services to the economy or business. 1 merchant license, $1100.00 credit line, 300,000 loan value to professor Chien-Ji Lee. 100.50 credit line, 600,000 loan value to professor Ji-Hui Lee. 100.50 credit line, 600,000 loan value to the Equal Opportunity Commission.
COLLEGE CLASS GEAR PEACE CORPS and VISIT
UNIQUE OFFERMENTS FOR QUALIFIED
ACTION GUILD, UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
APPLICATION AMERICA ARM AND AID
TEXTURE FOR OTHER OPENSING IN A VARI-
ABLE PROVIDED FOR YOUR MORE INFO ON
WEBSITE. FOR MORE INFO ON HOW TO
PROVIDE GUILD, GO TO CAREER-GUIDELINE-OF-OG. JOB 22, 34, 19, 18
MATUI/SCIENCE 'TEACHERS' an alternative to teacher positions in Africa, as are asking for Peer Coaches in Africa. An organization is imagining assignments for creative, energetic individual pairs. Palp trays, monthly living allowances and student credits are among the unique murmurs with no department of expertise. Applicants must be Currumbin-Origanum or Oct 21. *10-13*
HOME ECONOMISTS You can be more than a home economist if you have your Home Eco in many developing or all over the country, to teach in secondary schools or at universities
Wanted—auto parts company counterperson, full or part-time. Experience if possible. Come In to 10-17 and Haskell for interview. 10-17
Lost class ring in 4th floor men's room of Wescow on H-92 on 11-25. *Hum 864-2319* after 4. Reward 10-12
LOST
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS BINDING COPYING—The House of
Ursus' Quick Copy Center is headquarters for
thesis binding and copying in Lawence. Let us
help you at 835 Mansion or phone 426-710-8100.
Enroll Now! **In** Lawrence drive school, no驾驶 license in 4 weeks without highway patrol test: Transportation provided, drive now pay later. 842-0615. 10-12
NOTICE
ATTENTION KANANS READERS. TRED OF WALKING? In need of a good, dependable new or used car or truck? Call the kid in town. Terry Mode 843-3000. 10-15
Reward: $25.00 for information leading to the return of a green Bianchi bicycle. No questions asked. Call 841-8967. 10-12
ABLENE ALUMNI! Attend Homecoming and dance Oct. 12. 10-12
Vets get ready to party hardy, G.I. bill. 10-19
Reward for return or information leading to re-
payment. Apartment 845-623, after 5:00 p.m. 10-17
EMERGENCY FOSTER PARENTS—If your family is vulnerable for limited time or kindness of time, Kane Children's Service League invites you to call 512-847-9000 during the expense; State license and training required.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tt
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Tubal ligation. Appointment: 9 a.M. AMH Clinic-KS, 400 19th St., Overland Park, KS - 1650. TF
ARE YOU READY? The 2nd annual JAWHAWJ
JOG is at ECT 1, 1979. 10,000 meter run. Contact
GAMMA PHI BETA 843-8023 or PHI KAPPA
PHI 843-2654 for registration.
TQ TMB:
Good luck on LSAT! Good luck on LSAT!
Good luck, etc.
We can NEVER believe that time already. We know we do IT TRENDEMONIALLY on the phone. We know we do IT PUNISHING in pulling tricks to make a LASTING impression. To reward your efforts, let's take the opportunity to show you why 'dry'! What's THREAT? Also, beweigh a pair of CP energy Heater to provide any day massage in bed. What's THREAT? Also, beweigh a pair of CP energy Heater to provide any day massage in bed. What's THREAT? Also, beweigh an evening with three loveworks; Bogart and A Q II? I would…Hey, what does Bogart and A Q II? I would…Hey, what does
Love from a three-speed, shifty bunch
Fliance, Wildwoman of Borneo and Guardian
Aegis (What kind)?
Good luck on LSAT! Good luck on LSAT! Good luck
If you're looking for a bar with cheap beer, poolside parties or a bar with people you like, the Harbour Lodge is a great place to stay. Day and day afternoon for TGIF! Now serve up Harbour Lodge's new shipyant ship with the
If you are interested in playing SCRABLE, call
SUA 864-3474. Emily 864-3895. Emmy 864-3810.
SUA 864-3810.
GAY CUNSELING REFERALS through head-
quarters, 641-2345 and KU info, 864-306-106.
The KU GO CLUB meeting every Tuesday 7-10
mind. Pork. 2-10, Union. 844-377-476
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid - 864-5564. tt
tonight and saturation
from st. louis
spend an evening with
THE SHIEKS
come early
8:00 show 9:00
$1.25 pitchers to
8 instruments
Lawrence Opera House
Call for concert info: 842 6930
Gevere, no one can do it quite like you do. We've got a rat and toilet turn-over-Kenny can get the Rat beer
Tournament Management recreation majors or any-
other professional BSA office 848-2477 (asso. of)
indoor recreation)
fary J-Got a whole Thanksgiving vacation and
tary to do Got any suggestions? 10-15
8-13
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not. Check Campus Vets. 118 B Union. 664-474
www.campusvets.org
Mary J- So I'm asking already but third better be good. If I wanted to be bored I'd go home for Thanksgiving. Steve. 10-15
SKII Aspen, Copper Mountain, or Breckenridge,
for information call Brad 841-607-00. 10-16
SMITH & WESSON—Model 66 Stainless Steel
357 Magnum Revolver 4-inch barrel new $30.10
842-7158
PSYCHIC AWARNESS AND HEALING CLASS.
Call now for late enrollment. Eve Leesenberg
842-7842
10-17
Advance tickets for the movie JESUS available.
Call John 843-4064. 10-18
Stieve-Borting? How do three things at the Aeolus Theater about what being a Second CUP? or how about visiting the Soundstage. If you are interested in the Soundstage, if you are interested in architecture, we can visit the Water Tower and visit D. B. We can visit the Water Tower and visit D. B. We can attend the Schubert or Nielsen Chapter Alive at
The Entertainers
O
LOUISÉ'S
Bars & Grill
Cocktail bar
$1.00 per person
desserts
candies
1982 Washoe Valley, NV
West
G.P. LOYDS
Tuesday night -- College ID $31 all you can buy
Hiltonest Shopping Center
below J. Watson's
5 footers make parties
Hoagle's
Zero
1234567890
926 Massachusetts 843-2644
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
Anita-A year of diversion, discussion, direction,
and distractions—the fun just keeps on coming!
Happy Anniversary and lots of love, Jeff 10-12
Ya puts it like the fact that DAVIS GHRESM
erwhile new director of JKNK Radio, is having
a birthday today. And for Total Sports,
Tom Hedrick reporting.
10-12
To my "Pinner," I've loved you this year that we have spent together in the Great Midwest. If I'm going to the Far East with you I go well with it, which one is best? Love always. "Which one" 10-12
The very happiest of birthdays, "Sam!" Way to hang with the "big dogs" for a big 24 years! 10-12 Love, "Lou."
Don't min' the THEIERS Fri. and Sat. at the LAWRENCE Opera House and 8 to 9 cocktails for members, 8 to 9. The LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE wants you to have the best time. 10-12
C-This appears late, but was sent early. Happy Birthday! Our friendship has endured a lot, and I hope it will continue to grow in the future. We will have known each other quite decades—A)
EVANS SCHOLARS. Good luck in the game against Missouri IS. Hope you are as good on the court as you are on the links!—The Coach's Phi.
10-12
GP LOYDS
Mary J.-Sounds Great! Where do I sign up for the trix? Steve. 10-15
Roderman Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod invites you to worship with them at 30th and Hancock (Carroll) Church in Boulder City, Boulder Church at 45, Sunday School at 8:30 a.m. at 9:45. Call 843-758-298 for a need of 10.
This letter is personal as it can be. Since every member of the class, of one kind or another, free-standing and retained by intelligent people, has contributed to individual personality. Those they helped give to others have had the right to vote without paying a fee, as long as they had the right to be called a citizen this year when the Klu Klu Klan was refused permission to march in a city in the month of March, so decided to have a have the college education some people think he has given them. In the realm of human rights Bobby Ackerman, a law professor, letter is dedicated to many people for whom I am an ally. Some I have met personally in the fight. Some I have also to write this letter, but I now realize it is important to the fight. The fact is it very personal. Flory E.
SERVICES OFFERED
---
RJS: Thanks for being so warm and understanding. Your love keeps me smiling. It's been a fantastic year. I love you very much. The Green Dragon.
10-12
The Bike Garage—complete professional bicycle repair. Garage specialty="Tune-Ups" and "Total-Downtime." Details叫41-2781. 10-22
Downtown
EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 84758.
MATHS 115-700 call 84758. STATISTICS 100-600 call 84758.
PHYSICS 100-600 call 84758. ENGLISH 115-
SPANISH 104-700-573
SPANISH TUTORING Experienced teacher and tutor can help you through courses 104, 105, 108,
109, 111, 112, 116. Call 841-2467. TP
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of U尔更 Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A 5 to M 10 Monday to Friday, 5 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at $88 Mall.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your
30-page catalog of collegiate literature. 10,250
topics listed. BOOK 25097K; Los Angeles, CA,
90025; (213) 477-8286.
Douglas open at
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Open House
Office
Call for info at
416-873-9300
Disco tonight until 3 AM 701 Mass
tonight and Saturday
don't miss the shirts
$12 picech and $10 cocktails
from the club club member
guards 8 to 10
THE
OTHER
PLACE
$1.50
1717 W. 6th
TGIF—$1 pitchers—all day
O
Excellent dee-jay with sound equipment for your private parties. Very competitive prices. 811- 813, after six. 10-12
Creative illustrations—Artwork and illustrations for: advertising, logs, personal use, and cartoons, phone: 814-760 or 814-765. 10-15
GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS for the choice of
call Elite Clute Dancing Service 864-2827. 10-16
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. TF
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF.
TYPING
Journayrn typographer. 20 years typing,typing-
setting experience. 4 years academic typing;
thesis, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest
Selective equipment. 842-4848
Experienced Typet—term papers, theses, misc. electric ISEb械. Proofreading spelling corrected. 843 Msx. Wright. TP
Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127. TF
Experienced typist- Quality work, reasonable ratings. Call Beverly at 842-5910. TF
Experienced typet-ilex systems, dissertations, term
and course materials, selected bibliography,
842-318, evenings 842-321
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-certify Selective. Call Eleni or Jeannam, 841-2722. 11-3
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-8654, after 4 p.m. 2-28
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, occu-
rate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call
841-3387. tf
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate service, low rates. 843-3635 evenings and weekends. 10-23
I do darned good typing. Papers under 50 pp.
only. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6438, 85c per
10-17
I would like to type your term papers, these,
etc., Reasonable rates. Karen 10-16
3332
WANTED
Roommate wanted for beautifully furnished 3 bedroom house $75 per month + 1/3 utilities.
Call 841-3661. 10-12
PSYCHIATRIC AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES WORKERSHIP ANIMA TORBA, Topeka State Hospital, Topeka, KS. Phone: (913) 298-5360, W 15, Wochia, TOPKA, R.S. Phone: (913) 298-5360. Male encouraged to apply. An equal opportunity employer.
Need roommate for 2 bedroom house. Must be
tidy. Call Chris 841-0833 keep trying. 10-12
I am interested in sharing a nice looking app.
with other student students preferably already furnished.
Must be nice looking app. Call Paul 842-10421,
please leave message.
Want job as house cleaner. Good worker. References. Call Susan. 814-6308. If not home, please leave number and I'll call back. 10-12
Uppercase student preferred. New house and quiet surroundings, $80 and 1/3 utilities. Call 842-0248. 10-16
Female looking for same to share nice 2 bdm.
agt. from now until end of first semester. 841-
8693 after 5:20. 10-12
Housemate WANTED to share large house, $115
utilities paid, non-smoker preferred, no pets,
643-289. 10-17
Roommate for 2 bbrm. house, must be tidy, cell
Chris 814-0833, keep trying.
10-16
Want to buy Bass amp. 841-3581, evenings 10-18
Want to buy any mp3 player, even ifwant to
looking for a third mprinter to fill 3 bedroom
usages? Ask for a DVD player or utilities.
Ask for Rob at 843-7643 for appointment.
Come on, get out of a chair and jump up.
16
Friday, October 12. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Escort service needs volunteers
By JUDY WOODBURN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Organizers of a student escort service say a lack of volunteers and permanent headquarters is preventing the implementation of its service.
Gay Services of Kansas, the KU Police Department and a representative from the National Foundation are helping organize the escort service, which would provide escorts for students who must walk alone.
Todd Zwahl, co-director of GSOK, said volunteers who were willing to act as escorts on a part-time basis were needed.
Sgt. Jeanne Longaker, who directs the KU
Police Department's campus crime prevention program, said the escort service would not "get off the ground" unless they were enough volunteers to ascots.
The escort service also needs a place for a headquarters, Zwahl said.
"We want to use the Kansas Union, but it doesn't stay open late," he said. "Now, we're going to make a request to use one of the residence halls."
Zwahl said volunteers would be on call at the headquarters to answer requests for excursions. Late at night, when there were many people in the hall, he was able to remain on call at home, he said.
But we don't know what the peak hours
for escorts will be yet," he said. "We may find that we'll get the most requests when the library closes at night. I don't know."
Judy Browder, director of the KU Information Center, said the center probably would act as a "middle man" to relay requests for scouts to the volunteers.
Zwaah said a student requesting an escort would be walked home by two escorts, a man and a woman.
"We're hoping to keep this mainly a walking service." he said.
Zwaith said that an organizational meeting for volunteers was scheduled for Oct. 22, and that the escort service could begin Oct. 29.
Letter-writing service started for students
Love letters, business letters, letters home to mom--for a price, KU student Mike Hall will write them.
Advertising to his venture the Hall, Topeka freshman, along with two friends, began a letter-writing service this week for "busy KU students."
"I read about some letter services at other universities in Newweek a few weeks ago," he said. "I thought it would be in-depth and a good way to pick up some extra money."
Hall's service primarily offers four types of letters-friendly letters, love letters, business letters and letters to parents. He charges $2.50 for each letter.
"Our hot and juicy letter is the most popular," he said. "We make it muzzy, include some poetry, and even write it on performed stationery."
All but the business letters are handwritten and all are tailored to the tastes of the person sending the letter.
Given some brief background for the letter, Hall can write a rough draft in one hour. Before drawing up the final copy, he will contact the sender for approval.
has been he has been in business for only a few days, Hall said that the five or more letters he had averaged a day would allow him to quit his present part-time job.
"We're pretty hopeful. We'll be making about $2 on each letter and it's a service students need," he said.
Diabetic Group
KU symphony to perform
While the letters do not say that the sender is not also the writer, Hall said those receiving letters probably would realize that the handwriting was unfamiliar.
"But we don't think that really matters. We're just trying to provide a service."
Roger Stoner, as a professor of music, performs two pieces by the orchestra. Orchestras at a trumpet concert in the orchestra's first concert of the year at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Schenectady Library.
Conducted by George Lawner,
professor of orchestra, Skoner will perform Kurt Rurg's Concerto Grosso
Number 1 for Soltrump Timpani and String Orchestra. He will be accompanied by the more than 80-piece orchestra.
Stoner, a former member of the U.S. Navy Corps Band, has performed with the National Oklahoma City Symphony, the National Symphony Orchestra and the Kansas
Diabetic Group
Monday, Oct. 15, 7:30 P.M., Watkins
Hospital, Dr. Reeves, Podiatrist, will
walk on "Foot Care in the Diabetic"
The concert is free.
STUDIO ONE
HAIR DESIGNERS
Today's Hair Care Center
843-2228
REDKEN
2323 Ridge Court
THE SOUTHPLAZA CHIROPRACTIC CENTER WELCOMEKS KU STUDENTS & FACULTY
For spinal related conditions feel free to contact
HUGHES
DR. WILLIAM A. MILLER
without talking to the Hughes Recruiter visiting your campus soon.
Contact your placement office for interview dates.
i. Creating a new world with electronics
2032 West 27th St.
Lawrence, KS
Phone: 842-4114
DON'T GRADUATE
Member:
Kansas Chiropractic Association
Kansas Council on Reorientation
Kansas Council on Orthopaedics
American Acupuncture Society
Parker Chiropractic Research Foundation
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
Fred Raulston & Open Stream in the balcony after the shieks Fred Raulston "King of the Vibes"
In love, it is better to give and to receive. I'm Emmanuelle—I can show you how to do both. My partner should be chanted Born should be sensually laud. Let me show you that nothing is strong if it feels good.
THE ALLNEW Emmanuelle
The Joys of a Woman
...nothing is wrong if it feels good.
XX TOY OR A PARANORMAL TIME
Friday & Saturday, October 12-18
12:00 Midnight
Woodside Lounge, required $1.50
Rated X-Age I.D., required at door
—No refreshments allowed—
THE SHIEKS and for 7th spirit club members and guests opera house productions present
tonight and saturday don't miss
open stream
jazz
sua films
Let me show you that
mothing is wrong if it looks good
Midnight Movies
Doors open at
8:00 - show at 9:00
Lawrence
Opera House
Call for concert info 842-6830
Call for concert info. 842-6930
COLLEGE GRADS WANTED FOR INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS
AGRICULTURE
BUSINESS
EDUCATION
IMMIGRATION
FRENCH
HOME ECON.
LIBERAL ARTS
NURSING
NURSING
THE SCIENCES
YOU CAN BECOME INVOLVED IN AN IMPORTANT
MEANINGFUL MOVEMENT FOR WORLD PEACE AS
A PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEER, AND HELP PEOPLE
IN THE HUNTING OF GLOBAL DEATHS
PEDIATRICS, HUNGER INNOCENCE AND DIESESSION.
IF YOU ARE WILLING TO SHARE YOUR SKILLS WITH
BEGINNING DEDICATED THEM AND ARE ABDABLE
TO PUT OFF CLIMbing THAT THESE BENEFITS, AND ACCUMULATING POSES-
SIVE ENERGY. AND ALTERNATIVE FOR TWO YEARSOF YOUR LIFE.
SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW AT PLACEMENT
CENTER, CARRUTH - O'LEARY ON OCT. 22,
23.24.
SEE RECRUITERS:
JOIN THE NEW PEACE CORPS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
**TODAY:** FINE ARTS FILM SERIES will present "The Red Balloon" and "Poetry for Fun: Truller Coolier" at 9:30 a.m. in 303 Bailey Hall, MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY MEET with KU, OSU, WSU and St. Louis Universities will begin at 4 p.m. at the Lawrence College BIOLOGY CLUB in the sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: OBSERVATORY OPEN
HOUSE 109 KANE BLANC 800 Lunette
IN THE DANCE KANE 2 p.m.
in 173 Robinson, VISITING ARTIST
RISSELL IS SENIOR MAYEX on the
Saint Joseph's Lake Murphy
Hall in Murphy, OCTOGINTA
MOONLIGHT RIDE will begin at 9 a.m. at
KANE BLANC.
TOMORROW: OCTOGINTA AC-
TIVITIES will be held all day beginning
with a breakfast Ride at 7 a.m. at South
Park. PIANO MASTER CLASSES with
Leon Fleischer will be at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall.
SUNDAY: OCTOGINTA $MILE ride registration begins at 7 a.m. at South Park and ends at 10 a.m. at Albert Gerkin will begin at 3 p.m.
UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA will perform a fall concert at 3:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Chinese STUDENTS ASSOCIATION will open an exhibit at 4 p.m. in the Big Eight DANCE CLUB will present a Balkan Fashion Exhibit all this week and a dance performance at 2 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center and Vernon streets. THE ART CENTER will host highlights of Saturday's game at 5 p.m. in the southeast lounge of the Satellite Union, with highlights of Saturday's game at 5 p.m. the Church will apperate a dinner at 3:30 p.m.
MONDAY: COMPANIES IN-
MEKONG
Weeknights until midnight Weekends until 2 a.m.
WE'RE STILL HERE!
OUTDOOR
ROLLER SKATE RENTALS
Golden Gate Skates 13th and Oread
--sua films
TERWINING ON CAMPUS in the School of Business will be Baird, Kurtz & Johnson will be Bendix, Celanese, Flea Analysis Center, Mason & Hangar, and Missouri Pacific. In the Department of law will be Strench, In the Department of medicine will Wilmer. In the department of chemistry will be Celanese and in the department of Master Classes concocto. FINE ARTS MASTER CLASSES will begin at 9 a.m. and 13:0 p.m. pianist, will begin at 9 a.m. and 13:0 p.m. at Swarbow Realtor Hall. COMMISSION ACTION COMMITTEE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Orcad Room of the Union. KU COMMISSION ON SOUTH AFRICA will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 68044
913-841-4326
NAVY OFFICER
IT'S NOT JUST A DEPT. ADVENTURE!
For more information, contact your recruiter or send your resume to: John Searsh
NAVY OFFICER.
IT'S NOT JUST A JOB. IT'S AN ADVENTURE.
RUN A MILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS IN LESS THAN A YEAR.
THE GREAT AMERICAN HOT DOG GRAND OPENING
Thursday-Friday-Saturday—Get a 20c robate check with each hot dog.
BUY A DOG—GET A CHECK
205 W. 8th—between Rocky J's & Bogarts—Holiday Plaza Shopping Center
B.V.D.—Proprietor
U.S.A.
Supply officers are the Navy's junior officer, a supply officer responsible for a single ship runs the equivalent of a million-dollar
★★★★★
MONDAYS— All Btl. & Can Beer 55*
WEDNESDAYS—
Drink's Dry
Draft Beer
Ladies $1.50
Gents $2.50
All you can drink
FRIDAYS—
TGIF Pitchers $1
The
205 W. 8th—between Kocky J's & Bogarts—Holiday Plaza Shopping Center
B.V.D.—Proprietor
U.S.A.
PLUS! When $2
Worlds Collide
FRIDAY &
SATURDAY
MIDNITE
Varsity
Downtown 843-1065
PLUS! When $2 Worlds Collide
Other Place
1717 W. 8th
843-9706
AMAZING! TERRIFYING! The most savage spectacle of all time!
DON'T FELL HOW IT ENTER
WAR OF THE WORLDS
TECHNICOLOR
GENE BARRY • ANN ROBINSON • LEWIS MARTIN • LES TREMAYNE • FRANK KREIG
Friday & Saturday.
October 12-13
DAYS OF HEAVEN
Directed by Terrence Malick, with Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, Sam Shepherd, and Linda Manz. Photography by Nestor Al曼托尔. Plus Maya Dareen's "Study in choreography for 9am." . Sat. matinee in Forum 9am.
Midnight Movies EMMANUEL, THE JOYS OF A WOMAN
Directed by Francis Glacobetti, with Sylvia Kristel. RATED X—Positive age ID required for admittance.
Sunday, October 14
RETURN ENGAGEMENT!!
FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
(1971)
Directed by Norman Jewishen, with
Ashley Lindsay and *I I Were a Rich Man* (Sunrise,
Sunset!) by Jerry Bock and Sheldon
Harnick. Due to the amount of disap-
pose during our interview, we
FIDDLER last month, we are bringing
2 more show! $1.50 admission.
*2:00pm—Woodruff Auditorium
5:30 pm—Ballroom
Monday, October 15 JULES AND JIM
(1961)
Directed by Francie Truffaut, with
this classic film of the French New
Wave. Adapted as Truffaut as a
leading world director, Francombe
was a
Tuesday, October 16 BULLITT
Directed by Peter Yates, with Steve McOuen, Jacqueline Bisset, and Robert Vaughan, includes the famous Charles H. Warren of San Francisco's hills street.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
.admission
Weekends show also in Woolduff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m. otherwise with 1:45 admission. No Refreshments.
Gays march on Washington during rally for rights
By KATHLEEN CONKEY
Special to the Kansan
WASHINGTON - The murble statue of Abraham Lincoln looked down from its perch in the Lincoln Memorial yesterday afternoon and saw something very different.
On the steps coming down from the memorial stood 80 red jacketed men with yellow silk roses in their lapels. They were the Los Angeles Men's Gay Chorus and "The Star Spangled Fighter" and "America the Beautiful."
Beyond them, gay couples walked hand-in-hand around the reflection pools. And walked the pools, in buildings and gardens. In Washington Monument two blocks away, at least 50,000 homosexual men and women, by U.S. Park District.
The gays asked for an end to all economic,
judicial and legal oppression of lesbians and gay people."
The rally of speakers and singers was the culmination of a national March on Lesbian and Gay Rights for Lesbian and Gay Rights.
THE TREK WAS, however, more like a parade than a civil rights march. Gay people from every state, 17 foreign nations, many religious groups, and racial and national backgrounds were there.
"Give me some men who are stoot-hearted men and will fight for the rights they adore," sang the 80s boy. "In those days, they were not afraid."
Am Murdock, a college music teacher from
California and accompanist, said it had
sung in bars and at festivals for 12 weeks to earn money to come to the march.
A GROUP OF BLIND gay people was led through the march by signed friends and a large contingent of volunteers.
Tom, a 19-year-old from Washington, D.C., said his mother knew he was at the march, but that she did not.
Then there was Proncicto. She said she was from the lesbian clown cinderent, however, she said she was from the queer girl cinderent.
Dressed in typical clown garb and speaking with a strong Italian accent, Procnto explained that her friend was one of the most famous of them.
Adole Starr, a former teacher from Los Angeles,
came to Washington to help organize the National
Baseball League.
STAIR SARN THAT 11 years ago, when her son told her that he was gay, she did not accept it.
"I had to learn to understand," she said. "We were given all the information, we are criminals and sinners and sick, and that has caused them to be criminals and sinners and sick. We're here to tell the word that it's not true. We are."
"We're here to support human rights for our children," she said.
In Zodiz shirts and crew neck sweaters, a group from Harvard passed, followed by Vassar and John.
In the lineages of states, the prairie region came first. Under a small sign reading "Kanas" marched eight
"It's a difficult thing to come out of the closet when
you live in Kansas," said Jim Dawson, an audit manager for the Kansas State Department of Social Security.
PEGY YASSETT, from Topka, said that she had time to attend the dance because she recently had
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
e every guy person here, there must be 80 more people who have come from he'd said.
"They found out that I was gay," she said. "I don't want to tell you who I was working for because I may have been a lesbian."
Lynn Wilkerson, Kansas City, Mo., said it was important to attach the march to a number.
He said he attended the march, "just to make people smile and have a good time."
Boyd Masten, a teacher at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, said he was originally a professor.
PAPER
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 36
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Monday. October 15. 1979
Pirates whip Orioles, 7-1
10
See story page six
Bicucle buddies
drink beer and relax with music played by Eddie Zovodnik's polka band after riding 80 miles westerly in the 10th annual Octogonia.
Dan Fellsworth, Liberty, Mo., high school senior, and George Hayes, Warrenburg, Mo.
Bikers brave hills in Octoginta
Staff Writer
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
The ride began at a 1 a.m. yesterday at the South Park garchez. A huge group of cyclists and a police escort left town under heavy clouds and in cold air.
The wind turned faces red. Most people wore sweatshirts and long pants, but a few braved the cool, early-morning temperature expecting warmer weather later in the day.
By 8:30, all the riders had left town and the 10th annual Octoginta, sponsored by the Oread Bicycle Club was underway.
the 26 riders spread out quickly, pedaling on county roads from Lawrence to Perry. After a short rest in Perry, the nack headed north to the lake.
The route twisted up hills and across valleys, through forests of autumn color. At the top of what seemed to be the longest hill of the first 40 miles, Perry could
Some of those hats were murder, almost,
THE REWARD FOR puffing and straining up a hill was a view of what lay behead.
More hills. The pamphlet advertising the Octoginta had mentioned some "challenging hills." Those words had made me shudder.
But now, out on the 80-mile course, the hills became less menacing, even to a novice cyclist like myself.
The dull pain I'd noticed in my thighs faded into numbness.
I crossed a bridge over the lake and started up another in the succession of long, strength-draining hills, confident of my position in the first third of the long
Strong winds buffeted my borrowed bicycle as I nedald around the lake.
HALFWAY UP THE hill, I heard a pop and the sound of escaping air. The bicycle's ride became musky.
I had a flat tire. That's where my lack of cycling experienced glued through the endurance Imastered. Tools materials to perform any quick repairs were not
Sitting by the edge of the road, I watched the cyclists struggle up the hill while we watched them. I stood when the wagon arrived and noticed the numbness in my legs was aching.
Later, I learned that the fastest riders were arriving at the gazebo in South Park—the end of the ride—at that time.
I loaded my bike into the van and got in for the ride back to Lawrence.
DAVE CONRAD, racing chairman for the Oread Bicycle Club and a national class race, was one of the first cyclists to finish the ride.
in the 40-mile range, but I'm used to 100- mile races.
Conrad said, "This weekend was a weekend off for me. Most of my races are
"The hills were no sweat, but the wind really killed you. It wasn't that difficult, though."
During the ride, the experienced cyclists were easily distinguishable from the road. They were enveloped with European bicycle brand names and logos. They climbed the hills easily, shifting and lifting their tires off the ground.
A 7-year-old boy pedalled a small, one-speed, coaster-braked hike near the front of the pack.
Another novice rider swerved in front of an experienced cyclist, toppling the novice's bicycle and sending him rolling on the rough pavement.
A WHITE TANDEM 10-speed, ridden by a man and woman, pushed by the slower riders, thanks to its double power.
State committee clarifies GOP delegate rules
e hopped up, however, picked up his
See OCTOGINTA back page
Sen, Robert Dole, R-Kan., also was at Eisenhower Day to assure party members
By TONIWOOD
The Republican State Committee guaranteed yesterday that each of the five Kansas Congressional Districts would have an independent national convention in July 1989 at Detroit.
Staff Renorter
the action was taken yesterday at Eisenhower Day in Abbene, where the state committee not to approve the process for selecting delegates to the national conference.
The resolution was passed because state law does not require specifically that each state Congressional District be represented by a single candidate, which is required by national party rules.
The annual ceremony to lay a wreath on former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's grave was combined with a meeting of the GOF state committee and a barbecue for the funeral.
The resolution passed yesterday by the state committee gave Morris Kay, state party chairman, the authority to direct the election to comply with the principal party rules.
The Republican national party rules require that each district have at least three delegates, and that an attempt be made to reach a balance of men and women and a
Of the 32, 15 delegates will be elected at the five district conventions April 26, 1980. The remaining 17 will be elected at the state convention May 24.
that he was a serious contender for the 1980 GOP presidential nomination.
BEFORE DOLE'S SPEECH, the state finalized details on the selection of the 32 delegates to the national convention.
The state laws are more vague and do not require that each state Congressional District be represented at the national convention.
ACCORDING TO state laws, the state narty must choose Kansas delegates to the
The list must be submitted after the April deadline. The list is known how many delegates he is allowed the national convention. The list must include twelve as many delegates and after that a minimum of four.
national convention from a list of names submitted to the Secretary of State by the presidential candidate.
Only those candidates who receive more than 5 percent of the popular vote from the state primary are entitled to delegate. The state will be proportional to the primary vote.
For example, if Ronald Reagan enters the Kansas presidential primary and gets 50 percent of the Republican vote, he is entitled to victory. If Ronald Reagan delegates from Kansas.
KANSS DEMOCRATS dealt with the difference in state laws and national party rules Sept. 15 when they adopted detailed steps for delegate selection.
According to Donna McCain, a secretary for the state party. Democratic party
members who want to be considered as a delegate must submit their names to the state party chairman, Larry Bengston, by March 15.
After that, the process is much like the Republican's delegate selection.
one presidential candidates send a list of the secretary of State and from that list, delegates are selected to the Democratic national convention by the state
After the Republican state committee unanimously accepted the delegate nomination, Mr. Fazio asked by Dale to support him and to go to Iowa to help in his effort to win the Republican nomination.
THE PARTY CHOOSES the delegates from the lists at five district conventions on October 31, 2014, and 37 delegate to the Democratic convention. Of the 37, 26 delegates will be elected at the district conventions, eight will be elected at the state convention and three will be party delegates.
Exigency definitions mesh, counsel says
By DAVE LEWIS
Staff Reporter
The legal counsel for the Kansas Board of Regents confirmed last weekend that KU's definition of financial exigency would not be applied to students, said Arlene R. Dykes said yesterday.
Dykes said he had received a letter this weekend from Bill Kauffman, legal counsel for the Regents.
Financial exigency is a state of financial crisis and would be declared by Dykes if budgetary difficulties arose and the release of tenured faculty members became
In the letter to Dykes, Kauffman said, "I have reviewed carefully the University of Kansas' financial information from you that I find no inconsistency or incompatibility in the detailed definition, plans and strategies of the Lawrence campus of the University and the more general definition and plans adopted by the Board of Regents at their meeting."
Kauffman was not available yesterday to comment on the letter.
DYKES the letter confirmed in writing the sentiments of KU officials that the Regents definition of financial exigency would not conflict with KU's definition.
Some faculty members have said the Regents definition was too vague and could limit the effectiveness of KU's definition.
The Regents policy says, "It will be the responsibility of the chief executive officer of each Regents institution, in consultation with appropriate campus groups, to develop a plan for reductions in personnel as well as by conditions of financial exclusion."
KU's policy states that the release of tenured faculty is to be used "only as a last resort... after all possible alternatives
See related story page three
have in good faith been examined, and utilized or rejected."
Dykes met with the AAUP Thursday to discuss the group's objections to the Regents policy.
"This is a big step forward." Srinivasan said. "It certainly improves the climate for further discussion.
The AUAP said in its Oct 1 resolution that 'The Regents definition of financial exigency effect substitutes legislatively defined norms for acceptance for a genuine financial crisis.'
"THIS LETTER IS satisfactory as far as the status of the KU document goes, but there is still another aspect which is equally important. The Regents acceptance that the Regents definition weakens their commitment to tenure. This aspect is not just for KU, but is a statewide law."
The AAIP also contended that the policy definition violated the accepted standards of academic accountability and appraisement” KUa’s exigency policy states that when possible, faculty members should use the AAIP’s definition.
THE ASSOCIATION of American University Professors adopted a resolution Oct. 4 requesting affirmation from the Regents that KU's definition would remain in effect and any amendments to the resolution by the KU faculty and administrators.
P. T. Srinivasan, chapter president of the AIP, said yesterday that Kauffman's letter was a step in the right direction. But he said AAPU representatives from each faith institution need to meet with Kauffman to confirm the Regents commitment to tenure.
The Regents policy does not specifically mention notification to faculty members of their release.
Staff Reporter
By BRETT CONLEY
AIAW adopts plan to work with NCAA
The Association of Intercollegiate America for Women took a first step Friday toward the recognition of National Collegiate Athletic Association concerning the governance of women's sports.
At a meeting of the AIAW Executive Board last week in Washington D.C., a proposal was approved to the NCAA to deal with problems rising from the sponsorship of women's athletes by both organizations, according to Ruth Laird, AIAW Region Six
The NCAA now must agree to the joint committee, she said. The committee would work out details between the NCAA and AIAW concerning the sponsorship of the game and creating an organization to govern men's and women's athletics. Laver said.
Bob Marcus, KU athletic director, said the discrepancy between the rules of the two organizations made it hard to operate a combined men's and women's athletic team.
PHYLLIS HOWLETT, assistant director in charge of non-revenue fees, said, "My concern is that federal laws disallow defrauding them will have to work something out."
"I would like to see the organizations come together and have one set of rules," Marcium said. "There is an awful lot of differences between the two. In fact, there are more differences probably than there are similarities as far as rules are concerned."
Currently, the NCAA is involved only in men's athletics, but Tom Hansen, associate director of the NCAA, said that the NCAA has decided direct involvement in women's athletics.
"I have been told that there will be specific amendments offered at this year's NCAA convention to authorize the NCAA to sponsor women's championships. Hansen
"Many NCAA institutions do not belong to the AIAW and they are adamant that we must give their women championships," Hansen said. "Also, many people feel NCAA should have a scholarship program and the expenses of the teams would be paid by us, which the AIAW does not do."
Hansen said the NCAA was considering the sponsoring of women's championships for several reasons.
THE NCAA FIRST took an interest in women's athletics in 1975 when a special committee on women's athletics was appointed at the NCAA convention, Hansen
In 1977, the NCAA formed the Committee on Women's Athletics, which is a permanent committee now. Hansen said that Committee members will continue this week that specific representation be given to women on the Council, which sponsors legislation for the NCAA con-
In a second effort to create opportunities for women in the NCAA, Hansen said, member institutions were allowed to bring women to the college for the first instead of three. The extra delegate is requested to be a woman, Hansen said, even though institutions were not required to do so.
Lauer said that despite attempts by the NCAA to create more opportunities for women, she thought the AIAW could do more for women's athletics than the NCAA.
"The AIAW wants whatever is the best for the women athletics," Laver said. "We feel that the people who have been involved in these organizations are the ones who can do the best job."
?
University Daily Kansan
2 Monday, October 15. 1979
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wire Services
Carter leads Florida balloting
MIAMI- With two large blocks of votes still to be counted, President Carter held a statewide lead yesterday over Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in Florida's Democratic Party caucuses. Carter backers claimed victory in the first bulletin of the 1980 presidential campaign.
but wine Carter seemed certain to emerge with a majority of the elected delegates. Kennedy supported called the senator's showing, 'one of the best.'
Still to bealled are ballots for IDB delegates in Dade County, which includes Miami, and for 40 delegate in Palm Beach County. Party officials said a
Black leader to blast PLO talks
Results from 64 of the state s 67 counties gave Carter 368 delegates, Kennedy 104, a state coteled by organized labor 19 while 27 remained uncommitted.
NEW YORK - Veterans should participate in the black civil rights leader, reportedly plans to reproach some other black leaders for their recent meetings with leaders of the Palestinian Liberation Organization.
In a speech to be delivered in Kansas City, Mo., today at the annual meeting of the National Catholic Charities, Jordan will call the meetings "sideless"
A copy of the speech was obtained by the New York Times and ran in the nayer's Sunday editions.
President Carter also is scheduled to address the conference.
The speech said, "Black-Jewish relations should not be endangered by ill-considered flirtations with terrorist groups devoted to the extermination of
"We've got to recognize that our agenda demands construction of powerful alliances. We don't do it alone. We shouldn't do it alone."
Diverted train traveling 65 mph
HARVEY, ill. — A recording device retrieved from the demolished locomotive of an Amikrail train shows the train was traveling about 65 mph when it was diverted into a fatal head-on crash with a parked freight train, a federal official said yesterday.
William Pugh, head of the investigation for the National Transportation Safety Board, said four teams were looking at separate aspects of the accident that killed two people and injured 44 others Friday night. The crash apparently resulted from a switching error.
the train was carrying more than 200 persons, including dozens of college students, in Chicago when it was switched onto the same track as a parked train.
KC could lose arena grants
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Two federal grants that city officials were relying on to help finance the reconstruction of Kemper Arena might be in jeopardy now because the city awarded construction and engineering contracts for the job without accepting competitive bids.
The Department of Commerce informed city officials last week that it would not waive the requirement of competitive bidding on all contracts of more than
However, Mayor Richard Berkley said that the city had received assurances that competitive bids were not required before awarding the construction and building permits.
The cost of repairing the damage caused when the arena's roof collapsed June 4 exceeded to exceed $3 million.
The city was to receive $50,000 from the Economic Development Administration and $300,000 in federal funds from the Ozarks Regional Com-
munity.
Castro ends guarded U.S. trip
NEW YORK - Cuban President Fidel Castro left New York at dawn yesterday after a busy 77 hour visit seeping cementing his position as leader of the non-aligned nations and meeting Puerto Rican nationalists, U.S. congressmen and American media celebrities.
His departure also ended some of the heaviest, most expensive security measures ever taken for a visiting dignitary. The New York City police and the Secret Service kept the four-block area around the U.N.: Cuban Mission where Castro stayed in mid-Manhattan heavily guarded.
During the 59-year-old Communist leader's first trip to the United States in 1949, Castro spoke to the United Nation's General Assembly as head of the 59-second session.
In an impassioned two-hour speech, he called for a new world economic order and for industrialized nations to participate in a $2 billion-a-year program to help poor countries.
Possible PCB source found
KANNSA CITY, Mo. The *Environmental Protection Agency* is looking into the possibility that the wastewater there has been producing waste of all the toxic chemical PCBs.
An EPA spokeswoman has confirmed that an electrical transformer on the ground floor of the post office's main building is being investigated as the cause.
The inquiry also is related to an investigation into Radium Petroleum Co. of Independence, Mo., and Deffenbach Disposal Service of Shawnee, which are involved in the mining activities.
The Independence company has been named in a suit filed by the EPA with seven alleged violations of federal regulations. The suit is seeking $131,000 in damages.
One of the primary sources of PCB, polychlorinated biphenyl, is transformers, where it is used as a cooling oil. Its manufacture has been banned by the government since it was discovered that PCB did not break down in the environment.
3-year-old dies despite Laetrile
The youngest died Friday evening in Tijuana, Mexico, where his parents took him to continue Laetrie treatments of defiance of a Massachusetts court order.
The cause of Chad's death was not announced, nor was there any official announcement on an autopsy.
HARON - Leukemia victim Chad Green is dead at the age of three, but the legal ramifications of his parents' fight to treat him with Lactoferil still are to be resolved.
Should the Greens return to Massachusetts, they would be taken before Volterra for sentencing on the civil contempt of court finding. They could be tried, before another judge, for criminal contempt if prosecutors decided to proceed with that action.
His parents, Gerald and Diana Green, were found in civil contempt of probable early this year by Judge Guy Volterra, and there was a hint finding of probable wrongdoing.
processives in the city and they doubted any criminal charges could be brought against the Greens in Massachusetts because of Chad's death. He died his third day in the hospital, according to a news release from the Greens.
New rates could hurt housing
WASHINGTON — a time bomb is set to go off in the early 1980s that could send the coat of bombs sky high and the detonator may be the new surge of high-pressure gas.
Once the market opens up again, probabilty in 1981 and no later than 1982 buyers will come flying in1, said Ken Kerin, an economist for the National Bank.
Ironically, the rapidly rising interest rates were designed to cut inflation and the excessive credit that had infected most markets, including housing.
Expertss that as mortgages became too expensive for most people, and specially dried up for others, the pressure for housing would increase until
However, in Atlanta yesterday, Vendal G. Gravelie, the president of the National Homebuilder's Association and said that interest roses and the tight growth of real estate were the main drivers.
Weather...
The National Weather Service in Topeka has predicted cloudy skies for Monday, with highs in the low 70s and lows in the 40s. Winds will be out of the south at 10 to 15 km/h. The extended forecast calls for cloudy skies and a chance of showers for Wednesday, and highs in the 68s for Thursday.
BANGOK, Thailand (AP) - Carpain planes flirted tons of food and other relief supplies yesterday to Phnom Penh for Cambodia's starving people, but organizers of the emergency international airlift they feared a famine might not be averted.
Airlift attempts to avert famine
The Cambodian government gave the goahead for the relief program Saturday, and it got under way even though formal agreement has been held up over the government's insistence that no food should be given to the followers of depreciated Presti Pa.
On the Thai-Cambodia border, meanwhile, a mortar attack from the Cambodian army shot and injured 12 others in a camp on Thai territory. The soldiers said they were unarmed, but land-locked
Vietnamese and Cambodian government forces continue to battle Pol Pot's guerrillas in the Cambodian countryside.
Cambodian government were believed responsible.
Thirty nations have pledged more than
$110 million to the relief effort, coordinated by the US Embassy in France and Emergency Fund. Two planes carried 35 tons of food into Phnom Penh yesterday, but officials of the international agencies said that no more aid was available.
In a new estimate, UNICEF spokesman Jacques Danais said 165,000 tons of food would be needed over the next six months to avert a famine.
scheduled to be sent in by sea by the end of the month.
A number of relief operations that could help reach that goal are still in planning stages, but more than 10,000 tons of food are
The funds committed to the airlift include an initial pledge of $7 million and eventually as much as $30 million from the United States.
Jayhawk's this Wednesday don't miss a night with
The changing estimates of how much relief is needed—a figure that has risen from 700 tons a day—face the difficulties and groups are facing with a reluctant attitude. The war has been decimated by war, famine and the disruptive policies of Po Sol.
Jayhawk's this Wednesday don't miss a night with
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Monday, October 15, 1979
3
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
A LAWRENCE MAN was in critical condition after he was struck by a car Friday at Burgham Park, Second and Indiana streets, police said.
Date F. Jones was taken first to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and then taken by helicopter to the Med Center, police said. The patient was not available from police or the hospital.
A police spokeman said police were not aware of the circumstances of the accident, but it was clear that the vehicle. Police would not release a description of the vehicle that struck Jones because of an overturned car.
At 1:15 a.m. Sunday, a man reported he saw two black males get out of a 178 afthedawn Cadillac, climb into the man's 1968 BMW and crash into it. The man Collapsed in the Cadillac, police said.
Police also investigated a report of a stolen car that led to a chase by police and ended in a police car being destroyed.
After officers were dispatched to look for the stolen car, police received a report of persons in the Meadowbrook addition allegedly siphoning gas and putting it in a white vehicle. Police dispatched an unidentified man into water, two back-units to assist in the chase.
University Daily Kansan
back up the firewall.
At the intersection of 15th and Coventry streets, the Cadillac ran into one of the police cars. The officer in the car swept to
the left in an attempt to avoid the oncoming car, but was struck in the rear.
The police car, valued at $6,000, was destroyed.
destroy.
The two occupants of the Cadillac fled on foot into the woods north of 15th street and escaped from police.
Meanwhile, the driver of a Lincoln, which also had been reported stolen, drove onto Coventry Manor and stopped. He was apprehended by police.
The driver, a juvenile, admitted to police that he and two companions had stolen the Chevrolet, the Cadillac and the Lincoln. He was charged with driving under the influence and police were seeking two other suspects.
the cars were taken to Hillcrest Wrecker and Chevrolet, 1129 E. Bury, in Carnegie Hill, about 6 a.m. in the 1000 block of Wellington Dr. and 875 E. Bury, where he had recorded a stolen Lincoln, police said.
A JUVENILE WAS DESTATED NATHED in connection with a burglary at Southport town centre, where width of equipment was taken, police reported. The juvenile was apprehended after a man reported that someone was sleeping in the car parked which was parked on police station.
When police arrived to investigate, they discovered the juvenile and some of the stolen items. The subject was detained in a detention center, which released to his parents, s. al official said.
AAUP seeks rules for pamphlet distribution
By DAVE LEWIS
Staff Reporter
The Association of American University Press and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, in future to discourage the distribution of alleged "defamatory" handouts, it was announced on Thursday.
T. P. Stirnivasan, chapter president of the AUAP, said yesterday that the AUAP and the college drafted a resolution during a meeting last week that criticized a Humanities 104 course.
The handout, which urged students enrolled in the course to drop it, was anonymously distributed at Wescoe Hall on the first day of classes.
The resolution said, "An anonymous circular attacking two professors was distributed in the hallway just outside their office, with a large number of slurs on individuals are denotable.
"Not only we condemn the anonymity of the circular, but we believe that when such material is distributed adjacent to a surface it disrupts the normal activity of the class.
"IN THE FUTURE, we shall do all we can to respond as an相应or to such activities
Srinivas said the AAUP would send the resolution to the University Senate executive committee.
and to defend as necessary the faculty members so attacked."
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
"The object is to get the committee to look into appropriate guidelines for the future distribution of samplers." Srinivasan said.
"We believe that the committee will get in touch with legal advisers before it makes recommendations or possible steps that the University could take."
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Mike Davis, university general counsel, had said earlier that a freedom of speech issue depended on the circumstances of the incident.
*SOME FEMALE WANTS to stand out on the sideline and say something as a bad teacher, but you don't have to about it. As you get closer to the classroom and disci- tare it, the case becomes very
Davis would not say whether the University had authority to take legal action on such handouts.
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By DAVE LEWIS Staff Reporter
KU tenure policy to be reconsidered
The University Senate executive committee decided Friday to place discussion of a controversial amendment to the university's constitution at the University Council's November agenda.
The University Council will reconsider the amendment Nov. 1 and forward its recommendations to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
The amendment authorizes elected committees from each department to recommend tenured faculty that would be released in case of financial exigency.
The amendment was passed last spring by SenEx and was forwarded to the University Council Sept. 6 fc: its anewrel.
You have something to share with the people of the rural South and Appalachia yourself. Find out how
The Association of American University Professors adopted a resolution Oct. 4 that questioned the role
of the committees determining termination of tenured professors.
Cole said that the implications of such a committee had not been analyzed sufficiently upon the passage of the amendment.
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Richard Cole, a member of AAPU, earlier that elected committees would make the exigency procedure political in favor of changing factions among faculty members.
In other business, SenEx voted to meet with sheriff's executive vice president Kyle Schmale to discuss the new interim videowatching earlier this month by EK administration.
The interim policy allows the University Police Department to videotape any University public event and evidence for criminal prosecution.
Your request will be treated confidentially.
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Register October 15-19
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Where: Residence Halls
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In front of the Union Oct.18 & 19
This fall the KU Blood Drive will be by appointment and walk-ons are discouraged because of lack of time and space
The Bood Drive will be in the Union Ballroom October 22, 23 & 24 Sponsored by Panhellenic and the Interfaternity Council.
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1144INDIANA 842-1059
ACACIA KZ $ \sum\phi E \tau\phi B $
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9th Year!
"THE BALLAD OF BLACK JACK"
DON MUELLER'S
FULL LENGTH, HISTORICAL
MUSICAL!
with CHARLEY OLDFATHER as John Brown
From Lawrence: Keith Weidenkeller
Frank Chaffin
Bob Newton
Kathy McGee
THE HOLY FLOWER
SPECIAL LAWRENCE BIRTHDAY PERFORMANCE!
SPECIAL LAWRENCE BIRTHDAY LETTER
To salute the city of Lawrence on its 125th birthday, all Lawrence residents may deduct $1.00 from the price of each ticket for the SUNDAY MATINEE!
FRIDAY, OCT. 19 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY, OCT. 20 2:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
INDAY, OCT. 21 3:30 p.m.
RESERVED SEATING: $3.75, $3.25
UNRESERVED BALCONY SEATS: $2.50
It's part of the 1979
MAPLE LEAF
FESTIVAL:
Doors open one hour before curtain, each show. Phone reservations must be paid for one hour prior to curtain. CHILDREN HALF PRICE: no infants will be admitted.
Oct.20,21!
TELEPHONE: 594-3064 or 594-6541,
ext. 536, 9 to 5, daily
Parade Saturday at noon! Steaks in the street, breakfast on the prairie! Carnival, crafts, square dancing!
Baldwin City is just 15 miles from Lawrence. Take 59 to the junction of 56 and 59; turn east and travel 4 miles. You may make reservations by mail and pick them up at the door!
UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of other editors.
October 15, 1979
Racism on the rise
We're fooling ourselves.
We tell ourselves we've come so far since Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education, since the 1964 Civil Rights law, since the days of the Selma, Ala., march.
We tell ourselves that bias is decreasing in our society, that we've come a long way.
So how do we explain the alarming resurgence of racist graffiti on desks and in elevators? How do we explain American students who snicker at others who speak a language foreign to them? And how do we explain the renewed practice of clubs turning away certain people?
THE TRUTH is that we don't want to explain it—it's so much easier to pretend it does not exist. We're a content generation, we're told. We don't have the pressing problems of the 1980s, we repeat mechanically, so we run away with reminders of a past we thought we had left behind go by without question.
Unfortunately, Lawrence is showing signs of such a poisonous attitude. No draft, no war, no segregated lunch counters. No problems? Wrong.
The segregated lunch counters may be a thing of the past, but KU students are becoming perfectly content with kitchenware that cater almost exclusively to whites.
RECENT INQUIRIES by the Kansan and TV stations in Topeka and Kansas City, Mo., have led to the
possibility of an investigation into membership policies of two Lawrence private clubs by the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights.
Whether such an investigation will result in some sort of action against the clubs' owners remains to be seen.
But what can be seen, and what must be realized, is that KU students, who most frequent the clubs, can do something about the problem. In fact, students may be as much to blame as the owners.
When white students buy memberships to such clubs, they are not only accepting inexcuseable policies, but also are promoting them.
It's easy to say that the problem isn't there, that blacks and foreign students just happened to try to join at the wrong time.
"IN THEIR eagerness to comply (with more affluent students' social preferences)," says Clarence Dillingham, professor of social welfare and former acting director of affirmative action at KU, "the clubs quickly changed atmosphere, form, dress codes, and with the additional advantage of reciprocity rights to members, the over-21 establishments where they were listening and assured those who preferred not to be in the company of Third World people that there would be more discretion."
But then again, we've always had an amazing tendency to fool ourselves about the true state of affairs.
World Series arrives decked out in glory
Ah. the World Series.
America's national pastime always comes to a roaring dimax at this stage of the nation. But the driving force drives people to a freazy and reckless nostalgic thought of the country's favorite
this year is no exception. The nation now hails on, forgetting so many of the day-to-day responsibilities. The Baltimore Orioles meet face-to-face to decide who is the best team in baseball. It is not only the confrontation of two teams, but also the tensions between Pittsburgh and Baltimore, to see who may舞 in the streets and proclaim themselves throughout the long, cold winter months.
IT HAS ALWAYS been that way. Throughout this century, baseball heroes have been applauded and loved. There is a special mystique surrounding the professionals who have donated Yankee pants and Dodger blue or have stepped in some places as add Sportsman Park in St. Louis or Wrigley Field in Chicago.
There was Roger Maris' 61st home run and Aaron's 715th blast, both of which cracked old records by Ruth. Willett captured a crowd and good-natured captive capitated crowds.
There have been the great hitters—Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle and Henry Aaron. There have been the great managers—Casey Stoll, Sandy Koufax and Bob Gibson. And there have been the great managers—Casey Stoll, Sandy Koufax and Bob Gibson. These are the men who have thrilled us with home runs, stellar pitching performances and wins.
There have been other great moments, such as Bobby Thompson's game-and-penning win home for the old New York Giants in 1951 and Bob Gibson's 17 strikeouts in the third game of the 1967 season. The Cardinals had defeated the Boston Red Sox.
THE MEN WHO have played the game have done more for this country than just playing the games. They are leaders in the nation and valuable assets to D-Maggia, jacket Rockets and Long Island.
david COLUMNIST preston
are some of the great ballplayers who have meant as much to people as leaders as they did as players.
The World Series brings all of this to a form the first classic. The National Football League's championship game, the National Basketball Association this past week must defer to the Series-terminated playoffs.
THE PIRATES and the Orioles last met in the World Series in 1971 when the Pirates, behind the brilliant leadership and play of the former Royals, pitched the Orioles in seven games. The Orioles' star, third baseman Brooks Robinson, also had a great World Series that year. Wednesday night's game was the first ball of the game as the hometown fans cheered. The Pirates can only play in the memory of Clemente, who died in a plane crash the winter following the 1971 World Series.
The 1979 Series is for the working man. No flashy New York or Los Angeles teams are ready to play these tough workplaces, worker who toils in the steel factories in Pittsburgh or in the textile mills in Baltimore. Baseball is no ollt sport, and baseball has been a working town that for years have taken time-out from work to follow their teams on television in bars or in the cheap seats at
The World Series is the end of the race for supremacy in a sport that is more American than any other. It is this kind of event that will be welcomed by admiring fans. Will this worshipping by admiring fans. Will this power-hunting Dawker, just as last year, power-hunting Reggie Jackson? Or will the hero be the crafty pitcher, Mike Flanagan, who throws fastballs like Ron
Regardless who the hero is, the World Series stands as testimony to the greatness of this country's favorite baseball. Baseball always be, a vital part of American life.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(1) 0516 6946484: Postdied at the University of Kwauneng on August 19th, 2013 and Mintel and Moody's
(2) 0516 6946484: Postdied at the University of Kwauneng on August 19th, 2013 and Mintel and Moody's
(3) 0516 6946484: Postdied at the University of Kwauneng on August 19th, 2013 and Mintel and Moody's
Postmaster: Send changes to the University Daily Kansan, First Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 86045
Editor Mary Hosok
Managing Editor
Nancy Dreaser
Editorial Editor Mary Ernst
Business Manage Cynthia Ray
Retail Sales Manager...
National Sales Manager
Retail Sales Manager
National Sales Manager
Vincent County
Canada
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowtns
General Manager Rick Musser
Blessed is the Highway Oil Co. of Topkea, for it has committed itself to building an energy self-sufficient alcohol plant in Kansas.
Alcohol plant a blessing to Kansas
Highway's subsidiary, Hudson Ranches, will join in the building of the multimillion-dollar $400-million cattle feedlot-alcohol plant fertilizer plant. it will be built about 30 miles west of the airport.
Highway is being very shrewd in making the investment. It can get a 10 percent tax credit for the construction of the plant and will benefit mildly from a Kansas graduated fuels tax, which reduces the tax burden. The company gains a gallon in the first year of production.
The plant's operation plan is a marvelous cycle involving technology that has existed separately for decades and has never been combined. It will produce fertilizer and dithered caterpillar for market, market give a boost to local grow markets.
ALCOHOL will be produced from milo, sugar beets and potatoes; the distilled grain waste will be fed to the cattle; the animal waste will be used as solar power with the help of solar power; and the methane gas will fuel the boilers for the alcohol plant.
It's also a good political move because Congress has legislation pending that would increase the tax credit to 20 percent.
It's a nice, neat package.
THE PLANT is basically an internal effort. Highway plans to get the necessary infrastructure, including Hudson Ranches, Grain will be brought from Nebraska and Colorado will provide a hay supply.
And Highway isn't limiting its choice of
alcohol raw materials to just milo, sugar beets and potatoes. In about three hours, these ingredients are extracted from cellulose fibers found in grasses, wooded chips, wood scrap, paper, wheat bran, fodder seeds.
melissa COLUMNIST thompson
Highway's dream plant could not have been built at a better time, nor in a better location. The plant about 75 percent energy self-sufficient. It could provide the key to bringing ethanol-gasoline blends into a car where use would be sensible, not just noble.
CURRENTLY AT LEAST two stations in Lawrence are selling Gasolone blends instead of premium unleaded gasoline. Experts say any American-made car should be able to use the Gasolone blends to 20 per bottle alcohol without any engine modification.
But the price of the wonder fuel is higher than regular gasoline. People who would like to be more conservative in their use of gasoline might do so, because their budget just won't allow it.
gasoline marker with 225 stations in 26 states, began selling a 10 percent/90 percent Gasolol mixture at its stations last spring.
This is a choice area to build such a plant, too. Kansas' economy is already built solidly around the grain and cattle industries. The high alcohol production is sound business thinking.
HIGHWAY IS no stranger to Gasohol production. The company, an independent
With its market already established and with such a magical production plan, how can it lose?
ALCOHOL with use of boilers
DISTILLED GRAIN WASTE
GRAIN PRODUCTS
CATTLE
GASOHOL
GAS-POWERED BOILERS FOR ALCOHOL PLANT
ANIMAL WASTE (methane gas)
using solar energy
One problem is the Department of Energy's reluctance to allocate more unleaded gasoline to the company for the production of Gasolol.
Lawrence third year law students
Chris Long
and the selflessness of the Oil Tribe is rearing its head. The major oil companies that supply Highway have been failing to deliver the gas. What a coincidence.
It's good to see a company finally take such initiative. It's all the sweeter because the plant is so well-suited to the state's economy and supply of raw materials.
It would, however, be more accurate to say that the amount of effort put into an assigned case varies greatly from attorney to attorney.
To suggest that in this case a court-appointed attorney was not doing his or her best solely because of the predominance of women jurors is blatantly and grossly unfair and reflects Mr. Hank's lack of interest in the process and process involved in jury selection.
Are we writing to disagree with Mank's suggestion that some court-appointed attorneys may put as much as a case as a case they might if privately retained.
We are not writing to suggest that this research, in fact, with increased public awareness of the falsehood of many myths surrounding sexual assault, the theory may lose validity.
Rape trial attorney unfairly blamed
To the Editor:
Brian K. Hank's letter in the Oct. 9 Kansan suggests the a recent kidnap and rape conviction could be traced in part to the fact that he was accused of rape by his man. His argument is based on the assumption that women jurors would be harasser on the accusated than men jurors
On the other hand, the theory suggests that women juniors tend to subconsciously seek to uphold the "it-deesn'bappe-ton" principle of authority and so tend to blame the victim. In most circumstances that involve a young victim who accepted a ride with the defendant, a jury of 11 women and one man would be advantageous to the accused assailant.
Unfortunately, most trial attorneys would suggest that the opposite is true.
The prevalent theory in rape trial jury selection is that men are likely to be sympathetic to and paternalistically protective victim, and thus harasser on the accused.
Kansan's headlines sloppy, inaccurate
To the Editor:
Considering the number of letters recently published praising the Kansan, a critical letter seems to be in order. As usual, the Kansan's headline would so like to criticize the sloppy headlines that appear in the Kansan. The following are examples from Tuesday's and Wednesday's Kansans:
"Law students watch police beat"—Who were the police beating while the students were watching? Oops.
"University may seek more funds / if solons reject 'formula-finding' ("ouristics) - solons of legislators) is an almost unforgiving case of headlineiness. A better head would have been: . . . if formula funding plan rejected, the better fund would be improved; for example, because the story specifically mentions "Regents schools" rather than KU.
These are just a few of the skoppy headlines in just two issues of the Kansan. Others have unlikely noun/verb combo structures, and others have peculiar ambiguities such as “yields no contest pla?” . (it’s this “yields a contest pla” or “ did not yield a contest pla”?)
The Kanan is not a professional newspaper, but we think we can expect better headlines than these. Perhaps the staff can chin in and buy a copy of HTK.
"I inspection show dwellings violate safety code"3, the story mentions buildings, never dwellings. The two words are the less appropriate word in the case of the less appropriate word "dwellings"4}$
Bruce Leban Lawrence junior
"Inquiry clears sheriff of charges" – wrong. The results of the investigation prompted by the inquiry cleared the sheriff.
"late paychecks hurt faculty fund?" the headline is talking about one particular? faculty fund; the story is talking about inquiries faculty members' retirement funds.
Bruce Leban
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Hawarth Hall climate is like meat locker
To the Editor:
President Carter may have a point by telling everyone to turn their thermostats down, but I don't think I hear him say shut the whole heating system down. The third floor of Hawthorn Hall could be used as a grocery store that doesn't have enough space.
When people have to buy space heaters and keep them running so they can type without mittens on, it seems to defeat the purpose of trying to save energy.
Anne Johnson
Anne Johnson
Housekeeper, Haworth Hall
Cross country needs more press ocverage To the Editor:
After reading the letter to the editor on Wed., Oct. 10, titled "Kansas sport staff reporting 'excellent,'" he to have command the writer responsible. The letter was well-written, and hopefully it opened the eyes of sports officials that Kansas is giving more space to nonrevenue sports.
However, one problem with the article was that many students who read it thought the team's coverage of these nonrenewce sports. Little did they realize that not one article about men's cross country, other than one from last year, had been Sure, there have been those sports briefs, but how can they do justice to the fine performances of the individuals and the teams?
THEE HAS been good coverage of other nonrevenue sports and individuals, with large articles and photographs. I'm not
saying that cross country deserves more space, but shouldn't it get at least equal time to other nonrevenue sports?
The members of the sports staff should realize that cross country at the University of Kansas is growing stronger and better. The teams are potentially the best ever. If they were to get the coverage they deserve, then maybe students would show some interest in these sports. Students who educate students about the fine cross country teams we have right now, not to mention the boost in morale it gives team members who have their accomplishments reported.
Even without help from the Kansas, the great team tests their continued their great team's skills and a dedication perseverance, determination and dedication. training to which little is given.
KNIT IT AMUSING THE WAY THEY CHATTER AND BEAT THEIR LITTLE CHESTS AND BOUNCE AROUND THE CAGE? IF YOU COULD GIVE THEM NAMES, WHAT WOULD YOU CALL THEM?
SENATOR STONE,
SENATOR CHURCH,
SENATOR DOLE,
SENATOR TOWER...
Paul Malott
Prairie Village junior
To the Editor:
In a recent letter, Pat Sick stated that there is not, and never has been, any quality control of construction at the ultimate heat sink at Wolf Creek Nuclear Station.
No problems found at Wolf Creek site
Slick's statement was correct because quality control was not needed during exposition. But if it was, the experiment will be interrupted, to mean that there will be no quality control of construction.
The ultimate heat sink is an arm of the main cooling lake, which is cut off by a low wall below the lake surface, below the water level of the main lake. Its purpose is to retain sufficient water to cool down the reactor of the main dam should fail or when the dam becomes damaged designed with very flat side slopes, armored with a blanket of gravel and a top layer of rip-rap composed of 34-foot diameter steel beams that are mounted withstand constant submergence, the flow of water over it if the main dam should fail, and the same sharp shut down in case of other category-one structures are designed.
Only excavation of the ultimate heat sink lake site and foundation of the dam has been done. No construction of the dam had begun before the project. The geoengineering geology adviser to a team of engineers from the Water Resources Division of the State Board of Agriculture. Members of the team were proposed for plans proposed in Kansas, issuing permits and monitoring construction for adherence to specifications. The official groundwater management bedrock foundation of the heat dam.
We were met at the site by the resident geotechnical engineer of the consulting firm that is in charge of quality control of dams and building conditions. We were chief of quality control for KGKE. The rock foundation for the dam had been air-blasted clean all and joints in the rock meticulously worked. This was the first time we had no problems and the foundation was approved for construction of the dam. Quality control of construction of the dam will be handled by a consultant for KGKE, and because it is a category-one structure, during periodic inspections by NIC regional soils
Frank W. Wilson, Chief Environmental Geology Section Kansas Geological Survey
Monday. October 15, 1979
University Daily Kansan
5
Classified Senate expects Dykes' decision this week
By JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
Classified employees at the University of Kansas will have to wait several days before the administration decides whether to recognize the Classified Senate.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday that he had received recognition for his work. Senate recognition from a special four-member administration committee, but
"This is not one of the items that we've been giving attention to in recent days," Dykes said. "I've been spending most of my
time trying to coordinate all the changes going on at the Med Center, where we've been moving patients into the new hospital."
The recommendations were sent to Dykes by the special administration committee after it met Oct. 5 to discuss a recognition of the achievement and Senate's interim steering committee.
Administration committee members would not dissect the nature of the problems that had arisen; were Richard Mann, chairman and University director, of informational materials for the committee.
JOSEPH COLLINS, chairman of the Classified Senate's intern steering committee, said he thought the administration would formally recognize the Senate.
encancellor; Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs; and Mike Davis, University general counsel.
"I'm glad Dykes has received the administration committee's recommendations to favor," he said. "I think the administration will recognize the need for classified employment."
Collins said Dykes had told him to expect decision by Wednesday or Thursday.
"Regardless of whether we are recognized," he said, "we will hold elections in November and seat a Senate in January to elect a new president." In public communication for 1.300 classified employees.
Collins said, however, that the Senate would operate even without recognition from the KU administration.
Without recognition, the Senate would have to work directly with the Kansas Legislature and the Board of Regents instead of workthrough through KU Collins said.
"WITH RECONFIGITION, the exchange of information between the administration and classified employees would be greatly
enlazed," he said. "Access to more information would keep us from taking incorrect stands because we were ignorant of something going on in the administration.
Hiram Stockwell, KU printing service and member of the Classified Senior Staff team. The SEN staff was too early for classified employees to consider contingency plans in anticipation of any unforeseen event.
"I don't want to cross that bridge until I come to it," Stockwell said. "I'm optimistic about recognition because both the student and faculty senates have responded
favorably to the idea of a Classified Senate."
stockwell said recognition from the administration would give classified employees a chance to voice their opinions on concerns concerning their job at the University.
THE MOST beneficial result of recognition, "be said," "will be knowing that we are being heard."
Colinns said the Senate's steering committee would meet tomorrow night, to certify nominations of 68 persons who would run for 68 senate seats in the November elections.
WZR
106
200
Raleigh, Puch. A.D.
Centurion Bicycles in Stock!
We Repair All Bikes
RICK'S
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entry fee $5/$6 day of the race
includes donation to united fund
and a Jayhawk Jog T-shirt
Call for information
Gamma Phi Beta
Sorority
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Phi Kappa Psi
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SURPRISE!
A PROFESSIONAL HEWLETT-PACKARD AT STUDENT PRICES?
YOU BET-Kansas Union Bookstores announce our lowest prices ever on Hewlett-Packard calculators
Hp33E reg. $90 sale $79
Hp37E $75 $65
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BEST QUALITY • BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE
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Come in and let our trained calculator specialist help you select your next calculator Now with two stores to serve you Main Store Level 2 Main Union Satellite Shop Satellite Union only bookstore to share its profits with K.I.L. Students
We are the only bookstore to share its profits with K.U. Students
A New Game Store
9" folding leatherette Backgammon set $799
Inside the new One Thousand Mall 1002 Mass. 841-4450
Sun cond James
Student Prepaid Legal Services Board now has
---
POSITIONS OPEN . . .
1 law student position &
1 graduate student position
One shall serve until March, 1980, & one until March 1981
Application deadline is 5:00 pm
Wednesday October 17th in
Student Senate office—105B KS Union.
Paid for by Student Activity Fees.
AVIATION MAINTENANCE MANAGER SENIORS
As a senior at KU, you can be guaranteed a position as an Aviation Maintenance Manager and become an officer in the Navy after graduation. Selected individuals will be trained to solve complex maintenance management problems and supervise a team of skilled specialists in servicing, inspecting, and maintaining a fleet of highly sophisticated aircraft. For more information send your resume or call:
Lexie Castielman 610 Florida Street Ph: 913-841-4376 Naval Aviation Programs Lawrence, Kansas 66044 collect
Hardee's
ROAD RUNNER
His sport is racing.
His restaurant is Nardee's.
OK, RUNNER. ILL BET YOU BREAKFAST
YOU GOT A BET!
tradees'
WHAT'S THE BET?
I SAY HARDEE'S BISCUITS ARE BAKED FRESH, HOMEMADE.
ERNIE HERE SAYS THEY CAME FROZEN IN A BIG, COLD TRUCK.
COME SEE FOR YOURSELVES.
HOW'S THAT SMELL? LIKE A BAKESHOP!
WE BAKE OUR BISCUITS FRESH FROM SCRATCH EVERY MORNING.
THEN WE FILL THEM WITH SAUGS, HAM OR CHOPPED BEEFSTEAK.
© Rudolph Valentino Systems, Inc. 1979
GOOD AS THEY ARE EVERY DAY,THEY'RE EVEN BETTER WHEN SOMEONE ELSE BUYS!
BEST EATIN'ALL AROUND
6
Monday. October 15. 1979
University Dally Kansan
'Huskers do it one more time to hapless Jayhawks
By TONY FITTS Sports Editor
LINCOLN, Neb.-Nebraska fans just never get tired of the routine.
They never get tired of sold-out football games. They never get tired of wading red, yellow, and green. They never get tired of wearing with more end zone seats than sideline seats. And they never get tired of boating seats.
Saturday was no exception. Nebraska shut out the 'Hawks 42-0 before its 103rd consecutive sellout crowd of 76,011.
The last time KU defeated Nebraska was 1968, when Perrodd Rogers was KU's coach, Robby Douglass was the All-American quarterback and John Riggins was the standout back. Since then, they have won KU 401 to 70, with four shutouts.
After a decade of disastrous Saturday afternoons, the KU players resent it.
I hate Nebraska. Everybody here does," Jim Zidak, sportline bearer, said. "At the end of the game, when it didn't make any sense, they were trying to score more points."
But KU coach Don Fambrough would not complain about Nebraska.
We just got bat by a really good football game, he said after the game. Nebraska bats too hard, so the defense tense so many opportunities to score, so sooner or later the dam is going to break.
Our defense in the first half—you just can't play any better than that. But Nebraska didn't make any mistakes."
KU's defense held the Cornershakers through the first quarter, and asked them to score before goals before the half. But the KU offense wasn't able to do anything. The Gators had a good chance through the air—before the half. They got their first down with four minutes left in the game.
Kevin Clinton, who came in late in the second quarter, said the biggest problem for KUU of offense was the Huskers' pass rush.
"It was tough to get set up," he said. "They brought everybody, I think we could have thrown against their secondary if we had the time."
The Kansas quarterbacks were sacked five times for a total loss of 32 yards. And many more times they threw the ball away to avoid a sack. Clinton threw three interceptions, two of which set up touchdowns. The second interception was recovered by the KU one, but it took the Corkshorns only two plays to drive 58 yards and score.
Craig Johnson provided most of those injuries. He wrestled Johnson is the running back who exploded for 192 yards on 10 carries against Kansas last year. This year, he had 18 on nine
"I couldn't believe it," he said. "I was just shocked when I learned that straight-legged handoff, I cut back underneath the center and all I could see was open fish. Seems like things happy happen."
Johnson's touchdown, coming at the end of the third quarter, was the last score of the game. The fourth quarter saw his hunkers had the ball four times and scored four touchdowns. The only thing they made was a 31-20 victory.
Yesterday, Fambrough complimented his team on their effort in defeat.
"At times in the first half, we played defense as well as we could. Looking at the films, if you could take out three or four plays from the first half, it would look pretty good. At the time they broke some of them of us, and we had been on the field for many claps."
Nebraska ran 92 offensive plays against the KU defense. Fambrough also praised some individual players.
"Scellars Young had been really disappointing to me until Saturday," Fambrough said. "But he had his best game against him. And Stanley Gardner played well."
And it's not that our offensive kids weren't trying, because they were. But they were just up against a brick wall as far as that defense was concerned."
Fambrigh had more to say about what makes Nebraska so good.
"It doesn't come overright," he said. "It takes years of recruiting and building a good redshipping program. And I don't mean redshifting four or five, like we do in a go
year. I mean 25 or 30 a year. They don't play
in their junior varsity games because they're redshirtst most of them.
"And they have a great weight program. We do too, now, but something like that doesn't really have the effect for three or four years. Their kids are so strong and so
"I don't feel it's out of reach for us to have a program like this, but it takes time.
"I'm not going to sit and worry about Nebraska, though. We went up there and played them and that's over. Now we have to get ready for Iowa State."
Iowa State defeated Kansas State 7-3 Saturday on a six-yard run in the second quarter.
"Winning the Kansas State game had to encourage them," Fambrough said, "but we're hungry for a victory, too."
In other Big Eight games this week, Oklahoma State upset Missouri 14-13 and Texas defeated Oklahoma 16-7.
KANAS
NEBRAH
NIU-Pack 36
NIU-Performance 54 (run kick failed)
NIU-Pack 26
NIU-Pack 17
NIU-Pack 23
NIU-Brown 12 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick)
NIU-Brown 12 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick)
NIU-Brown 12 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick)
NIU-Pack 18 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick)
Pitch down Kannas Nikelaakh
Rushen yards 28.19 70.430
Rushen yards 28.19 70.430
Total takeoff 59 181
Return yard 160 181
Passes 3.235 12.252
Poors 9-495.447 4-138.454
Poors-lost 1-41 1-41
Total takeoff 59 181
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rangoon - Cairns Capers Alumni 41-31, Sydney,
21-30, Davie 39, Marion 61, Jamaica 51,
Johnson 83, Landwehr 43, Franklin 52, Mauer 52,
Nim 11,
Passing-Kansan, Clinton 3-19-59, Belford 4-6-40,
Nebraska 18-10-17, Michigan 3-19-59, Mauger 9-1-40,
Greenville-Kansas, Vereer 2-27, Schlicher 1-8-4,
Kansas City, Vereer 2-27, Miller 4-18, Milner 3-18,
Harris 11-12, Hurns 5-18. Smith 1-8.
Punting - Kansas Hobach 9-402-44.7. Nebraska, Smith 1-103-435. Gember, J. M.
5-04234, Garth 12-18
Tackling - Kansas, McNorton 14, Young 13, Criswell 12,
Iwain 11, Wheatle 11, Gardner 9, Tumphc 9, Nebakura,
Verng 8, Batek 6, Cale 6, Cols 5, B. Williams 3
Nebraska 42, Kansas 0
Texas 16, Oklahoma 7
Oklahema State 14, Missouri 13
Iowa State 17, Kansas State 3
12
Sweet Redwine
Jarvis Redwine was the only one in red run over KU, but he was most often. On this run, Redwine run over jeecko Joe
Tumpel, in Nebraska's 42-8 triumph, Redwine grabbed 175 yards in 24 balls. The entire OKL offense had, half that, 79.
'Hawks end fall season with split
The KU baseball team team split a
new regular season with the Tampa Bay
Sunday afternoon to finish the fall season
with a 18-2 record. The Jayhawks lost the
first game 7-4, but rounded to win the
second game 6-3.
KU came back with two runs in the fourth to make the score 5-4. Matt Gundelfinger walked and advanced to second and third on wild pitches. He scored on Juan Ramon's sacrifice fly. Loren Hibbs doubled and scored in the last inning, walked with the bases full for the final tally.
KU got off to a good start in the first game when Clay Christian's struck out the side and Brian Gray honored to put the 'Hawks ahead 2-4 in the first iming.
KU coach Floyd Temple said he wasn't too pleased with the first game.
Gundelinger began KU's scoring when he doubled a down the right line on a hit-and-run in the fourth. Scott Wright, who reached on a lead-off walk, scored on the hit.
Clayton Fleeman relieved Christiansen, the loser, 2-1, in the sixth and retired the final six batters.
Dick Lewall scored KU's seven run after leading off the shirt with a single. He scored when Steve Jeltz reached on an error.
The Jayhawks scored seven runs on six hits in the second game as Fleeman started three innings. He hit two homers andinnings. Mike Watt, 44, relieved Fleeman and gave up his first and only hit this fall, a 10-6 victory.
"We gave them too many unearned runs, didn't swing the bat well and we just left too many people on base," he said.
Riley drove in both runners with a two-out single.
Mark Gile led off the fifth with a single, stole second and scored when Dan Graham reached base on an error. Wright and
Gundelfinger walked and scored on Gray's sacrifice fly to center.
Broncos use big fumble to humble Kansas City
KANAS City, MO. (UPI) - Denver big play artist Bill Thompson scores a bitter touchdown on a 2-yard fumble return in the waning seconds of the first half yesterday to send the Broncos off to a 24-ball nationally televised victory over the Kansas City
With less than 30 seconds remaining in the half, and Kansas City in possession at its own 15, Tony Reed fumbled a handoff into the arms of linebacker Benson Swatton on the field. The cornerback Louis Wright, who then fumbled the ball forward to the two, where Thompson
son scoped it up to give the Broncos a 10-0 lead with 17 seconds remaining in the half.
Jim Turner added a 8-yard first-quarter field goal and Craig Morton both hit Haven Moses and Rick Uphchurch with second-half kickoff to help the Broncos on record to its S-1.
Kansas City runny Dan's bid for the third shutout this season on Janet Stenneral's 44-yard field goal five minutes into the fourth quarter. Arnold Mergado rounded out his game with 62 seconds in the game after the Broncos had opened up a 24-13 lead.
Coldsmith keys KU win
By PAM CLARK
Bruce Coldsmith and Paul Schultz finished 1-2 to lead a procession of KU runners to six of the top seven spots and an overall third-ranked angularmedge at Friday's Lone Star Lake.
Sports Writer
KU won with 18 points. Wichita State came in second with 51, Oklahoma State third with 76 and St. Louis University fourth with 118.
Coldsmith completed the winding, hilly 10,000-meter course in 29-41. Schultz finished nine seconds later at 29-50.
Bauer was leading卸oxygen debt gave
Bauer more control and shoulders tightened up and he began back and Coldsmith took over. Bauer managed to rende on and hang on to fourth
David Bauer, the race leader through the mark, took fourth in 60 and Tim Tumayi, fifth in 59. Tim Tays (30,14) Kendall Smith (30,17) and Brent Swanson (30,30) placed first in 2016.
KU coach Bob Timmons was pleased with his team's performance.
"I've been sick for three weeks, but I'm okay," said Bauer. "The only thing that bothered me was my lungs."
"I thought we did a real good job," he said. "We weren't running quite that well together, but we ran real well place-wise."
KU students said before the meet he wanted KU to run together as a tight-kick group in preparation for the Big Eight Championship in Stillwater, O.K. Oct. 27.
The top seven Hawk players in Friday's meet will compose the KU squad that commutes to the Big Eight meet.
"I ran a smart race," Tays said. "I didn't go for the win, I was going for a place on the team. I took off easy and moved up rather than start of quickly."
Most of the conversations of the KU runners centered on the Big Eight meet instead of their easy win.
"It's going to be good," Schultz said. "Colored is at least one of the top 10 teams in the country. It's going to be a two-team team." Colorado would tell you a me-trainer.
"I don't want to say we'll win for sure, but it's going to be close. They are real solid through their first three guys then they break down. We have better depth."
663
Pace setter
KU'r's Bruce Coldsmith turns on his stretch run around Lone Star Lake, Coldsmith tauts it on to cough to finish in KU's quadrangle. The UU team didn't do bad
Pirates stay alive with 7-1 victory
PITTSBURGH (UPI) -- The Pittsburgh Pirates hit a 15-foot double yesterday by baffling the Baltimore Orioles 7-4 on the combined six hit pitching of Jim Rooker and Bert Blythe to assist the world No. 1 pitcher in the MLB.
Rooker, who had spent much of the year on the disabled list, allowed only three hits in five innings before turning things over to Orioles. Orioles to just one hit over the final four.
Having used most of his pitchers trying to contain the Orioles over the first four games of the Series, Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner turned to the 7-3-year-Rooker because he had no one left. The veteran came through with one of the biggest games
It was Blyleven's first relief appearance since 1927.
For five innings, it appeared the Orioles were going to return to Baltimore with the world championship.
They got to Rooker for a run in the fifth on a double by Gary Roenicke, a single by Doug DeCinces and Rich Dauer's double.
play grounder, and it looked as if that would be all left-hander Mike Flanagan would need to post his Serenades victory.
Flippenagan gave up four hits and struck out nine in the sixth game, trouble in the sixth with the walked Tim Foley and gave up a single to Dave Parker to start a doubleheader. Robinson, Will Stiles secretré the second run with a sacrifice fly. Madlock followed with a single to center to give Pitta-barah 3-12.
Time and again weaner's bench had delivered in the clutch throughout the Series, but this time Blyeven proved to be better at match and struck out Kelly to end the threat.
It appeared that lead might not stand up, however, when Rick Dempsey doubled for the Orioles with two in out of the seventh. The team was playing well and was going to be performed by Orioles Manager Waelen when he went to his bench before hitting the bats. Pat Kelly to fit for Fianauan.
The Pirates finally got the clutch hits they
but so desperately needed when they tugged reliever Stim Bradford for a pair of runs in the seventh innering after two were out to give Byleven some insurance runs.
Pilar Garrer beat out an infield hit to open "twelve" seventh, but was thrown out at third by Garrer. At Omar Moreno forced Blyleen at second when shortstop Kilo Garcia made a diving throw at home, then Moreno later, Moreno on was second when Stoddard threw wildly past first base on an attempted
Foli fellow followed a triple to right-center field, scoring Moreno, and Parker grazed reliever Tippart Martinez with a double to chase home Foli.
In the eight, Stargell opened with a single and went to third on Madlock's fourth single. After Steve Nicosa popped out, Garner delivered a single offender Don Stanhope to score Stargell. Blyeven moved the runners up with a sacrifice. She then ran back, but Poil singled up the middle off Garcia's glove to score Madlock and Garner.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Weekend Sports Roundup
JV suffers second loss
Rick Simmons returned the opening kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown, sparking the Nebraska junior varsity to a 17-0 win over the KU JV's before 5,132 fans at Nebraska's Memorial Stadium Friday.
KU's eight point total came on a 15 yard touchdown pass from quarterback Steve Smith to wide receiver Skip Holmes in the third quarter. Smith scored the 2 point conversion on a quarterback keeper.
In addition to Simmons' touchdown gallop, the Cornhuskers scored another touchdown in the first quarter and added a field goal. The Chargers led 24-17.
KU's chances for victory slipped away with 14:56 left in the game. Smith was sacked in the end zone by defense and Todd Kushner made a stop at home.
Neither team was able to generate much offense after the safety. In the last 3 minutes and 23 seconds, the ball switched hands six times as Nebraska intercepted three passes and KU recovered three Cornhusker fumbles.
KU's JV, record dropped to 1-2 with the loss. The 'Hawks next game is Oct. 29 against Baker in Lawrence.
Female netters drow two
The KU women's tennis team won one of three matches for the second straight weekend, beating Southern Illinois 8-1, but losing to
Marcie Eery, playing No. 3, singles, lost her first collegiate matches last weekend, falling in the Oklahoma and Missouri state semifinals.
No. 1. singles player Val Block won against Oklahoma and Southern Illinois, but lost against Missouri.
Mauren Guilfoil, who was hampered by a pulled leg muscle last week, won all of her N. 4 singles matches and two of the three No. 1
Block and Guilford were the only winners against Oklahoma, winning both of their singles and doubles matches.
KU Coach Tom Kivisto said before the Oklahoma meet the Sooners would be the team to beat in the Big Fight.
The meet against Missouri Friday was tied 4-1 when play in the 5-2 doubles match had to be stopped because of darkness. It was a tough game, with both teams scoring in double figures.
Every "Hawk won against Southern Illinois in either a singles or doubles match. Mary Stauffer was the only KU better to lose in singles play, but she came back to win in No. 2 doubles with Shari Schrufer.
Female golfers finish 3rd
The women's golf team held third in the eight-tone Kansas Invitational Golf Tournament held at the Alvamar Gour Course.
KU was 43 strokes behind first-place Texas Christian University, which had a 657 team total for the 36-hole tourney.
"TCU is a very strong team and a candidate for post-season national competition, and Missouri is an excellent team."
Sally White打 the 'Hawks, carding counts of 82 and 88 for a 171, taking eight place in the individual competition. The other KU scores were Pattie Coye, 89-49-179; Cary Eyre, 86-49-161; Liza Stern, 85-49-179; Sarah Merwald, 84-49-179; and Barbara Goodbee, 84-49-174.
Women 3rd at Nebraska
Michelle Brown and Susan Phillips finished in the top 10 at the Husker Cross-Country Invitational Friday in Lincoln, Neb. But their efforts weren't enough to boost KU higher than a third-place finish.
Kansas State, KU's season-long mercenary, was the wrist with 36 points. Missouri has a three-time winner in the NBA, with D'Angelo at its state in its first three games, was third with 19.
Brown, the only senior on the squad, snared seven in 19:36, and
Phillips, a freshman, was next in 19:44.
Janel LeValley of K-State won the individual honors in 19-10 while teammate Clyde Saxen, a freshman undefeated entering the NCAA Tournament.
Round out the scoring in the six-tteam field were Kearney State with 143, Nebraska 143 and Nebraska-Omaha 145.
Men netters split matches
KU's men's tennis team won a close meet against Southern Illinois 64-but were defeated by Tulsa 7-2 in weekend competition. Only No. 2 singles player Bill Krizman and the No. 2 doubles team of Rick Wess and Kehr Lein won against Tulsa.
No. 1 Wayne Sewall, No. 3 Chel Collier, No. 4 Wertz, No. 5 Lehman and No. 6 David Williamilling in singles like James Cox, Bill Trotter, and Kirkinnock.
Collier, Werts and Willingham won in singles play against Southern Illinois, as did the doubles teams of Wertz and Lehr, and Lahey and Krizman, Seilman, Krizman, Lehr and the No.1 doubles team of Sewall and Collier lost.
Monday, October 15, 197!
University Daily Kansan
1
You can help increase the safety of our campus. The Campus Safety Service needs men and women volunteers to provide escort teams for those people on campus who request them. For more information see the ad in the Notice column of the classified ad section and call KU-INFO, 864-3506.
"OUR SUCCESS GOES TO YOUR HEAD"
Uppercut
841-4894
Contact your placement office for interview dates.
WATCH FOR THE HUGHES RECRUITER VISITING YOUR CAMPUS SOON.
1031 VERMONT IN THE BAY BUILDING
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
HUGHES
he University Daily
Creating a new world with electronics
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AD DEADLINES
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Monday Tuesday Thursday 9 pm
Tuesday Friday Saturday 9 pm
Wednesday Monday Tuesday Thursday 9 pm
Thursday Friday Saturday 9 pm
Friday Saturday 9 pm
REDKEN
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UIK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect inverters. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UBI business office at 84158.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole in the Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also saluted, raw and fruitful in the shell. Twelve varieties of apple, pear, plum, peach, honey, and orchid. Every Sunday.
Every Sunday.
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
INTRAMURAL
TRACK . . .
ENTRY DEADLINE .
WED., OCT. 17 . . .
5 P.M. . . .
208 ROBINSON . . .
Think Skew! Want to go skiking? For information call Brad 841-0070. 10-16
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% nationally
through Jan. 26. Some stores offer
BOGOALLLEE at our 0,500 paperbacks is
1 price; everyone have been and always will be
Come in at Browns at 149 at 10am
Mar. 19-21
Watch for trout pasted at 9th & Illinois. Home
warehouse pick up from 21st & Michigan. Fresh
on-wall with freshly picked fruits and vegetables.
In the shell Twelve varieties of dry bake beans, like
every Sunday. Prepare batter. Heath Anderson, tt
---
Check with the opportunities岗位. A representative of the Northwestern University, 202 Main Street, 202 Sonnerturm, Oct. 23, or call Robert L. Shields, CLD, District Arrest, 832-1823, Law Department, 10-19
K.U. B'nai Br'ith
Hillel Foundation
Sponsors
ISRAELI FOLK DANCING
Employment Opportunities
Wednesday Oct. 17 7:30-8:30 q.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr. (Across from Hiltont)
Travel to the Hook for SIA Travel Tribe Bungu.
Train, Oct. 17 at 8:30m. Make午游 travel plans and enjoy our refresheds. SOA
864-3177
16-16
Zon practice nightly 6 p.m. Free lecture by Zoran
Senior, Sukhnai Sun, Oct. 22, 8 p.m.
Jiahkhuyn, mom, student union. For information
call 842-7010. 10-22
Need help with compost? Communication Resource Center staff announcer. Free evening course. Ticket "Writing the term paper." Week, June 29-30, p.m. Ibn Bsharq to all students. 10-17
ENTERTAINMENT
THE NIGHTHAWKS
NIGHTHAWKS
Wed, Oct. 17
Adv. tickets available
Dinner open at
8:00, show at 9:00
Lawrence
Opera house
Call for concert info 842.6930
FOR SALE
1. Blue Monday, but the Harbour乳脂 is a first-class dive bed so join us tonight for $168 and die cars and bodies between 7:45 p.m. You can ship your boat together at the Harbour 1031 Mass. Hotel 10-15
FOR RENT
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
East side of month's rent. 120'x80'. Insulated, unfurred from $749.
Two luxury rooms, large balcony.
Indoor heated room. For rentals call 624-4444 or见
administrator.
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. tt
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes
room near KU. Possible rent reduction for labor.
Call 641-6254 or RQ2-4065.
10-31
All Frontier Ridge Apts. 1/2 months rent free $50
security on all 1 bedrooms if
2 berm, exovial condition, shelf and refrigerator, wader, waterdry hook-up, four blocks of campus, $200 per month—no pets. Low utilities, call 4-831-7263. low-fee mail. 10-16
House for rent, close to campus. $125 month,
utility paid, call after 5 p.m. 841-2313 or 864-
6497.
10-15
FOR SALE
SunSpeed=Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-
resistant. Reasonable, reasonable, reasona-
tive. 1021 Maa. 841-5770
WATERBATH MATTRESSS ... $499.00 3 year warranty.
Western Civilian Notes. Note on Bible Make
in Western Civilian Notes. Note on Bible Make
in Western Civilian Notes. (1) At study room, 25 for room
at town center, 15 for study room. (2) At study room,
25 for room at town center, 15 for study room.
At town center, Baldock Bedroom & Great Bed-
room.
Single bedroom apt. for nubilease, 2429 Oundahl.
Apt. 32 after 5.00 p.m. 10-19
Roommate needs to share four bedroom duplex:
842.15 m² 1, utilities. 41.05 m²
16-10-17
Alternator, starter and generator specialist,
Parts service, and exchange units. BELT AUTO-
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9060, 3000 W. 6th. tf
1970-1980买 cars+ please let me be your guide when purchasing a used car. Call and find out why so many KU students buy used cars from Bob South-Landmark Ford 845-2500. 10-19
Mpt sub-let immediately-Jayhawker Towers
Apt. Partially furnished Call 543-812-0892
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION? Puch Mopeds.
Rick's Bike Train, 1032, Vermont. 841-6442. TF
11. Camaro 350 Turbo, many high performance
mass-mog wheels. Must to appreciate
battery.
10-15
1979 Trans Am, T-top, loaded, automatic, 10-
wrises, warranty. $1690 off list. 84-9228, 10-16
77 MGB, low mileage, air conditioned with electric overdrive, 842-5760. 10-16
74 2 bm. mobile room - 4 x 36 ideal for students or couple. Clean. cleaned in Lawrence, 60,000 firm. For app. Call 842-9922. If no answer 1-353-2441 or 1-353-1544. 10-16
1977 Cutlass 442. Loaded. Call Greg 843-6244.
10-t
Beat energy costs this winter if you buy this house. The wood stove to build it has 18 inch old home heating, t
Two rooms of sculptured green carpeting and
approximately $10^2 \times 10^4$ and $9 \times 12^3$
$15.20 each. Wool卫墙 lacket, size 5, worn only
6 times, $30.00, 842-607-. . . . .
1971 Impala, 2 dr. HT, full power, AC, good condition, very dependable. 543-3475. 10-17
PUCH sport moped. 875 miles, perfect condition,
fully equipped. P.V.J. KS. (913) 649-0177. 10-18
Four United Airlines 50% discount coupons. $45
each. Call 842-8378. 10-18
1972 Grand Prix, AC. PS, PW, PB. AM/FM,
cuail control CALL at 843-767-253. 10-15
Our plants need a new home! We're selling them Monday, Tuesday, 12-5 p.m., 13th and Mass. 10-16
9 week old Ferrets, make adorable pets. Call
843-2483 after 6 p.m.
10-23
1978 tan automatic VW Rabbit, sunroof, Blau-
punct cassette stero, radial trees, air. Call between 9-11, am and after 5:30 p.m. 841-6348.
610-6348.
Large green Alpine ski jacket. Goose down.
Great Call 842-1031. Ask for Mary R., leave message. I call back.
10-17
1571 Pinto, 4-second, 67,000 miles. Must sell, price
Call: Keith C81, 843-5073. 10-18
Exhibition and sale of Polish Folk Art-Statelle Union—Monday and Tuesday, from main of union all week 11 a.m.-2 p.m., posters, cut-outs, tapestries.
1971 Dodge Monaco four-door, fully equipped.
Superclean. Admitage 842-1078. 10-19
One way United air tickets to Phila. PA Good
until 12:15 $35 each or B.O. B48-6005 10-19
FOUND
Calculator. Across from Union. Call and identify
after 5.000, 842, 0360.
10-15
after 5:00, 822-3600
Male Black dog approx. 5 months old with a flea
collar. Please call 842-9396.
10-15
Yellow leather knit shirt in the parking lot of
HELP WANTED
Yellow, long-hair, kitten in the parking lot of Sambo's. Oct. 8. Please call 843-8895. 10-15
Class ring in Flint Hall. Come in to identify—111 Flint.
10-16
Set of keys found on stairs west side of Malott Hall, claim them at Hoch Auc. 10-17
HELP WANTED
Earn as much as $20 per 1000 stuffing envelopes with our circulators. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 45042.
10-16
MEN' WOMEN! JOBS! CRUISHBIRTHS! SAILING EXPEDITIONS! Good knowledge. Good pay. Applications for APPLICATIONINFOJOBS! CRUISHBIRTHW 153, Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 98000. Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 98000.
Part-time dishwashing and counter help, 11
a.m.2 p.m., Mon. thru Fr. Apply in person only
at Border Bandio, 1528 W. W2rd. 10-16
Need extra money? Sign up for babysitting Call or come in by appointment with the Student Employment Center, Bs Strong, 842-4700. Your name will be given to the job a babysitter. You can go about the job.
Cooks wanted immediately. Day and night shifts.
Excused preferred, but will train. Call for appointment.
Village Inn Pancake House, 821 Iowa,
463-3211
10-16
WANTED- students for part-time jobs in Life
Careers. Send resumes to Job Place, 306 N. Washington
ridge, while you learn with our Internship Program.
Call (215) 448-3722 or visit www.lifecareers.com,
incl. campus fees, or call Lorela B. Lloyds,
District Agent, 45-1333, Lawrence National
School.
Wanted—auto parts company counterperson, full or part-time. Experience if possible. Come in to 23rd and Haskell for interview. 10-17
MATHIS SCIENCE TEACHERS - Consider an alter-
nation of math and actice. Challenging
math skills in Arabic, India are added for Peace Corps
majors teachers in
Dishwasher for sorority house. $15 per week and meals. Call 843-6650 10-17
Bursars of Child Research, Achievement Place,
Fairview, VA. Apply by November 15th for
available salary up to $39,000 per month. Experi-
ence must include work with adolescent youth preferent. Our staff will provide scheduling early intervention and screening sessions for early intervention and screening sessions for child Research is an equal opportunity employment program. Contact Martinez, Fairview, VA at 1-800-222-4111 or martinez@childresearch.org. Applicant must be 18 years of age by November 15th.
HOME ECONOMIST* You can be more than a home economist. Your use of the home Use HOME degree in many areas, including rural or 4-H extension, to teach in second-grade living allowance; health care 48 days married with no dependents. No upper age limit
COLLIDER GRADS AND PROPEL WITH EXCESS OF PROJECTIONS — If you have experience in farming, research, realms the sciences, or are a health professional who works over载荷, consider being a Peace Corps student to upper age limit. Sign up now for interviews at Center for Agricultural Research, Center Carroll-Gibbs 10-18.
COLLEGE GRADS SPEACE CAPEES AND VISA UNION GRADS OPPORTUNITY CARE KNOWLEDGE & SUPPORT DEVELOPMENT KNOWLEDGE OF AFRICA LATIN AMERICA ARIA AREA ALL WORK FOR OTHER CAREERS OPENINGS IN A. VARIANCES PROVIDED FOR MORE INFORM ON HOW TO ENTRY INTO THE JOB FOR INTERNS LIABILITY ON Oct. 22, 19-14
TEACHERIF-- If your degree is in English, math, or science, you need to teach. Teach in primary secondary schools, receive keys,
LOST
10 week old male puppy. Solid black. Brown flea collar. Needs medication. Please call 842-3301. Very attached. 10-19
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS BINDING COPYING—The House of
the Quick Copy Center is headquarters for
thesis binding and copying in Lawyers. Let us
help you at 888-MP or phone 854-3610. The
Thomas & Fowler Group is located at
472-725-8918.
NOTICE
ATTENTION KANNAS READERS. TIRED OF WALKING? In need of a good, dependable new car or use car truck? Call the kid in town. Terry Mode: M3-5390. 10-12
Vets get ready to party hardy. G.I. bill. 10-19
Reward for return or information leading to re-
turn of lost item. **Applied** to apartment 942-6234, after 8:00 p.m. 18-17
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS
Looking for the perfect gift idea
We've got it!
"Songs for every occasion"
841-8515
EMERGENCY FOSTER PARENTS—If your family wields the challenges of caring for children in Children's Service League invite you to call 1-800-762-4539 or visit www.children-serviceleague.com. State license and training required.
Papera do soon? Will provide personalized bibliography on hawk images. Have I saved my MLS, MCS, or other citations?
shoe
The entry deadline for the intramural Track Meet is Wednesday, Oct. 17 at 5:00 p.m.
The entry deadline for
The entry deadline for the Intramural Swimming Relays is Monday, Oct. 22 at 5 p.m.
More Information
208 Robinson
864-3546
THE CAMPUS SAFETY SERVICE is being organized by the office and the KU police department. The CBS will provide executive will work in teams of one woman and one man per team for security teams. If you are a guest, call KUINFO, 643-2500 for info. information
F
PERSONAL
PERSONAL
Cant afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 844-5564.
If
FOSS HILL SURGERY CLINIC-ABNOWS up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling, Maternity Care. For appointment call (804) 269-3520, 400-1691 St. Overland Park, KS.
If you're looking for a bar with wipe away beer, poolside, or wood-fired pizza, people you like. The Harbour Hotel offers a variety of stay and Friday afternoons for TPCB now open; you can book them online at Harbour Get your skin together at the Harbour Hotel.
JOBS ON SHIPS! American, Foreign. No experience. Excellent pay. Expand world travel. Summer job or career. Send $250 for information. Welcome to Washington, 85822. Job 10-17
Mary J--So I'm asking already but third better be good. If I wanted to be bored I'd go home for Thanksgiving. Steve
18-15
Tournament Director: recreation majors or any-
one in the USA office 864-377 (10)
10-15 interns recreation.)
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head-
quarters, 841-235 and KU info, 864-3506
Mary J- Get a whole Thanksgiving vacation and nothing to do. Got any suggestions? Step 10-15
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not. Check Campus Vets. 118 B Union. 644-174.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid--864-5054. tt
SKI Aspen, Copper Mountain, or Breckenridge,
for information call Brad 841-0700. 10-16
PSYCHIC AWARENESS AND HEALING CLASS.
Call now for late enrollment. Eve Lessenbard
842-7842 10-17
Advance tickets for the movie JESUS available.
Call John, 842-4064.
10-18
Steve - Boring! How do three nights at the Atcet what about seeing a Ballet with Clint (what about saying what about seeing a Ballet with Clint) or how about talking to your fellow cast members on the Soundstage. If you are interested in architecture, you can visit the Water Tower and eat at D. E. K. We can visit the Water Tower and eat at D. E. K. Amate at the Schubert or Neil Simon Chagney and Fritz Italian Master Draws Exhibit at the Carnegie Museum of Art and Italian Master Draws Exhibit at the Carnegie Museum of Art.
Mary J. Sounds Great! Where do I sign up for
the trix? Steve. 10-15
This letter is personal as it can be. Since every person in the world of our kind and another, free from class, of any kind or another, Free Library attained and retained by intelligent people in our community, those they called Martin Luther King Jr. 26, when he taught them how to read, wrote to his children, saying, "and as long as they were the right to be called this year when the Kiku Kluk Kluk was refused entry in the city in a month, established to require that all students have the college education some people need, I will write to you asking that you read what Martin Luther King Jr. is dedicated in many people for whom I was an ally. Some I have not personally entered into the letters. Some I have not personally written to this letter. But I now realize it was gliding the fact it is very personal. Flayley I would gladify the fact it is very personal.
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Monday, October 15, 1979
University Daily Kansan
'Shadow Box' plot found lacking; acting and directing carry play
"The Shadow Box," a play by Michael Cristofer, presented by the University Theatre Series. 8 p.m. Oct. 12, 13 - 5 p.m. Dec. 6, 2014. Tedeschio, associate professor of theatre. Setting and lighting by Deborah Urhnert, associate professor of theatre. Costumes by Ellen Wright, Topka sophomore. Sound by William A. Burns, Phoenix. Arti-graduate student.
By MARY JO HOWARD
BY KANSA SOHWAH
Kansan Reviewer
"The Shadow Box" is a play about death and dying. Except that no one dies. Instead, the constant shadow of death forces the characters to try to pack full each living moment. This becomes an exercise in the game. You can never live enough to be ready to die.
The action is focused on three patients, Brian (Steve Mokofsky), Joe (Tom Swift), and Felicity (Laurie VanderPel-Hosek) and their families who live in three cottages on the island. The play is dispointingly ploeless, it must depend on
Review
strong acting and direction to carry it off. Both are present to aby bring out the main thrust of the play—how to deal with living before death,
ATHELINE L. WARFFEL, Kansas City Kan. graduate student, gives an achingly poignant performance as Agnes, Felicity's old-maid daughter.
The cast is superb, Mokfaky, Overland the cast's student, is outstanding as Brian are not particularly fortunate, his makeup is to old for the character and for the first 30 minutes, Brian
VanderPOL-Hosek, Yankton, S.D.
graduate student, is somewhat disap-
pointing as Felicity, a woman who
is still living and who refuses to die until
can see her again. It is a formidable
challenge for VanderPOL-Hosek
than you are, and while VanderPOL-Hosek
Yaping for top honors are Joe and Maggie, played by Swift, Rockwood Park senior, and Rob Manzano, Piedmont Park junior. Prairie Village junior. Joe and Maggie are a lower-middle class couple from suburban Iowa, which is early in Brazen's brazen and beautiful ex-wife.
does a creditable job, she does slip out of character occasionally.
BEVERLY IS A Magnificent tramp, acting flambipity off Brian and his lover, played by Mark Dutton. But he is a more moving at the end, wondering where their dreams went, and knowing they'll never get the chance to find them before Joe
Grungebock-Tedesco's direction is brilliant. His fast pacing keeps a potentially draggy play from becoming boring. But his actors sometimes forget to hold for laughter.
Unubr is a master set of workings and platforms which both works well and looks completely natural placed amidst giant pine trees.
$233,900 grant awarded to finance old-age training, center for elderly
A $239,000 federal grant awarded last week to the KU keratonology center will finance a keratonology training program and develop an education in Kansas City, Kan., beginning next year.
Donna Schafar, gerontology center assistant assistant, said Friday the department would increase the division of the U. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, would be divided
SOME OF THE FIELDS related to gerontology, she said, are occupational and physical therapy, psychology and social welfare.
She said $135,200 of the grant would fund a joint training program with Kansas State University and $80,700 would provide for the elderly center for the elderly in Kansas City, Kan.
"The training program with K-State will consist of a series of training seminars for students involved in fields related to georhythm." Schafer said.
PE HAROLD CAMPBELI
Staff Reporter
--center for aging, said the joint program would start next spring with seminars featuring visits by gerontology experts to each campus.
The idea for joint gerontology research between KU and K-State began last year, she said.
Gerontology is the scientific study of old are.
"We decided to the program to share our resources in this area in order to better serve all of Kansas," she said.
HOLY SPIRIT?
George Peters, director of the K-State
HE ALSO SAID part of the grant would fund video tapes lectures and seminars for use by government agencies involved with elderly, such as the state Department of
Are you interested in the power of the
Come find out every Tuesday 7:30 pm Regionalist Room Registration dulce at studiosedum.edu
Although nearly all of the riders made it the first 43 miles to the lunch stop, some rode the sag wagons on the last leg of the trip.
ALTHOUGH CHRISTIE did not ride on the new route, he followed the cyclists, taking pictures and shouting encouragement to flagging riders. Biking Across Kansas is an annual eight-day ride that offers western boundary to its eastern one.
Larry Christy, co-organizer of Biking Across Kansas and a participant in past Octavian dates, said that this year's route was harder than those of the last two years.
$88,700 will be used to develop an elderly care center in the Argentine district of Kansas City, Kan., Schafer said.
The Argentine is a section of Kansas City with a large elderly and Mexican-American population.
"In the past, there was a long flat stretch that always had strong headwinds. They changed that, but the new route is a lot hiller."
bike and inspected it for damage, ignoring his skinned elbow.
According to Edward Meyen, professor of special education who wrote the grant proposal, the center probably will not open until next year.
From page one
"We average about 50 miles per day on our trips, but the rout isn't quite as hilly."
Octoginta
The remainder of the $233,000 grant.
-KANSAN-
On Campus
TODAY: THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION luncheon will be at 11 a.m. on Dec. 4 in Cork of the Kansas State University. The SOUTH AFRICA will have a slide presentation and meeting in the ONIGHT: THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN'S Political Action Committee will meet at 6:30 in the Oread Room of the Kansas State University's KU Diabetes and the Diabetics" for the KU DIABETIC GROUP at 7:30 in Watkins Hospital, and then on its activities United States at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Kansas University. There will be a faculty lunch in Swarthout Reocalt Hall in Murphy Hall.
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In addition to the cyclists from the Kansas tour, people from St. Louis, Kansas City and Omaha also rode in this year's Octaventh.
he said. "A lot of the riders from our trip come to Lawrence for the Octoginto, too. Some of them have problems with the dog, but they just aren't conditioned for them."
CHRISTIE SAID. "Wet try to get all of our riders up here because this is the biggest cycling event in the state."
Lawrence Banks close
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Tonight is
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LIBERTY
1979
One of this year's riders, Bill Harrison, 924 E. 12 St., said, "I rode to the lunch stop, but I thought it was going to get a little rough on the wav back.
LIBERTY
1979
Get three (3)
draws of BUD,
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"It did. This 80-mile ride is a lot tougher than some 100 mile rides I've been on." Harmon drove his own van back to Lawrence with his bike in the back.
SUA
films
with film historian bob deflores
rare comedy films
MATT KING
At the gazeeb in South Park, in returning cycling we were greeted with a keg of beer, food left from lunch and a fourpiece polka band.
bob hope, bing crosby, betty grable, harpo marx, frank sinatra in "all band rally" (1944)
george burns, bob hope in "the jack benny show" (1954)
---
MARIO CARTOONS
groucho marx in "tell it to groucho"
sponsored by SUA fi
bing crosby
n a mack sennet short
hursday, October 18 7:30pm
forum room $1.00
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08-17
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SPRINT WEEK ENOUGH IN THE COUNTRY
Fri. 19
GATE MOUTH BROWN AND Southern Fried
Hank THOMPSON and the River Creeks Bay
Wed. 24 Tyre
Sat. 27 #LZR treat night
Fn. 26 Owaton recording what JOB SUN
Wed. 31 HALLOWEEN PARTY in Paris a True Raven!
and the Kid Earns
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Th 1 John Hammond and Pat's Blue Modern (Sund)
Sat 3 Billy Sikes Reunion
Sun 4 AAM record artist The Police
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sua films
Monday, October 15 JULES AND JIM
Directed by Francois Truffaut, with his collaborator, this classic film of the French New Wave was established Truffaut as a leading world director. François-abbas Truffaut
These excellent prints include Charlie Parker's only screen appearance; Glenn Cave's long-distance dance "Choo"; John Coltrane with the Gii Evans Orchestra; boogie woggles from Thelonious Monk; Johnson; and the Sound of Jazz, a 60 minute show with Count Lake, Gabe Lester, Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, Gerry Mulligan, and more quick historian Bob Delfner will answer questions.
Tuesday, October 16
BILL LITT
Wednesday, October 17
RARE JAZZ FILMS WITH
BOB DEFOLESLS
Directed by Peter Yates, with Steve McQueen, Jacqueline Bissett, and Robert Vaughn, includes the famous "The Invisible Man" in San Francisco's Hilly街.
Thursday, October 18
RARE COMEDY FILMS
WITH BOB DEFORES!
These rarely seen classics include a 1931 Mack Sennett short with Bing Bing, Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra, Betty Grabbe, Harppe Marx and more. A sequel to *Bing*, *George Burns* & *Bob Hope* and a Groucho Marx TV show that includes historian Bob Defores will answer any questions following the films.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7.30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
**Weekend shows also in Woolfurt at**
3.30, 7.00, 9.30 or 12 midnight and
Sum at 2.40 p.m. unless otherwise
in the 1.50 admission. No Remoirs.
**Email:** info@woolfurt.com
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 37 free on campus The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 10 cents off campus Tuesday, October 16, 1979
Family affair
about 1,500 people in Kansas City, Mo. yesterday as his wife, Rosalynn, looked on. Carter told the National Catholic Charities Convention that he was creating a new Office for Families with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
City to tackle zoning issue
Rv ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Reporter
An ordinance to immediately downsize a section of the Oread neighborhood will be presented at the Lawrence City Comptroller, Mayor Barkley Clark said yesterday.
Clark said he requested yesterday that the city staff write the ordinance. If the commissioners approve the request for downzoning, Clark said, he will ask the commissioners to declare an emergency for the district. It could be effective by the end of the week.
Usually the city commission would have considered the request and, if it was approved, the city staff would have written the ordinance to be read at the next two city commission meetings.
THE PROPOSED ordinance would downzone the section from multiple family to residential duplex.
The section, Known as Area One, is bounded on the south by 11th Street, on the west by Missouri Street, on the north by 12th Street, and on the east between Illinois and Mississippi streets.
Clark's action was prompted by a court order issued Friday that requires the city to issue a building permit for an eight-plus unit apartment in an area under consideration for downsizing.
Construction began at the site in the 900 block of Maine Street early yesterday morning. Eight Oread residents staged a protest as workers cleaned the bill.
CLARK, A KU law professor, said legal precedents set in Kansas indicated a downizing ordinance would negate the legality of a building permit to build a building for a project.
The building permit was issued to Milton Milstead late Friday afternoon after judge Ralph King Jr., of the Douglas County jail, said it would be held in building permit could not be held up
simply because the zoning in an area might change.
Earlier last week, City Manager Buford Watson had suggested hold up issuance of the building permit until after the meeting tonight. He said the legal question of what would happen if the area was closed because the permit was issued should be explored.
MILSTEAD'S ATTORNEY, Kernit Beal, said he thought that once the permit was obtained, the judge Jerry Cooley, city attorney, said the issue might have to be settled in court.
www.ziwimbing in the Great heights
See COMMISSION page seven
Two groups to picket private club
By JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
Organizers for the International Committee Against Racism and the Progressive Labor Party are planning a rally to protest alleged discrimination in the distribution of membership applications at a Lawrence private club.
Finley Campbell, national co-chairman of INCAR, said yesterday the upper body could be at 9 p.m. Saturday at
Investigations by the University Daily Kansas, BIWW-TV, Topeka and KCMO-TV, Kansas City, M., soo-inpositions in the granting of membership applications to minorities at Shenanigans and another club, Blanklew's, 643-718-2015.
"We're going to have a get down with John Brown beats at Campsbell." Campbell said, "We intend to
"Biasism is growing like a cancer and we're going to administer cobalt treatments."
GRACIE MORENO, a representative of the Progressive Labor Party, said protesters would picket the club and
have a sit-in.
Protesters also will try to persuade Shenanigans mem-
birs to bring to the club as guests, according to Ron Kaukai of cNAR member and member of the KU leadership.
A representative for Shenanigans was unavailable for comment.
In addition to promoting the protest at Shenanigans, Campbell advocated an aggressive attack on racism when he spoke to about 40 people in the Jayhawk Room of the University Union. His speech was sponsored by KU-Y and INCAR.
"We advocate neither violence nor nonviolence," he said. We advocate using whatever means are necessary to deter crime.
Campbell had nonviolent resistance to racism should be thought of as a toolical tool but should not be incorporated
"INCAR is a radical reform group. With the resurgence of fasciac, the urgency of our work becomes more evident in our practice."[1]
CAMPBELL CALLED Angela Davis, Andrew Young *1996*
Jesse Jackson traitors to the anti-racist cause because of
the stains against direct confrontations with the Ku Klux
Klan and the Nazis.
"The period of nonviolence was valuable to the movement," he said. "It pointed out the decadence of
INCAR and the Progressive Labor Party also plan to hold
their first convention on Friday to downtown Lawrence Oct. 27, KU1s/Homecoming Day.
"We want it to be a fearful experience to join the Ku Klux Klan or the Nazi Party. Once they put on the uniform or the sheet, we will see them as agents of suppression and we will be prepared to deal with them."
THE MARCH, scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m., will take protesters down Jayhawk Boulevard, 13th Street and Massachusetts Street. Moreno said. The march will end at where marchers will be held, at where marchers will bear speakers and eat a box lunch.
Moreno said the rally would begin at about noon in front of the library.
The University Events Committee last week approved the groups' plan to gather in front of Watson Library and
receive information.
Moreno will ask the Lawrence City Commission tonight for permission to use a sound truck on the march route.
Mobil Oil executive advocates nuclear power
Bv AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Reporter
Maximum development of domestic energy sources, particularly nuclear power, electricity and gas energy problems, an executive of Mobil Oil Corp. said last night in a public lecture in New York.
Herb Schermata, vice president of public affairs for Mobil, told the Kansas State University alternative facing the United States, declaring war on oil producing nations, and calling for a rethink of alternative domestic energy, the latter was the most viable and best suited to the environment.
"I don't think we can conserve our way
Schmertz said Mobil was among the leaders in the development of alternative energy projects that would convert low-grade uranium to high-grade for use in nuclear reactors. The project would move Massachusetts and a coal-to-gasoline conversion plant as significant innovations.
Nuclear power is the only available alternative energy source that can begin to solve America's problems immediately, he said.
out of our problems," he said. "I suspect Americans would give up many things before they would give up driving."
"Nuclear power has proven to be so safe that we should proceed at a rapid rate in
THE MAJOR problems of nuclear power have been solved, he said, and the U.S. should follow the examples set by other nations who have developed safe and ef-
developing it for large scale use," Schmertz said.
"There is more radiation in Grand Central Station than in any nuclear power plant in the United States," he said.
He said radiation leakage was not a significant problem in the nuclear industry.
The same people who are against nuclear power, Schmerz said, would support an energy independence and security for nations in order to secure energy. Such "invasion scenarios" now are being tested by the U.S. military.
States, among them the New York Times, which published an essay supporting such an effort last year, he said.
"THESE SCENARIOS seem to be emerging as a fad. The motive for this warmerongening apparently is arrogance or sadism," said, "This is an invitation to disaster."
Oil-producing nations should have the right to determine what the price of their resources as commodities will be and how and when they will be distributed, he said.
"Why should they be asked to subsidize American lifestyle?" We should learn that small nations have the same right as big nations to develop their interests. "Schools
See MOBIL page seven
Families now part of HEW Carter tells crowd in KC
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
President Jimmy Carter announced yesterday in Kansas City, Mo., that a new Office for Families was being created in the department of Health, Education and Welfare.
Carter's announcement was cheered by about 1,500 people who attended the National Catholic Charities Convention at the Radisson-Muehlich Hotel.
Carter's announcement was interpreted as a victory for the Catholics because much of their seven-day conference concerned family issues, including family therapy, child care, parish and family ministry, church issue and the intergenerational family.
"This office, the first of its kind, will provide a focal point for the development of federal policies and programs affecting families." Carter said.
Carter also announced that the United States would send $7 million to Cambodia to
People were admitted to the speech only after being checked by security agents.
"help feed tens of thousands of starving human beings."
WHILE THEY wait anxiously to hear the famous Southern drawl, a band wired up for "Pump and Circumstances" and their new seten set up cameras in the press area.
The crowd stood when Carter and his wife, Rosalyman, entered the ballroom, and people on the far side of the room stand on chairs to catch an initial ilumination of the president.
"I was in Sunday school yesterday morning," Carter said, "and someone said, 'Mr. President, you've been spending an awful lot of time with Catholics later.'"
"And I told them it had hurt a lot.
Carter preceded his announcement about the new Office for Families with a talk on how important the family unit was."
"FAMILIES ARE a foundation of a healthy and vibrant society," he said.
See CARTER page eight
By ELLEN IWAMOTO Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Iranian organization drops charges of discrimination
The Iranian Student Organization has withdrawn its charges of discrimination against the Iranian Student Association, according to Hossain Mahlahi, president of
After meeting with about 100 of the group's members, Mahalati said yesterday he thought it was the consensus of the organization that the charges should be
"We would like to unify the Iranian students on campus," he said, "and the charges would only further separate the two organizations."
During fall supplementary budget hearings last week, the ISO charged the LAW with holding closed elections without prior notice of the election and students of the LAWS' bylaws or use of its Senate funding and with carrying out political activities in violation of University
ISA officers could not be reached for comment yesterday.
"All we needed was a budget from the University, " We didn't want to get involved with the ISA." Mahalit said. "We didn't want we would be confronted with this."
The ISO requested $1,550 from the Senate the State Senate and Senate Budget Committee to disburse $200,000. The ISO was duplicating the services of the ISA. The ISA received an $855 allocation from the Senate.
As a result of the allegations made by the
ISO, the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee decided to investigate the alleged discrimination by the ISA.
THE INVESTIGATION would have created a task force to research the allegations and to present its findings to the Finance and Auditing Committee chairman, Matt Davis, Finance and Auditing Committee chairman. If the allegations were found to be valid, Davis said the matter would have been forwarded to the Student Senate for a vote.
Davis said that since the charges had been withdrawn he was "almost sure the investigation would be dropped."
"I see no reason for us to pursue it," he said.
However, he said, he would discuss the investigation with other committee chairman involved in their task force.
"We decided to investigate on the basis of the allegations," he said. "Who are we to push it without any allegations?"
REX GARDNER, Senate Rights Committee chairman, agreed with Davis.
"It'll probably drop because they're innocent until proven guilty," he said. "We really should not pursue it without allegations."
Mahalati said an investigation would not benefit KU Iranian students.
"In the interest of all, we will try to cooperate with the ISA as much as we can in cultural and traditional programs," he said. "We are also fighting politics and gather for cultural events."
2
University Daily Kansan
2 Tuesday, October 16, 1979
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansas' Wire Services
Quake hits California, Mexico
CALEXO, Calif. - A powerful earthquake that struck Southern California and part of Mexico yesterday, buckled buildings and wrecked water systems in this border town, while it swayed skyscrapers in Los Angeles and as far away as Las Vegas, Nev.
At least 76 persons were injured, authorities said. One death was reported in Mexicali, Mexico but none have been reported in California. The five-second earthquake was the strongest in the Imperial Valley since 1940, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
Geopolitical Sea issues
The California Institute of Technology in Pasadena said that the tiltometer, which occurred at 4.19 p.m. on March 26, measured 6.4 on the Richer scale and 5.7 on the Deichler scale. The series of afterschiffs that measured more than 3.0 on the Richer scale. The National Earthquake Center in Golden, Colo., measured the major quake at 8.5
WHITHA-Kansas General Robert Stephan said yesterday he supported legislation that would allow physicians to prescribe marijuana for mental health.
Glenton app provides a home undergoing chemotherapy for seven years. Although he had not used marijuana as part of his treatment, he said, his doctors have wanted to
Stephan was diagnosed in 1972 as having cancer of the lymph glands, bone marrow, liver and spleen. His cancer is in a state of remission.
Stephan told reporters that physicians should be allowed to prescribe marijuana (it would erase the pause of chemotherapy).
It just shocks me that people would want to withhold a drug that would help other human beings in the suffering they sometimes end in chemotherapy," he said. "Society doesn't worry about prescribing barbiturates, amphiphenes, oxom derivatives, cocaine and any myriad of controlled substances."
KC firefighters threaten strike
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Tails between city officials and firefighters collapsed yesterday and a union negotiator promised city bargainers, "You'll have a
After a tense, hour-long session with city officials, union leader Stanton Godden and a strike is "amidly what some people in City Hall want."
A special union membership meeting was planned for later in the week to discuss possible job action steps.
Union representatives rejected a city proposal calling for a 10-14 schedule with three shifts over a $2 hour work week. The union prefers a 10-14 schedule with four shifts over a $2 hour work week.
The city's chief negotiator, Leen Brownfield, told the union the city had demonstrated its good faith by agreeing to three major conditions in negotiations. He said the union should show its good faith by also making compromises.
Brownfield said the firemen had been given the city's final offer until provisions were met.
Farm solar heat plan unveiled
WASHINGTON - The Agriculture Department yesterday unveiled a low-cost, portable solar unit designed to warm farm homes, dry grain or heat sheds for
With mass production of the unit, officials said, solar energy no longer will be an exorbit. high-cost energy alternative, but a practical way to reduce petroleum use.
By January, officials expect to be able to license small firms to manufacture the simple solar unit, on which the Agriculture Department holds the patent. Around 150 solar panels are expected in India.
Officials said the solar units, who are expected to come in kite costing $2,500, will be financed by the Farmers Home Administration for farm families.
Turkish premier steps down
ANKARA. Turkey — Turkish Premier Bilent Ecevit announced yesterday he would resign because of an election defeat that gave more power to the opposing party in Turkey.
Exeve said he would formally submit the resignation of his government to President Fahri Korurtuk today.
The decision came after three hours of meetings involving the Cabinet and the leadership of Ecclestor's leftist Republican People's Party.
i the premier's party which took power from Democrat's Justice Party in 1977, lost all of its Assembly seats being contested in mid-term elections Sunday.
Demirel had called for Ecceit's resignation but declined to say whether he planned to form a government or take the country to early general
UAW aives Chrysler a break
HIGHLAND PARK, Mich.-United Auto Workers President Douglas A. Fraser said yesterday his union would seek "equality of sacrifice" from nonunion workers at Chrysler Corp. in return for making unprecedented concessions to the troubled automaker.
Speaking to reporters after the resumption of contract talks with the company, America's third largest car manufacturer, Fraser said he had told Chrysler Chairman Lee A. Iacocca that concessions that affect both union and non-union workers.
The UAW represents about 10,000 workers at Chrysler, a little less than a third of the company's white collar work force. It is the only company in the Big Three where the UAW represents a substantial number of white-collar workers. The company imposes a white-collar wage freeze in the spring, and some employers do not.
1,700 executives have greater ties.
Before has never had the UAW agreed terms for one of the Big Three companies.
14 percent loan rate predicted
KANASAS CITY, Mo. — The chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board yesterday predicted that home loan mortgage rates would rise to an 14 per cent level by next fall.
moreover, the chairman, Jay Janis, excluded those states with usury legislation, such as Kansas, which has an 11 percent mortgage limit. In those half dozen states, lending institutions could either continue making mortgages at the limit or call a complete half to home loans, he said.
Jay Janis told the annual convention of the National Savings and Loan League that banks in states with usury legislation probably would not lend, leading to fewer new housing starts, a loss of jobs in the construction industry and downturn in state's economy.
Jans is urged state legislatures to eliminate or increase usury limits or it 'will become very tough for young families to quality' for home loans.
Panel suggests appraisal delay
L|OEKA-A decision on whether property in the state should be reappraised for tax purposes would be put off another year under an interim tax panel's
The Special Committee on Assessment and Taxation voted to recommend that the deadline for gathering preliminary information on property valuations, be extended.
Under a bill considered in the House last session, the reappraisal study was to have been completed in January 1983.
If the bill passes next session with the interim committee's proposed amendments, the 1984 Legislature would be the first group of lawmakers to take
That would have left the 1983 Legislature facing a decision whether to order state officials to roperse property, which would readjust property taxes in
Weather
The KU weather service forecasts partly cloudy skies today with a chance of thunderstorms this afternoon. Winds will be southerly at 10 to 15 miles. Tighten will be mostly cloudy with a chance of rain and showers. Highs today will be in the mid 70s and lows tonight will be in the low 50s.
the mid tors and low tors will be the same in the skies Will clear to camowork with a high predicted in the low 78s.
Correction ...
An actor in the University Theatre Series production of "The Shadow Box" was incorrectly identified in a review by their Kaiser. Bart Ewing, director of the series, said it was "fair."
Winn introduces prairie park plan
WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislation creating a 74,000-acre Tallgrass Prairie National Reserve in Kansas and Oklahoma will replace the House of Representatives yesterday.
Kansas Republican Larry Winn of Overland Park, a staunch supporter of the prairie park designation and senior member of the state's House delegation, said the proposal was intended to preserve "the last remnants of the tallgrass prairies that exist among culture is maintained as an integral component of the prairie."
Republican Bob Whittaker of southeastern Kansas said it would make hundreds of square miles of prime Kansas land" or a "tourist trip."
mediately attacked by the Kansas congressman in whose district the bulk of the reserve would be.
After years of stiff opposition that has blocked any congressional action on the plan, Winn said he is more optimistic than Mr. Obama and his supporters about changes in both the bill and the Congress.
THE PLAN, HOWEVER, was im-
The land set aside, which is also being sponsored by House Interior Committee Chairman Murdus M'Lard, D-Arriz, has been proposed for decades and proposed several times.
But opposition from Kansas landowners and farming and ranching organizations, who call it a federal intrusion into local land markets, has even formal congressional hearings.
special conservation areas in Wabusea County in northeastern Kansas in a four-county area along the southern and southeastern Kansas and in a three-county area straddling the Kansas-Oklahoma border. Once the government obtained the land, it could restrict its use.
WINN'S LATEST proposal to preserve the Flint and Osage hills would create
Both Whitaker and James Jeffries of northwestern Kansas, whose district is also affected, have pledged to vigorously oppose the changes they made from past proposals.
But Winn, saying the reserve is the top priority of the National Park Service this year, claimed the opposition from the two freshmen didn't bother him.
HE SAID THE departure of Rep. Joe Skubitz, Whittaker's predecessor who used his influence as a member of Udall's
committee to block any action on the bill,
has opened the way for congressional
debate. Public hearings this year are
guaranteed, Winn said.
He also said elimination of provisions allowing the government to purchase land for the park through condensation has ease of disposition by landowners in the affected areas.
The bill would permit the government to buy up the land for the prairie preserve only if the landowners want to sell.
Whittaker, however, is sending letters to all congressmen, asking them to consider his opposition to the plan.
He said his constituents, whose land is requested for the reserve, overwhelmingly want to be outstanding job the people of Kansas have done to taking care of this beautiful prairie.
El Salvador's leader flees in wake of coup
SN SALVADOR, EI Salvador (AP) -- Army rebels seized four key military bakers yesterday, forcing President Carlos Humberger from Rome from diplomatic and rebel sources said. The reports said Romero fled the country and one officer was
The usually reliable diplomatic sources said Romero left by commercial airline bound for the United States with his family. Nudelsatz on the flight were provided.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Susan Sittman said "we don't have confirmation on exactly what has happened," adding that the department was
in constant contact with the U.S. Embassy in San Salvador, the capital.
A REELB spokesman said key aides and officials of the CIA, including Defense Secretary McCain, Castle Yanez and his deputy, Col. Jose Eduardo Lucera II, left with the president, but not the chief investigator.
The spokesman said a major and two colonels, all unidentified, led the coup against Homero, a rightist army general that captured two years ago in a four-year term.
Earlier, a rebel spokesman, who asked for anonymity, refused to describe the ideology of the rebels, but said they wanted
to "effect the changes that are necessary in the country."
A later statement said that the rebellion "stabilized the situation in the country."
SOME OFFICERS wanted Romero to liberalize his regime, while others had for an even tougher crackdown on the increased power of whols们 who is led the coup.
The rebels claimed they controlled all 14 departments in the country throughout this countryside, an average of 4.5 million people. Central American nation, sandwiched between Guatemala, Honduras and the Dominican Republic.
After the rebels announced seizing the barracks, they said they were seeking to overthrow Romero.
SOME SHOTHING was reported in late morning at the barracks in Chalatenango, 30 miles northeast of here, and in Sonsonate, 30 miles southeast of here. Identified enemy captain was reported killed.
A spokesman for the rebels said the insurgents also seized barracks in San Miguel, 100 miles east of San Salvador and at San Carlos, a city on the nation's largest military installation. Traffic was flowing normally in the capital as the soldiers tried to stop shooting in some areas of San Salvador.
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3
NCAA will discuss women's involvement
By BRETT CONLEY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The National Collegiate Athletic Association will begin a series of meetings with the NCAA to discuss the 1980 NCAA Convention, according to Tom Hansen, NCAA assistant executive.
A recommendation to involve more women on important NCAA committees will be one of the most important proposals discussed, Hansen said last week.
"If this proposal causes the cause of women's athletics and brings us closer to having just one organization for both men and women's athletics, then I'm all in."
Phyllis Howlett, assistant director of KU athletics, said the NCAA needed to hear women's ideas.
nestle regulation can be presented to the NCAA Convention it first must be considered by the steering committee, which then makes recommendations to the NCAA Convention. The convention will be presented to the convention which is scheduled for January in New Orleans.
THE THREE division steering committees will conclude their meetings today, Hansen said, and make their recommendations to the council tomorrow, Thursday and Friday.
Hanssen said the NCAA Committee on Women's Athletics was expected to ask the Division I steering committee women's team to join the NCAA Council and steering committees.
The group hopes to involve more women, and to eventually involve the NCAA in women's athletics, he said.
"The proposal could have problems," he said, "because the council has traditionally denied designating that specific committee positions be filled by certain people.
"I DON'T THINK we will have to designate positions for women in the NCAA, because women will be appointed as a matter of course if they are qualified for a job."
I've been told that there will be a specific amendment to sponsor women's championships at this year's convention," he said.
Although the Committee on Women's Athletics didn't suggest that the NCAA sponsor women's championships, the recommendation should be made at the meeting, he said.
Such an amendment would have to be sponsored by six member schools and submitted before Nov. 1 to be considered at the convention, he said.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: NON-TRADITIONAL
STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will meet for a lunch宴 at the University at Albany in p.m. on March 10 from 12 to 4pm at ART BROWN BAG TOUR will present Douglas Hyland, curator of western art, speaking on "Farm and Function in Puritanism."
TONIGHT: COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINAR: JE Bangert will speak on "Introduction to Graphic Services" Facility Auditorium, ADULT LIFE RESOURCE CENTER WORKSHOP on "How to Count Visitors" Council Room in the Union. SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7:30 in Pfarion
11 w 9th behind weavers
a. m. at the ECM Center at 1304 Oread RECREATION SERVICES DAILLEM for entries in intramural track at 5 p.m. in the Gymnasium Sailing Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union Parkers. LATIN AMERICAN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayahawk Room in
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*TOMORROW: DAN BRESLAER, Religious studies, will speak on "Clarifying Terms in the Middle East Conflict" at 11:45
COMPANIES INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS in the School of Business will be Arthur Young and Company, NCR and the Union Oil Company of California. In the School of Engineering, Hendix, Texaco and the University of Texas will be interviewing. In the School of Law, Cosgrove, Webb and Oman, and Arthur Young and Company will be interviewing.
CARLILON RECITAL performed by Albert Gerken at 7 p.m. WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room in the Union, A. K., at 10 a.m. in Michael Klimber, vina, at 8:00 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. SIERRA CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Satellite Union, A. K., at 10 a.m. in the league will meet at 7 p.m. in the Community Building for an organizational meeting.
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Professor to participate in US-Chinese conference
By ROSEMARY INTFEN Staff Reporter
C. C. Cheng, KU professor of pharmacology, will leave for Washington, D.C. next week for a three-day conference with scientists from the People's Republic of China.
The conference will be the first bilateral meeting between China and the United States since the normalization of relations in 1928.
A 10-member Chinese delegation will be in Washington Oct. 28-31 to discuss recent achievements of the Chinese Academy of Medicine and its anti-invasive drums and acupuncture.
"It's going to be interesting, I'm looking forward to learning a lot from them and also to contribute," he said.
Cheng said he did not know how advanced China was in cancer treatment.
The group is from the Institute of Materia Medica, Beijing, and other institutes in Beijing and Shanghai.
Cheng, who also serves as co-director of the Mid-America Cancer Center Program at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said cancer was a serious problem for the
"They definitely have as much as we do here only different types. While breast and skin cancer more prevalent in the upper part, lot of stomach and esophagus cancers."
"I consider myself a scientist and don't want to get into politics. If there is something I can do for science, it doesn't matter if I'm not or not, I will be happy to do," he said.
Cheng, who was born near Peking and speaks five Chinese dialects, said he did not want to get involved with any political issues in the United States and the People's Republic of China.
Cheng came to the U. in 1948. He spent 19 years at the Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo., before joining the Med Center staff last year.
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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 authors.
October 16.1979
Nuclear plant needs well-trained workers
It appears almost inevitable that the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant will be built as it continues to receive stamina support from Kansas Gas and Electric Co. and Kansas City Power and Light public public condemnation of the project.
But when the plant begins operation in 1983, state officials and representatives of these utilities should be sure that all the proper precautions have been taken to avert a nuclear catastrophe that would jeopardize the lives of thousands of innocent people across the state.
Proper disposal of nuclear waste, adequate cooling systems and the correct design of the reactor all need to be considered by state legislators and these utility companies. But another important aspect that has been delayed until recently is the qualifications of the personal working at the plant.
Nuclear power plants are almost completely run by computers, but there is still room for human error—error that can have devastating an accident. But add to the potency of an accident, Stu was the case with Three Mile Island.
The investigations conducted after the Three Mile Island breakdown pointed to human error adding to the seriousness of the accident.
Consequently in considering the importance of the human element at the Burington reactor, state officials now are beginning to question
training programs for plant workers and those workers' qualifications.
Officials are disturbed with a report by the Kansas Corporation Commission last spring that may have found deficiencies in training programs run by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and they are concerned about whether Kansas should use these training programs.
Questions also have been raised by state officials about statements that some workers who will be operators at the Burlington plant did not score well in their training programs. However, Bob Rives, a vice president for K&G/E, supported the workers saying, "They are a very outstanding group of guys, and I think their grades show that specifically."
But the abilities of the workers for the Wolf Creek reactor is an important concern and if there are any questions regarding their abilities, the state has a right and an obligation to the people of Kansas to look into these questions to determine the capabilities of the workers.
Who works at a reactor plant can be just as important as how well the plant is designed. It is important, then, for the safety of the people who live in the state that capable and responsible people are employed to operate the Wolf Creek plant and that they are trained properly.
Hopefully state officials will continue to investigate these matters further in an attempt to make sure there is no risk of further and reduce further the possibilities of a nuclear accident.
Technology—we have praised it as a deity since the days of the Industrial Revolution in England in the 18th century. With it we have created who we are and what we are
*a nas developed into an awesome power and in many ways we have, knowingly or not, found a way to enact fictives every aspect of our lives today, and we use it even to measure the success and failure of our efforts.
One of those side effects created by technology that threatens man's existence is air pollution. Air pollution has been known to cause lung cancer and respiratory problems. In some areas of the world, people need to wear masks to avoid breathing contaminants that might be harmful to their health.
Technology has given us color television sets, dishwashers plastic goods, hot combs, vacuum cleaners, and more to make life just a little softer. It has sent men to the moon and space probes
Most of our technological mishaps, however, affect us indirectly by affecting our environment. But since we are part of the world, we must take great consequences for us in years to come.
An example of this is farming practices today. Farmers set their goals for maximum crop production to meet the needs of America and the world.
Bad side effects of technology already have rendered life-threatening problems for us, but so far we have been able to adapt them. However, if we continue at our high rate of destruction and exploitation of the earth, we will no longer will be able to support human life.
And yet this "god" in which we have placed so much faith and trust in destroying us slowly, but surely. An alarming thought and one that we overlook too often.
New director of FDA has rocky road ahead
In trying to maximize production year after year, the land becomes overworked and is robbed of its nutrients. Although crops are grown in a way that becomes so poor that they are no longer farmable. Consequently, this reduces the production levels and puts a strain on the amount of粮食 exported to feed people in the country. Today, States is the only exporter of grains today.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanson, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS6940
It was Kennedy's bad luck to be on the spot when public and legislative opinion came about regarding the decision from the FDA's judgment on such matters as saccharin. Lantelie and the use sodium saccharin in foods.
Moreover, Goyan comes to Washington at a time when the general prestige of the FDA is relatively low. Of his predecessor, Donald Kennedy, it was remarked in the *The New York Times* that he was resting 'after losing himself in the policy battle in which he engaged.'$^4$
More generally, in the present conservative mood of the country, the FDA is in a position to implement typical agency, an organization founded on the assumption that the consumer is incompetent to take care of his own affairs without government telling him what he should do.
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It has been a remarkable decline in the fortunes of an agency that was unanimously praised back in the early 1980s. Then the FDA prevented thalidomide, a drug that was commonly used to treat pregnant women, from being widely prescribed in this country. In the euphoria
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The government's own General Accounting Office told Congress just before Kennedy left his job that the FDA was guilty of misleading the public and proving of useful drugs needed by the sick, drugs that were available earlier in other countries. A top GAO official agreed with a congressional official that the study could find no benefits to compensate for the lack of testing.
Mary Horiok
Managing Editor
Nancy Dresner
Editorial Editor
Mary Ernt
NEW YORK-If there are any surplus compassion around, part of it ought to be directed to the pharmacy school dean who has served as a staff member for Dr. David Administration, Jere Eidow Goyan. He is leaving a prestigious and well-paid University of California post for one of Washington's most controversial and politically sensitive jobs. He has accepted the position, but whose assured lease on the White Housetax has less than a year and a half to go.
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Farmers also use irrigation in crop production in the Great Plains. But what has not been realized is that the irrigation is often more efficient, and which could very easily lead to the for-
Technology threatens our existence
generated by this feat, the late Sen. Ekafer Kefauver had no great difficulty winning legislative changes to require the FDA to certify the efficacy as well as the safety of new drugs. It is this added requirement that is part of the FDA problems that will face Gavin.
For example, except in a few isolated cases, Laetrile usually has been safe. But that substance's sponsors have not even tried to comply with the FDA's cumbersome, time-consuming and expensive costs of Laetrile. Laetrile actually help cancer patients.
Moreover, Goyan has been a leader in efforts to raise the status and importance of a pharmacist. For many years, a typical pharmacy has had an in-house repackage manufactured pills and powders he bought at wholesale into smaller containers for retail sale. Goyan has sought to train a new breed of pharmacists capable of performing the duties of those who are specialists who are equalls with physicians.
Watching the FDA ought to be an interesting occupation in the months ahead as Goyan leads that agency.
Harry Schwartz recently retired after 29 years' service on the editorial board of The New York Times.
His critics claim he is simply engaged in occupational imperialism, trying to grab additional turf for his profession at the University of Goya's educational policy may well agree with the laudatory comment that Sidney M. Walef, Ralph Nader's chief counsel, insisted that Goya heard of the Goyan appointment: "I thank he will push very hard at increasing the role of pharmacists to interfere with the prescribing practices of many doctors."
Nevertheless, recent years have shown that thousands of American cancer sufferers want the right to try Laetrile even if it has been deemed a political pressure has got an amazing number of state legislatures to pass bills legalizing Laetrile, laws that implicitly challenge the most basic assumption of the Kefauver amendment became law.
It used to be mandated that an M.D. head the FDA. But Goyan is the second accuser of his doctor. The ministeria has appointed. The leaders of organized medicine are unlikely to miss the death of Dr. Goyan.
he has stressed the web of processes in the living environment at its most vulnerable points that there is little leeway left in the system. Time is short. We must begin, now, to respond to these challenges geotechnical power conform to the more powerful constraints of the living environment.*
We cannot ignore any longer the problems of technology. It has been put on the shell too long and further problems have been created,
The pharmaceutical industry complains about the long delays, usually stretching over years, required to FDA approval of a new drug. They have approved medicine for a given ailment tends to look with equanimity on the FDA-market data and is competing in market rival drugs.
As if juggling these and other political issues, he takes office under conditions favoring intangible friction between his agency and the community of physicians that is the target of so many cases.
John
COLUMNIST fischer
mation of deserts. That, in turn, could reduce crop production-leaving the possibility of starvation in underdeveloped countries.
If the oil spill had occurred in the spring when crops were growing, it could have been deterimental to the farmers in the area where it might have caused crops to wither and do not grow.
Technology should not be condemned because it will play an important role in trying to resolve the problems created by it.
And our technology mishaps also affect our climate. The recent runaway oil well off the coast of Mexico and its effect on the climate in America is a good example.
Because the oil spread over a great extent of the ocean's surface, it reduced the amount of water evaporated by the sun into the air.
Since this results in less water vapor in the air, precipitation is reduced and does not carry as far. Consequently, this is an impertinent event. Kansas has not received rain for a month.
But we must take a more active role in the technological future, including determining alternative forms of energy and stricter pollution-control regulations.
Man has tried too long to live without nature—but that cannot be done because he is part of it. And one must not forget that technology also is dependent on nature.
We go into new technology blindly, not knowing all the consequences that will arise from it. We make amends and corrections—but by then it has had a possibly irreversible result on our lives.
We need to call for stricter regulations of those things that greatly affect the well-being of the environment. For too long we have allowed man-made floods. Now it looks tick to stick to nature's rules.
Man is destroying himself through his own endeavors with technology.
The outlook for the future is not pleasant, and Barry Commer, the director of the business school at MIT, writes. We have become, not less dependent on the balance of nature, but much more dependent on it.
THERE ARE LOTS OF THINGS YOU CAN DO WITH IT.
YOU CAN MOLD IT!
YOU CAN STAND ON IT!
YOU CAN BOUNCE IT!
A man throws a balloon. It falls downward.
YOU CAN EVEN CARVE IT!
LOS ANGELES AIR
ISN'T SO BAD!
U.S. cooking in microwave beams
Like it or not, the world we live in is becoming more and more similar to a microwave oven. We are bombarded daily by dozens of blasts from many different sources of microwave radiation, from short-wavelength to long-distance communications towers.
One is in danger of being cooked to a crisp by these microwaves, however, some scientific claims. The radiation we receive is too small a dosage even to be harmful, they
But is it? Other scientists, especially those in Europe and Russia, maintain that even the smallest dose of microwave radiation can kill cancer, over a period of time. Some scientists also insist that small doses of microwave radiation can affect behavior.
Despite the contentions of these scientists, who are backed by reams of papers from studies conducted on the effects of antibiotics on human liver, a liberal standard to companies using microwave equipment. That standard, 25 years old, allows dangerous amounts of antibiotics to be used.
The current American standard was developed in 1953 by Professor Herman Schwan, a professor of electrical engineering and physical medicine at the University of Michigan. He designed the metal ball as a model of the human body and made some assumptions as to how much
john COLUMNIST logan
heat the human body can handle. At the time, the heating effect of microwaves was the only effect known on the human body.
Using the metal ball, Schwan decided that man can handle safely an exposure of 10 milliwatt (thousandths of a watt) per square centimeter of body surface. That material is being developed by the United States armed forces and the American Standards Institute.
But a number of scientists insist that lower radiation doses than 10 milliwatts are extremely dangerous. Doctors have written on the subject of microwave damage, according to the Government Accounting Office. Among them is Dr. James Shipley, whose papers have reported are central nervous system disorders, genetic damage, reduction of the brains electrical activity, and damage to the brain's blood vessels.
One scientist has demonstrated that a dose of just 0.2 milliwatt (one-fifth of the government standard) affects the bloodstream of mice, and it allows them to choose what substances enter that organ.
The Russians have long known the harmful effects of microwave radiation. Their
safety standard is only 10 microwatts (millionths of a watt).
That irradiation has resulted in the State Department declaring the embassy a hazardous duty post, despite the radiation exposure and the American safety standard. How hazardous that radiation might be is reflected in the fact that three of the most recent American cancer centers are still battling cancer. Two have died, the third, Ambassador Stoeffel, is suffering from Leukemia. The Ambassador's office is in the weak of the Korean microwave beam.
This is interesting in light of the fact that microscopes are used to microwave radiation at the United States Embassy in Moscow for the past two decades, twice their own safety.
Just why the Russians are irradiating the embassy, no one is sure. It is known that Russians believe that microwave radiation burns skin and can be used to influence behavior.
The problem of microwave radiation has recently taken on a local aspect with the construction of a microwave relay tower in downtown Lawrence. The five-story tower, one of 70 to be built in the state by South Carolina, is designed for long distance telephone communication.
According to Bell, the tower will use five watts of microwave radiation, beamed at
the next tower in a tight pattern, much like a searchlight.
At the base of the tower, stral ray transmission will measure about five micromatrics, according to Southwestern Bell engineers, and be pointed at the Embassy in Moscow.
That searchlight beam will spread slightly over the journey, however, and persons along the path of the beam can be exposed to radiation, particularly if they are on a hill.
It raises some interesting questions. With all the doubts about the effects of electromagnetic radiation, safety hazards, why was the middle of a metropolitan area chosen for a microwave relay tower? What effects will the radiation have on people living or working near the tower?
No one seems to have the answers, or perhaps no one cares. What is sure is that there is going to be more radiation in River City. Perhaps not enough that we can stick a finger into it, but at least enough that someone should begin to check into the possible dangers.
There should also be a greater effort made to develop a new safety standard for the entire nation. There are far too many dangers from lesser levels of microwaves for the current standard to be regarded as safe. The development of mushroom-like sprouting of microwave towers and booming sales of microwave ovens, something needs to be done soon.
West Campus parking lot suggested
To the Editor:
as a former editor and publisher of two weekly newspapers in South Dakota, I am very much concerned with the parking situation on the KU campus. All of this has nothing to do with my past experiences, but it also has my attention to the situation at hand.
I am a bookbinder II at the KU Printing Service, just doing my job and minding my own business, but this parking situation takes the cake.
Lately the KU Police Department has been ticketing the campus area like crazy. I suppose they are just doing their job or else the department is short of funds. Who knows. And I understand that the fee goes to the upkeep of the department.
But it isn't fair. One would think that the department is in charge of the legislature for their funds, like other departments on campus do, and not take it to the faculty; the students are the ones who need the Student Senate or the newly formed classified organization would be up in arms about all this.
In an earlier article in the Kansas, it was mentioned that a majority of the faculty members do not pay the fines that are imposed on them. So why should the lowly professors pay the fines? There is no big push on to collect the faculty's fines, but the students cannot
register for classes, I bear, until theirs are fully paid. Now is that fair or isn't it?
Let's look at the situation from a different point of view. We all know that the main campus is very crowded, but the west edge is more open and provides land of land close to campus, why could it put a large lot out there, and provide shuttle bus service for the people who park in that area. A lot of students drive on campus, when they could be walking or riding
Of course, in the wintertime the situation would not be as good. But during the other seasons, you have to take it just as a suggestion. The students committing from a distance would have to park somewhere.
But as far as West Campus is concerned, there is no traffic to speak of, only trucks loading and unloading merchandise. So why the permits at all?
Overall, the employees on campus do not make a fantastic wage to start with—and then the extra burden to buy permits. The department has been so busy that myself am not that bad off, since my wife works, as do a lot of wives on campus. They have to these days with rising costs and inflation, and now the prime bank rates for mortgages are higher than before. I can think of, but will not bother to mention.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
The legislature gave us a small increase termed a cost of living increase, but that is not enough to cover the inflation rate, or even the cost of parking permits.
Bill Combs
West Campus employee
There has to be a way to justify this situation. I hope that someone can come up with an answer.
Maybe if the permits were only $1 instead of $4 it would not be so bad. But the high cost to purchase them, and the $0.60 for $7.50 are too much for anyone to handle.
Amplifying equipment low-power consumer To the Editor:
Wake up and smell the coffee, people. The fact is that any blow dryer, toaster, broiler
Now I'm just a anti-nuke as any of your average liberal-thinking, ecologically-minded individuals. But I want to do your research better than to keep printing cartoons based on the premise that nature is public address systems and the like are good examples of a 'power-gobbling'
or even a large light bulb uses more power than 95 percent of the band equipment on the market today.
J.D. Willhite
Lawrence musician
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kanan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and include the name of the author, include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is afraid to type, please include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. Letters should also include the right to edit for publication.
Tuesday, October 16, 1979
5
Stuffy library air damages books
Rv HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
Old books in Waltons Library will continue to deteriorate on the shelves until there is better ventilation in the library. Alexandra Benson, director of special collections, said yesterday.
She said better ventilation would come with the planned renovation of the library in 1981.
one books, some more than 150 years old, are now stored on Watson's shelves instead of in a special ventilated section of Watson or in Spencer Research Library, she said.
"Now, there is not enough space in the library to keep older books in a special section," Mason said. "But plans for renovation of Watson include plans for a ventilation system that will help the books keep a steady temperature in the building."
John Glinka, associate dean of libraries, said bids for Watson renovation will be considered early next year with renovation expected to be completed in mid 1981.
"We have a duty to ourselves and to our grandchildren to keep up these old books," Mason said. "They can tell us a lot about the past."
mason said books in Watson published before 1800 were taken to Spencer Library where they were placed in the special collections department.
"We try to go through Watson periodically to find books in the library published before 1800," Mason said. "But Watson is so large it hard to find them all."
Mason said that conditions in Watson were inadequate, but that most of the older books were in good condition. However, she said there had been a lot of damage could be caused by inadequate ventilation.
SHE SAID ONE reason the older books were in good condition was that people took extra care to handle them properly because of their age.
"We haven't had much trouble with vandalism to old books," she said. "Most of the damage done to old books is caused by careless use."
Library users also have overcome temp- tations to steal old books because of their apparent value, she said.
"I don't think people would walk away with books just because they are old," she said.
She said, however, that a number of missives she wrote to the teacher with notes attached saying the "borrower" had kept the book because he thought he could care for the book better.
"The quality and rarity of a publication is more important than its age," she said.
Lee Young, professor of journalism, said some of the old magazines in Watson probably were valuable.
The age of a book should not be a temptation to take it because age is not the primary factor considered in a book's value, she said.
For instance, Watson has copies of the Southern Literary Messenger, which was edited by Edgar Allan Poe in 1835.
Room demand up; wait shortened
By BOB PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
Although the demand for temporary rooms in University residence halls was growing, McElhene placed in permanent rooms more quickly this year. Fred McElhene, director of academic administration, said:
As of yesterday, two women were living in temporary rooms in McColum Hall, he said. No men are still living in temporary rooms.
"This year we have had between 265 and 272 men and women who contracted COVID-19 last year, about 225 students had contracted for temporary rooms, and both men and women who contracted COVID-19 last year.
"Right now, we have essentially eliminated the need for temporary rooms," he said. "The only students still remaining are our staff." Who, who contracted with us very recently?
**STUDENTS WHO LIVED in temporary rooms were charged $4 a week, or $7 a day. McBheenan said the cost of double-room accommodations at the university ball is about $1,218, or about $3 a week.**
McElhene said the contract that was signed by students who lived in temporary rooms was not binding.
"The student must pay us only for the amount of time that he lived in the hall," he
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said. "It does not force the student to live in a hall if he finds an alternative form of housing."
RUN A MILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS IN LESS THAN A YEAR.
A CLAUSE THAT was inserted into the office is that they are residential programs find rooms for students on the permanent room waiting list. McEhennie
He said fewer men applied for temporary rooms this year and that permanent rooms are now available. The room is available for men because rooms have been vacated by students who moved into them.
The clause states that a space cannot be
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Detective L.J. Frank Bolin.
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guaranteed to contract holders if they have not checked into their rooms by the first day of classes.
"We were able to identify rather rapidly the no-shows in the halls." McKenzie said. "The people who then took a drop because we could move them into the rooms of the people who had been there."
"You're not going to have to," she said.
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Directed by Peter Yates, with Steve McOuen, Jacqueline Bisset, and Robert Vaughan, includes the famous Carlos the hooligan down San Francisco's hills street.
Wednesday, October 17
RARE JAZZ FILMS WITH
RARE DIFRES RES
These excellent prints include Charlie Parker only screen appearances, the hit "noga Choo Choo"; Miles Davis & Leonard Cohen; the orchestra Oboe piano with Albert Ammons & Pete Johnson; and the Sound of Jazz, a movie by Thelonious Monk, Billie Holiday, Lester Young, Conleen Hawkin, Jimmy Fallon, historian Bob Defoles will answer questions following the films.
Sponsored by SUA Films, African Studies, KANU-FM, and radio-TV-film.
Thursday, October 18
RARE COMEDY FILMS
WITH ROR DEFLORES!
These rarely seen classics include a 1931 Mack Sennett Hindi with Bing Bing, Frank Sinatra, Betty Bing, Bing Hope
Sponsored by SUA Films, African Studies, KANU-FM and radio-TV-film.
Friday & Saturday,
October 19-20
BREAD AND CHOCOLATE
Directed by Franco Brusati, with Nino Manfred and Marina Karni. An Italian film that focuses on the economic ability to earn a living which the Italian economy is unable to provide. A bit bittersweet, the film critically discim of two national temperaments. It will be one of Best Foreign Film, Italy/subtitles.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 8:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise indicated. Up to 1:50 admission. No Refreshments.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
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Tuesday, October 16, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
Jayhawks complete fall baseball work
Sports Writer
By JERRY FINCHER
Baseball season is finally over for the Kansas Jayhawk baseball team. Most of them have been playing baseball for eight months, and KU Coach Floyd Fleury thought it was time to re-ring him. He had a game against the second-second-games this week, but canceled them.
"I just felt we were mentally tired," Tempel said the final afterall game Sunday. "It happens every fall. I just feel we've gone far enough."
After losing ten players from the winningest club in KU history, the Jayhawks were faced with an extensive building program this fall.
however, the Hawks went 10-2 in fall games and Temple said the team definitely improved.
"Everything we asked this fail, they did it," Temple said. "All of them improved. When we first started, I had some doubts, but are only three months out of high school."
Scott Wright, senior outfitter, said the 'Hawks had the best group of freshmen since he came to KU four years ago.
"A lot of the freshmen in and picked up the things we were trying to do. They all came in here fighting for a position, Wright said. We knew they wanted us. We've got a nucleus of good ballcubes. Everybody has done about as much as they can do. We all right."
Temple was aided by the fall Lee by Eisenhower, graduate assistant, and Russ Sehon, who has helped in the fall since the first year of the fall program in 1969.
Two freshmen were the top KU hitters. Dick Lewallen led the team with a .471
batting average, followed by Roger Lee,
hit 45, and led the team with 16 hits.
Steve Jeltz, who was moved from second base to shortstop, led the Jayhawks in RRI's stolen bases and triples.
3rd baseman Roger Riley batted 424 with a team-high total of six times. Brian Gray homered three times to drive in 10 runs and hit 375.
Wright led the team in scoring with 13 runs. He batted 412, the same average as Jesse Vann, who led the team in walks with 11.
Veteran catcher Dan Graham alternated with Juan Ramon, Garden City Community College transfer.
"Ramon has a good chance of being alternate catcher for us," Temple said. "He'll definitely be our backup catcher."
The Jayhawk pitching staff is also young, with Clay Christiansen the only returning starter.
"Pitching depends on how well our veterinizers do," Temple said. "Dave Hicks, unfortunately, suffered a knee injury and be's a question mark."
However, the Jayhawks may be able to rely on two rookie pitchers.
"Jim Phillips and Randy Minstosh have both made excellent progress this fall." Temple said. "I think they'll be able to help us next spring."
Mike Watt, 4+1 last spring, allowed only one hit all fall, which came in the final inning he pitched.
"We're going to be very young," Temple said. "We go from a predetermined veteran community to a first place probably three rookies in our lineup. We get three rookie pitchers we're going to play."
HAMLET NOTES
Cliff's Notes
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HAMLET
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JEFF HARRING/Kansan Staf
Kevin Clinton, KU quarterback, sets to throw before an onrushing Lawrence Cole, Nebraska defense end, during Saturday's game in Lincoln, Neb. Clinton got this pass away, but he was sacked three times by the Cornhuskers defense and re-injured his right foot when Cam Fambrough said Clinton was "very, very doubled" for the next game, at Iowa State.
Sack comin'
Women play WSU
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The road has been familiar but not frequently for the KU women netter team. The ECHA champions, are 3-4 for the season. Two of their victories and three of their losses have been to them.
"The Hawks will try to buck the road losing trend and even their record today when they play Wichita State University in Wichita.
Coach Tim Kivisto will use the same line he has been using the last two weeks against the Shackers, led with Val Hallett and Marcus Winslow, and 2, Marcie Earls at No. 3, Marceen Gulfill at
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Block and Gulifuil will play No. 1. Doubles with Staifer and Scherfer at No. 2. Eary and Kathy Merrion will probably be the No. 3 team. Merrion is questionable for the No. 4 team, but she has the fin. Leauon also is not feeling well, but Kivisto said she would play today.
No. 4, Shari Schrufer at No. 5 and Lissa Leonard at No. 6.
Pizza
"We competed all the way down the line," he said. "Oklahoma is not that much better than us, even though they had another good recruiting year. We were able to hold on and win."
Even though the team was on the losing end last weekend in Columbia, Kivisto said she was encouraged by the overall play of the Jayhawks.
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'Hawks open practice
The men's basketball squad, led by eight returning lettermen, began workouts yesterday in Allen Field House, preparing for KU's #2nd basketball season.
Ted Ewen, embarking on his 16th season as KU basketball coach, put the 15-man squad through a two-hour workout to train the players with practice procedure.
ms african studies KANU1m and radio-tv-film
"The first days point out how much work we have ahead of us," Owens said "We're trying to give them the total concept of our efforts in defense and then break down into drills."
Despite the return of eight lettermen last year's 18-11 team, KU will have a relatively young team this year. Paul Terry and David Johnson will graduate and only three seniors—Randolph Carroll, Mac Stalcalp and Chester Gills—return. None of them have started a varsity.
The team was in good shape, Owens said. Carroll has been slowed with bone chips in
his left foot, but is expected to be at full speed in a week to 10 days. David Mangley, who underwent shoulder surgery in the summer to correct an old problem, and Mark Snow, who played in only four games, are both recovered and are practicing.
think everybody came back in, relatively good condition," Owens said. "I think we're going to have fairly good depth and play an intense brand of basketball. We're going to press every time we can and make sure we can or another even time we get the ball."
Owens said he was hoping to improve on last season's 146 field goal percentage.
KU's first game will be an exhibition against the Yugoslav National team Nov. 15 in Allen Field House.
"I think we were a potentially good staging team, but our selection was poor," he said. "We had to use technique, it's a matter of finding out where our high percentage shads are and how they fit in."
Men's tennis team to play exhibition at Wichita State
Wichita State has gone outside of the United States to recruit top tennis players, as evidenced by the national ranking of
The KU men's tennis team travels to Wichita today for an exhibition match against Wichita State. The match will give coach Tom Krivoist an opportunity to see how his lineup, including ineligible players and runners, will do under match conditions.
"I'm anxious to see how the guys will do against a team like Wichita State," Kvisto said.
Theses will play 1. singles, Wayne Weynall Seawall 2. Bill Krizanrion 3. Chet Collier 4. Rounds No. 5 and Rick Wertz 6. No for the Jayhaws. Ties and Runnels, who are both ineligible until second semester, will team to play 1. doubles. Collier will team to play 2. doubles, but he will not yet know who would play 3. doubles.
Mc Markham, from Australia. McMahon is ranked 14th in the Westia. Waite State also has a national champion from Canada and McMahon, including McMahon. Kivisto said.
"We'll find out the guys will fit in to national competition against Wichita. We'll be the team to beat in the Big Eight. anybody will be concerned about Kinsas."
Kansas beat Missouri last weekend and gave them a slight advantage to team from Southern Illinois. Although the loss to Tulsa University was a lopsided 2-2, Kissete said the individual matched were.
Hockey team to play ESU
The KU field hockey team goes for its own goal in a 2-1 victory against Jacobsville on Emperor State at 2 p.m. today at the Holocaum Sports Complex, 29th and Iowa. It will be the final home game for the game.
Coach Diana Beebe said the biggest problem the Jayhawks have had this season is a lack of experience.
KU's only victory in a 17 season came against Emporia State early in the year. The team won 8-2 and 11-0 in year. The Jayhawks are coming off a 4-1 victory in the Kansas City Fleet Hockey Club in Oklahoma City.
"We're standing and waiting on the ball and are not playing good field hockey," said
Beebe. "It’s total inexnerience that we’re seeing. We get so engrossed in what the ball’s doing, we're not thinking about what we should be doing."
Varsity tryouts today, tomorrow
anyone wishing to try out for the men's
varsity basketball team should report to
KU assistant coach Lafayette Norwood,
at 1:00 p.m. today and tomorrow on the
weekend.
Candidates are to report wearing basketball clothing, including shoes.
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For A Turnover
Want something to top off a meal? Or just in the mood for a satisfying snack? Turn into Henry's—and treat yourself to an apple or lemon turnover—topped with lots of cinnamon and frosting. What a treat!
And don't forget a steaming cup of coffee to go with it. At Henry's, an 8 oz. cup is still only 15¢!
Open tll 9 p.m.
At Henry's
You Have Your Choice!!
10,000 meter run
Sunday, October 21.
1979
Lawrence, Kansas
to benefit the United Fund
entry fee $5/$6 day of the race
includes donation to united fund
and a Jawahk Iog T-shirt
inc a
and a Jayhawk Jog T-shirt
Call for information
Gamma Phi Beta
Sorority
843-8022
Phi Kappa Ps Fraternity 843-2655
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 16, 1979
7
1980
Herb Schmertz
Mobil.
From page one
He said the social and economic progress of the oil-producing nations depended on their profits from oil resources.
--energy sources in the United States would be prevented.
SCHEMES BY some Americans to secure these resources are "imperialist" and "irresponsible" and would constitute "world-scale handie," he said.
Increases from 1973 in the price of oil are justified because, Schermer said, the "history of oil prices clearly demonstrates that 1973 was never priced at its true value."
For every dollar of profit that Mobil makes, it invests $1.75 in finding new oil resources, he said.
According to Schmertz, Mobil has produced a profit increase of 30 percent annually since 1977. However, he said this profit is not a real test of the corporation's profitability.
"OIL CORPORATIONS make large profits, but in terms of capital invested, the return is not that profitable." he said.
The government, he said, should thus deregulate oil prices so it will be economically productive to produce all the oil in the United States.
Another suggestion offered by Schmertz was the creation of a reliable allocation program that would be available should a shortage occur.
But be said that an energy shortage in the upcoming year was doubly as long as this winter was relatively normal.
"One of the big problems has been un certainty. It's a tragedy that we don't have a back-up program of rationing," he said.
has been a controversial issue. Last July the city commission rejected 3-2 the downizing of the entire neighborhood.
"We have tight but sufficient supplies for the winter, Schmertz said.
Commission .
From page one
That action caused members of the Oreo Neighborhood Association to consider building a new police missioners, Don Bimbs, Bob Schumann and Ed Carter, who voted against the downsizing.
The association decided earlier this month to wait on the recall question until after the meeting tonight.
CARTER AND Schumm have said they would consider downzoning the Oread by sections.
The association also considered holding a city-wide referendum on the downzoning issue but decided to wait.
Clark said he thought the events of the last few days called for the downsizing of the Oread section, mostly a single-family dwelling. as soon as possible.
"I will argue strongly for the downzoning. All we need is one more vote." Clark said.
Schumar the area was a "tpe area for downzizing. I will look at it favorably unless someone can convince me otherwise before tomorrow's meeting."
Commissioner Marci Francisco has asked the commissioners to discuss at the meeting
the possibility of establishing a moratorium on issuing building permits between the time the planning commission recommends a permit, or the commission considers the recommendation.
CLARK SAID he questioned the legality of a mortalor because it would deprive property owners of their rights.
In other zoning issues, the commissioners will consider a recommendation from the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission to rezone the east side of the 800 block of Pennsylvania Street excluding the city's downtown area from general industrial to multiple family.
The rezoning was requested by the property owners because multiple family zoning reflects the current use of the property.
Hayden has not requested the rezoning of his property because he hopes to convert a former tawny marsh into tavern. He has filed suit against the city officials and commissioners, previously rejected his plans.
THE COMMISSIONERS rejected the plan because the building did not meet setback requirements because the building would be the favored would be an intrusion on the neighborhood.
In other business, the commissioners will consider requests for variances from the city's sign ordinance from Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.; Oakland University, 760 W. Main St.; Warehouse Furniture, 1457 E. 23rd St.; Otasie, 1189 Massachusetts St.; University State Bank, 954 Iowa St.; Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd St.; S.L.C Credit Creo, 460 Betsy Street; Holiday Inn, 2002 Iowa St.; and Bob Hopkins Vowenwagen, 220 Iowa St.
THE COMMISSIONERS also will conduct a public hearing regarding improvements to Second Street from Wisconsin Street west to the Kansas turnpike access road.
This street passes the site of the proposed MCC facility, which is a vertical center-model for which the city commission authorized in late August the issuance of $2 billion in industrial revenue from the MCC.
After the public hearing, the commissioners will consider a resolution to determine the advisability of paving and improving Second Street.
The commission also will consider granting permission to two groups to use a mobile public address system during an anti-racist march to be held Oct. 27.
Computer use increase forecast
Computer usage will continue to increase in the wake of the bookwork, as computer becomes cheaper, officials at the University of Kansas Academic Computer Center, said
"It it's uncommon for a department to increase its computer usage 25 percent from one semester to another." John Seitz, assistant director of production, said. "They will be used more and more because hardware is getting cheaper. The investments are even doubling their computer use from one semester to another."
Hardware is larger in the computer science field for the computer itself and its peripheral electronic equipment.
"The departments are using the computers for instructional and research purposes and the administration is using them more for processing." Seltz said.
THE UNIVERSITY has two main
Magnuson said the University's computers still would be adequate if computerized pre-enrollment were instituted.
"WEWOULD JUST have to add 15 or 20 terminals to the system," he said.
These two computers are scheduled to arry the burden of computer use in the near future.
Magnuson said the increased use of computers would not mean a loss of jobs.
"It may be a matter of redefining responsibilities," Magnus said. "I never looked at a computer as taking jobs. My colleagues are not won't have to lift additional workers."
Man remains in critical condition
A 20-year-old Lawrence man, the victim of a possible hit-and-run accident Friday, remained in critical condition in the interior center of Chicago after a hospital spokesman said.
Dale F. Jones, 711 Connecticut St., was
Jerry Magnuson, director of the office of information assistance said, "We think there will be more utilization of computers in the future.
the long awaited return of
"However, we think our computer capacity will be sufficient for about the next three years."
walking on a gravel road on the west side of Burcham Park, Second and Indiana streets, when he was injured, police said. Jones sustained severe head injuries.
Although police are classifying the accident as a hit-and-run, an investigation into the incident is continuing.
NIGHTHAWKS
tomorrow night
computers, one for academic and instructional purposes, and one for the administrative uses.
buy your tickets
today only $3.00
($4.00 D.O.S.)
kiefs better days at 7th spirit club
* NIGHTHAWKS
tomorrow night
Doze off after at
10:00 a.m. to 9:00
Lawrence
Opera House
Call for concert info. 842-6930
SENIORS
SayCheese!
Senior Pictures have been extended until Oct.26
Call the Jayhawker Yearbook for your appointment.
864-3728
Only $1 sitting fee
You can help increase the safety of our campus. The Campus Safety Service needs men and women volunteers to provide escort teams for those people on campus who request them. For more information see the ad in the Notice column of the classified ad section and call KU-INFO, 864-3506.
Get your kit together!
frostline kits
the kits made in America. by everyone.
available at
HONDA & HARLEY-DAVIDSON
Sales & Service
913-843-3333 1811 West 6th Street Lawrence, Ks.
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BEST FRIENDS
headmasters
rare jazz films
with film historian bob deflores
benny goodman
count basie
billie holiday
glenn miller
charlie parker
lester young
miles davis
billie
glenn.
charlie parker
lester young
miles davis
wednesday, october 17 7:30pm
woodruff auditorium $1.00
sponsored by: SUA films, african studies, KANU-fm.
radio-tv-film
8
Tuesday, October 16, 1979
University Daily Kaasan
Carter courts Catholics, eats ribs in KC
SAN FRANCISCO
BARB XINNEY/Kansan staff
THE 185 FOR FORM HOLY 18000
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
"TEN"
Eve. 7:30 and 9:45
Sat Sun 2:30
Grandma
BABY BANK
"MONTY PYTHON'S
LIFE OF BRIAN"
Eve. 7:00 and 8:45
Sat Sun 2:00
Variety
CHILDREN'S GROUP
Highest
Score
1. "STARTING OVER"
Eve. Sat Sun 1:30
Sat Sun 1:45
2. "THE SEDUCTION OF JOE
TYNAN"
Eve. Sat Sun 1:15
Sat Sun 1:45
3. "A MAN, A WOMAN AND A BANK"
Eve. 7:45 and 8:45
Sat Sun 1:45
Carnival Run
Score
1. "ANIMAL HOUSE"
Eve. 6:30 and 7:30
Sat Sun 1:30
2. "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS"
Eve. 7:40 and 8:40
Sat Sun 1:45
President Jimmy Carter greets local dignitaries, above, including Kansas City, Kan, Mayor Jack Reardon, after arriving at Municipal Airport yesterday afternoon. Later, Carter bows his head during a prayer before addressing the National Catholic Charities Convention at the Radisson-Muclahb Hotel.
*Many families have been strained to the breaking point by social and economic forces beyond their own control.
**MARKETING MASTERS** **MASTER'S GUIDE**
**10TH EDITION** **2015** **PUBLISHED BY**
**ACADEMY OF HUMAN ENGINEering**
Members of the press and Secret Service followed Carter to Arthur Brentv's, a popular barbecue restaurant.
THE PRESIDENT later met with Kansas City, Mo., business and
architectural courthouse at a reception attented by Kansah Gov. John Carlf
"The White House Conference on Families will not limit itself to what Washington officials think is important but will learn what happens."
"Our people were waiting for someone to say, 'God Bless
the world' wounded particularly good coming from the lips of a
poor man.'"
The proprietor of Bryant's, an east side Kansas City landmark, said Carter was the second president to dine at his establishment. President Henry Truman from nearby Independence got his hands greasy more than once with the famous ribs, Bryant said.
STUDIO ONE
HAIR DESIGNERS
Today's Hair Care Center
Student discount
with KU ID
843-2229
REDKEN
2323 Ridge Court
Most customers who frequent the unkempt dining area have to stand in line for barbecue. But Bryant said Carter, who was soaked by a sudden downpour as he left the Jackson County Courthouse moments earlier, didn't have to.
"Some families indeed have broken. The tragic results are all around us in alcoholism, drug abuse, social alienation and crime."
"YOU IN THIS room try姆 and persistently the best in America," he said. "As a result of your assistance, tens of thousands of desperate customers."
"The pope's message and his visit stirred our nation's capital, just as it stirred the hearts ofnearwhere wherever he visited.
"There was a glow of warmth and friendship," he said, "and we had a delightful private conversation.
Carter also told the crowd that he was surprised by the warmth of his visit with the Pope John Paul II.
"The needs of families are so deeply ingrained in my conscience that they will not go forgotten."
Carter told the crowd yesterday that plans for a White House conference on families, which he promised three years ago to hold, were backdrop to his efforts.
He said three conferences would be held next summer in Baltimore, Minneapolis and Los Angeles.
Carter praised the Catholic organization for its volunteer work.
HE SAID, "I can assure you that this conference on the family will involve another one of those government reports which often open on Tuesday."
THE PRESIDENT and his wife sat down at one of the old tables that crowd the two rooms and ordered a beef sandwich and ribs, Bloody Mary.
"I sat at a table and talked with him. He thought the barbecue was great." Brvant said.
BIBLE STUDY and FELLOWSHIP
Every Tuesday
7:00 P.M.
Kansas Union*
Bryant, who denied that New Yorker magazine writer Calvin Trillmade him as famous as the president, said he voted for Carter Trump. The president's administration is still investigating.
Sponsored by Campus Christians
*Check Union Room List
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 16, 1979
9
Increased minority recruitment changing Peace Corps' image
By JUDY WOODBURN Staff Reporter
The peace Corps is mostly a white, middle class phenomenon and is trying to build an inner community of minority volunteers, Yvonne Jackson, Peace Corps director for the Gambia.
Jackson, a 1964 graduate of the university, Kansas. He is a University placement officer, other University offices and student groups yesterday to help him with his research.
The problems of minority recruitment were a topic at a conference of Peace Corps directors in Washington, D.C., last week, Jackson said.
"The minority volunteers we do have are also primarily middle class," she said. "Part of the problem is the way we have students, and they're not college campuses. That immediately excludes a certain part of the social strain - the people who don't or can go to college."
"ALSO, MANY minority students have produced sacrifice quite a bit to go to college. They are not in degree. they don't consider it an option to study at the Peace Corps and not receive a salary."
Jackson, who worked for the Inter-American Foundation before joining the Peace Corps, coordinated international humanitarian efforts in Central America and the Caribbean in 1974.
She said Americans were received more warmly in The Gambia than in Latin America or the Caribbean.
"Americans haven't had the history in West Africa that they have had in Latin America," he said. "Our foreign policy in Latin America, we're not trusted. Most of the people we come in contact with know that the United States is directly tied to political gains."
SHE SAID THE PEACE Corps had been designed to operate independently of U.S. foreign policy so that people in other countries would trust volunteers more readily.
"But I can recall that as a black person, I had to deal with a lot of skepticism both in Latin America and the Caribbean anyway, because the people thought it was terrible." He said he would "to send black Americans to infiltrate and discredit their countries," Jackson said.
Jackson said that aside from simply gaining the trust of the people of a country, a volunteer also must adjust to a multitude of cultural differences.
"FOR EXAMPLE," she said, "the women of third world countries don't want the liberation views of American women forced on them, because their needs are greater."
"If I were to begin telling the women of the Gambia to push for equal employment opportunities, or lesbian liberation, I'd be kicked right out of the country.
"These women are concerned about adequate health care for their families and sufficient water supplies for their families. They're fighting for basic survival needs."
A misunderstanding between the department of geography and meteorology that resulted in a phone bill of nearly $2,500 for the department, according to Travis Meyer.
Meyer, Campbell, Neb., senior, said yesterday that Larry Cargoyre, former head of the weather service, did not bill the agency for last year's long distance phone calls.
By KATE POUND Staff Reporter
"I MURE THE department wasn't pleased with the misunderstanding, but it was just one of those things. I don't think it is a big deal."
Subscribers made daily phone calls to 12 radio stations and one newspaper around the country and expected to pay for the calls. Meyer said, However, Groongvever never
"I'm sure it was a misunderstanding." Meyer said. "Larry might have thought the department was going to pay the bills and we wouldn't have to fool with all that.
KU Weather didn't forecast bill
Glenn Marotz, chairman of the department of geography and meteorology, said the department had paid the bill and had no outstanding debt from last year.
Marotz also said that in the future, weather service subscribers would be billed for the phone calls.
"We are hoping to work out some kind of an arrangement," he said. "If we do, we will try to recoup some of the cost of the program, not make a profit."
ACCORDING TO JOE Eagleman, head of meteorology, last year's subscribers had been contacted about their shares of the bill.
"Most of the stations have they said pay," Eaglemann said. "If a station doesn't pay, I guess the department will have to soak its bill.
"We were quite willing to pick up the bill because it was for a program with educational value," Marotz said.
"Most of the subscribers were told last year that they were to pay for the phone calls, but they had never received bills from Cogrove."
Cosgrove, contacted yesterday at the Dahluth, Mullin, television station where he is employed, said that the University business office had a weather service a phone bill until last May.
"I WAS GETTING worried because we never got a phone bill," Cosgrove said.
"Several stations contacted us about their bills but we didn't have any to send them."
According to Cogwave, the stations knew they were to pay for the phone bills. Some subcribers had paid bills in 1977, he said, and had assumed the practice would continue.
However, Marzot said, there had been no explicit agreement with the subscribers about the phone bills. Marzot said that last month it was reported that he could cover all weather services operating costs.
“This year, however, we have an entirely different situation,” Marzot said. “The use of our machinery is expensive and growing. We will not be able to recover the cost.” We will try to recover some of the cost.
MEYER SAID the weather service had requested money from the Student Senate for expanding operations at no cost to the geography and meteorology department.
The request of about $200 was approved last week by the senate budget committee. Meyer said the money would be used to buy equipment for a 24-hour weather service to students and faculty during the regular school year. The Senate funds will enable the institution to use its money to cover increased expenses incurred by the weather service.
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
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AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Monday 5 p.m.
Friday Monday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
The UDK will 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 newspapers or called via the UDIS business office at 443-258.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4158
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. All roasted, glazed, and raw fruits in the shell. Twelve varieties of daisy peony, poppy, and sorghum. Every Sunday
ENTRY DEADLINE .
208 ROBINSON . .
WED., OCT. 17 ...
5 P.M. ...
INTRAMURAL
TRACK . . .
Think Snow! Want to go skiing? For information call Brad 841-0070. 10-16
PAPER RACK SALES are down 15% nationally
BAGGAGE SALES are down 20% nationally
BOOKSELLER AT all of our 50,000 paperbacks is
price have always been and always will be
6444 Come and browse at 1401 Maxim 10
31
Watch for truck parted at 9:08 & Illinois Home Store. Fresh and crisp on-the-wall sales selling fresh fruits and vegetables in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry bean food, every Sunday. Five varieties of dried beans, every Sunday. Garlic seeds, herbs Hardwoods. 11
wednesdav night
wednesday night
tickets only
$3.00 today
$4.50 tomorrow
S.O.B. offers, better days,
9th spirit club
7 Hours
Hawrence Opera House
Doors open at 8:00
Mon-Fri 9:00-10:00
Call for concert info: 842-6930
Zen practice nightly 6 p.m. Free lecture by Zen master. Seung Sahn, School. Oct. 24, 12 p.m.
Jayhawk room, student union. For information call 842-7010. 10-22
Need help with composition Communication Resource Center staff announceor. Free evening course: Topic Writing the term paper* Wednesday, Writing the term paper* Wed., June 16 to students in all departments.
Travel to the Hawk for SUA Travel trip fly,
Tuesday, Oct. 17th at 8:00 p.m. Make holiday
travel plans and enjoy our refreshments. SUA
684-377-1
10-16
Employment Opportunities
Rooma with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579.
tt
Check with the opportunities a career. A researcher will visit students, interviewing at the Fascement Office, 202 Suffernerb. Oct. 35-or call Robert L. Shields, CLJ District Agent, 847-759-1424, Lafayette National School.
FOR RENT
2 bdm, excellent condition, stove and refrigerator, water-dryer rack up, four locks of campanula $200 per month - no pets. Low utilities, call after 4 p.m. #831-8261 10-10
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
The frontier ridge apartment is furnished and unstuffed from $170. Two apartment units on the 3rd floor, or $149 for one. INDOOR HEATED POOL. For appointment call 824-4524 or see at www.frontierridge.com.
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes
rooms near KU. Possible rent reduction for
labor. Call 841-6254 or 842-4065
10-31
All Frontier Ridge Apts. 1% months rent free. $50
security on all 1 bedrooms. tt
Roommate need to share four bedroom duplex.
841 25/month + 1/4 utilities. Call 841-6663 evenings.
10-17
Must *sub* initially immediately—Jayhawk Tower
Apt. partially furnished. Call 843-8182 or http://
Single bedmate apt. for sublease, 2429 Oudahl.
Apt. 32 after 5.00 p.m.
10-19
FOR SALE
SunSpecies—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably
predicated. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9699, 2900 W. 6th. tf
WATERED MATTESSEE. 358-600 TOWER
WATERED MATTESSEE. 358-600 TOWER
Western Civilian Collections, New York. Make make make use them! At asst. make make use them!
New York Public Library. Asst. make make use them!
At town Creek. MMA Bookstore, Ord book store.
At town Creek. MMA Bookstore, Ord book store.
CHEAP TRANSFORTATION: Pouch. Moped. Nick's Bike Shovel, 1035 Vermont. 841-644-62. TF
1979 Trans A, T-amp, loaded, automatic,
mile warranty, $1600 off list. 843-9226 10-16
1978-1980 used car can; please let me be your guide when purchasing a used car. Car Fid and find out more about the features of this BMW Smith-Blandark Ford -435-350. 10-19 77 MGB, low mileage, all condition with tires.
77 MGB, low mileage, air conditioned with electric overdrive, 842-3706. 10-16
74 2 kbim, mobile home -8 x 36.1 ideal for students or couple. Clean. Good in lawrence. $400.00 firm. For appl. Call 842-9522 If no answer 1-825-3441 or 1-357-1541 10-16
HELP WANTED
Two rooms of sculptured green carpeting and padding. Approximately 10" x 10" and 9" x 12". $12.50 each. Wool plain jacket, size 5, worn only 6 times. $30.90. 842-609-760. 10-18
1977 Cutlass 442. Loaded. Call Greg 843-6244
10-17
1971 Impala, 2 dr. HT, full power, AC, good condition, very dependable. 542-3475. 10-17
Beat energy costs this winter if you buy daylight-saving clock. Dawn wood stove to his 18 month-old home. Dawn wood stove to his 18 month-old home. You would pay a great deal more for this kind of stove than for an electric oven. As bonus, an assembly loan is 120. This is a cost-effective option, but also increases energy and high energy costs. Contact Marie Lynch at 843-322-2572, Ohio, 843-322-1697, nps at 843-322-3523.
PUCH sport moped. 875 miles, perfect condition,
fully equipped. P.V., KS. (913) 649-617-10, 10-18
1974 tan automatic VW Rabbit, sunroof, Blincour stereo tape, radio silent 2.8-inch speaker, 84-831-6450, 84-831-6458
1971 Dodge Monaco four-door fully equipped.
Superlime. To acquire, 842-1078. 10-19
1971 Pinto,公斤 67.00 miles. Must sell, price
negotiable. Call Keith: 843-5073. 10-19
Four United Airlines 50% discount coupons, $45.
Call: 842-7587.
Our plants need a 5 - p.m. WT sale when the
9 - week old Ferret, a maledictate pet,
is needed. Call 1-800-362-6611.
Large green Alpine ski jacket. Goose down.
Great. Call 854-101. Ask for Mary R. leave
message. I'll call back. 10-17
Earn as much as $50 per 1000 stuffing envelopes with our circulars. For information: Pentax Enterprise Department KS, Box 1158, Middleton, Ohio 40542.
10-16
Exhibition and sale of Pollab Folk Art—Satellite Union—Monday and Tuesday, front of main union all week 11 a.m-2 p.m., posters, cut-outs, tapestries. 10-17
MEN WOMEN JOBS! CRUISERSHIPS! SAILING EXPEDITIONS! Good experience. Good payoff.
INSTANT ACCESS TO ORDER FOR APPLICATION INFO-JOBS to: CRUISERWOLF 135, Best #1253, Sacramento, CA 94082
One way United air tickets to Phila. PA. Good until 12:55 each or B.O. 864-6005. 10-19
Part-time tidalwading and counter help, 11
a.m-2 p.m., Mon, than Fr. Aply in person only
at Border Bandid, 1528 W. 23rd. 10-16
FOUND
OVERSEAS JOBS--JUMP year/year round, Europe,
S. America, Aurora, Asia, etc. will be filled
by 3 months annually. Job fee is $645.
Monthly, I.C. box, B-142, Corona Del Mar,
CA 92025.
—ass ring in Flint Hall. Conn in to identify —10-16
Set of keys found on stairs west side of Main Street. Climbs down at North Akron. 10-17
Pizza Hut
As one of America's leaders in the
restaurant industry, we've always considered people to be among our most important assets: the people who work with us and the people we serve.
So, if you've been looking for a full or part-time position with flexible hours where your attitude, ability, and personality are more important than your experience, apply at any of the three Lawrence Pizza Hut restaurants.
804 Iowa
934 Massachusetts
1606 W. 23rd
Cooks wanted immediately. Day and night shifts.
Experience preferred, but will train. Call for
appointment. Village Inn Pancake House, 821
482-3251
10-16
Need extra money? Sign up for babyhunting! Call 864-2066, the Student Employment Center, 864-2470. Your name will be given to be about the job. You can be a babysitter. They love you and about the job.
Bureau of Child Resource, Achievement Place,
Bureau of Child Resource, Achievement Place,
available. Salary up to $390 monthly experience
work with adolescent youth preferred. Gain
executive permite information and screening
estimate permeant safety information and screening
estimate permeant safety information and screening
of Child Resource in an equal opportunity
work with
Wanted—auto parts company counterpart, full
time. Must have ability to lift. If possible.
Comes 10-17
23-d and Haskell for work.
WANTED - students for part-time life in Life
School. Apply by mail to the school.
while you learn with our Internship Program.
282 Hickman Avenue, or call Robert L. Schlots,
CLU District Agent, 843-1533, Lawrence National
School.
Dishwasher for sorority house. $15 per week and meals. Call 843-6650. 10-17
LOST
THEISS BINDING COPYING - The House of Uber's Quick Cinder headquarters for those binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 838 Mn or phone 843-360. To make an appointment, call (843) 360-7500.
10 work old male puppy. Solid black. Brown seal collar. Needs medication. Please call 842-3501.
Very attached. 10-19
NOTICE
MISCELLANEOUS
EMERGENCY FOSTER PARENTS - If your family wishes the challenges of caring for children at Emergency Services Service League invite you to call 541-760-9388 or visit www.epss.org expenses. State license and training required.
Reward for return or information from
turn of 19' color TV stolen 18-75 from Gate-
house Aartment. 842-6521, after 3:00 p.m. 19-17
THE CAMPUS SAFETY SERVICES is being organized and the KU police department. The CSE team has been requested to respond to requests. Enrolls will work in teams of one or more volunteers. Volunteers who are willing to volunteer are needed for escort teams. If you volunteer, you must be a KU campus. camp叫 KU-inf. 864-3560 for more information. Camp will begin operation on Oct. 29. 10-19
The entry deadline for the intramural Track Meet is Wednesday, Oct. 17th at 5:00 p.m.
The entry deadline for the Intramural Swimming Relays is Monday, Oct. 22 at 5 p.m.
PERSONAL
Vets get ready to party hard. GI tm...
Purses dues will? Will provide personalized biographi-
cations on your topic in social sciences or humanities. Have M.A. M.S. Call 842-3910-10-25
More Information
208 Robinson
864-3546
R
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Hu184-5564.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Total Uterus Tubal For appointment: 9 A.M. Tulane Park, For appointment: 4919. st. Outlet Park, KS
If you're looking for a bar with cheap beer, poolside bars are a great option. Canyon Crazy people you'll like the Harbour Lites, a day and Friday afternoons for TUIF new showers, and day and Friday afternoons for TUIF new showers. The Harbour Lake Get your skin together at t
JOB'S ON SHIPS. Required. Foreign. No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Summer Internship. $50 for info for requirements. SFAXAF. Dept. KI. 8320. Post. 10-17. Washington, HSTM 9832.
GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through Head-
quarters, 814-235 and KU info, 864-3506, tlf
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not. Check Campus Vetts. 118 B. Union. 653-749-0782.
can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
kid--864-5064
HERE COME THE
NIGHTHAWKS:
white boy's blues with a big difference
JACKSON CREEK
wed.
oct.
19th
"NIGHTHAWKS
10-16 AP Art History
10-16 English Language
10-16 Art History
Brad 841-7007
PSYCHIC ACWARNING and HEALING CLIENT
10-16 for use in educational KEAVES LEVELS
841-702
Adventure tickets for the JERUISmovie
10-17
SK1! Aspen, Copper Mountain, or Breckenridge,
for information call Brad 841-7007. 10-16
Devilishly handsome Computer Selence major desires attractive female bed warmer Will train. Freckles required. 842-912-926, ask for Dave.
PERSONAL
Mark, if I knew your last name I could properly thank you for the wine and rose. Call me. Janet,
I will be here tomorrow.
Is there life after acid??
The San Louis Onisbo Tar Creatures,
84,000 people can't be wrong!!! 10-19
Steve, in response to your question, I've got a hot tip on a trip where there will be lots to do.
All you had to do was ask-Mary J. 10-16
Happy Birthday, Brenda Nix!! And Happy Late
14:58
Ty my B-Ball Star, If you do, or if you don't today, you can still be my valentine. Play well. P.O.P. 10-16
PSYCHIC PERSONALITY READINGS. $25, $50.
843-9144. 10-19
86 Rambler station wagon, 4-door, new battery, heals runs well. Call Jeff, 864-950 (8-10). 10-15
V-W Rabbit 76--56,000 miles with 2-wishouts.
$200. 10-30
Light housekeeping, cleaning, 3 or 4 hours weekly Must provide own transportation. 82-109 10-19
10 appointment secretaries for Isle National Portrait, Studios, morning and evening salary. $2.50 plus bonus. Apply in person, Westminster Inn, 25 W. Wickhill, Spt 21. 10-19
Pioneer X524 Stereo Receiver $100. Ultrailnear
Speakers $15. Call Jeff. 81-238-121. 10-20
this letter is personal as it can be. Since every person has a history, a form of shaking, of one kind or another. Free from attained and retained by intelligent people, this letter gives an insight into the individual persuasiveness those elected Martin Luther King Jr. when he taught the classics in 1963. He believed that as they had the right to be called this year when the Klu Klux Klan was refused permission to march in city in the city, constituted to be March in a city in the state of Tennessee, he gave college education some people think we are privileged to have prove of, but I do have no proof of, that I do have privilege to have
Night
SLA TRAVEL
at the Hawk (14th & Ohio)
8 pm - 11 pm
information available on our skis trip,
warm weather trips, etc. Come visit
their website to learn what they've got
Committee about what they've got
planned for you!
Refreshments Served
Substitute teachers for Basecho-Linwood USD-
458. Contact Board of Education Office (921)
724-1296 10-20
Fax Rent, newly remodeled two bedroom apartment,
315 east 19th. $475 plus deposit. Graduate students preferred. Call 842-5729.
10-18
Free lecture on Christian Science: "The Consciousness of the Healing Christ," by John A. Grant. In First Church of Scientist, Scientist, 1901 Massachusetts, Monday, October 22, at 8:00 p.m.
Gold women's I.D. bracelet with gold heart charm. The name Jena on front. Love From scotch back. Reward. Call 861-4128. 10-20
SERVICES OFFERED
19' Tuesday and The Harbour Lifes is still a first-class dive. Tond's tonight is $16 prizes and 36 cane and bottles between 7-10 p.m. Get in touch at The Harbour Lifes at The Harbour Lifes, Massachusetts.
10-16
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Garage-complete professional bicycle repair. Garage specialty="Tune-Ups" and "Total-Oversal". Details叫 "M41-2781". 10-22
EXPERT TUORING: MATH 600-102 call 847-
5785. MATH 1150-741 call 847-5785. STATISTICS
847-5785. STATISTICS 847-5785. PHYSICS 1000-640 call 847-9036. ENGLISH
847-9036. SPANISH call 847-9037. ENGLISH
GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS for the date of your choice
Elite Club, Dancing. 864-287-100
10-16
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday @ 838 Mass.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES. Send $1.00 for your 300-piece catalog of college reportage. 10,200 titles listed HOX 2097G; Los Angeles CA, 90225 (213) 727-8582. tf
Mating and framing done—call after 4:30 MON-
FRI, or anytime weekends 842-6875. 10-19
BUYING LIFE. INSURANCE! Our rates and values first. Call Wayne. 842-6044, 842-2922
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. TF
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1076. TF
Title: Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, cutting team. Call 821-9427. Webpage: tp.catlab.org/Layout/Call 821-9427
Experienced tyspist-Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 843-5510. TP
Journalism typographer. 20 years, typing for
typing experience. 4 years academic typing; thesus,
dissemination for 10 universities. Latest
Sedilectric教材. 824-644. 79
Experienced Typed—term papers, theses, inkte-
electric IBM Selectic. Proofreading spelling
corrected. 843-953 Mrs. Wright. *TP*
Reports, dissertations, resumes, local form,
graphic editing, and corrective Slectic CT.
11-05 841-712-372
Experienced typed-theses, dissertations, term
papers. misc. IBM correcting electronic. Barb
846-3138. evenings 822-3210.
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-8654, after 4 p.m. 10:25
MASTERMINDS professional typing, Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar correct. Call 841-2387. ___ If
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate.
service, low rates. 843-8632 meetings and weeks.
I would like to type your term papers, theses,
dissertations, etc. Reasonable rates. Karen 824-
3332 10-16
I do darned good typing. Papera under 50 pp.
only. Call Roth after 5 p.m., 843-6428. 15e per
page.
WANTED
Housemate WANTED to share large house, $115
paid, paid non-smoker preferred, $849-
843-2829
Want to buy Bass amp. 841-3581, evenings 10-18
**Rootmate for 2 barm, house, must be tidy, call**
*Chir 814-6831*, keep trying
10-16
PSCHISTRIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES WORKERS WANTED BY STOPA STOCK SHORE Hospital, St. Louis, MO 63120, 212-528-7200, W2. 516, Tocha, KS Phone: (913) 261-2800; Males encouraged to apply. An equiv opportunity exists.
Mature roommate necessary for very nice three
room double bed, 15 min. walk from campus,
$100 month + ½ utilities. Call 841-3205 after 6
p.m.
10-19
People who have Executioner, Penetrator, Death
Marshal or Matt Henn书-ooks: Call Davies 10.29
**DVD**
*The Matrix*
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kana.
Classified sells it. Just mall
in this form with check or
e-mail. Call Hau. Use rates below
to figure costs. Now you've got
it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Thursday 5 pm
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:
1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5
12.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.02 .03 .04 .05
RATES:
15 words or less
4 times
82.75
.04
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1. Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
DATES TO RUN: ___ to
NAME:
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
10 Tuesday, October 16, 1979
University Daily Kansas
Stop In To
robin's nest
To Brighten Up Your Bath And Kitchen.
--pen&,inc. makes it easy with 10% off on all drawing tables and easels through October!
Get Some
KU Spirit!
KU Glasses
KU Foot Stools
KU Ice Buckets
KU Ash Trays
at
HAAS
IMPORTS
1029 Mass. 843-0871
ku
KU
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass. 843-0871
Tuesday Nights at the Flamingo Club is Ladies Night 50" Drinks for ladies all day and night
50° Drinks for ladies all day and night.
501 North 9th Open memberships available
Open 11 am-3 am
Express yourself
pen&.inc.
art supplies
613 vermont 841-7177
METRO ELEVATOR CORPORATION
Bathing Duck
robin's
Bath & Kitchen Shoppe
nest
Robin's Nest has a wide selection of gift items perfect for a friend or for yourself.
TOWELS
TOWELS
RUGS
WICKER
CANNISTER SETS
COOKIE JARS
COFFEE MUGS
WALL CLOCKS
SHOWER CURTAINS
HANGING WINE RACK
We also have a lay-a-way plan for Christmas.
HOLIDAY PLAZA Next to General Jeans
Western Store
SHIRTS: Snap Front and Sleeve Yoked Shirts
REAL WESTERN WEARER
JEANS: LEE & WRANGLER
15 West 9th 842-3059 We Buy Records
RAASCH
BRIDGESHOP
ENGLISH WASHED WEISTERN HORSE ADS
kiday Plaza - 25th & Iowa - Lawrence - Kansas 842-8415
H
JEANS:
Western Jeans From $13.20 to $15.75
HATS:
Fashion additions
Check Our Boot Selection—Biggest In Town
Ripen thru for 15% off
RECORDS
13
Bring this ad for 15% off.
RAASCH SAIDLEY &
LAST WEEK
WESTERN WEAR
HALF ABS
"Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence"
Pigeon
Guaranteed Used LP's $2.25 Rock, Disco, Jazz, etc. Large Selection of Paraphernalia
711 W. 23rd 841-4300 Mon-Sat. 11-7.
Call for appointment & prices
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS GIVES YOU WHAT YOU WANT WHEN YOU NEED IT
The Texas Instruments TI-50
Malls Shopping Center Sun.12-5
A Pet Shop
"The first step to Pet Care"
Tropical • Domestic Exotic Pets
LOVE
—scientific and statistical functions
2
- 2 continuous memories
computes all data to 11 digits internally
Reg. $40
— slimline and beautifully designed
ACME cleaners 3 Convenient Locations
Hillcrest - 843-0928
Grooming & Pet Care
Reg. $40
SALE $36
C4 C3 C2 C1 C0
A8 B7 C6 D5 E4 F3 G2 H1 I0 J9 K8 L9 M9 N9 O9 P9 Q9 R9 S9 T9 U9 V9 W9 X9 Y9 Z9
C4 C3 C2 C1 C0
A8 B7 C6 D5 E4 F3 G2 H1 I0 J9 K8 L9 M9 N9 O9 P9 Q9 R9 S9 T9 U9 V9 W9 X9 Y9 Z9
3 Convenient Locations
图
T1-50
10% Discount on Most Dry Cleaning Items for Cash and Carry
Available at the Kansas Union Bookstores
Kansas Union and the Satellite Union
We are the only bookstore
that shares its profits with KU students.
Malls - 843-0895
Saturday Service - in by 9 - out by 4
Downtown - 843-5156
YOUR KIDS S UNION
BOOKSTORES
We Use & Sell
Nucleic A
MANE TAMERS
Lawrence Toyota Mazda
Lawrence Auto Plaza 842 2191
10th and Mass.
841-0906
Lawrence Toyota Mazda
Lawrence Auto Plaza 842-2191
QUALITY you expect... you get it
843-9111
USED CARS
QUALITY
you expect it... you get it!
THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
1975 CELICA ST 5-SPEED Stereo Radials, 31,000 Miles
1976 CELICA GT LIFTBACK 5-SPEED A/C; Stereo Radials
1973 NEW HATCHBACK AUTO P/S; P/B, $1,688.0
1978 CELICA GT LIFTBACK 5-SPEED A/C; Stereo Radials
Lawrence Toyota Mazda
Lawrence Auto Plaza • 842-2191
Lawrence, KS 66044
Pizza
Pasta
Salad Bar
Campus
Hideaway
N. Park
SCIENTIFIC
PROFESSIONAL
HAIR CARE PRODUCTS
WITH NUCLEIC ACIDS
Est. 1957
New Members Always Welcome
STUDY BREAK!
Special Prices
TONIGHT
8-9 pm
Mingles
Disc
An
Intimate
Environment
MINGLE TONIGHT!
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat 6 pm - 3 am
Sun 6 pm - 1 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th
PEASANT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 38
Pittsburgh wins;
ties Series
See story page 11
10 cents off campus
SUASPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR
R. Nelligen makes a request as he speaks against the downsizing proposal for the Oread Neighborhood area at last year's city council meeting.
M. L. HARTLEY
Oread opponent
The company's spokesman said the cards would arrive.
three landlords with property in the Oread Neig,
spoke against the issue. The proposal passed by
the Council.
pr public relations indoor recreation SUA TRAVEL FORUMS Fine Arts sua outdoor recreation SUA Special Events free university sua films
The company's spokesman said the cards would be sent by truck, but he did not know when the shipment would arrive at the University.
SUA
Special
events
The IDs have been delayed twice since
But Julian said the processin again was delayed because thentwanted to be sure that the ce defective.
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Reporter
The 26,227 DPs for undergraduate and graduate students will be tested at Watson's new computerized system before distribution.
Sept. 15, the original date the cards were scheduled for delivery at the University
IDs for the University staff will arrive later this year, he said.
Once the cards arrive, Gil Dyck, dean of
Edward Julian, University director of special programs, said the defects had been corrected, but he was not sure when the cards would arrive.
October November 1979
16T 17W 18T 19F 20S
Orienteer Kansas
to Baumann Orienteerin
Meet at St. Louis
Shipment of the new KU student identification cards will be delayed until Oct. 20, 2015, to allow manufacturers of the IDs, a spokesman for Matex Flasks, Inc., of Garrison, Maid, said.
admissions and records, has it be distributed in two shifts as Union, Satellite Union or J. Students with names beginning in the first half of the alphabet their cards the first day, and J. students the second day.
The uniform IDs will be used to check out books in KU's new library system.
21S 22M 23T 24W 25T 26F 27S
EMBOSSING ON THE sample card also was unsatisfactory, Julian said, but the company made the necessary improvements.
Julian said the delay occurred when production changes had to be made after the equipment was properly by the Optical Character computer check-output system. Watson Library computer check-out system.
Maple Leaf Festival Ride to Baldwin City--Mt. Oread Bike Club 1:00 pm South Park
3:00 Homecoming Parade
4:00 Rally X-zone FB KANSAS vs
Floats on display Oklahoma State HOMECOMING
THE IDS WERF order
University June 13 and were
arrive Sept. 15. After the
found, the cards were expire
The Ume
Harold A Maude
Martin
9:00 Paul Gray Jazz Dance
Satellite Union Free
Temporary identification c were issued at enrollment, exp
Mt. Oread Bicycle club
group Tour 9:00 am
x-Jane Parking lot
Quarterback Club 5:00 pm
Level 2 Satellite Union
Rackgammon Club 7:00 pm
Parking Lot A TPC Dell Line
Youth and innocent sabermacron
HALLOWEEN
The Three Penny Opera Bridge 7:00 - 10:00 pm Union
Thanksgiving Candle VIP Deadline
NU Saline Club 7:00 pm Union
Love and Murphy
Bridge 7:00 - 10:00 pm Union
Foul Play Collisions Right Live
Fool Play Collisions
**no KANSAS vs Kansas State**
city at % to
Mr. Grabad Bicycle club
Troupe Top 9:00 pm
28S - 29M 30T 31W 1T 2F 3S
4S 5M 6T 7W 8T 9F 10S
Backgammon Club 2:00 pm
Parlor A Union
Fantastic American Festival
Orienteer Kansas to New York for with U.S. Orienteering all "Homingsby"
11S 12M 13T
Bucharest Club 7:00 pm | Pepsi Aviation Series
City Lights 8:30 pm | Darius Bristol Series
Budapest Club 7:00 pm | Albatross Series
Chicago Club 7:00 pm | Kickoff Series
Backgammon Club 2:00 pm 8:00 pm Kansas Union
Backgammon Club A
Mt. Oread Bicycle Club
Meeting Union
were issued at enrollment, KU officials have said that the temporary cards still are valid because no replacement has been issued.
Student Union Activities University of Kansas
this calendar is provided as a service to University of Kansas students
© Old Public Library
dinated, which contributed to negotiation problems and forced the cancellation of the Oct. 27 show.
University of Kansas
worms, neyorks said.
He said Divine didn't like the groups and thought BFR had taken too long to arrange the concert.
he said.
Kansas State University also canceled its homecoming concert this year because they could not schedule a band.
Silver outshining gold on market
Bv JENNIFER HOLT
Staff Reporter
Gold is not the only game in town these days. Americans in record number are building and maintaining muddies such as jewels, land, houses and, increasingly, silver, according to several sources.
Today the face value of $1,000 in pre-1965 quarters and dimes still is equal to what it would be if there were no drastic increases in the price of silver, the silver content of those coins now is worth $10,000 to $13,000, according to Howard Sacks and Antiques, 731 New Hampshire SH.
Before 1965, dimes, quarters and half dollars were 90 percent silver. Because of a worldwide shortage that year, silver was reduced from 90 percent to 40 percent in half dollars. Today the value of the silver in U.S. coins is deltated down than the face value of the coin.
In 1940, silver cost $1 an ounce and a year ago the price was between $7 and $8 an ounce. Today an ounce of silver is worth $17.
THIS INCREASE IN price has brought about a realization in international investment circles—all that glitters is not gold; it could just as well be silver.
A year ago silver was traded on the New York Commodities Exchange for about $7 an ounce and the silver content in $1,000 coins was worth $4.275. Monday at the close of trading, that same silver sold for $1.757 and $1.000, that same gold sold for $3.400 for $12.600.
In fact, in the last year the value of the silver coins has almost tripped, while the price of gold, which has received the most publicity, has only doubled.
ounce in the past few months to as high as $447, silver increased proportionally, Boyd said.
As gold increased in value from $250 an
So why are people raving about gold when silver prices have skyrocketed?
ACCORDING TO Boyd, gold is a metal with charisma and romance, comparable to diamonds, while silver is just silver.
Bord, who has been in the coin business for more than a decade, is the best people talk about gold, the rise in value of silver—particularly in the past month—and made them more aware of silver's potential for growth.
"People are realizing the value of old coins," he said. "If they don't cash them in for money, they hold on to them in case the price goes higher."
In 1967 there was a tremendous increase in the price of silver, Boyd said. He bought
See SILVER page si
Solbach plans to push for self-help tenant bill
By TONI WOOD
It's the familiar struggle between landlord and tenant that is the No. 1 problem dealt with by the Consumer Affairs department of the State and the Associated Students of Kansas.
Staff Reporter
Drops of water fall incessantly from a broken pipe into a bucket of water. Soon the bucket will be emptied by an irritated gas was lived with the drip for several days.
The student has called his landlord about the leak, but the landlord's regular plumber is too busy to fix the broken pipe.
Last year, ASK requested that Solbach sponsor a bill to revise part of the landlord-Tenant Act.
Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, will keep trying to deal with the problem during the 1980 legislative session.
SOLBACH INTRODUCED a bill during the 1970 legislative session that is still in the House Judiciary Committee.
Solbach's proposal is sometimes referred
UNDER CURRENT LAW, if the landlord does not repair something as required by the rental agreement or by state laws, the landlord may give it to the landlord after he has given the landlord 30 days notice, or be can make the repairs himself and to try to collect money by suing the landlord.
"The tenant can call his landlord and say, "This is the problem. You need to repair that." In most cases, the landlord will comply. But in some, the problem would be taken care of soon enough."
to as the "self-help" bill because it would allow tenants to make their own repairs after giving landlords seven days notice.
Clyde Chapman, administrative coordinator for the local Consumer Affairs department, said he problems for a couple of months. And any number of fairly serious things could occur.
current legal methods for tenants were not clearly defined.
Laurence M. Rose, an associate professor of law who works with Legal Aid, said
ROBERT BINGAMAN, executive director of ASK, said. "As long as there are landlords, and as long as there are students, it a problem we have to deal with."
"The Landlord-Tenant Act is five years old and it needs to be refined," he said. "It should clearly spell out the responsibilities of landlords and tenants."
Members of ASK have lobbed in the Legislature to revise the act during the last several years.
Sobach's bill, House bill 2550, would allow tenants to make their own repairs after landlords were given sufficient notice.
The tenant would take a receipt for the payment and money for a month's rent to the district court. The district court would be set up. An escrow account would allow a third party to control the transaction.
The landlord would have a chance to contest the repair, but if he did not, the cost of the repairs would be subtracted from the
rent, and the remainder of the payment would be sent to the landlord.
SOLBACH SAID that under the current system, tenants who made repairs and then sued landlords in a small case court were not guaranteed of being reimbursed.
"They may get the judgment, but that doesn't mean the money is collected," he said.
Solbach said the system only would tie up the money long enough to cause the landlord and tenant to take action.
See LANDLORD page five
"The escrow account takes money out of both pockets, he said. "It's not a good situation. It's one that both parties want to settle.
Solbach said his bill would clarify solutions for tenants and protect landlords because a tenant could no longer make an unjustifiable repair.
"People say there was a delicate balance adopted in the Landlord-Tenant Act. But the current law is tipped very much in favor of landlords."
X
MIKE WILLIAMS Kansan staff
Stick it
KU's Ellen Jasket mount the hull past an Emperor State University defender in yesterday's field hockey game at Holcom Sports Complex. Teammate Jaylowon, behind the Emperor State player, trails the action in the first of two wins for the Jayhawks, now 3-7. See story page 10.
Z
PLEASANT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 38
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Pittsburgh wins; ties Series
Wednesday, October 17, 1979
See story page 11
A. B. RICHARDSON
Oread opponent
C. R. Negley makes a point as he speaks against the downing proposal for the Oread Neighborhood area at last night's city council meeting on Monday.
three landlords with property in the Oread Neighborhood who spoke against the issue. The proposal passed by a unanimous vote.
ID cards delayed again
By DAVE LEWIS
Staff Reporter
Shipment of the new KU student idem-
net unit is delayed until Oct. 20 to be
caused by a manufacturing issue in
manufacture of the IDs, a spokesman for
Maclox Plastics, Inc., of Garissa, Md, said
The company's spokesman said the cards would arrive.
Edward Julian, University director of special programs, said the defects had been corrected, but he was not sure when the cards would arrive.
The company's spokesman said the cards would be sent by truck, but he did not know when the shipment would arrive at the University.
The IDs have been delayed twice since
Sept. 15, the original date the cards were scheduled for delivery at the University
The uniform IDs will be used to check out books in KU's new library system.
Jain said the delay occurred when production changes had to be made after the switch was properly by the Optical Character Recognizer, a part of the Watson Library system.
The 26,227 IDs for undergraduate and graduate students will be tested at Watson's new computerized system before distribution.
IDs for the University staff will arrive later this year, he said.
admissions and records, has said they could be distributed in two shifts at the Kansas Union, Satellite Union or Wesco Hall. Students with names beginning with a letter in the first half of the alphabet could pick up a letter in the first day, and the remainder the next day.
Once the cards arrive, Gil Dyck, dean of
THE IDS WERE ordered by the University June 13 and were scheduled to arrive Sept. 15. After the defects were removed, the cards were expected to arrive Oct. 10.
Temporary identification cards, which were issued at enrolment, expired Sept. 17. However, KU officers have said that the cards were valid because no replacement has been issued
But Julian said the processing of the cards again was delayed because the University wanted to be sure that the cards were not defective.
City approves downzoning
By ANN LANGENFELD
An overflow crowd that lined the walls and stretched into the walls at last night's parade came from a group of unanimous vote by the commissioners to downsize the section of the Neighbourhood.
Staff Renarter
A second unanimous vote to implement the downsizing ordinance by the end of the week rather than in the usual two to three weeks was recreated by even louder apause.
About 100 people were in attendance during the five-hour meeting at the First National Bank Towers, 910 Massachusetts St.
The section, known as Area One, was downzoned from multiple family units to residential duplex. The section is bounded on the south by 11th Street, on the west by Missouri Street, on the north by Ninth Street, and on the east between Illinois and Mississippi streets.
Residents at the meeting favoring the downstairs said the section should be downzoned because the current high density building is locked parking, noise and privacy problems.
GAIL REBER, 916 Alabama St., said that she and her family were committed to Lawrence and the Oread Neighborhood, but that the current zoning was not acceptable.
Judy Roltman, 1227 Ohio St., said the present zoning allowed developers to construct multiple dwellings in a neighborhood.
Roitman told the commissioners, "If you deny the downsizing you show that the only thing you care about is profit and that you care nothing about people's livelihoods."
Arguing against the downzoning, Rodney
Lang, 941 Alabama St., said he thought the downsizing would hurt both property values and the development of off-campus housing for University students.
C. R. NELEY, 715 Tennessee St., who also opposed the downsizing, said the commissioners should consider the energy prices and cost of housing in campus could wait instead of驱车 to class.
In voting for the downsizing, the commissioners concurred that the rezoning of the 129 lots would provide of predominantly single-family dwellings. Of the 129 lots located in the area, 88
Mary Barker Clark said that when the area was zoned in 1966 for multiple-family units, it had been projected that of campus housing for students would develop in that
"It DID NOT happen," he said, "and if there is any area that is a classic example of the need for downzoning this area is it."
The commissioners asked that the zoning be effective immediately to prohibit the construction of multiple dwellings, like that on the east side of the 1900 block of Main Street.
Last Friday Douglas County District Judge Ralph King Jr., ordered that a building permit for an eight-plex apartment be given to Mistlewood, owner of the 3'3 lots on Main Street. The city staff had wanted to keep the permit until after tonight's meeting.
A temporary restraining order halting construction was issued late yesterday in Douglas County District Court when an employee requested an injunction to stop the construction.
THE CONCERNED residents must post a
$10,000 bond by 10 a.m. today to keep the restraining order in effect.
Milstead did not attend the commission meeting and was not available for comment yesterday.
Clark said yesterday that part of the zoning codes stated that a building permit was legal once it was issued.
The commissioners asked that the planning commission consider an amendment to the ordinance that would remove the statute of legality of an approved permit.
Clark, KU professor of law, had said legal precedents set in Kansas indicated that a downizing ordinance would negate the state's law on building permits that had not been noticed for a building project.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the commissioners granted sign variances to the following towns: Vermont St., F.W. Woolworth Co., 911 Massachusetts St., Otsaca. 1012 Massachusetts. The commissioners also hold Hookins Volkweg. 5252 Iowa St.
The commissioners set a time period of one year for removal of the Malls Shopping Center sign, 711 W.20 St., a dayshawk office, 360 W.25th St., a dayshawk office, and a sign at the Hallway Inn. 1280 Iowa St.
S.I.C. Credit Co., 946 Massachusetts St.
has until the end of the year to remove its nonconforming sign.
All businesses must comply with the city sign ordinance by Oct. 22 or request a variance from the city commissioners to allow the sign to remain.
The sign ordinance requires that signs conform to specific guidelines, such as size and number of signs allowed by a business.
Homecoming concert canceled
Bv AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Reporter
KU's annual homecoming concert was
the event where the Alumni Acctu-
tations after the concerts' promote-
Productions. Springfield, Mo., failed
to meet yesterday's 5 p.m. contract deadline,
and KU was fined $20,000.
This will be the first time in recent years that homecoming will not end with a Saturday night concert.
Negotiations begin last May, but several Nega-
tions have not been resolved. A signed
signed because of schedule conflicts and
regulations concerning the use of Allen
Field House, Duke Divine, USA special
officers, and others.
After negotiations with several promoters failed, Divine said, he contacted BFR in September and proposed a 6% rock festival in Washington, Ifwell, In Butterfly and the Grass Roots.
However, Divine said, the agencies representing the bands were "shuffled around," kicks on the show were confused and the bands schedules were not coordinated, which contributed to negotiation. The band forced the cancellation of the Oct. 27 show.
"IT IS PRETTY well impossible to put together a show now, this week," he said. "I'm depressed and I feel really had about letting the students down."
Albaugh Divine said SAU contacted BPR with the concert proposal in mid-September. Rick Reynolds, vice president of the event, notified of the proposal only two weeks ago.
Reynolds said that if he had been given more time to put together the show, he could have given SUA exactly what they wanted.
"You've got to know months in advance in order to get a coordinating date for a show," he said. "We have had these three bands now, but I would have lost $1,000 to $1,000 flying them all into theaters."
REYNOLDS SAID he offered Divine an alternative '60s reveal show with the Monkees, the Association and the Grass Bowl team. In ceremonies, Divine declined the offer.
"I've got this strong show that I'm going to take on tour. I don't know what else he wants." Revnolds said.
He said Divine didn't like the groups and thought BFR had taken too long to arrange the concert.
Several promoters had been involved with the homecoming show since May, but all had been unable to sign the acts that Divine wanted.
Under SUA policy, acts are booked through a promoter to avoid financial risks. However, most of the profits go to the promoter.
ONE REASON FOR the loss of potential acts, according to Divine, was the University's policy prohibiting the suspension of objects from the ceiling of Allen Field House. Many attractive bands must be suspended from the ceiling that must be suspended form the ceiling.
The same bands could not perform in Hoch Auditorium because they would draw large crowds, Divine said.
Another problem, he said, was the general slump in the record industry and the tour circuit. The larger bands that have recording contracts tour only to the bigger metropolitan areas while the smaller bands are not recording and cannot offer tour, so they lose.
Kansas State University also canceled its homecoming concert this year because they could not schedule a band.
Silver outshining gold on market
By JENNIFER HOLT
Staff Reporter
Gold is not the only game in town these Americans in recent numbers are caballeros. They can meditate such as jewels, land, houses and, increasingly, silver, according to several sources.
Today the face value of $1,000 in pre-1965 today and dimes still is equal to what it would have been 40 years ago. Drastic increases in the price of silver, the silver content of those coins now is worth $10,000 to $13,000, according to Howard Sacks, the author of *Silver and Antiques*, 731 New Hampshire St.
Before 1965, dies, quarters and half dollars were 90 percent silver. Because of a worldwide shortage that year, silver was reduced from 90 percent to 40 percent in half dollars. Today the value of the silver in the U.S. is downed much meltdown than the face value of the coin.
In 1940, silver cost $1 an ounce and a year ago the price was between $7 and $8 an ounce. Today an ounce of silver is worth $17.
A year ago silver was traded on the New York Commodities Exchange for about $7 an ounce and the silver content in $1,000 coins was worth $4.275. Monday at the close of trade, that same silver sold for $17.57 an ounce and $10.00 worth of coins sold for $12.050.
In fact, in the last year the value of the silver coins has almost tripped, while the price of gold, which has received the most publicity, has only doubled.
As gold increased in value from $250 an
ounce in the past few months to as high as $447, silver increased proportionally, Boyd said.
So why are people raving about gold when silver prices have skyrocketed?
Boyd, who has been in the coin business 25 years, said that although he heard past references of the mint's silver—particularly in the past month—had made them more aware of silver's potential.
ACCORDING TO Boyd, gold is a metal with charisma and romance, comparable to diamonds, while silver is just silver.
"People are realizing the value of old coins," he said, "if they don't cash them in for money, they hold on to in case the price goes higher."
In 1967 there was a tremendous increase in the price of silver, Boyd said. He bought
See SILVER page six
Solbach plans to push for self-help tenant bill
By TONIWOOD
It's the familiar struggle between landlord and tenant that is the 1. problem dealt with by the Consumer Affairs department and the Associated States of Kansas.
Staff Renorter
Drops of water fall incessantly from a broken pipe into a bucket of water. Soon the bucket will be emptied by an irritated student who has lived with the drip for
The student has called his landlord about the leak, but the landlord's regular plumber is too busy to fix the broken pipe.
Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, will keep trying to deal with the problem during the 1980 legislative session.
SOLBACH INTRODUCED a bill during the 1979 legislative session that is still in the House Judiciary Committee.
Last year, ASK requested that Sabbach sponsor a bill to revise part of the landlord-Denant Act.
Solbach's proposal is sometimes referred
UNDER CURRENT LAW, if the landlord does not repair something as required by the rental agreement or by state laws, the landlord may be issued a notice after he has given the landlord 30 days notice, or he can make the repairs himself and try to collect money by sending the landlord a bill.
to as the "self-help" bill because it would allow tenants to make their own repairs after giving landlords seven days notice.
"The tenant can call his landlord and say, 'This is the problem. Will you repair that?' In most cases, the landlord will comply. But in some cases, the problem was taken care of soon enough."
Clyde Chapman, administrative coordinator for the local Consumer Affairs department, faces problems for a couple of months. And any number of fairly serious things could have happened.
current legal methods for tenants were not clearly defined.
Laurence M. Rose, an associate professor of law who works with Legal Aid, said
ROBERT BINGAMAN, executive director of ASK, said, "As long as there are landlords, and as long as there are students, it a problem we'll have to deal with."
Members of ASK have lobbed in the Legislature to revise the act during the last several years.
"The Landlord-Tenant Act is five years old and it needs to be refined," he said. "It should clearly spell out the responsibilities of landlords and tenants."
Sobach's bill, House bill 2550, would allow tenants to make their own repairs after landlords were given sufficient notice.
The tenant would then take a receipt for the money and moves for a motor car to the district street. The county count would be set up. An escrow account would allow a third party to control the
The landlord would have a chance to contest the repair, but if he did not, the cost of the repairs would be subtracted from the
rent, and the remainder of the payment would be sent to the landlord.
SOLBACH SAID that under the current system, tenants who made repairs and then sued landlords in a small claim court were not guaranteed of being reimbursed.
"They may get the judgment, but that doesn't mean the money is collected," he said.
Solbach said the system only would tie up the money long enough to cause the landlord and tenant to take action.
See LANDLORD page five
"The escrow account takes money out of both pockets, he said. "It's not a good situation. It's one that both parties want to settle."
Solbach said his bill would clarify solutions for tenants and protect landlords because a tenant could no longer make an unjustifiable repair.
"People say there was a delicate balance adopted in the Landlord-Tenant Act. But the current law is tipped very much in favor of landlords."
AUSTIN X
Stick it
KU's Elen Jaskot moves the ball past an Emporia State University defender in yesterday's field hockey game at Holem Sports Complex, Teammate Izayle Lowdon, behind the Emporia State player, trails the action in the first of two wins for the Jayhawks, now 3-7. See story page 10.
2
Wednesday, October 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Tidal wave in France kills 8
NICE, France—A tidal wave crashed on a 48-mile stretch of the French Riviera yesterday, killing at least eight men who were building a seaside
Five other persons were reported missing and feared dead on the popular Melville bridge near coast.
An undetermined number of yachts and other pleasure craft were wrecked all about the Riviera.
The French weather service said the tidal wave was felt from Menton to Cannes and probably was caused by an underwater landslide off the coast of France.
Officials speculated that the landslide was caused by masses of earth and debris carried into Antibes Bay during the past few days by the Var River, which had been affected by heavy rain.
Rautown police pledge strike
RAYTOWN, Mo.—Pledge pledged to walk off their jobs at 11:30 p.m. yesterday in a dispute over wages and personnel.
Sit. Steve Thompson, a spokesman for the police, said the mayor and the Board of Aldermen (left the officers no alternative.
Members of the force, including clerical and detention workers, met late yesterday after a Board of Alameda meeting and voted to stay off the job until April 2015.
the city agreed to maintain personnel levels in the department. The police also want the board to provide for a cost of living increase in
The proposed job action excludes uniformed officers above the rank of
major general in federal reserve offices.
sergeian and school officials
Police walked out of the board meeting earlier yesterday when the board
took action against the demands.
Carter's peanut business upheld
WASHINGTON—Paul Curran, special counsel, said yesterday that there was no evidence that President Jimmy Carter committed any crimes and no prosecution was planned over the financing of the president's family peanut business.
After concluding a six-month investigation, Curran, a Republican lawyer from New York, said no indictment "can or should be brought against anyone" who was involved with the nearly $10 million in loans from the National Bank of Georgia to the peanut business.
Curran said in a 239-page report to Attorney General Benjamin Civilliet that there was no evidence that any of the money was diverted into Carter's 1976 presidential campaign. He also concluded there was no evidence of criminal activity stemming from the loans.
Sturn also disclaimed that he took an unprecedented four-hour deposition from the president of the White House on Sept. 5, 2013, accusing his advisers of being a criminal investigation
Economists share Nobel Prize
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - An American and a West Indian who teaches in the United States were jointly awarded the 1979 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science yesterday for their work to improve economic and human conditions in the Third World.
Schultz, 77, of the University of Chicago, and Sir Arthur Lewis, 64, a West Indian native and British subject who teaches at Princeton University, and James L. Cotton, of the University of Chicago,
would be the award to Lewis was the first ever given to an economist from the developing world according to the Royal Swedish Academy.
newcomers, when accustomed to playing the offense, have been awarded so far this year and of the nine winners, five have been Americans, two Britons, one Pakistanian and one Ger-
man.
Quake cuts off water supply
EL CENTRO, Calif — Officials said yesterday that California's earthquake Monday, which was its worst in eight years, broke the main water canal that brings water to this arid border region, leaving some cities in the area with only a two-day supply of water.
Thai assessment came from city officials who met in the garage of the Imperial County fire station. The meeting was attended by students of firefighting and related professions on the Richer scale.
At least 91 persons received mostly minor injuries in the quake. Damage in the area was estimated at between $10 and $12 million.
the area was abandoned. The All-American Canal after the quake caused several cracks in the conduit that runs about 70 miles from the Colorado River at the mouth of the Rio Grande.
Carter assails Cuba's military
CHICAGO—President Carter, offering a two-day trip to the Midwest, condemned Cuban military operations yesterday and expressed his delight over President Obama's decision to move the embassy.
Carter called Cuba "the most highly militarized country on earth per capita." The Cubans, he said, are constantly interfering with the affairs of other
He said Cuba had more than 45,000 troops in countries where they had "absolutely no business."
solidly no business, on uncertain political ground with the city's Democratic leaders but returned to Washington with strong statement of support from
Although she did not give Carter a full endorsement, she did say that if the decision were to be made now, she would vote for him.
necessary to be on the front line in decision making, so he asked to sen. Edward M. Kennedy's possible challenge to Carter for the Democratic nomination by issuing a warning "to those who
Attempts made to reopen track
TOPEAK—The Kansas City Terminal Railway Co., which is operating the bankrupt Rock Island Railroad, is working to upgrade substandard track as well as to obtain permission for slow-speed traffic on several substantial lines, a state snakeman said yesterday.
tum taylor, spokesman for the Kansas Corporation Commission, said an embark on some standard lines had been lifted for a portion of a main line running from McFarland through Manhattan to Belleville. However, a line through northern McFarland remained pending a possible waiver.
The embargo has been permitted under federal law that says the operating company does not have to use tracks that do not meet minimum standards of safety.
Two 'auilty' in nuclear sabotage
William Kukendall, 26, of Newport News, and James Merrill, 24, of Hampton, admitted they had sabotaged the Surry plant, saying they had infiltrated the plant with explosives.
The KCC wrote the KCT last week urging that the northern and other lines in question be opened to move grain to market. KCT has applied for a waiver to
The utility, which operates the Virginia Electric & Power Co. plant, sustained damage estimated at $1 million from the sabotage.
SURRY, Va. — A jury yesterday convicted two former nuclear plant employees on felony charges of damaging a public utility.
Pilot souaht before fatal crash
about in prison, and the judge sentenced him to death through Thomas County undersheerishment, said the pilot, Michael Lee Arnold, Broder College. Cecilia was asked for questioning in the investigation of an arrest, according to authorities.
GUNNISON, Colo. — The pilot of a plane that crashed in the Rocky Mountains Sunday and killed its eight occupants was wanted for questioning in Kansas on Friday.
Federal investigators still are trying to determine what caused the Cosma 210 to break apart, strewing bodies and debris over a two-square-mile area of
Weather
Weather ...
Today will be sunny with a high of 71 degrees, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds will be from the northeast.
Tight it will be fair to partly cloudy and cool with a low of 49 degrees and winds from the southeast.
The extended forecast calls for a chance of thundershowers tomorrow and high temperatures in the upper-60s.
El Salvador under martial law
SAN SALVADOR, EI SALVADOR (AP) — the new military government yesterday sent a letter to the governor of the suburb, suspended constitutional guarantees and imposed martial law and a night curfew.
Col. Jaime Abud Gutiérrez and Col. Addio Almada Miano also dissolved the Colorado-led group of Carlos Humberto Romero's right-wing government, which was top down in the state. The redistribution
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Romero reportedly fled to neighboring Guatemala.
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
IN WASHINGTON, the State Department in
Salvalador government sources said constitutional guarantees were suspended in 1985. In 1986, erected barricades and took over municipal buildings in San Salvador's suburbs of Zona Tropical.
AT LEAST 299 government troops armed with assault rifles and heavy machine guns moved in on the protesters in Mejicanos.
plazas in the capital and surrounding suburbs to prevent rallies.
Granada
There was no information on casualty.
Police were posted around parks and
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat Suv 2:30
WZR
106
"TEN"
THE GOVERNMENT banned demonstrations and imposed a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew throughout the country.
"We do not want defiance of the government right at the start," said one source, adding that the primary objective now was to restore calm to El Saiadador.
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Under martial law, the government also can ban meetings, impose press censorship, prohibit journalists from entering the entries and exits in the country. There was no indication whether any of those measures were effective.
Hilcrest
Varsity
A military spokesman said the coup leader was studying a roster of possible Cabinet members who would be moderate and that it would be made up of two military leaders and three
1. "STARTING OVER"
1. "STARTING OVER"
Eve 7:30 8:50 Sat/Sun 1:30
2. "THE SEDUCTION OF JOE"
Eve 7:15 & 9:30 Sat Sun 11:15
CHIA MAN A WOMAN AND A BANK 1:15
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Fire damages living room
Damage to the house, owned by Robert L. Pierson, was estimated at $3,000, and damage to the contents at $2,000.
Three trucks were sent to the scene at 11:20 a.m. and the fire was extinguished by 1:20 p.m., firefighters reported.
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A fire that broke out in a house at 130% Pennsylvania St. Monday caused an estimated $10,000 damage, Lawrence firefighters reported.
Firefighters the blaze might have been caused by a cigarette left burning in an ashray. The fire broke out in the room sometime after 11 a.m., they said.
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Wednesday, October 17, 1979
University Danny Kansan
3
Reagan's talk in KC typically conservative
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Ronal Reagan addressed his philosophy of conservatism in government to the National Savings Bank and asked that it pay fewer taxes and more private investment.
"We should have a tax policy that enforces the laws, and we said the former California governor and announced front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination in most of his state."
Instead, he told an enthusiastic audience,
"we tax ambition, ingenuity and pride of
workmanship. We punish production with
confessional taxes.
"But profit, property rights and freedom are inseparable," he said. "And you can't have the last one unless you have the first two."
Reagan said the government should spend
less than it takes in, print less paper money,
and reduce its regulation requirements.
"A government program, once initiated is the nearest thing to eternal life we have on this earth."
Reagan also proposed that administration of some public responsibilities be turned over to state and local governments with the funds to operate them.
He said income tax brackets should be lowered to provide workers with more money to put in savings, which could then be invested in more productivity, to provide jobs.
On the upcoming election, Reagan said that even with a presidential campaign by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., in the midst of a political crisis, there would be good chance of winning remuneration in 1980.
New interest rate lid uncertain
TOPEKA (AP) - Gov. John Carlin ruled out the possibility of a special session of the Legislature to raise the legal ceiling on home mortgage prices, the tightening home mortgage market.
Carlin met with aides yesterday to talk about the situation. He told reporters he was not present, announcing any action. The only result was the removal of a special session from his office.
"There is no indication that there is any merit in having a special session," the governor said, noting the time and expense to bring the I&S lawnmakers to Topeka.
HE SAID ANY action that required changes in the law could wait until the Legislature recovered in January.
The situation resulted from the Federal
Reserve Board's action Oct. 6 that raised interest rates so high that it would be impossible to keep mortgagees in Kansas because of the state's statutory ceiling of 11 percent on housing prices.
When the board first announced its plans, it was clear that calls from some industry officials for a special session to immediately raise the ceiling. A 12 percent had beenmened.
"WE WOULD generally agree that the situation is serious," Carlin said, "and there is no question that it will have an economic effect on this state."
Carlin said he would continue to review options under study by his staff.
"It is not the kind of situation that lends itself to shooting from the hip. We are looking at the options."
The governor discounted a call from the Kansas Savings and Loan League that he should immediately announce his support for a 13 percent interest ceiling.
THE LEAGUE CLAIMED such a show of support would bolster lenders' confidence in advance of legislative action.
"I question whether too many people in Kansas are going to determine their business plans on the basis of a press release from the governor," Carlin said.
The governor refused to say whether he would accept another industry suggestion to ask the board of the Kansas Emerson Energy to approve using part of the state's $70 million pension fund to ease the money supply problem.
REPRESENTATIVES OF state lending institutions pressed the KPERS board to
make available over the next three months up to $100 million from the state pension fund for home mortgages. They wanted $25 million of that released immediately.
Those representatives said this could be done if KPERS would loan Kansas landlift institutions the money at interest rates of 10% and 5%. If they load the current rate available elsewhere.
THE SUGGESTION GOT a cool answer. The group will meet tomorrow to discuss a $25 million offering it planned to make some time ago and to set the interest rate it would charge.
Carlin said he thought the investment policies of KPERS funds were the board's responsibility, but he did not rule out another recommendation before tomorrow's meeting.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editors.
October 17.1979
Legal aid lacking
The complexities of students' lives are increasing, as are the legal problems associated with such an increase.
Landlord-tenant and consumer problems plague students who are often victimized solely because of their inherent transience.
Luckily, many colleges have had the use of Legal Aid Society offices for indigent students, and now an increasing number of universities are seeing the need for, and the ability of, university services programs for all students.
THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas is one of those universities. However, the KU Student Legal Services program seems to have cut itself short.
Worries about the court representation of students by a KU attorney scared administrators last fall enough that they fought for, and won, a gradual phase-in of the program through a three-step timetable that would mean more services to students with each phase.
Phase I, which is due to run out in March 1980, offers only advice on many legal issues and preparation of some legal documents.
PHASE II would allow Steve Ruddick, lawyer for the program, to file a lawsuit against the criminal misdemeanor cases and when they need a civil suit defense counsel.
If there are problems with Phase II,
however, they are not with the services to be provided.
No, the problem with Phase II is that it still continues to scare some administrators—and even some student leaders.
Margaret Berlin, student body president, says she would like to see the next phase implemented by January, yet she adds that she would not want Ruddick to have to handle big cases for fear it would bog him down.
SUCH A range of services, it is argued, would require another attorney-at least part-time. But then, that is exactly what was promised in
Additional funds obviously are needed, and now is the time to consider appropriating them. The Student Senate conducts its review of the Revenue Code and allocation of the student activity fee, from which legal services program is funded, in November. Some consideration of how to expand the legal services program as promised should be considered then.
Eighty-five students obtained assistance from the program in September, but another 37 were turned away. The places placed on Ruddick through Phase I.1.
A comprehensive legal service could have helped those students. In fact, it has been promised them. Let's not let a student get put on the back-burner again.
It was not one of the Senate's finest hours. That august body last week meekly followed the recommendation of its thoroughly cowed C ethics Committee in reaffirming the group's powerful members for crimes that likely would have put any other man behind bars.
The Senate did the wrist chitchaw in a 81 to 15 vote to "denounce" powerful Georgia Democrat Herman E. Talmadge. The Senate did the wrist chitchaw in the Ethics Committee that found "clear and convincing evidence" that Talmadge knew or should have known of more than $43,000 in claimed expense money and that the Senate would report $10,000 in campaign contributions.
CLEAR AND convincing evidence of that kind of behavior is enough to put most other politicians in jail, or at least drive them out. A national senator and a foreign diplomatic secretary. He is a cagely, powerful 23-year veteran of Senate warfare. He serves as the chair of the Senate Committee and is the second ranking member of the powerful Finance Committee which controls the nation's purse strings.
Spare the rod and spoil the senator
His seniority and powerful allies among the senior Democrats in the Senate obviously made him an object of fear for the junior senators on the front lines of the committee. In a report reportedly recommending censure, a much harsher form of wrist slapping, but backed down for fear of damage to their reputation, pushed a backlash that would have followed.
INSTEAD, THEY took the easy way out,
voting to denounce demotion.
That really isn't as bad as it sounds. A denouncement lies somewhere between the justification of punishment. Neither of these carry much weight either. A denouncement stands far short of any type of sanction the should impose, such as a loss of seniority.
A loss of seniority would have stripped Talmadge of almost all the power he had in the Senate and would have made him the
junior of every first term student. Clearer, less shaggy hair and avoid any loss of power and prestige and instead opted for the tone lashing that was administered to Talmudiaj last month.
dishonor and disrepute," Talmadge claimed that the Senate vote was a "personal victory."
Talmadge was on to shrug off the denouncement. The Senate, he said, was merely being critical of his conduct, which he found too blunt and evildoose in regard rather than intentional wretchedness.
john
COLUMNIST logan
who is gloating over being let off easily in his "personal victory."
Some justice will be done however.
Alimadaya pleaded $40,000 to the
Ada and Talimandaya factories
year in a campaign that will probably
reverse the Senate Ethics Committee's
Nonetheless, the decision to merely denounce the senator from Georgia ranks as an effect of the least honorable moments accusing the senate of being especially reprehensible display of cowardice on the part of the Senate Ethics Committee and supposed to be the watchdog of the Senate.
N. Y. Times Special Features
THA TALMAGE is gloating over the fear and impatience of the Senate is devious. Despite being accused by the full Senate of failing to get the Senate to concede that tends to bring the Senate into
By CANDY SCHULMAN
Violence starts as child's play
When a high school girl was pushed off a New York subway platform for no apparent reason by an unidentified teenager, many people wondered what kind of person would do such a thing. I remember one. I know. The assault could have been a former student of mine.
For three years I taught emotionally disturbed children in a school that funded, attended, and by the city and state of New York. Most of my students were women; backgrounds, and could no longer function in the public school system. For some, it was the last step before treatment.
The teachers all agreed that socialization came before reading and math
Public school children took field trips to museums: I took my class to the grocery store to teach them to how in line and count change. Instead of discussing literature, we talked about solving problems with words instead of fists.
"I accept the criticism because I believe that senators should be held to much higher standards than is commonplace," he said, according to a statement at others. "I also know how to take it."
"OH YEAH?" "a student might counter while practicing his technique. But the second says if someone hits me to close right back. No matter what.
If that watchdog has a fear of sinking its teeth into anything, then it is pretty useless.
THESE ARE hardy the words of a man who has broken the law or has violated the public trust and is truly repentant for what he has done. Rather, it sounds like a man
Violence was an integral part of their lives.
When one student brought a knick knife into school, the principal two hours to persuade him to give it up. Why the knife 'killed' her?
"I'll read about Joey in the newspaper one day," teachers sometimes say, despairingly, "in the police blotter."
THE VIOLENCE often began at home, parents beat their children. Ten-year-old Amy came into my class one morning when she was playing with her brother and mother for the parental reason. Distraught, Amy kept antagonizing others in the class, and I had to physically guard her so that her classmates couldn't hit her. Her social worker should have seen the situation and helped her. She could, she never time with Amy until late afternoon.
William, for example, had been improving both emotionally and academically for the first time in years when he was threatened by an older student. His teacher tried to keep him inside the classroom to prevent a fight. But William's mind became fixed only on retaliation, and he knocked over anything, including his teacher, that stood between him and the door. She might have been in the middle of a riot, but a third tutor for William punched her head several times, causing a concession has put her out of work for the rest of the year.
Too many questions were left unanswered.
ADMINISTRATION
Bentoo
'79 KANSAS
WHEN WILLIAM was asked why he hit the teacher he was so
fond of, his eyes glazed over. "I hit my teacher?" he asked. "What."
Maybe the teen-ager who pushed the high-school girl off the subway platform has blanked out his act of violence, too. Like William, he may not have been in control at the time; he may not even remember the incident.
But even if the police find him, the problem will not be solved. He is just one of thousands who cannot find solace through parents and schools, who are in need of therapy and possibly counseling. They seemingly senescent acts of violence because it is all they know.
RUDY WAS a faint, harmless-looking boy who enjoyed sitting in my lap and listening to fairy tales; frequently he wrote me love notes. One afternoon he refused to leave when the afternoon bell rang. When I tried to coax him, he threw a pair of scissors at me. By the time the principal arrived, he was kicking, biting and cursing me. He said that I was a blank expression in his eyes that I had never seen before.
Rudy was suspended until a residential treatment placement could be found, a process which took months and meant he'd be at work all summer. Rudy had not left the hospital we discovered Rudy's father had left home. If our counseling staff had been adequate, Rudy might have had someone to talk to and help him get better.
Rudy couldn't even face me when he returned to pick up his belonius. He left behind one last note: "I'm sorry."
AND IT GOES on and on. Without preventive measures, how can we expect to exaltimate more acts of violence by violently troubled children? Problems must be identified early. Too often students reach junior high school before they are placed in special classes.
Well-trained teachers supplemented by workers and psychiatrists within the school are a necessity. Family counseling is a must, since it is impossible to help disturbed children who have to go home to drunken, psychopathic or indifferent parents.
Such was the case with Ellen. After being forced to accompany her mother while she had an abortion, Ellen's behavior became erratic, more aggressive than usual. Perhaps she was afraid that her mother would attack her when she violated, violent, throws desks and chairs around the classroom, deliberately provoking others. She was suspended until her mother agreed to enroll in her psychotherapy, a service that was not provided in our school. However, because her mother wasn't a therapist, Ellen was allowed to attend. The last I heard, she was roaming the streets. Today may
The last. I heard, she was roaming the streets. Today she may be roaming the subways.
Candy Schalman is no longer affiliated with the school described in this essay.
AWRIGHT EVER'BODY...
BREAK IT UP! FREEZE!
T2K3DIM
Friend of yours?
Never seen him before in my life.
Maintaining our campus
Billboards visual menace to city
Every American's primary vocation, it sometimes seems, is to be a consumer.
Our senses are bombarded continually,
from all sides, with messages urging us to
smoke this, drive that, eat here, travel there, buv. buv. buv.
Most Lawrence residents don't object to that never-standing harassment, according to a study that was made public at last Tuesday's City Commission meeting.
The study was conducted by the Institute for Social Research at William Jewell University in Liberty, Mo., at the behest of Marilyn K. Brown, who owns all of 11 of Lawrence's billboards.
BILLBOARD'S - biaring reminders of society's commercialism - inure upon our view of the change, interrupt our view of the surroundings and make us involuntary.
The study showed that 66 percent of the people interviewed think billboards are useful. Sixity-one percent think billboards should be permitted in the city. Sixity-perhaps not in the City Commission should mind its own business and shop trying to get rid of the things.
lynn COLUMNIST byczynski
The commissioners, who had been taking tough in their campaign to rid the city of visual pollution, seemed to be swayed by that majority opinion. They postponed the 22nd deadline, which was established two years ago, for Martin Anderson to remove signs.
AT LEAST, we should hope it was the study that changed the commissioners' minds about the billboards.
Surely, it could not have been Martin Outdoor's attack of a lawsuit that inspired the extension of the deadline to the end of the year. Tom Martin, owner of the billboard company, was at the commission to reiterate his plan—and his threat of a lawsuit.
Outlawing billboards is, in Martin's mind, an infringement upon his First Amendment right to freedom of speech.
NEITHER MARTIN nor the city com-
The possibilities for compromise with 11 billboards are almost endless.
mussoners want to go to court. So they have decided to negotiate a compromise.
They can take down the billboards on Massachusetts and they can take down the number of people have to look at them there. Or they can take down the ones on 21st Street, because they add up a lot.
Or they can remove the ones on the outskirts of the city, because they contribute to the urbanization of country-like areas. Or they can increase the size or the number of advertisements.
WHAT IS THE difference? The compromise, whatever its outcome, is sure to be arbitrary and capricious.
The issue facing the city commission is a simple one: should our urban landscape be littered with advertisements? Or should billboards be banned?
The commission should base its decision only on the original reason for drafting the ordinance—the removal of visual pollution.
Then, the commissioners should "get tough" and go one way or the other, and be ready to face the consequences.
To the Editor:
Not everyone at KU drinks beer
Perhaps this is an expression of "minority rights," but at the very least, it is a ripe.
This is directed at those social organizers obsessed with what can best be called "everybody-likes-beer-im". All too in my years at the University of Kansas, I was asked, "What temperature, where beer was served, but no alternatives—punch, cola, or others—were."
Two current examples will explain my situation. A letter I received from the Board of Class Officers during the summer urged me to buy a Senior Class card, promising 'free beer and free cola at class parties'. Then, we met three former teachers where we picked up our T-shirts, there was a beer truck, but the cola was nowhere in sight.
KANSAN letters
I asked the class president where the Coke and his feeble reply was, "I... think he had not arrived." The cola never arrive or that there was a misprint in the letter was unclear. However, from what I can determine, there was no and no cola at the Big Blue Rally as well.
I'm not sure what is worse—no beer alternative at all, or paying extra for what alternative exists. The latter has been announced for an All-Scholarship Hall
Halloween party downstairs. Beer is free; cola and other set-ups for mixed drinks will cost you something. This happened at previous class functions as well.
I'm not against people drinking beer, and I'm aware that lots of KUK folks do. It's just that some folks don't like beer or, for some reason or other, can't or won't drink it.
It seems unfair to me for these people to be considered as "outcasts," unwanted at social functions.
Who knows? Maybe by welcoming such people with an alternative to beer, they'll have a bigger turnout.
Richard Burkard Kansas City, Kan., senior
Letters Policy
The University Dayan Kaisan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters are received and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after a period, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kaisan reserves the right to edit the letter delivered personally or mailed to the Kaisan newsroom, 112 Flint Hall. Because of space limitations, the right to edit letters for publication.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
10257-96-44886. Published on the University of Maryland July August through May and December and Thursday December 3rd, 2015. Students must register for registration at www.maryland.edu/registration. Submit resumes to mail us for a six month or a year fee in Daughters of the Republic School, 1200 W. 6th St., Duluth, MN 55803.
Professional Registrar Send special address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Law School, NKU5482
Editor Mary Hoenk
Managing Editor Nancy Dressler
Editorial Editor Mary Ernst
Business Manager Cynthia Rav
Retail Sales Manager Vincent Coulis
National Sales Manager Carl Nelson
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
4
Wednesdav. October 17. 1979
5
Escort service finds base office
By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
Organizers of a proposed Campus Safety Service have overcome one obstacle to starting the service by finding a base of operations for volunteer escorts.
The KU Police Department, Gay Services of Kansas and representatives from University residence halls and the School of Architecture are helping to organize the service, which will provide deserts for male female students who must walk home at night.
The service at first will serve only the KU campus and campus living groups, but will expand later if it proves successful. Donna said that she was assistant at Temple Hall, said yesterday.
Schenken said officials at Hashingin Hall had offered the use of a telephone and an empty temporary room housing as an operation base.
But the service still must face other obstacles.
"We need two bases of operation," Schenkein said. For a campus this big, one just isn't tough."
HE SAID HE was planning to ask officials at GSP-Corbin Hall for space to set up another base.
The service also would require money for at least two sets of waist-talkie radio, Schenken said. The radios will be needed, he said, for escorts to respond to new
requests while they are walking other students home.
Todd Tzwah, co-director of Gay Services, said the escort service would apply for recognition as a student group from the Student Senate and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities. Recognition organizations group the eligible for Student Senate funding.
He said Gay Services was willing to pay the advertising expenses of the service until other funding arrangements could be made.
SCHENKEN SAID the group also would investigate the possibility of operating as part of Student Senate or as part of the Commission on the Status of Women.
Another problem is a lack of volunteers.
Sohankair said
"But," Zwahl said, "we are hoping for at least 100 volunteers."
Twenty students have volunteered to act as escorts on a part-time basis.
University Daily Kansan
Schenkin said the service would operate 98 hours a week, between the hours of 6 p.m. and 8 a.m., every day. Volunteers would work in shifts of three hours each, he said.
"We don't want to have volunteers work more than one shift a week. Because the workload is too much for one woman each, we'll need at least 100 people so we will be back-up people on call."
He said students should call the KU In information Center to volunteer as escorts. Volunteers are scheduled to meet Oct. 22 for a brief screening interview and training
Landlord . . .
A TENANT WOULD have to be well-informed to use the remedy, he said, and would use it only as a last resort.
From page one
Before the next session, the bill might be amended to apply only to heating, lighting and water. Solbach said.
It now applies to all landlord responsibilities in the rental agreement or as defined in the Landlord-Tenant Act. That includes maintenance of water, electricity, plumbing, heating, ventilation, compliance codes and provision of trash receptacles.
Chapman said, "Sohbach's bill looks like it gives tenants more leverage. It puts the burden on the tenant to do the work.
"But a tenant can't just say. There was a hole in the wall, and I called the landlord a couple of times and went ahead and fixed it." However tenants aren't always
fair, either. I don't think landlords are going to jump up for joy over this bill."
DURING THE last legislative session, several Lawrence landlords protested the bill during hearings in the judiciary committee.
sobach also said he thought the bill might lead to higher rents.
Jack Brand, representing the Lawrence Apartment Owners Association, had said that Sollach's bill would cause landlords to be liable for damages of tenants abusing the proposed remedy.
"The biggest problem is that people don't understand the oil," he said, "and there is an emotional reaction to it."
Lucy Smith, legislative director of ASK,
said that she thought the bill was too complex,
and that it might cause tenants to avoid using it.
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6
Wednesday, October 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
State checks sale of flooded cars
By DOUG WAHL Staff Reporter
The Kansas Attorney General is investigating the sale of 40 flood-damaged 1979 Ford vehicles that might have been sold to a spokesman for the office said Sunday.
the spokesman, Leille Rawlings, deputy attorney general for the Consumer Affairs Department, said investigators vehicles sold during the past two months by a Wichita dealer. She would not answer questions.
She said her office sent a letter to the dealer this week requesting a list of the people he had sold them to. It is possible that the cars were sold to Lawrence dealers, she said.
The vehicles were 1979 Fords that were damaged during floods on July 26, 1978 when tropical storm Chaudite struck Bayton and Storm, Texas, about 100 miles east of Houston.
"WE WILL CHECK with consumers to
see if they knew the cars were flood-damaged when they bought them," she said.
"We don't care if a consumer wants to buy a flood-damaged car. We care if they were not told they were flood-damaged."
Hawkins said she first learned that the cars might be in Kansas when a Washington, Kan., resident called her office about two weeks ago.
Marcus Woods, chiff of dealers' licensing in Topeca, said a list of the serial numbers if the damaged cars had been sent to his office by Ford Motor Co. Aug. 20.
He said his office sent the list to auctioneers and to special investigators for the Kansas Department of Motor Vehicles.
He said he did not think it was necessary to send a list of the vehicle serial numbers to Kansas dealers.
"YOU CANNOT CONVINCE me that a dealer buying a 1979 car for the price they would pay wouldn't know something was wrong," he said.
Railings said cars were sold in Kansas, Arkansas, and Oklahoma.
"There certainly could be dealers selling the cars in Lawrence," she said, standing in front of a brand name in Topkapi or Kansas City yet. We do think some may have been sold in Kansas City at
Ford Motor Co. sold the damaged vehicles to a salvage company from Imboden, Ark.
the cars had salvage titles, but later received regular titles after passing Texas vehicle inspection tests, according to Woods.
THE VEHICLES were then sold as new models, even though they were damaged.
J. R. Humcumil, regional supervisor for the Department of Highways and Transportation in Houston, said the salvage crew "rebuilt the car or sold them for parts."
According to Larry Sturm, a mechanic at Phillips 66 service station, 19th and Massachusetts streets, the cars would have incurred extensive damage because of the foods, including mud in the body and engine.
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Gary Sturtridge, a coin retailer and owner of House of Stuart Ltd., Tonganoxia, also said the silver market was active.
BEEF BURGER
From page one
HE ADDED THAT many people who could not afford to buy gold at $400 an ounce bought silver instead.
coins then at 2.5 times the face value of the coin. In 1971 another increase occurred and the value of coins fell because of the oil embrasure's effect on currency, he paid five times the face value of the coin.
"I wouldn't want to be a buyer right now," he said. "With inflation, people want to own their homes." He also encouraged the dollar. We are discouraging our average investor from going into the silver market.
In the past six weeks, the price of silver has increased from $10 to $17 an ounce, he said.
Sturtiidge that investors and speculators, eager to get rid of depreciating American dollars, were using them to buy silver. That, along with purchases by Americans, generally is thought to be the main steady increase in the price of the metal.
"You can be sure the temporary increase is because of speculation and foreign investment that has pushed the economies down and the country is under control economically, you'll see the price of silver rise."
HE SAID SILVER prices were soaring because its commercial price was important to the client. So he took photography. Not many substitutes for silver have been found, he said, unless more than a few have been found.
"PEOPLE HAVE THE tendency to buy on the up market," he said. "The price of silver is now making the headlines and they want to jump on the bandwagon, too. Plus with continuing inflation they think the government needs to something to back up their assets."
Gold, however, can be filled and mixed with other metals to make it cheaper. Silver is more expensive and more difficult to mine, he said.
IN JUST FOUR weeks, gold leaped from $30 an ounce to $47, only to lose half that impressive gain by the end of the week. I bought it for a quick killing turtle hurt badly, he said.
"However, we've seen the most rapid increase in the past three weeks, not three years. It used to be a yearly increase, but not now."
IN THE PAST three years, the price of one silver-plated plate in his store has increased from $35 to 80.
--presents
After the big boom the price of silver will go down before it goes up again, Shaw said.
Ron Schmidt, owner of Roberts Jewelry, Inc., 833 Massachusetts St., said it was difficult to explain the cause behind increased silver prices in the past year.
"When gold goes up, silver goes up," he said. Silver bullion is being inflated by a sort of taq-ang with gold, he said.
He suggested that those who want to invest slightly in the money they already have investing in the coins is the safest way to go, he said, because they always will be worth their face value plus or minus 2%.
However, dealing on a larger scale in metal commodities is for the person with money assets of $50,000 to $75,000 before he even starts to buy silver, he said.
sua films
Wednesday, October 17
RARE JAZZ FILMS WITH
ROB DEFIELSS!
Questions following the form
Sponsored by SUA Films, African Studies, KANU-FM, and radio-TV-film.
These excellent prints include Charlie Parkers only screen appearance, nooga Cho Chor*; *Miles Davis* and John Coltrane listen to boogie woogie piano with Albert Ammons and Pete Rowe in a mini show with Count Basie, Thelonious Monk's Blues, Holiday, and Gulliver's Adventure; Marge Gulliver, and much more film historian Boulder will answer sponsored by SUFAI. Images of Sponsored by SUFAI. Images of Sponsored by SUFAI. Images of Sponsored by SUFAI.
Thursday, October 18
RARE COMEDY FILMS
WITH BOR DEFLEORES!
These rarely seen classics include a 1931 Mack Sennett short with Bing Bing, Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra, Betty Grable, Harpo Marge and an more; the 1950s starring Sting, George Burns & Bob Hope, and a Groucho Marx TV show featuring historian Bob Defoles, will answer any questions following the films.
Sponsored by SUA Films, African
Sprints. KANU-FM and radio TV-film.
Friday & Saturday.
October 19-20
BREAK AND CHOCOLATE
Directed by France Brusat, with Nino Manfred and Jean-Anne Karin. An Italian film that makes the economic gain to earn a living which the Italian economy is unable to provide. A bit of cynicism about the cult of two national temperaments. Winnipe New York Citics Award for Best Foreign Film.
Sunday, October 2
THE GODFATHER
(1873)
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola,
with Marion Brando, Al Pacino,
James Caan, Diane Keaton, Tallia
Sutherland, John Malkovich,
and Abe Wida.
Monday, October 22
FAHRENHEIT 451
Directed by Francis Truffault, with Julie Christie and Caskar Werner. Based on Ray Bradbury's futuristic novel of book burning.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission
(1966)
WEEKLY SCHOOL INFORMATION
3:30, 7.00, 8.30 or 12 midnight and Sun, at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted. $15.15 admission. No Refreshments.
PRIVATE CLUB Lawrence, Kansas presents
HIDEOUT
JIMMY CLANTON
October 18 and 19
First show starts at 9 p.m.
$4.50 advance, $5.50 at door
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Call 843-9851 for more information
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"TEENAGE MILLIONAIRE"
"Letter to an Angel"
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offer good 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily
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"A Part of Me"
"Another Sleepless Night"
JOHN C. RYAN
"My Own True Love"
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tonight, from Washington D.C.," NIGHTHAWKS swoop down on the Lawrence Opera House for a full scale assault of HOT blues and Boogie, and can you believe it's only $4.00 for a full night of
X NIC
NIGHTHAWKS
NIGHTHAWKS
NIGHTHAWKS
DOORS open at
"NIGHTHAWKS"
Doors open at 8:00 show at 9:00
Lawrence Operatg House
THAWKS
Doors open at
8:00 - show at 9:00
Lawrence
Opera House
Wednesday, October 17, 1979
7
Big 8 athletic facilities compared
By BRETT CONLEY
Staff Reporter
a Big Eight schools probably will show that KU's athletic facilities are less adequate than at most other schools in the nation. For instance, an assistant athletic director, said assistant
Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, said the study was being conducted by the KU athletic department to evaluate the quality of other schools in the Bieff Group compared with other schools in the Bieff Group.
Mays has visited six universities in the conference and will conclude the study after visiting Iowa State this weekend.
"Indoor workout facilities are what we need to make us comparable to other schools," Mays said. "We have just sort of been working on maintenance and restoration with our facilities."
*many* was started after Don Siewon, a committee chairman requested that his boss report on Big Eight facilities, Marcum said. The cost of the study will not be known until the study is complete.
MAYS SAID HE began the study more than a week ago when he and a photographer visited Big Eight schools.
"We spend about four to five hours at each school and take pictures of every part of the building, including the laundry rooms," Mays said. "I also talk to athletic officials about financing of facilities and their budgeting process and other academic programs and recruiting."
A slide presentation will be made from the results of the study, Marcum said, and the slides will be turned over to Slowson along with the information gathered by Mays.
The KUAC committee on facilities will evaluate the information and develop priorities for improvements at KU, Marcum said.
"THIS IS A very important project on other campuses and see it is happening on other campuses and see that petition is going," Marcum said. "I haven't talked to Burke about any details yet, but I have a lot of feedback."
Marcum agreed that for KU to be comparable to Big Eight schools, an indoor workout facility was needed.
sixth or seventh in the conference in facilities."
"An indoor facility will be a tremendous shot in the arm to our purpose." Marcum said, adding that the indoor facility, but if we want to build one the money will have to come from private sources.
Mays said most of the other schools had asked for copies of the study because it was the first of its kind in the conference.
“ALL OF THE schools have been very receptive to me because they really don't have anything to hide.” Mayne said. “They've already about the business aspects of other operations. We also got new ideas about things that might help us in out many different areas.”
some discrepancies in facilities could be attributed to the sources of financing for facilities, Mays said. Schools such as
Nebraska receive state funds for facilities, but other schools, such as Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, do not receive state aid, Mays said.
KU received state funds for fiscal year 1979-80. About $215,000 was given to the women's athletic department.
Mays said the Big Eight schools had average facilities compared with other schools in the state and that there are the exceptions, he said, because they are significantly ahead of other Big Eight schools.
"I would say KU is still comparable in our total facilities," Mays said, "but we have to up-keep to with facilities, the reason everyone expands is that someone like you does it. I will be there then Oklahoma State starts building something and pretty soon we are building."
"I would say that KU is headed in the right direction now. Mays and. We're going to be a leader for our facilities. This study helps us with prior planning of facilities and tells us what we need."
Derailment witnesses keep silent
Bv MARK SPENCER
Staff Reporter
The attorney for the engineer and fireman involved in the Amtrak train deactivation in April 2013, as well as investigators that his clients will not speak to officials until a December public hearing on the incident is held, a National Transportation Safety Board representative said yesterday.
"Basically the attorney told us, 'Why talk to them now since you are going to have a public hearing?' " Harold Storey, lead investigator for the NSA, said.
John Rooney, the attorney from St. Louis, was secured by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers to represent L.H. Graham, the engineer, and W.P. Hand, the fireman. Graham is laded in satisfactory condition at the New York Hospital. Hand is at his home in Newton.
Storey said that Rooney told his clients would voluntarily appear at a public hearing, tentatively scheduled for early December in the Kansas City area.
Doctors for Graham have said he is able to answer questions, but Rooney told investigators that his client still was not feeling well. Storey said.
Elwood T. Driver, vice chairman of the NTSB, said at the beginning of the deraliment investigation that testimony from the engineer would be crucial in determining whether the accident. But Sturry said the new delay would not "unduly hinder" the investigation.
"We hope we are through enough that we know what they could tell us by the time of the hearing," he said.
Investigators want to know why the train was traveling at 78 mph in a 30 mph zone.
NTSB representatives are continuing their investigation into the 21-car derailment, which left two men dead and 69 persons injured.
Employees of a freight train that ran on the same track 20 minutes before the accident occurred near Fourth and OH-
streets told investigators that a sign warning of an approaching 30 mph zone was not in place.
Although the sign, located on a mile before the accident site, was discovered down after the accident, Stery said track marks were visible. The car was upright and visible before the wreck.
Investigators have not yet determined the condition of the speed warning mechanism that should have warned the engineer of
excessive speed with an alarm and flashing light.
Although a broken coil in the device was discovered, Storey said investigators were not sure whether it was damaged at the time of the accident.
The alert system is designed to trigger emergency brakes if the engineer does not respond. The metal plate or moving in his seat, Storey said. But the system is not linked to a speed limiter.
Student Senate Meeting Tonight... Wednesday, October 17th 1979 6:30 pm in the Big-8 Room Supplemental Budget Deliberations
paid for by Student Activity Fees.
REMODELING CLEARANCE SALE
We are expanding our service shop and showroom to meet the needs of our rapidly growing full-service Lawn and garden equipment business. The work crew are equipped with advanced tools and technology.
Help us and help yourself to top quality equipment at unreasonably low prices. New units advertise carry full one-year manufacturers warranties. Don't Wait.
Tau
GARDEN TRACTORS
**DOLENS** 23 h.p. hydrostatic garden tractor. 54-inch mower. Demo. List $4875.
Chesapeake $3870. Save $1055.
BOLENS 11 p.h. hydrostatic garden tractor, 42-inch rear discharge mower. Demo. List
$2914. Clearance $3200. Save $614.
JACOBSEEN 12 h.p. hydrostatic tractor, 50-inch machine. New unit. Ripped seat. List $3264. Clearance $2449. Save $815.
**OBLENS 1050.** 10 hp, Wisconsin. 6-speed. 42 inch shaft-driven mower. The classic
Botens garden tractor, restored. A steal at $1159.
JACOBSEN 5 h.p. 26 inch cut., demonstrator. List $695 $595
SEARS h. h.p.lawn tractor, 32-inch cut, denim; $359
SEARS h. h. 32-inch cut denim; list $755. New $65
MOZ-ALL 5 h.p. self propelled, belt-driven blade. Built like a small brush hog. List $589
$450
M02-ALL 5 h. p. self-propelled, bell-driven blade. Built like a small brush hog. List $589
$459
WFED CUTTER
GARDEN TILLERS
ROOFF self-propelled 22-inch mowers. List $219. Clearance $169. Only 5 left.
JACBOSEN 20-inch walk-behind mulchers. List $234. Clearance $169.
JACBOSEN self-propelled mulchers. List $354. Clearance $279.
JACBOSEN Power Burst 20-inch mowers, side discharge or rear bag, self-propelled. List $728.
BOLENS Rear Bag mowers. Built extra tough. List $265. Clearance $210. Rear Bag self-propelled electric start Bolens. List $145. Clearance $349.
NUSS Muchbing Mowers. The original manual. 20-inch push type. Sale $144. Sale $184.
Electric start 22-inch self-propelled Bolens mowers. List $141. Sale $242.
LAWN MOWERS
**BOLENS 5 h. p. front with reverse** List $44, Clearance $339
**BOLENS 6 h. p. front with reverse** List $44, Clearance $779
**MURRAY 5 h. p. front** List $399, Clearance $779
**MURRAY 5 h. rear** List $399, Clearance $779
Dance
CHAIN SAWS
ALL PODLAN AND MCCULLDON CHAIN SAWS REDUCED. Lowest prices in town. Bring in any ad from other stores in Lawrence and we'll match their price.
LOMBARD 4 & 2.4 cubic inch, 16-inchch, auto, adj, oiler with manual override, $249.
Compares with other saws at $400 or more.
SNOW THROWERS
Registration: 8:30 am Robinson Foyer
Beginning & Beginning / Adm.
Master Classes: 9:00 am - 3:00 pm
Dance Films: 3:00 am - 4:00 pm
All snow showers are now selling at pre-season prices. Lay one away and be prepared for winter prices start at $249
INSTORE, SNOWSHOP 3.5 h. new, at $269.95.
Sigma
Dressin Mandalie-hallet
Pandi Fied-jazz
Jonoss Slos-moden
Janet Hamet-moden
S. R. NESBITT & SONS
Wardrobe
Open a m. b. in room 1 daily except Sunday
Wardrobe
Open a m. b. in room 1 daily except Sunday
$2.00 non-members
Free to Tau Sigma members
Symposium
Saturday October 20—Robinson Gym
OLD GARPENTER HALL
University Daily Kansan
SMOKEHOUSE second big hog heaven weekend
SMOOR HOUSE
719 Massachusetts
rib big end rib small end $3.25 $4.25 come down and pig out
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
AIDE TO THE HEAD of the Kansas Department. He was charged with a fire that been charged with burglary and grand theft in an incident April 25 in which stucco equipment was taken from an abandoned warehouse.
Christopher Smith, 31, Topeka, is scheduled to appear for a preliminary hearing Oct. 30 on one count of each charge.
Smith, a special assistant to SRS Secretary Robert Harder, will remain in his position because the charges are not job-related. Harder said.
An 18-year-old Lawrence man was charged with felony theft of a car Monday, police said.
IN OTHER NEWS, Lawrence Police reported yesterday an auto theft, a burglary and an auto accident in which a KU student was injured.
Sainth was arrested Monday and freed on a $3,000 personal recognition bond after he and his attorney came to the Douglas Improvement Center at the connecticut police.
A police report said that Jamie Galloway, 1609 Haskell Ave., took a Jamaicai Mercury from 80 W. 2nd St., then drew it into a fence, and other vehicle in the 900 block of W. 22nd Street.
Police arrested Galloway after witnesses who chased him from the scene identified him while being driven around the area by officers, a police spokesman said.
Galloway is being held in lieu of $1,500 bond in the Douglas County Jail.
THREE PAIRS OF SKIS, two pairs of boots and a camera were taken from A-1 Rental, 2936 Iowa St. police said. The equipment, valued at $1,655, was taken sometime between Oct. 8 and Oct. 11 but was not reported missing during the investigation, which was taken from a storage building after a padlock was broken, according to a police report.
Chase was released from the hospital yesterday after being treated for minor injuries.
The report said the driver of the truck told police that he swerded into the curb lane to avoid hitting cars that had stopped abruptly and failed to stop, or for failure to yield the right way.
JUDY CHASE, Topka graduate student,
was taken to Watkins Memorial Hospital
Monday after a truck swerved into her car
from Mississippi near Mississippi Street,
a police report said.
inc.
an.
10,000 meter run Sunday, October 21. 1979
Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas to benefit the United Fund entry fee $5/$6 day of the race includes donation to united fund and a Jawhawk Jog T-shirt
Call for information
Call for information
Gamma Phi Beta
Sorority
843-8022
Phi Kappa Psi
Fraternity
843-2655
1968
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8
Wednesday, October 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Music series debt before Senate
By KATE POUND Staff Reporter
Failure of the Student Senate tonight to make a decision last week by the KU Chamber Music Series could leave the program with a $6,000 debt, according to Raymond Staffa, a senior music professor.
Stahl went before the Senate Budget Committee last week to ask for funds to pay the debt, which was discovered last month. The debt was created, Stahl said, because the committee that Senate funds had not been appropriated for the 1979 Summer Concert Series.
Stuhl said he had assumed that funds for the summer series had been included in the budget. He said the Chamber Music Series. He had scheduled the summer series under that assumption.
According to Bill Scott, co-chairman of the Senate Cultural Affairs Committee, Senate funds from the summer activity fees were not automatically renewed.
"It was probably a misunderstanding between the former cultural affairs committee chairman and the series director," Scott said.
The error was discovered, Stuhl said, when the School of Fine Arts' bank clerk began to receive bills last month for the summer concerts. Stuhl said that he heard that Senate funds for the bills would be sent to the budget office in installments.
STUHL SAID THAT when the original request was made in 1978, he had been assured by a member of the committee that the series brother series would be available every year.
"I'm baffled as to why the money wasn't allocated," he said.
SCOTT SAID THAT he was approached by SKOTT soon after the error was discovered and that the cultural affairs committee decided to request the additional funds from the Senate. The budget committee approved a bill that would keep the week and passed it to the Senate to be yoked on.
According to Stull, all of the series finances are handled by the School of Fine Arts' budget personnel. Stull is responsible only for arranging performances.
Sulli said that if the Senate rejected the recommendation, the series would not be able to pay $6,000 bill. The regular Senate allocation of $4,029.30 would not be
LEVI'S STRAIGHT LEG SALE
LITWINS
THE "SERIES HAD been funded for the summer program before," Davis said. The committee just gave the money right away, and it was because of the quality of the program."
According to Matt Davis, chairman of the budget committee, the committee did not hesitate to recommend the supplemental allocation.
The series also is funded by donations, federal and state grants and ticket sales. Stubl said.
Davis also said he expected the Senate to approve the budget committee's recommendations for the Chamber Music Series.
"The Senate allocation pays for most of the artists' fees," he said. "It doesn't pay for publicity, traveling costs or production costs."
enough to pay the debt and pay for the five concerts in this year's series.
CORDS & DENIMS style no. 505
According to Stuhl, the other funding sources have helped finance concerts featuring international performers.
Black Student Union General Meeting
Place: Kansas Room-Union Time: 6:30
"WE HAVE PICKED up some artists through these programs that we otherwise could not have gotten."
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PLEASE BE ON TIME
Date: Oct. 18, 1979
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However, those funds are not large enough to finance the three concerts in the 1979 summer series. Stuhl said.
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Serving Students' Needs Since 1946
rare jazz films
(213) 744-1444
rare
billie ho
glenn
billie holiday glenn miller
1
with film historian bob deflorebenny goodmancount basie
charlie parker lester young miles davis
"We spent money we thought we had but found later that we did not have it. It could have been disastrous." The error can be avoided if the budget committee series this year or next, Stuhl said, if the Senate approves the budget committee. We are confident that the money would be allocated.
wednesday, october 17 7:30pm
woodruff auditorium $100
sponsored by: SUA films. african studies. KANU-fm.
radio-tv-film
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HAIR and SKIN CARE
Nobel Prize scanners in use at Med Center
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Although the University of Kansas Medical Center was not included in last week's Nobel Medal ceremony, the Nobel Center shares part of the success.
It uses three X-ray scanners, purchased last year, that are duplicates of the scanners developed by an American lacrosse team who received the Nobel Prize last week.
Physician Allan Cormack of Tufts University in Medford, Mass., and Hennessey Himmheldt, research engineer with Methane firm, were selected for their work on the
Official says KU to comply with Title IX guidelines
Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, said yesterday that the University would comply with Federal Title 10 as soon as they were developed.
Von Ende and Marian Washington, KU women's basketball coach, appeared yesterday before the interim Educational Committee of the Kansas Legislature.
"As soon as they come down with guidelines, we will do our best to comply," Von Ende said.
Title IX guidelines call for nonimmunization in information and womens final interpretation of the guidelines is due this fall from the Department of Health, Education and
Hughes is news
computer-axial tomography scanner. They will share $190,000 for their award.
The examiner is used to detect tumors at an early stage by producing cross-sectional X-rays.
Of the nearly 7,000 X-rays taken at the Med Center last year with the scanners, most were used to devise treatment planning for patients, Mansfield said.
we make engineering and scientific history after year (like 1975), when it first developed telescopes.
CAT scanners cost between $350,000
and $700,000.
If you come to work with us, we both make news in
your home town paper.
The scanners are specialized to detect breast cancer, head tumors and body tumors, called Man Carl Wood, director of the Mid-America Cancer Center.
Hey Hughes Aircraft Company make news. And
he's a great person to ask if you can help.
Ask your placement office when Hughes recruits will be
on campus.
HUGHES
Creating a new world with electronics
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
OUT THERE
THERE ARE PEOPLE
computer-axial tomography scanner.
That will supply $100,000 for their own.
THEY LIVE IN PLACES LIKE CHAD, MALI, TOGO,
BELIZE, BENIN , GABON, RWANDA AND FIJI,
AFRICA, ASIA, LATIN AMERICA, THEY LIVE IN
AMERICA, TOO, IN CROWDED CITIES, FORGOTTEN HILLS, THEIR DREAMS ARE COMMON,
NEEDS BASIC, FOOD AND WATER, HEALTH AND HOUSING, JOBS , AND YOU . TO HELP AS A
CEAPS CORPS OR VISTA VOLUNTEER.
UP NOON FOR INTERVIEW AT PLACEMEN
CENTER, CORPORATION OIL AUCTION
PEACE RPS OCT., 22, 23, 24 VISTA
Joseph C. Harder, vice chairman of the committee, said the committee was gathering only preliminary information.
"We are trying to find out in our schools are in compliance with the guidelines and what it will take to make schools in compliance," Harder said. "However, we are going to have to wait until we get feedback," he added by HEW before it can much more弗."
The committee also will have to wait to see a study being prepared by the Kansas Board of Resents. Harber said
FREE PUBLIC LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
Washington told the committee that she thought schools in Kansas were behind other schools in complying with the spirit of the anti-discrimination guidelines.
by John A. Grant
Von Ende told the committee that scholarship aid for women at KU totaled nearly $396,000, compared with $28,000 for women.
The committee eventually will make some general recommendations to the Legislature, Harder said, as to how Kansas schools can best meet Title IX guidelines.
All are welcome.
Monday evening,
October 22,
at 8 o'clock.
BY JOHN A. GRANT
A Member of the Christian Science Board of Lecturship in First Church of Christ, School 1701 Massachusetts Street
offer good
oct. 16 to oct. 21
"The Consciousness of the Healing Christ"
SPRINTED BY KRISTA WILLIAMS THE COUNTY
Fri 19 GATENOIR BROWN WITH Southfield
Sun 20 HANK TIMPSON WITH The Loving Lady
Mar 24 GATENOIR BROWN WITH Southfield
Sun 27 GATENOIR BROWN WITH Southfield
Mar 31 KLURT TRIBLE TIME
Wed 31 HALLMARK PARK WITH Blue Modern Rain
Sun 37
no coupons accepted with this offer
OPERA HOUSE PRODUCTIONS
CONCERT CALENDAR
OCTOBER 18
Theo 1 Jake Hammer and The Nightwish
F.2 Jay-Z and Billy Ray Brown
Sat.3 Billy Ray Brown
T.1 The Beatles
lemon tree
Doors open at 8:00 p.m.
Show starts at 9:00 p.m.
21TH SPIRIT CELLAR is
7 days / week
memberships to the
7th spirt club
always available
11 w 9th behind weavers
Downtown open at
8 AM - Show at 5:30
Lawrence
Opera house
Call the concert info: 842-6930
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Wednesdav. October 17. 1979
University Daily Kansan
9
LOCAL
UBWAI
LOCAL
LOCAL
P513503
BRIAN STOTLER/Kansas
Final pickup
Frank Visoczy, a postal maintenance worker, pulls a local delivery mailbox on the campus. The customer service manager Hill Beyrook, customer service manager Lily Hancock, and a Postal Service lawyer, Lawrence, were removed because of the low volume they carried and because automated mail sorting made two boxes unnecessary. A local box is still located at the post office in
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: COMPANIES INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS in the School of Business will be Arthur Young and Company, NCR and the Union Oil Company of California. In the School of Business will be Travail Laboratories, Inc., will be interviewing. In the School of Law, Cosgrove, Webb and Omen, and Arthur Young and Company, will be interviewing SERVICE SERVICES DEADLINE for entries in intramural tractor at a 5 p.m. in Room 208 of Robinson Gymnasium. DBN BLAESLURG, religious studies, will speak on "Clarifying The Myth" at 11:45 a.m. at the ECM Center at 1049 Oracle.
TONIGHT: RUIL SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union parlor.
LATIN AMERICAN CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union parlor.
CARLILLON RECITAL by Albert Gerek will begin at 7 p.m. WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
International Room of the Union A
Union Hall, 75 West 42nd Street,
Michael Kimber, viola, at 8 p.m. in Swar-
ward recital Hall of Murphy Hall. SIERRA
CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. on the second
day.
BASKETBALL OFFICIALS in the city league will meet at 7 p.m. in the Community Building for an organizational meeting.
TOMORROW: GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 4865 Westapen, Australia.
GENERAL ROOM of the Union, AUHR GENERAL ROOM of the Union, AUHR GENERAL ROOM of the Union, AUHR
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
SOME OF THE SMARTEST YOUNG EXECUTIVES DON'T WORK FOR BUSINESS.
They get responsibility faster in the Navy. An ensign, less than a year out of college may run a division of thirty men, a lieutenant (j.g.) a department of fifty or more. By the time he makes full lieutenant - age 24 or 25 - an officer can have more managerial experience than most civilians do at thirty.
The Navy has officer programs in Aviation and Nuclear Propulsion, Supply, Law, Medicine and many others. If you'd like to know more about them, speak to your local recruiter or send your resume to:
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
913-841-4376
NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB,IT'S AN ADVENTURE
SENIORS
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Senior Pictures have been extended until Oct.26
Call the Jayhawker Yearbook for your appointment.
864-3728
Only $1 sitting fee
Only $1 sitting fee
The KU Student Senate will vote on supplementary funding for 25 student organizations at its meeting at 6:30 tonight in the Bie Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Senate to earmark extra funding
Fourteen of the organizations are being funded by the Senate, but the remaining groups have not been funded for the 1980 [year] data.
After deliberations on the requests during fall supplementary budget hearings last week, the Senate Budget Committee unbudded allocations totaling $191.84M.
According to Matt Davis, committee chairman, about $5,000 was available for the student Senate, and half of the Student Senate allocated fund, he said, from which supplementary funding came.
The Senate also will consider a resolution supporting the sale of season tickets to KU sports events to Haskell Junior College students at KU student prices.
Scott Schmalberg, sports committee representative to Stadex, said yesterday that Haskell representatives had asked to fill in season football tickets this at student press.
THE RESOLUTION probably will be amended on the Senate floor to clarify what year the sales would go into effect and which sports events would be included, he said.
Some of the student organizations whose original budget requests were cut by the budget committee said they would appeal to the Senate tonight for more money.
Mike Pepen, student director for the Kansas Defender Project, said he thought the Senate would approve before the Senate. The Kansas Defender Project's request for $1,750 was completely approved.
Committee members decided not to fund the organization because it served a limited number of KU students and members were receiving credit for their work. In addition,
LAST SPRING, Pepon said, the organization's request also was completely cut by the budget committee, but it was funded $2,000 when it appeared before the Senate.
a rider on the organization's request last year stated that it should seek funding from other sources.
"Although we were successful last year, I don't know about this year," he said.
Janet Justus, second-year law student and a representative to Women in Law, said her organization probably would appeal its cut from $50.20 to nothing. The organization did not appear at budget hearing, but Justus said she had not been contacted.
THE CUT IN budget came primarily because of other sources of funding that could cover the club's expenses, committee members said.
The following allocations for student organizations were recommended by the
budget committee; Operation Friendship,
$322; Alpha Phi Omega, $255; Architecture
and Urban Design Student Council, $0;
Association of Students Interested in Asian
Studies; $106; Friends of Headquarters,
$46; University of Michigan, Masters of
Public Administration Graduate
Students, $0; KU Karate Club, $100; and
TaW Kwn Club, $128).
Speech Communications and Human Sciences, $130; Physiology and Biology Cell Biology Graduate Students, $130; Consumer Affairs Association, $4,850; KU Concert and Performing Arts Counting Club, $290.80; Microbiology Society, $180.45; Women's Field Hockey, $27.58; Organization of Black and Minority Athletes, $19.60; KU Falk Dance Club, $30.49; Native American Alliance, $704; Chancyce Club, $220; KU Weather Service, $20.24; or SCMBME,
AAUP opposes tenure proposal
Bv KATE POUND
The amendment, proposed by the Regents Council of Chief Academic Officers, concerns the requirements for teaching experience in other institutions. It is opposed by the AUP, "Sainthai said,
Staff Reporter
Members of the state association of American University Professors will try to stop a proposed amendment to the Board of Regents tenure policy, before the amendment reaches the Regents, P. Srinivasan, and the KU AAUP chapter, said yesterday.
Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, is the KU representative to COCAO.
Credit is given to new faculty members for teaching experience in other institutions and is counted as part of the seven-year probation period for faculty members. At the end of the seven-year period, faculty members may be released. Faculty members with more than three years experience at other institutions may be given a probation period.
period of no more than four years under the old tenure policy.
The amendment, however, states that in exceptional cases institutions may give faculty members with previous experience up to seven years of probation.
"The amendment does not list the exceptional cases," Srinivasan said. "It is too vague and undermines the效力 of tenure."
A November 1788 AUAP report recommen-
died in any KU Regents' tenure Srinivasan said. The exceptions are prior deposition of office from the faculty members KU positional service at an institution that is not considered comparable to the University of
The AAUP, with the Faculty executive committee, has planned to meet with members of COCAO to ask that the ex-commissioner be added to the amendment. Sinervasan said.
"I'm sure this was an oversight. The COCAO members must not realize the vagueness of the amendment," Sinvassan
You can help increase the safety of our campus. The Campus Safety Service needs men and women volunteers to provide escort teams for those people on campus who request them. For more information see the ad in the Notice column of the classified ad section and call KU-INFO, 864-3506.
SUA films
rare comedy films
VIRGINIA MAYBACH
TOM PARKER
with film historian bob deflores
PETER KENNEDY
bob hope, bing crosby,
betty grable, harpo marx,
frank sinatra
in "all star band rally" (1944)
george burns, bob hope in "the jack benny show" (1954)
groucho marx in "tell it to groucho"
bing crosby in a mack sennet short
thursday, october 18 7:30pm
forum room $100
sponsored by SUA films, african studies, KANU4m, and radio-tv-film
said. "We just want to correct it before it goes all the way to the Regents."
Christofferson said yesterday that he had not met with the AAUP, but that he was familiar with the AAUP resolution.
The amendment will go to the Council of Presidents, which comprises the executive officers of all of the Regents schools. If the president of the school, the council, it will go to the Regents, Srivenan said.
"It is a very straightforward amendment," Christoffersen said, "and I'm sure it will be discussed further."
He said, however, that the COCAO amendment was a "step in the right direction" toward clarifying the tenure
policy and serving the best interests of faculty members.
Strivamus also said that some sort of amendment concerning exceptions to the prior service credit policy was needed. By offering specific exceptions, he said, faculty members who needed the full seven-year probation period to earn tenure would benefit. However, he said, the possibility of an extension period could not be arbitrarily by the administration.
"We would like a relaxation of the probation period policy, but he COCAO amendment is a sweeping relaxation that requires the unlimitted probation," Srivnasan said.
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10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 17, 1979
Field hockey squad fires past Emporia
By PAM CLARK
Sports Writer
An aggressive KU field team team used a tough defense and first-half goals for a pair of 14 victories over Emporia State University, yearday at Holcom Sports Complex.
the games raised KU's record to 3-7. All of the team's victories came against Emporia.
In the first game, KU's offense put pressure on the Hornets early. After several scrambles in front of the goal and about a
-KANSAN·
Sports
half dozen corner shots, Nancy Kelly scored for KU.
Twice Emporia missed open-goal shots that would have tied the game. KU goaltender Layne Meyerhold made three good saves to win against attacks, one in a three-on-one situation.
"Lynne did a good job," said KU Coach Diana Beauregard of Meyerskard's three-on-one defensive play. "She gained control and made out and that started our offense again."
Meyerkord said that she was playing with much more confidence and that KU was playing better as a team.
"We played a bait of a lot better," she said. "The defense was there when I needed it. The fultucks need to when to stay out of trouble when they are, they're just trying to help."
Emperia must one last frantic offensive surge with about four minutes left in the game, but the KU defense held and Meyerkodd didn't even have to make a save.
Senior co-captain Beth Easter said she wasn't worried about Emporia scoring to the game.
"Their people were covered and our players played their positions well," she said, "it felt like field hockey."
In the second game, Beebe put in five
thrills and a 12-0 victory over the
content. The results were the same, as Eleni
Jasket scored KU's lone goal midway
through the first half and the defense took
At one point Meyerkord had three players down on the ground in the goal, but the ball never got through.
Again Emporia made a mad rush for a goal with only two minutes remaining, only to come unempty-handed.
"We played excellent," said Beeber. "There were some shabby spots, and we had some opportunities to score more goals, but we didn't. We had no advantage to advance to get the ball, as opposed to standing there and waiting for it, and as soon as we lost it, someone else was there to come."
The KU coach was particularly pleased with the forward line, but said one could it take anything away from the back line because it kept feeding the ball up to the
KU travels to Emporia this weekend to play the Hornets again and South Dakota.
Chiefs' Fuller loses starting job
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — The Kansas City preemptive yesterday in announcing that the veteran Mike Livington would return to the starting line at quartar-back Sunday after being injured.
Fuller, one of Kansas City's two first-round draft picks last June, took over for Livingston on the third weekend of the season and engineered three victories in five games, beating the likes of Oakland, Seattle and Cincinnati on consecutive
had several weeks to sit on the bench and regroup."
But Feller was unable to move the Kansas city offense Sunday in suing to the Denver office of a contractor for the yards, with 69 of those and Kansas City's only touchdown coming in its final quarter.
"Steve played for five weeks, got some good experience and did some good things," Kansas City Coach Marse Levy said. "But he also missed a lot of time. We got to change the tempo, Mike
Livingston guided Kansas City to a 140-play win against Baltimore but won in favor of Filler in the third quarter against Cleveland the following week with the Chiefs at first and directed four of the Chiefs战后 the final minutes of that game as the Chiefs fell, 27-42.
Fuller made his first start the following week, but Kansas City dropped a 20-decision to Houston. The first-year quarterback from Clermont then secured victories of 35- over Oakland, 44- over Seattle and 60- over Cincinnati before the loss to Denver.
"We better off at quarterback now than we've been in a long time," said Levy. "We've now got a good, young guy with experience and a great future ahead of him. We he's been there now. He can study things differently in a different perspective from the sidelines."
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Refs combat abuse for respect
The Crazy Corro buncher leaps up off the ground, dirty from an illegal chck from The Boxley defender. Flushed, the girl stalks up to the defender, finger pointed
By DAVID BURNS Sports Writer
**sort of forthin, a girl!** *satinbless*
The defender. a tall girl, struggs her shoulders in disbelief and looks to her buddies
*for comfort*
reasons. "Don't do that again!" she shouts.
Standing away from the action is a new referee, Tonya Boone, Leavenworth junior, who is officiating in her first game. The two other refs, David Bellong, Albuquerque, N.M., junior, and Kevin Kelly, Overland Park junior, step in to separate the two players.
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"I did not!" the Blocketties player yells, still contesting the 15-yard penalty for unnecessary roughness, but Kelly ignores her and walks on the yardage.
"Hev man, I only touched you—geez," she replies.
During the dispute, Boone studies the other referees intently. She knows that maybe one week, when the competition gets especially fierce, she may be called upon to take on the challenge.
"You don't usually see the girls fighting in these recreational games," the lineman, Brian Allan, Pittsburgh senior says. "They're pretty mellow."
Allai is a veteran referee, but he is working the down markers to let Boone get some same experience.
As a new official, Boone is assigned the relatively easy task of watching the offensive backfield. Armed with a whistle and flag, she stands behind the offense and tries to avoid double reverses or a wide sweep. With one exception, she's been successful. Every once and a while, she whistles, but that 's all she intends to do is throw any flags.
game experience.
The game resumes with the Crazy Combo a little closer to the end zone.
He's thrown at least 12 flags and will likely throw a lot more before this game is over.
I never threw anything yet, "she said during the half. 'Maybe I will later.'"
"Officating isn't all that difficult," he said. "The women's games are easy to handle, but it can get very rough on Sundays."
"She's doing fine as far as blowing the whistle is concerned," Kelly said during the ball.
"Yeah, that's right," Belling said. "No one really likes at you very much in these games. The women are nice and calm. It's just on Sundays, when you have the Ato benefit the United Fund
Said Alain, "It's very important that you maintain control in the Sunday games. If you're going to do your job right, you've got to let them know that you're not going."
Ron Richardson, recreational assistant, spends up to $5,000 each season on referee salaries. It is his business to attract as many students as possible into his program. His desk, in a cluttered office in Robinson, is covered with game schedules, team rosters and a plastic cup, which is half full of used chewing tobacco.
"We want our officials to come back for more," he said. "We want them to enjoy what they're doing and not have any bad experiences."
In his second year with Recreational Services, Richardson has sharply lowered the turnover rate among officials, which is currently 50 percent.
He said that because referees were faring much better, more people had answered the call, especially women. There are five women officials, two veterans and three
"The officials aren't taking as much static anymore," he said. "We tell them that if there's a lot of trouble in a particular game, to stop the game, get a supervisor out there, get the two captains and we'll go over with them exactly what our program is all about. Refereeing can be a lot of fun if our people don't catch too much
That's one figure he said he enjoyed very much.
"Eileen Markey is probably one of the best officials we've got," he said. "She's on par with at least 70 percent of our men officials."
Markey, a St. Louis junior, takes little flack from anyone else she dons her zebra stripes, whistle and flag. If there are any problems, she said, they come mostly from managers and players who like to complain to the refs, yet don't know much about the rules themselves.
"The main thing they tell us is that we make the calls to the way we see them," she said. "If someone gives us trouble, we're not to listen to them. If you try to explain anything to these people, especially the managers, they'll come back at you with their own versions of the rules.
"After the call 'be made,' there isn't too much that can be done about it. No one's going to overrule a call unless it's an obvious mistake."
The last serious injury was to a woman football player. She suffered a concussion after going up for a high, hanging pass.
Like most officials, Markey said, she didn't want to mix referee work with school work.
Flaa football
体能训练
Kevin Kelley, Playland Park junior, throw his flag after an infraction in one of the games he worked yesterday. Intramural referees receive the hourly minimum of 10 minutes for each violation.
"About this time last year we had a lot of broken bones and bones." Richardson said. "We've only had 10 serious injuries so far, so you can see we're doing much better."
"I'm having fun," she said. "I just needed some extra money, an extra job, and I like watching the games, especially on Sundays. You see some real good games for kids."
"Our game is a passing game." Richardson said. "With the overall improved skill of our players, that ball is going to spend a lot of time in the air—especially in the women's games. They're getting better as far as passing is concerned, but they still don't have the same ability as a crowd. There's little our people can do to protect the players in that situation."
"I haven't had any trouble or bad experiences yet, so I plan on coming back for more next season."
Richardson said he'd need all the experienced rebels he could have, with voletry coming soon and the new football rules in effect. So far those new rules have cut down the number of defenders in the squad.
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842-8822
3) Correspondence and negotiation in an effort to settle cases short of litigation.
4) Incorporation of bonafide non-profit student organizations.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
Paraphernalia
842-3059 15 W. 9th St
843-8022
ii.
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1) Notice and conditions on any legal documents
2) Preparation, drafting and review of contracts, leases and other legal documents
Student Legal Services are Available ..
1] Advice and consultation on any legal matter.
Fraternity
4) Incorporation of bonafid
5] Documents notarized.
Sunday, October 21.
Sorority
Lawrence, Kansas
843-2655
212 Carruth-O'Leary
10,000 meter run
pnone for appointment 864-5665
entry fee $5/$6 day of the race
includes tuition and related fund
entry fee $5/$6 day of the race
Wednesday Night Walk-In
Cell for information
Student Senate Offices Student Union 105B (3rd Floor) Time 7:30-9:30 pm
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
and a Jayhawk Jog T-shirt
includes donation to united fund
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Wednesday, October 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
11
Women netters beat WSU; men drop exhibition match
The KU women's tennis team beat Wichita State University 8-1 yesterday for the second time this season, but the men lost an exhibition match with the Shockers 3-6
in an MacBook Pro, and Marcie Erys was the only KU woman to lose, failing to Jan Louderback 3-6, 7-6, 3-4 in 3 singles.
Corsey Nason, playing in her first match this season, beat WSU's Drummish Smith in 0.5 singles 6.2-6.4. Nason filled in for Lissa Leonard, who had the flu.
Nason and Esry teamed to win No. 3 doubles B-2,5-7,6-4.
Val Block dropped only one game in taking care of Greta Siemens 6-1, 6-4 in No. 1 simules.
Mary Slatier beat Cindy Pauls 6-4, 6-4 in
No. 2 and Maureen Guillain whipped Jodi
Bbutterburgh 6-4, 6-1 in No. 4 action. Shari
Hobbs scored the winning 5-3, 5-3. Angles of
the KD lilies team won.
The men played with their strongest lineup for the first time this season, but it wasn't enough to feed off the Shockers.
David Thies beat the nation's 128-handed college player, Mark McMahon, in No. 1 singles: 6-2, 7-4, 7-1. The other Jaywhawes who Rustie Kortz at No. 3 singles and Burkert at No. 6.
Even though the 'Hawks won only three matches, Coach Tom Kivisto said the men played well.
"We last some close matches," he said. "Wichita State had some line-up changes and were not playing in the positions they came up with, but we played them since they were the NCAA representatives from Region 5 last year, but they haven't been there when we play them again in two weeks."
The KU volleyball team will be home tonight to face the Ravens of Benedictine College at 6:30 in Robinson south gymnasium.
Coach Bob Lockwood said Diane Schreeder, setter, would miss the game and the rest of the season because of an ankle injury.
KU was virtually eliminated from regional tournament and the team has now lost most of its last games. To qualify for the regional tournament, the Hawks will have to almost shut down the playoffs.
BALTIMORE (AP)—Dave Parker and Willie Stargell, the power part of Pittsburgh's lineup, dive in a pair of seventh-innings runs to ignite the Pirates attack at Pittsburgh tied for the treasure by defeating Baltimore 4 in last night's sixth game.
Wichita State comes to KU next Wednesday. The Jahyhaws then travel to Stillwater, Oka. for the Big Eight Tournament Oct. 26-27.
Pirates win second straight 4-0, send series to Game Seven
It was the second straight victory for the Pirates and forced the series to a decisive sevent game tonight. Scott McGregor, the winner in Game Three, will pitch for the Baltimore Orioles—possibly after he, who started Game Four for Pittsburgh.
Left-hander John Candelaire and bulleen are Kent Tekville combined for the seven-hit shutout — the first of the Series — at Pittsburgh its chance to become the fourth team to receive from a 3-1 game deficit and in a best-of-seven Series victory.
Since the eighth inning of Game Four, the Orioles have fallen into a slump, managing just one run in 18 innings. Their best game was against the Twins, Jim Palmer, who pitched a creditable
Candelaire, who has been troubled by back and rib case injuries, was taken out for surgery in the seventh as well as the Pirates to get something going against Palmer. But
game, matching Candelaria's shutout through the first six innings.
Speedy Omar Moro, criticized for his poor hitting in earlier games, drilled the second of his three singles of the night to Tirun Nair and then to Tim Firoh bounced a ball up the middle. Orioles稳持 Kiko García tried to field the ball and keep his foot on the base for the force play on Moreno. But he succumbed. He hit the ball squared through for a single.
That set the Pirates' table, with big guns Parker and Starkell come up. In the first inning, Palmer had escaped a similar jam by hitting an eighth. This time, however he didn't eat it.
Parker, who carried a 429 Series batting average into this game drilled a single past second baseman Rich Dauer, scoring Moreno with the game's first run and
Finally in front, Pittsburgh went to the ace of its bullpen, the lanky, bespectacled Tekuke. He moved the Otrioles down easily, allowing one hit the final three.
sending Foli scrambling to third. A moment later, Stargell got the second run home with a sacrifice fly to left field.
The Pirates doubled their lead in the edg. Ed OT opened with a single and dashed to third on Phil Garner's ground that bounced into the left field stands.
Bill Robinson, who had come into the game in a defensive shift in the seventh, was able to stay with him and then Moreno, who had left 11 men on base in the first two games of the Series.
The Pirates came out swinging against Palmer from the start. More bounced on a gloved hand was the pitch, and Foli doubled the glove of third baseman DeG DuCinces on the next
Parker hit Palmer's third pitch down the third base line, with DeCinces making a
sharp backhand stop to throw the batter at the runners behind them. Then, Stargel also went after the first pitch, popping out, and scoring the touchdown to take a pitch and finally bound out.
In the fourth, Palmer's wildness got him in trouble. With one out, Milner and Madlock drew consecutive walks.
Baltimore has its best shot at Canalaria in the first when Garcia opened with a single and moved to second on a three-point line. The Murray hit into a killer-kill double pla
what looked like a double pen, but Madick's rolling block slide at backstop would get him the runner up to reach first. With men on first and third and two out, Pittsburgh highest
With Candela on deck, Patmer solved his problem by hitting Garner with a pitch, loading the bases. Then he struck out Candela on three pitches.
Candelaria and Palmer dued on even terms into the seventh, and then the Pirates bats woke up and produced the first of the runs Pittsburgh needed.
The University Daily
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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 or simply by calling the UMN business office at 841348
Every Sunday
also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
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Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. tf
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also sold, roasted and raw pulses in the oven. Two well-baked pies, honey, powder, and sorghum. Every Sunday.
Watch for truck packed at 9th & Indiana. Home
warehouse. Desserts sold in stand-alone bed-dish-wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, rice,
every Sunday. Cornbread, corn cakes, hard Abendtong, etc.
A
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WED., OCT. 17.
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208 ROBINSON
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PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% nationally
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Jayhawk room, student union. For information
phone 842-7010. 10-22
Need help with compost! Communication Resource Center staff answerer. Free evening course: Topic "Writing the term paper." Week of June 18, 10am to summerfield to all students. 10-17
"Christmas in October": BAZAAR B.L.D.S.
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10-23 Lennon 5 older house ad. New, 1婴器 $E5
Lennon 5 older house ad. New, 1婴器 $E5
3 bdrm. house, close to KU bus line. No pets.
1 bedroom, couple or couple $34/month. 670/events,
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FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure to check out the "Special Instructor's Guide" as a Study guide. 2 for Class preparation. 3 for Workshop experience. 4 for Western Civilization® now available at Town Center, Mall Bookstore & Great Books Store.
WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98, 3 year guarant-
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Alternator, starter and generator specs
Alternator, starter and generator motive
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-7690, 3900 W, 6th tph
Best energy costs this winter. If you buy this car, your annual fuel cost will be $293. Daniel wood stove to his 18 month-old house. You would pay a great deal for this kind of furniture. But you have to pay about $400 at an air conditioner built in 1200. This is a huge expense and can take up a large amount and high energy costs. Contact Marie Lynch at 643-2322. Zachary C. Newborn at 643-2322.
1979-1980 use cars—please let me be your guide when purchasing a used car. Call and find out why so many KU students buy used cars from Booth Smith-Landmark Ford 443-2560. - 19-19
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Puch Mopeds. Rick's Bike Shop, 1035 Vermont. 841-6642. TF
1971 Impala, 2 dr. HTR full power, AC, good condition, very dependable. 542-3475. 10-17
Two rooms of sculptured green carpeting and
applippers. Approximately $10 x 10$ and $9 x 12$;
$12.50 each. Wool laid jacket, size 5, worn only
6 times, $30.00$, 842-6697. 10-18
Large green Alpine ski jacket. Goose down
length. Fits like a dress for Mary. M
measure. I call back. 10-17
Grounding Ditaphene, gran (gran) saline, samp purpurea; *Ditaphene* encyclopedia of railroad beds. Rink, at 411-8422.
For sale, United % fare coupon. Best offer. Call
Rh42, 864-0500 evenings.
10-19
PUCH sport moped. NTS miles, perfect condition
fully equipped. P.V., KS. (913) 649-0177. 10-18
1971 Pinto, appalled. 67,200 miles Must sell, price
appallable. Call Keith. 843-5073. 10-19
1977 Cutlass 442. Loaded. Call Greg 943-6244.
10.17
9 week old 4 Ferrets, make adorable pets. Call
843-4843 after 6 p.m.
10-23
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Call: 825.8378. 10-18
One way United air tickets to Pittsburgh, PA. Good
until 12/15 855 each or B.O. B64-6005. 10-19
Exhibition and sale of Polite Art-Satellite Union-Monday and Tuesday, front of main union all week 11 a.m.-2 p.m., posters, cut-ups, tapestries.
1971odgeMonaco four-door, fully equipped Supercar. See to apprecite.
Some models have optional New model delivery receive if one goes off-special at 495 Ray Rockshorn 929 Man Open 10:23
For Sale - 69 Ford XL, 2 door hardtop. P5, PB.
(price or eventing)
Michelin Tire Sale! 20, 25, and 30% discount at Ray Stoneback's downtown. The appliance store with discount tire dept. 10-30
FOUND
Set of keys found on stairs west of Maleon Hall, claim them at Hoch Aud 10-17 Small gray pouchie, male, between Indiana and Mississippi streets on 8th St. 843-655-0483
Identification cards found around Ridge Court apartments. Contact Traffic and Security. 10-19 Found gold bracelet near chaneler's residence. Call 841-8542 to identify. 10-19
HELP WANTED
MEN* WOMEN* JOBS! CRUSISHERS! SALIING EXPEDITIONS! Good experience! God付货!
OR APPLICATION INFO JOBS! to: CRUSHEW
WORLD 135, Box 60229, Sacramento, CA 95000.
Box 60229, Sacramento, CA 95000.
OVERSEAS JDSS-JUMP季年 round. Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields.
Annually, expounds paid Sightseeing.ree
JC, JC Box 25-34, KA Canada.
CA 92652. DAY 10-29
Need extra money? Sign up for babysitting! Call
484-3602 or the Student Engagement
484-3606, or the Student Engagement
484-3470. Your name will be given to
a babysitter. You will receive a
15-minute break. 10-17
Wanted—auto parts company counterperson, full or part-time experience. Possible. Come to 10-12
315 W. 49th St.
Pizza Hut
As one of America's leaders in the restaurant industry, we've always wanted people to be among our most important assets: the people who work with us and the people we serve. So, if you've been looking for a full or part-time position with flexible hours where your attitude, ability, and personality are more important than your experience, apply at any of the three Lawrence Pizza Hut entrances.
804 Iowa
934 Massachusetts
1606 W. 23rd
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place,
Fairbanks, AK. Child research available in $350 million each month. Experiential work with adolescent youth preferred. Own work with adolescent youth preferred. Own work required. Work required. Excellent experience and work required. Child Research is an equal opportunity department. Contact Marty Jalil at Achievement Place, Fairbanks, AK.
WANTED—students for part-time roles in Life
Immigration and Citizenship Program
to learn you with our internship Program
Interviewing Oct 29, 1979 at the Placement Cen-
tral, Inc. (543-780-8610), Lawrence, Massachusetts.
Cit. Agent Interview #183-1533, Lawrence, Massachusetts.
Language Preschool Proximal Bureau of Child Development collection and analysis. Must have bachelor's degree in education or post-graduate research and pre-derived job data. Affirmative action offered. Applicant should be 18 to 24 years old. Louisiana. Admission deadline Oct. 31. An Equal Opportunity, Affirmation Act action is available for applicants with disability regardless of race, religion, sex, disability status, or other protected category.
Dishwairer for sorority house. $15 per week and
meals. Call 413-6650. 10-17
Gahrelkis has a few immediate opportunities for wait-times, such as being in supply in person, carpooling, 249 days of holiday support and
LOST
MISCELLANEOUS
10 week old male puppy. Solid black. Brown sea
collar. Needs medication. Please call 842-3501.
Very attached. 10-19
Lost sick, black and white cat with spot on skin. Please call Scott at 841-3512. 10-23
THEIS BINDING COPYING—The House of Uber's Quick Copy center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 858-Mine or phone 426-310. This is Uber's office.
NOTICE
Reward for return or information leading to return of '19 color TV stolen 18-78 from Gallery House apartment. 842-6521, after 3:40 p.m. 10-17 p.m.
EMERGENCY FOSTER PARENTS - If your family wishes to volunteer at a Nationwide Children's Service League you will be invited to call 612-530-3400, State license and training required. State license and training required.
100
The entry deadline for the Intramural Track Meet is Wednesday, Oct. 17th at 5:00 p.m.
The entry deadline for the Immunary Swimming Relays is Monday, Oct. 22 at 5 p.m.
More information
208 Robinson
884-3546
9R
THE CAMPUS SAFETY SERVICE is being organized to provide safety training for the groups, and the KU police department. The CSB request them Excelr will work in teams of one or more volunteers. Volunteers need to be trained to volunteer are needed for需救队. If you are volunteering, please call KU-fire, mail KU-camill, call KU-info, 844-3260 for more information. Please contact us at ku@campus.edu Oct 19 - Nov 18
Papery due soon? Will provide personalized bibli-
ographies on your topic in social sciences or
humanities. HAVE M.A., MLS. CALL 842-302-15.
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. If
FOX HILL SURGEY CLINIC--honors up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment, Birth Control, Counseling, Tubal Ligation. For appointment call (800) 460-1400. 491 St. Island. Overst. Park, KS.
If you looking for a car with a奢华 beech wood interior, don't miss the Harbour Lakes. If you're a young people you'll like. The Harbour Lakes offer day and friday afternoons for TGIF New servise to the Harbour. Get your skin together at
JOBS ON SHIPPING: American, Foreign. No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Summer job or career. Send $250 for informa-
tion. Mail resume to: HR@washington.edu. 16-17 Washington. 98362.
GAY CUNSELING REFERALS Through Head-
masters Mt.3245 and KU info. 8642-8066 IF
use of www.gaycunseling.org
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid—645-544-2881
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not.
Check Campus Vets. 118 B Union. 864-
4478.
if
Advance tickets for the movie JESUS available
10-18
PSYCHIC AWARNESS AND HEALING CLASS.
Call now for late enrollment. Eve Leseman
842-7842
10-17
Call John 843-4004.
10-18
Mark, if I knew your last name I could properly mark for the wine and rose. Call Me. Janet,
Susan.
Is there life after acid??
The San Louis Opisbo Tar Creatures
8,400 people can't be wrong!!!!! 10-19
PSYCHIC CHEMICAL READINGS. $23.95
*
Light housekeeping, cleaning, 3 or 4 hours weekly.
Must provide own transportation. 842-607-007
86 Hubbard station wagon 4-door, new battery,
heater runs, wall Call: Jeff 644-905-108 (8-10)-
V-W Rabbit: 76-56,000 miles with 2—wheelies.
10-30
Pioneer SX242 Stereo Receiver $100, Ultralline
Speakerkrs 15, Call. Feff. 841-2381. 10-20
10 appointment secretaries for Ieal National Portrait,
Studia, morning and evening shift. $2.00 plus bonus. Apply in person, Westminster Inn,
252 W. bickhill, 987 Pte. 10-19
This letter is personal as it can be. Since every form of slavery, of any kind or another, free-attained and retained by intelligent people of individual personality. These people are Martin Luther King Jr., who would vote without paying a fee, and I would vote with had the right to be called this year when the Klu Klux Klan was refiled in March in a city in the country so constituted to have the college education some people think they must have. In fact, in May, of course, but not before, he knelt for many people for whom he called the colonists. Some I have not personally也 write this letter, but I now realize it was including the fact that it is very personal. Floyd K. is claiming the fact that it is very personal. Floyd
Substitute teachers for Baseer-Linwood USD-
408. Contact Board of Education Office
754-1296 10-20
Come Play in the Hay BREW-HA-HA Tonight.
10-17
For Rest, newly remodeled two bedroom apartment, 315 east 19th. 19th $175 plus deposit. Graduate students preferred. Call 843-5729 10-18
WHOOPEE!" Another great drinkin' darin' Brindiband Bash. Oct. 16 ("In" people call former "Coach" for details). 10-17
Archie—The Art & Design building needs a new
name, how'd you lambehakes Hall? 10-19
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every new occasion. Anniversary, 11-6
841-515-1280 11-6
www.astasinging.com
Sam. Happy. Hope it it's fine "n" dandy because you're awfully broial. Bro! Love. 10,75
Free lecture on Christian Science by "The Conce-
niousness of the Healing Christ," by John A. Grant. In First Church of Christ, Scientist, 1701 Massachusetts, Monday, October 22, at 8:00 a.m.
Gold women's ID. bracelet with gold heart charm. The name Jena on front. Love From Scott on back. Reward. Call 841-1426. 10-20
'THE BLACK CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCE' a lecture by Edward L. Wheeler, Atlanta, Georgia. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union Blit 8.10.
Come to the all new MAD HATTER Happy Hour
m. a.m. Monday the first Open. 7 p.m.
10:31
Friday's Free, the zoo is closed. In the
Animals are gone but me. So with a little wine
& cheese, a few hrs, of TV maybe you can
measure this bear. How about it? Baby! 10-17
Sigma Nu and the Wheel present the 1979 Daly Mar. Look-Alike Conference, KU's only campuswide beauty contest. Oct. 20 at the Sigma Nu House, 1:30 pm. free beer!
Don't miss!!" 1792 Daisy Mae Look-Alike Conference Sat. Oct. 20 at the Stigma House 1:30 n.m. Free beer, Fun & games! Sponsored by Sigma Nu and the Wheel. 10-1
SERVICES OFFERED
SERVICES OFFERED
The Bike Gauge-complete professional bicycle
Gauge that measures your bike's
Overfelt* during call 841-2781. 10-22
IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $1.00 for your 30-course catalog of college research, 10,250 lbs. lower (20297C, Los Angeles, CA), 92015 (213) 477-8328.
www.careers.hawaii.edu
PRINTING WHY YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Cup Center Alice is available from A to 5 M on Friday to 9 AM, 1 to 4 PM on Saturday at 894 Mass.
Mating and framing done—call after 4:30 Mon-
Fri, or anytime weekends 842-6875. 10-19
BUYING LIFE, INSURANCE! Check our rates and values first. Call 842-7049, Daya 842-7049, 842-7049, 11-9
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980 TF
Typert, Editor, IBM Pica Elite
work, reorganize rates, Threes, distractions welcome
editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127
TP
Experienced typist—Quality work; reasonable
rates. Call Beverly at 813-5210. TF
Journalism typographer. 20 years typing,typing-
setting experience. 4 years academic typing,
themes, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest
Electronic equipment. 842-4848. TPA
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-8654, after 4 p.m. 10-28
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-353-1267. If
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct Selective Call
Ern or Jeannn. 841-2722. 11-5
Experienced Typist—term papers, thesis, minc.
electric IBM Selectric. Proofreading spelling
corrected 845-954 Mrs. Wright. 79
Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers. misc. IBM correcting selective. Barch 841-3138; evenings 842-2310.
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate service, low rates. 843-3653 evenings and weekends. 10-23
I do darned good typing. Papers under 50 p.
only. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6438, 85c per
page. 10-17
Quality typing at competitive prices—no jobs too big or small. 842-2756. 10:23
PSYCHIATIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICE
PACIFIC CHAPEL HEALTH SERVICES
Peoria, Illinois 62465 Job Center: Service
215 W. 6th, Topeka, KS Phone: (913) 580-3580
Made encouraged to apply. An equal opportunity
employment.
Houssmate WANTED to share large house, $115
utilities paid, non-smoker preferred, no pets,
183-289 10-17
Want to buy Bass amp. 841-3581, evenings. 10-18
Looking for a third roommate to fill 3 bedrooms townhouse at Traitea Apg. $12 a month - utilities. Ask for Bed at 94-580-7634. Come on, get out of a lump and live in 10-18
Mature room需要 for very nice three b-droom, duplex, 15 min. walk from campus $100.month + ½ utilities. Call 841-3205 to 10 m.p.
People who have Executioner, Penetrator, Death Merchant, or Matt Helm books—call David 864-2833.
©
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansas Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to Flat White, 413-782-5000, below. figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DRELDINES
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Monday Friday 5 pm
Monday Saturday 5 pm
Wednesday Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday Saturday 5 pm
2
times on
02.25
.02
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
additional words
Write ad here:
Write ad here:
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
RATES:
15 words or lens
4 times
$2.75
.04
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch • $3.50
3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.03 .04 .05
DATES TO RUN:
5 times
83.00
.05
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
12
Wednesday, October 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
FOOTBALL
Two football players are in a dynamic action, one player is running with the ball and the other player is attempting to block him. The background consists of a dotted pattern that resembles a sunset or a cloudy sky.
DOMINO'S PIZZA
It's complete!
Nutritious and appetizing, a full meal you don't have to take time out to enjoy. Doomino's Pizza won't keep you waiting. Just call! Within minutes you'll be delivered to your door at no additional charge. So kick of a really great evening at home.,call Domino's Pizza.,we're # 1 in rushing!
Domino's Deluxe
Pepperoni, Mushrooms, Orfons,
Green Peppers, and Sausage,
as well as our special blend of
sauce and natural cheese.
Drink sauce is a special treat! You'll need two items for the price of four
Helpful hints on ordering your pizza
1. Know what you want before ordering (size of pizza, number,
what you want on it, any Coke?)
2. Know the phone number and address of the residence from which you are calling.
3. When placing an order, let us know if you have large denomination bills.
4. Remain by the phone after ordering. We may call back to confirm the order.
6. Have coupons and money with you when the driver arrives.
5. Turn on your porch light.
Menu
All prices include our special blend of cheese and sauce.
Our superb cheese pizza
12" small $3.40
16" large $5.10
Domino's Deluxe
Pomioia
mushrooms, mushrooms,
onions, green peppers,
and sausages
$14.90 Deluxe $6.20
16" x 14" Deluxe $9.30
Coke —free for the asking!
With any large pizza get up to 4 free cups. With any small pizza, get up to 2 free cups.
Stated prices do not include applicable state sales to the customer, the right to limit our delivery area.
Additional Items
pepperoni
mushrooms
onions
black olives
green olives
ground beef
green peppers
ham
sausage
double cheese
extra thick crust
anchovies
extra sauce - free
12" small $.70/item
16" large $1.05/item
Call us!
1445 W. 23rd St.
1445 W. 23rd St.
841-7900
4:00 PM - 1:00 AM Monday - Thursday
4:00 PM - 2:00 AM Friday
12:00 PM - 2:00 AM Saturday
12:00 PM - 1:00 AM Sunday
610 Florida
841-8002
4:00 PM • 1:00 AM Sunday • Thursday
4:00 PM • 2:00 AM Friday • Saturday
$2.00
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
$2.00 off a large deluxe pizza and 4 free Cokes!
One coupon per pizza. Expires: 10/31/79
Fast, free delivery 1445 W. 23rd St.
Telephone: 841-7900
610 Florida
Telephone: 841-8002
$1.00
DOMINO'S PIZZA
$1.00 off a small deluxe pizza and 2 free Cokes!
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 10/31/79
Fast, free delivery
1445 W. 23rd St.
Telephone: 841-7900
C235/6301
610 Florida Telephone: 841-8002
$.75
DOMINO'S PIZZA
$.75 off any pizza with extra thick crust!
One coupon per pizza
Expires: 10/31/79
Fast, free delivery
1445 W. 23rd St.
Telephone: 841-7900
610 Florida Telephone: 841-8002
$
$1.00
DOMINO'S PIZZA
$1.00 off any large pizza
with 2 items or more
and 4 free Cokes!
One coupon per pizza. Expires: 10/31/79
Fast, free delivery
1445 W. 23rd St.
Telephone: 841-7900
610 Florida Telephone: 841-8002
---
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 39
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
Pittsburgh wins World Series See story page six
Thursday, October 18, 1979
READING IN GAZEBO
BARB KINNEY/Kansas staff
Quiet time
studying yesterday in the gaebee north to the Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts st.
Paul Marshall, Kansas City, Mo., senior, spends spare time
Eight-plex restraint lifted
Staff Reporter
Bv ANN LANGENFELD
The restraining order was issued by Douglas County District Pro-Tem Judge Robert W. Fairchild when the homeowners Tuesday requested an injunction to be passed.
A temporary restraining order that late february halted construction of an eight-unit apartment building in a barbed-wire borehood was lifted at 10 a.m. yesterday when near-residents failed to raise a fire alarm.
A bearing to consider issuing a temporary injunction is set for 4 p.m. Friday in the Douglas County District Court.
The construction site is located in a section of the Oread neighborhood that was downzoned from multiple family to single-family housing light by the Lawrence City Commissioners.
Construction of the eight-plank began Monday morning, after Douglas County Police found a fire and issued a notice of a building permit late Friday to Mistletoo Master, owner of the property in the property.
The city staff had tried to delay issuing
the building permit until after Tuesday night's city commission However, King said, issuance of a building permit could not be required because an owner might change it.
AT THE COMMISSION meeting the commissioners declared a state of emergency and approved immediate implementation of the downzoning ordinance.
Under usual procedures the ordinance would not have been implemented for two to three weeks.
Frieda and Larry Caldwell, 917 Main St. were named as plaintiffs in the suit that brought against the property-struction. Frieda Caldwell said that neither she nor any other interested neighbors were liable.
She said they were disappointed that they had not been able to raise the bond because more construction could take place before Ender's hearing.
"We don't want to risk what little savings we have in what could be a long-drawn court battle," she said.
However, a part of the city zoning ordinance states that once a building permit has been issued it cannot be negated by a change in coming.
MAYOR BARKLE CLARK, a KU law professor, had said Kansas legal precedents indicated that a downsizing ordinance
At the city commission meeting, the commissioners authorized the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission to consider an amendment to eliminate the partion of the boring issue that produces noise from being needed by a zoning change.
wound negate the legality of a building permit if there had been no substantial construction on a building project.
The earliest an amendment would be ready for consideration by the city commissioners would be the first part of a new plan, a member of the city planning staff, said.
State law requires the planning commission to consider the amendment before the city commission can approve it.
KERMIT BEAL, Milstead's attorney,
said construction of the eight-plex had been
resumed and would continue.
Public records bill scrutinized
W. Davis Merritt, Jr., executive editor of the Wichita Heights and Beacon, predicted yesterday that a bill to open more public spaces in the city would be approved by a legislative committee tomorrow.
"At this time we do not see any other legal actions taking place," he said. "The building will be built."
Rv TONI WOOD
Staff Renorter
one committee has met this summer and fail to evaluate the public records law in Kansas. After conducting hearings with several newspaper editors, the committee drafted a bill that would make all public records available, except those closed by law.
Merritt is one of six persons scheduled to testify today before the interim Federal and State Affairs Committee.
Current state law makes public only those records that are required to be kept.
burden of proving in court why the records were not made available. It also states that if a case involving public records is to be tried, it will be heard before all other pen-
The proposed bill states that the "custodian" of the records would have the
MERRITT SAID yesterday, "I assume that the bill will get out of committee, because they've had it now all summer.
Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the committee, said, "I'm interested in finding the line between the business process and the nubra's rule to know."
"It's near final form now, but who knows what the I constitution will do with it."
the legislature to move it.
The bill has been changed four times, Merritt said, but the amendments have not been "substantial."
He said he was concerned with protecting legislators' opportunities to "brainstorm" and think proposals through before making them public.
"However, we don't want to move so far that legislation is 'fat acceptim' before the public knows about it." he said.
MEMEMS OF the committee will hear first from Robert Stephan, Kansas Attorney General. In a statement read to the com-munity, he said the court called the state law a "closed record law."
Donna McCoy, professor of history,
will represent the Kansas History Teachers
Association. He is concerned about open
records as they relate to research.
Others scheduled to tertiary are卡利 Monk, dean of the Washburn Law School; a spokesman for the League of Kansas Teachers; and a spokesman for the Department of Corrections.
Final action on the records legislation is expected to be taken by the committee tomorrow. If members approve the bill, it will be approved by the Association Committees of the 1800 Legislature.
Classified Senate granted rights but not recognition
By JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes announced yesterday that the University of Kansas administration would "acknowledge the existence" of the Classified Senate.
In a letter to Joseph T. Collins, interim chairman of the Dykes, the Dykes acknowledged would allow the Senate to use University rooms for its meetings if the meetings are
Dykes wrote, however, that the administration would not grant formal recognition to the Senate because of fears that the Senate could suddenly become a union.
"I must state for the record," Dykes wrote, "upon the advice of counsel, that I cannot formally recognize the Classified Senate. For if I were to do so, that body should be automatically as a collective bargaining unit for public employees under Kansas law."
DYKES SAID he realized that the Classified Senate had no plans to act as a union.
"But if those objectives should ever be achieved, the university would have waived its legal rights law to participate in any formal determinations about how much time to contain within the bargaining unit.
As I am sure you understand, to waive
such rights would compromise the Universal Declaration of Relationship you have described in your written communications regarding the establishment of
Mike Davis, University general counsel, said formal recognition would have eliminated the administration's voice on the issue and would be formed to represent employees.
"THERE ARE two ways a union can be formed in "KANSAS," Davis said. One "involves holding hearings with employer and employee representation on whether a certain group should be unimited. The final decision will be made by Public Education Relations Board.
"The other way involves an employer recognizing an employee group as a unit. The employer must be aware that in that employee unit to determine whether a union will be formed. The latter is the case."
By just acknowledging the Senate's existence, Davis said, Dykes avoided that situation.
"We understand that they don't want a union now," he said. "But attitudes can change down the road."
COLLINS SAID he would call Davis for more details on the legal significance of recognition.
"We might just ask whether Davis would
want to write an amendment to our senate code that would allow for recognition," she said. "But don't ever know if recognition will provide more benefit than we've received today."
Although formal recognition was withheld, Collins said, the Classified Senate is pleased by Dykes' assurances of administration cooperation.
The Student Senate already has granted recognition to the Classified Senate.
"The chancellor has given us the use of University facilities for our meetings." Collins wrote. "I will become a part of University governance if recognized by the Student and Faculty groups."
IN HIS LETTER, Dykes urged the Classified Senate to work for its objectives through the University administration in order to ensure that legislature or other government bodies.
Since the University of Kansas employs close to 20 percent of the total number of students, they are actively factively in behalf of all its employees than smaller groups can in behalf of them.
Dykes also said, however, that the administration could not accept recommendations concerning employment conditions of members of the Public Service Employee Union Local 112, which has represented about 600 UDI classified employees.
Senate allocates additional funds
Staff Reporter
Bv ELLEN IWAMOTO
The Kansas Defender Project's request of $1,750 was completely cut during budget hearings last week, but at last night's meeting the group raised the group $200 for supplies and expenses.
After lengthy debate on budget requests to the UKE Student Body, the BKU Student Body the UKE Student Senate last night passed one of two bills appropriating supplementary funds for the UKE Student Body.
Law students in the Kansas Defender Project travel to the Federal Penitentiary in Leavenworth and the Kansas State Prison in Lansing to counsel prisoners.
Matt Davis, chairman of the budget committee, defended cuts in the request to award class credit for their work, the project did not benefit all KU students, and also because a rider attached to the group's vehicle was requested that the group not return for funding.
"The idea is to help people who are paying the fees," he said.
Although the project does benefit some prisoners who are KU students, Davis said, the prisoners do not pay student activity fees.
STEVE CRAMER, Nunemaker senator,
said, "We should not put students' money toward a group which is strictly owned by whose membership is strictly limited."
Davis also said he thought the Defender Proofed was a beneficial program.
Speaking in favor of reinstating the
"We have $4,000, a fantastic amount of money," she said. "It should go to a worthwhile project."
"But we can't fund every program we
group's budget request, Claire McCurdy, Liberal Arts and Sciences scientist, said she was "all for fiscal responsibility," but said she thought the Senate was being "cheap."
think is beneficial." he said, "otherwise we'd run out of money."
Mike Pepco, a student director of the project, said the lack of funding would affect the number of students who could afford to join the project and also would affect its
states.
"It's confusing because we can't get an idea if we're legitimate or not," he said.
See SENATE back page
PARTY FILM STUDIO BROADWAY
Rex Gardner
Lack of financial support plagues KU's black sororities, fraternities
By BOB PITTMAN Staff Reporter
Lack of national funding and a shortage of alumni has hampered the growth of the black Greek system at the University of Kansas, Skip Helmstein said in an article published by the council and yesterdays.
"It is a matter of numbers," Holmes said. "Most of the students and fraternities have as much or larger membership as do the others on campus. We simply do not have as many of them."
Of the seven black fraternities and surely some of them are in Alabama, Alpha Psi Alpha, 104 Mississippi St. house. The other fraternities are Kappa Alpha Psi and Omega Psi Psi. Another is Phi Gamma Delta.
Black sororities include Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, Gamma Gamma Rho, and Zeta Phi Beta.
Holmes said there are about 80 undergraduates black reeks at KU.
U. Alonzo Wharton, president of Alpha Phi Alpha, agreed that funding was a problem for black grekets at KU.
"Financial support for black sororities and fraternities is a large problem," he remarked. "I rarely do you ever find a middle-aged person who is an alumni of a black sorority."
WHEN ALPHA Phi Alpha was established at KU in 1917 it was the first black fraternity west of the Mississippi River. Wharton said
Holmes said the lack of houses for black greets at KU was not unusual.
"Black schools get the greatest amount of money from our national organizations," he said.
He said housing for Greeks was common at black colleges, such as Howard University in Washington, D.C. Morgan, Jr., of Houston, taught at Hampton Institute, in Hampton Roads, Va.
the house used to be a gathering place for black greeks in the 190s, but that today black greeks have no real meeting place.
EMPORIA STATE University also has five black Greek institutionalbuses, but none of them have a house, according to Mike Dilmunen. The university is located at Emporia State University.
She said, however, that her sorority never had considered living together in a house.
Twila McFall, secretary of KU's Black Pan-Hellenic Council, said her sorrow, Sigma Gamma Rho, had always had trouble with finances.
"Our sorority is basically a service sorority," she said. "If we had a house, it would defeat our purpose."
Although Kansas State University has only black fraternities and secretes, only one fraternity, Kappa Alpha Pi, has a house, the Kappa Alpha Pi House, Thompson, KState Faculty affairs secretary.
"Pledging was quite expensive for us," she said. "We had to raise money for all of our expenses ourselves. There are no Sigma Gamma Rho alumni here at KU."
However, a second service sorter, Zeta Phi Beta, has been trying to obtain funding for a house, according to its president, Kimi J. Walker.
"Getting a house has been one of our major goals," she said. "We've had to work hard, but it’s a very good position for us being in a security here. We stand out."
WHARTON AGREED. "It is just as impressive for a black be to be in a fraternity or sorority up here as it is for a white be to be in one," he said.
Alpha Phi Alpha has an associate membership in the Interfaith Council, the only one of the three organized black fraternities to have such a tie.
"They participate in all of our activities except those that pertain to rush," Jim Bloom, IPC president said.
He said the fraternity could not have a full membership because it and the other 25 fraternities in the IFC had different national organizations.
No black sororites have memberships in the Panhellenic Association, an organization that includes representatives from 15 KU sororites.
In the spring bf 1978, Sigma Gamma Rho considered joining Panhellenic as an associate member, but finally decided against the move.
WALKER SAID her sorority, Zeta Phi Beta, was interested in joining Panhellenic as an associate member.
We went last semester to Panhellenic to See FRATERNITIES back page
2
Thursday, October 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wine Services
Judae rules on Taiwan treaty
WASHINGTON—A federal judge ruled yesterday that President Carter acted improperly in terminating the United States mutual defense treaty with Iran, the United States said.
C. INSIST JUDGE Oliver Gaskard ordered the Carter administration to take no action to terminate the 25-year-old treaty unless the administration received approval by two-thirds of the Senate or a majority of both the House and the Separat.
20 other members of Congress.
A Carter administration spokesman said the ruling would be appealed.
Gass's riting came in a suit brought by Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz. and 27 other members of Congress.
When Carter announced in December that he was granting full diplomatic recognition to the People's Republic of China, he also exercised an option in the Taiwan defense treaty allowing either party to terminate the pact on a year's notice.
The treaty, in which the United States agreed to come to the aid of Taiwan in the event of an attack by the mainland Chinese, would end Jan. 1, 1800 under
Steakhouse killer gets death
OKLAHOMA CITY — Roger Dale Stafford was sentenced to death yesterday by a jury that earlier in the day had convicted him of executing six steakhouse workers. He killed them after herding them into a freezer during a $1,300 robbery in July 1978
reporter in July 2015. District Attorney Andrew Coats, who called Stafford "a little man who wanted to be a big man," said the mass murder was "the most frightening story."
dissatisfied or incapacitated by the administration of a succinct verbs on the six first-degree murder charges after 45 minutes of deliberation, could have been removed from the consideration of burglars.
The jury deliberated for about an hour during the penalty phase of the case. It is up to presiding District Judge Charles Owens to sentence Stafford, a 27-year-old Alabama drifter. The judge has the option of rejecting the jury's recommendation.
Hundreds protest energy cost
Union members, senior citizens and hundreds of other Americans demonstrate against the oil industry yesterday in an attempt to bring an end to the
About 1,000 retired people, many of whom had traveled by bus from Delaware, Pennsylvania to Maryland, joined the protest at the American Water Pollution Control Agency in Washington.
Yesterday's demonstration was billed as a grassroots "Campaign for Lower Energy Prices." It was sponsored by the Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition which said there would be protests in more than 100 cities, ranging from "honk-ins" by motorists to marches by odriens挺.
However, a spot check showed that the turnout in several areas was smaller than predicted. It had been expected that the demonstration at the petroleum institute would draw more than 2,000 people—twice as many as actually expected. A demonstration said they had anticipated a crowd of 1,000. They got a group of 150
Ford recalls 400,000 Capris
WASHINGTON—Ford Motor Co. agree to recall about 400,000 Carpi automobiles because of front seat and gear shift leaks, the National Highway Safety Board said Tuesday.
Highway Truck Servicemaintenance Inc. in Houlton, Ontario, fronting a front seat backs could fail in 1971-74 and 1976-78 on which the gear shift level could separate the rear wheel.
sugary milk.
The decision to recall the cars, the company canceled a public hearing that had been set for today on its initial finding that the Caprius might be unsafe.
Last month Ford agreed to recall 1971 and 1972 Capris because of a fault in the beadlock switch.
6 killed in El Salvador battle
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Army troops killed at least six first fighters protesters during a four-hour gun battle in a mountain town near the city.
It was the second day of fighting after Monday night's overthrow of the rightwing government by members of the military.
Only hours before the latest fighting erupted, leaders of the new military government claimed their coup had prevented a popular uprising and "a sea of insurgents."
However, sources within three major leftist organizations said Wednesday their groups would not accept the new government and would continue their
2 women charaed with rape
Witnesses said the six persons killed belonged to a group that had put up barricades at the town's entrance earlier in the day. The same witnesses leftfits in the town were still in control of the city hall, the church and other buildings.
In less than a week two women in Missouri have been charged with rape and sexual assault for allegedly having sex with juvenile boys, and could face prison.
The rape charges, according to the Missouri attorney general's office, probably are the first ever against women in Missouri, and definitely are the first against men.
now takes wives to the hospital, and the women could be charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor punishment by a maximum six-month sentence.
under the new code, the two women, one from Moberly and the other from Mountain Grove, face maximum sentences of 25 years in prison for statuary crimes.
Second uake jolts California
LOS ANGELES - A quick, sharp earthquake joked a wide area in and around Los Angeles yesterday, rattling windows and dishes and shaking houses. There were shakes in the Rocky Mountains.
The seismology station at the University of California at Berkeley said the quake registered 4.1 on the Richter scale. There was no word on where the quake was centered or if it was related to Monday's 6.5 Richter scale quake in the Imperial Valley, 200 miles southeast of Los Angeles.
The Richer scale is a measure of ground motion as recorded on seismic data. An earthquake of 4 on the Richter scale can cause moderate damage.
Toneka board battles Brown
TOPEKA-Topeka Unified School district No. 501 filled a brief in U.S.
District Court yesterday upon the reopening of the Brown vs. Board of
Education case. The case, decided 25 years ago, outlawed racial segregation in
American public schools.
A group of eight parents of black children enrolled in the Topoka school system filed an application Aug. 22 to respond the case. The group wants the school district to provide more resources for them.
Judge Richard D. Rogers set a Nov. 9 court date for hearing oral arguments on the motion to intervene in the old case.
queppa attorneys Gary Sebelius and Charles Henson will argue the case for the school board. The lawyers said the case could not be reopened because the plaintiffs who brought the original suit in 1961 no longer were in the Topesa case and the original stake in the lawsuit. Therefore, they said, there is no legal controversy.
Weather
The KU Weather Service predicts partly cloudy skies and southerly winds 5-15 mph today with highs in the 78s. There is a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms. Tonight will bring cloudy skies and a slight chance of rain. The low will be 60.
Highs will be in the low 70s tomorrow with partly cloudy to mostly cloudy skies. The extended forecast calls for cool temperatures and mostly cloudy weather.
Nobel Peace Prize goes to Calcutta nun
OSLR, Norway (AP)—Mother Teresa,
Uchela Ndembe, of Ethiopia, the Nobel Peace Prize winner. She said she would spend the $100,000 prize on lepers and the destiny to whom she has dedicated her life.
"Poverty and hunger and distress also constitute a threat to peace," the Nobel Committee said in citing the sixth woman to win the prize.
The Yugoslav-born Roman Catholic kuna-
daughter of an Albanian shopkeeper and
a citizen of India, said she accepted the
wizard "in the name of the poor."
Her order, the Mission of Charity, was founded in Calcutta's slums in 1848 when she received a scholarship for $40 and 40 cents in her pocket and special permission from Home to live outside a condo.
The order now runs schools, hospitals,
youth centers and orphanages in 50 Indian
cities and in others around the world, from
the Bronx, New York, to Tapaqua, New
Mother Teresa, 69, has been nominated for the prize for several years and has often been mentioned as a possible recipient.
PRESIDENT CARTER was another nominee for the award for his Midwest peace efforts. He was first nominated for the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize, considered, and was nominated this year.
He received a special mention for his efforts in the citation given to the 1978 winners, Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel and Egyptian President Awar
The hallmark of Mother Teresa's work, the committee said, "has been respect for the individual human being, for his or her dignity and innate value. The loneliest, the most wretched and the most vulnerable without compassion, based on reverence for man."
IT WAS NOT known if Mother Teresa
KLZR
106
would personally accept the award in a ceremony in Oslo on Dec. 10. The presentation is made on the anniversary of the Nobel Prize in Physics Alfred Nobel, who set up the prizes.
At age 12, she decided to become a nun and six years later joined the Sisters of Loreto, an Irish order, which sent her to India in 1928 to teach.
it was on a train to the northeast India hill retreat of Darjeeling in 1946 that Mother Teresa said she heard her second call, "serve him among the poorest of the poor."
Mother Teresa was born August 27, 1910, in Skopje, Yugoslavia. Her original name was Agnes Ganha Bojachju.
"If you want to kill me, kill me," she told the priests. "Let them (the inmates) die in peace."
WHEN THE SHORT, slight woman opened the mission's "home for the destitute dying" next to a Hindu temple in Kathmandu, three sisters staged a noisy street protest outside.
She accepts no direct financial assistance from the Indian government, only an occational gift of land for a new project. "God is our banker, he always provides."
sua films
These rarely seen classics include a 1931 Mack Sennett short with Bing Gobble, Bob Hope, Pinatina, Betty Grabe, Harpo Mankiewicz and more; an 1924 Bing, George Burnes & Bob Hope, and a Groucho Marx TV show historian Bob Deflores will answer any questions following the films.
Thursday, October 18
RARE COMEDY FILMS
WITH BOB DEFOLES!
She won them over.
Directed by France Brusatil, with Niko Manfred and Jean-Marc An Italian. An international film that aims to earn a living which the Italian economy is unable to provide. A bit humiliating, but a great example of cism of two national temperaments. For best British film, subtitles.
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola,
with Marlon Brando, Al Pacino,
James Caan, Diane Keaton, Tallia
Simmons, John McAulay, John Marley,
& Abe Viggo.
Other 1979 Nobel prizes went to :
- American Theodore W. Schultz and West Indies native Sir Arthur Lewis, economic science;
Friday & Saturday,
October 19-20
BREAD AND CHOCOLATE
(1972)
Sponsored by SUA Films, African Studies, KANU-FM and radio-TV-film.
Sunday, October 21
THE GODFATHER
Monday, October 22
FAHRENHEIT 451
Directed by Francis Truffaut, with Julie Christie and Oscar Werner, Based on Ray Bradbury's futuristic novel of book burning.
- American Herbert C. B. Brown and West German Georg Wittig, chemistry;
- Americans Steven Weinberg and Sheldon L. Glashow and Pakistan Abdus Salam, physics;
(1966)
Weekend shows also in Woodfort at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise specified. Up to 150 admission. No Refreshments.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted, $1.00 admission.
American Allan MacLeod Cormack and Britton Godfrey Newbold Houndsfield, medicine.
WEEKEND BOWLING SPECIAL .50*/game
Now thru Oct. 28
Open Sat. and Sun.
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
2:00 pm—Close
lemon tree
11 w 9th behind weavers
TREE OF LIFE
low-calorie
nutritious
natural frozen
dessert yogurt
cones 45¢
offer good oct.16 to oct.21
no coupons accepted with this offer
1974
shades of the R.A.F., the flying fortress, and the red baron . .
the classic bomber jacket in 100% leather with wool mouton collar
warm yet light weight and flexible . . .
perfect for those cool fall days and nights
hours
hours
m-t-w-f-sat 10-6
th 10-9
sun 1-5
MISTER
GUY
922 mass.
Thursday, October 18, 1979
3
Energy office to ask Legislature to fund state employee van pools
University Daily Kansan
A car pooling program for state em-
ployees of being approved by the state Legislature in January, according to James Col伯, director of the state division of accounts and
The program, which is still being planned, would provide vans to state employees who commute into Topeka.
The state would initially pay gasoline and service bills for the vans, Cobler said, but the $3 monthly fee charged the passengers would eventually pay back the cost of the
One person would drive the van, which would service eight to 12 people. The driver would keep the van and would be responsible for repairs and maintenance. Collier said.
HE SAID HE and members of the Kansas Energy Office hoped to have a bill for the
program drafted by Nov. 1 to be sent to the Legislature before it reconvenes in January.
"I ANTICIPATE that it will be a rather popular program, and I think the Legislature will enact it," Cobler said.
Joe Fishbite, fuel allocations officer with the Kansas Energy Office and one of the people working on the program, also said he helped that program would be approved by the Legislature.
Surveys on the program have been sent to all state employees, and 418 of the 518 responses have been favorable.
"Van pooling is one heck of a way to conserve energy," he said.
Cobler said that if the program was approved by the Legislature, vans could be ordered in the spring.
FRIDAY NIGHT Country Fiddlin' At Its Best
HE SAID HE could not yet estimate how much fuel the program would save.
Jimmy Walker
with
Tickets
$4.50 ADV. / $5.50 D.O.S.
with CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN with Southern Fried
Available at Kiefs, Better Days and 7th Spirit Club
Doors open at 8:00-show at 9:00
Lawrence
Opera House
Call for concert info. 842-6930
Siding
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THE SUMMIT
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Think snow, think ski, think ski the summit.
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Come with us January 6-12 and enjoy 5 days of nothing but skiing! Your lift tickets, ski rentals, and round trip bus transportation are all provided. You'll be able to ski Breckenridge, Keystone, Arapahoe Basin, and Copper Mountain. The cost is $236 and the sign-up deadline is November 9, 1979.
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Ski Switzerland! Ski two of the world's most renowned ski areas, Davos, and St. Moriz January 5-20, **8970** includes 14 nights lodging, round-trip flight from Kansas City-Chicago-Zurich, all breakfasts and dinners, 6 days lift tickets and all transportation within Switzerland. Sign up by November 20, 1979.
KIEF'S
25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
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mfg. list $4.98
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JAZZ UP!
Tonight and Every Thursday night: FREE Jazz Jam!
FRIDAY: OPEN STREAM featuring Fred Raulston
Fred Raulston's versatility is demonstrated by the people he has played with: from Count Basie, Lionel Hampton, Jean-Luc Ponty, Oregon, and Chase, to the Henry Mancini Orchestra, among others. He won the Outstanding Musician Award for vibist/composer at the American College Jazz Festival. He has been classed with the likes of Gary Burton and David Friedman and has an album out on Inner City records.
SATURDAY: THE TOMMY JOHNSON EXPERIMENT
Smooth trumpet in the style of Chuck Mangione. Johnson is a great entertainer playing mellow jazz backed by a new rhythm section featuring guitarist Richard Joseph.
FREE beer, popcorn, peanuts and soft drinks with '6 cover.
This ad worth one free admission with each regular paying patron.
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
926 Massachusetts (Upstairs) 843-2644
926 massachusetts (Cupstart) 063-2044
Full Scholarship to Law School
to attend the Southern Methodist University School of Law each year.
Scholarships are available from the Hatton W. Sumner Foundation on the basis of Academic Achievement. The scholarships provide for tuition, fees, and living expenses.
Applications are available at: 223 Carruth O'Leary.
A representative from Southern Methodist University will be in the Kansas Union Pine Room on Friday, October 19 from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorslals
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editor staff. Standed columns represent the views of the editors.
October 18, 1979
Inspections a relief
A lot of reminders still linger in many minds of the awesome destructiveness, in terms of loss of property and life, wrought by fires that have swept through residence halls, amenities and sororites across the nation.
Many of us vividly remember the fire in a Baker University fraternity in the fall of 1977 that killed five men. More recently, there is the memory of the fire that swept through a residence hall at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., injuring 32 and killing two.
The thought of a fire raging through a KU residence hall so pervades the mind of Lawrence Fire Chief James McSwain that he has said, "It's one of those things that is the last thing you think of before you go to bed at night and the first thing you think of when you get up in the morning."
THOSE FEARS have prompted state and fire officials to conduct thorough and stringent inspections of KU residence halls, fraternities and sororites. But the danger extends beyond those types of dwellings, and the Lawrence Fire Department has taken steps to lessen such risks.
Beginning this past January, the fire department began a citywide inspection of all buildings that had two-family units or more. The inspection is street by street, starting at Massachusetts Street, and working its way west.
So far, more than 175 units have been inspected, and more than half were found to have violations. Enter more restless nights.
Many of these buildings were cited for violations because they did not have two exits and fire alarms.
Property owners who are found to be in violation of the city fire safety code have from 15 to 120 days to make repairs, depending on the violations. If they are made within the required time, the city prosecutor will go after the violators.
The new attention being paid to these types of housing should ease residents', as well as McMushin's, more students to sleep easier at night.
'Safe' trip is difficult for cautious traveler
MANY OF the violations have been overlooked for too long. McSwan says many of the older homes east of campus have not had any improvements in years. Now is the time we sure those improvements are made.
It shouldn't be too much to demand, after all, that residents be able to get out. The new intensive inspection program is all the more welcomed given the fact that a majority of KU students live off campus—in large apartment complexes and in old, deteriorating houses.
"We're not trying to make new houses out of old ones," McWain says. "We just want to give everyone an out of a residence in the event of a fire."
The travel agent nods knowingly as I begin to recite my list of provisions for a trip to New York.
"Ab-ba, a white-knuckler," she says with a scornful chuckle from the safety of her swivel chair.
I suffer her scorn in silence, knowing that if I'm going to die in transit, it won't be because I didn't research my tonic
"You read too many newspapers," she adds, flipping erratically through her flight schedule book.
"I CAN'T fly through Chicago," I explain to the travel agent's furrowed brow.
The educated bet-hedging I now inflict on travel agents began in 1977 with an article in Time magazine about airport safety.
ITS NOT easy to go anywhere these days, one who one aspired to nothing more than traveling that gradually—that traveling is far safer than ever before. But it is also much more
An association of airline pilots had ranked the world's airports and, from that article, I tucked in my memory some personal flight instructions: I must not fly into St. Thomas of the Virgin Islands in a jet. I must not fly into Los Angeles at night and I must
An article in New Times magazine convinced me of that long ago. The air traffic controllers at HAre are a wreck from the depression, alcoholism—the guys have problems. Far be it from me to aggravate those bits by飞奔 in a planehead of my bad eyes.
My neurosis had just about subsided—especially after I had indulged it with tortious trip to Philadelphia by rail—when I was taken out of the sky with alarming regularity.
Then DC-8s began popping their tails con-
sulting suckes out into the wild blue. Nake
came the fire of a DC-8 upon touch down in
Athens, Greece and I was sold.
lynn
byczynski
COLUMNIST
"NOTHING MADE by McDonnell Douglas. No 727s either." I intone.
That's another small tidit I picked up while flipping through the financial pages: Certain airlines are in financial trouble because of their bankruptcy the old and decret 275 in their fleets.
"How about a train?" the travel agent ventures, already knowing my answer.
A month ago I could have recruited myself to be eight to 10 hours late and living without my luggage for a few days and I would have agreed.
But now, with trains so prone to jump their tracks, I know I'd better steer clear for a while.
"THESE THINGS always come in threes, you know," I lambely tell the exasperated woman.
I thought I had all the bases covered until I read of a new angle after the Antrak deralment in Lawrence earlier this month.
A passenger aboard that train spread the word that the number 11 was the ticket to crash over San Diego, which crashed over Chicago and the plane that crashed over San Diego after a mid-air collision.
"What's the flight number?" I ask the travel agent, who thought she finally had me beat.
"WHY DON'T you just take the bus," she growls through her gritted teeth.
I've been on buses for three days straight
and I know what awaits me there—
screaming babies, horny soldiers and
snoring wipes.
And that is a fate worse than death
"Now av." I reniv.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
USPS 6464-6468 Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, July and Sunday. Second-class postpaid data at Lawrence. Kansas 6466. Subscriptions by mail are $10 for late fees or $12 in Douglass County and a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $6 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 46098
Editor
Mary Heath
Managing Editor
Nancy Dresser
Mary Hornk
Edwardian Editor
Mary Erwin
Tun Shewley
Phil Garcia
Lori Leeberger
Brian Seaman
Bill Prakea
Tony Plita
Business Manager
Cynthia Ray
Vincent Couillard
Chad Maclean
Matthew McLean
Hertford Sales Manager
National Sales Manager
Vincent Couillard
Cary Nelson
Cathy O'Reilly
Duan Trexel
Alain Knopf
Advertising Makeup Manager
Sid Photographer
Jeff Kuon
Kent Geiler
General Manager
Rick Krause
Advertising Adviser
Tim Rowe
It is a sad sight to see. Two of the nation's most oppressed minorities, blacks and Jews, who have fought side by side for so long against prejudice and inequality, have now turned on each other. A bitter battle of rhetoric has erupted between whites and emojis that threatens to severely damage the causes of both sides.
At the heart of the issue lies Andrew Young and his meeting with the Palestine Liberation Organization. Black leaders have called for a boycott of Jewish lobby" for forcing Young, the former U.S. Ambassador to the United States, to resign from leadership. Israeli leaders have emphatically denied this.
Young had met with a representative of the Israeli government, who officially sanctioned by the State Department and was contrary to Israel to Palestine to Israel not to negotiate with the PLO.
The ensuing hue and cry that followed the revelation of the meeting resulted in Young submitting his resignation which was accepted by President Carter.
Blacks, Jews need cohesiveness
American black leaders were infuriated. While Young may have been extremely controversial with a tendency to shoot from the hip, he was still a highly respected leader in the black community, a dynamic representative of American blacks in government.
Black leaders have become increasingly angry over the past week by revelations of widespread sexual abuse. Kissinger, have negotiated with representatives of the PLO in the past embarrassment.
HIS FALL from power for negotiation with the PLO, many blacks felt, was unnecessary and was caused by pressure from American Jewish leaders.
Revelations of the negotiations came rarely from these Artaxias. American Army commander Mauger contacted the PLO during the 1975-76 Lebanon war for the evacuation of the embassy.
A PLO representative met with the Ambassador in Beirut and helped organize the evacuation. Kissinger later offered his personal advice for the FLO's aid, according to Anwar.
ARAFAT ALSO said other contacts had been made in the past, including a chance meeting last July between a PLO official and America's ambassador to Austria, Dr. Robert Kaiser, who was no pressure on Wolf and Kissinger has added to black leaders' anger.
While Andrew Young's resignation touched off the first wave of hard feelings between the black and Jewish communities, what has really split the alliance
of the two groups was the "fact-finding, peace-making" mission of the black leaders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference last month. That mission involved extended meetings with that and other representative of the PLO.
COLUMNIST
John
logan
Many Jewish leaders were angered by what they saw as black meddling in the Middle East. That anger turned to fire when the black leaders linked arms with the Israeli soldiers using the civil right anthem "We shall overcome" on national television.
DENOUNCEMENTS from many Jewish leaders quickly followed this display of camaraderie. There is no justification for Americans to negotiate with a murderer, many said. Others openly terrorize that the entire trip was an act of terrorism in the community with the Jewish community for their resignation-revenge, in other words.
"THE CONFUSION of the past several weeks must not be allowed to polarize the race. We should allow to heighten or to release feelings of racism, anti-Semitism or religious bigotry. The only ones who benefit from these denials are the enemies of both groups."
But Jordan appears to be a lone voice of wisdom crying out from a sea of lunacy. Surrounding him are fierce angels and an unremitting sadness, while two groups have fought to eliminate for decades. His pleas for unity are likely to be rejected, and he is likely by other rational black and Jewish leaders.
This accusation was soundly denied by
The Rev. Jesse Jackson added that he thought American blocks could be a potent force in moving Arafat and the PLO away, but he added that Arafat has pursued for the past decade.
JACKSON MAY not be as potent a force as he thinks. however. The SCIS appeals to his credibility. But when he listened politely to their requests for novellas that he promised only that they would be worthwhile.
many black leaders who defended the mission as a genuine peace-making effort. They argued that blacks would stand to such待遇 another MidEast crisis explode.
The disadvantaged and minorities would bear the greatest burden if there should be another energy shortage.
That lack of success has drawn a number of black critics to join the Jewish community in blasting the SCLC's mission to the Mideast. One of those critics, Vernon Bruner, played in the Urban League, lashed out at Jackson in a speech千川 in Kansas City, Mo.
"Black-Jewish relations should not be endangered by ill-considered flirtations with terrorist groups devoted to the extermination of Israel," Jordan said.
Jordan is right in saying that the black-Jewish split benefits only the enemies of both groups.
Until then, the goals of equality and fairness for these groups have fought so successfully that the side, awaiting a return to reason. As these goals lie ignored, the work that went ahead has been missed.
Other vital civil rights issues are being ignored. Clearly it is time for the two communities to turn away from their common foes against them and against their common foes once again.
MCALEY
PERFORMING MONITORING © ON BY BOGARD TRAINE
WE SHALL
OVERCOME!...
NONVIOLENCE
KING
To the Editor:
Violence impedes anti-nuclear cause
I am responding to the article that appeared in the Kansan Oct. 9, 1979, titled "Violence Threatens Anti-Nuke War." The use of violence in protesting the building of nuclear power plants is aberrant. This violence will in fact turn people who have not made a decisive on whether to support the anti-nuclear power away from the anti-nuke cause.
Lawrence freshmar
The nuclear power industry is not safe for various reasons, some of which follow:
I am sick and tired of hearing California's Gov. Jerry Brown described as an opportunist or a "Zen-kicked officer" by those who have been consistently running our country are on track.
Jerry Brown offers essential alternatives
1. Government control for building in the required safeguards is inadequate.
2. Local funds for building in these safeguards are not adequate, so a poorer grade of building material is used. Hence, poor grade equals poor safeguards.
To The Editor:
Brown is offering this country some alternatives, and whether or not certain people like the alternatives he espouses, I
3. There is not a viable program for the education of the general public on the effects radioactive materials have on the body and the environment.
Let us face the fact that nuclear power is presently the only inexpensive way to produce electricity. We show that approximately 25 percent of the electric power produced this country will be used by nuclear plants.
I object to paying outrageous prices to heat my home and see no indication of a price decrease in the future.
The only result of violence against the present nuclear power industry will be more nuisance to future generations, not chance, but change the way that radioactive waste is processed and disposed of. This industry will not change the way it is used for energy. The only way to change the industry is to bring pressure on our governments to abolish the damage: Volence breeds violence!
Therefore, it is imperative that we let our elected officials know that the general electorate will be in control of our nuclear power program to continue. We should also inform these people that we need an immediate alternative energy that supports the energy needs of the masses.
James M. Flynn
think most people will agree that this is an alternative to the alternatives. Kennedy, as an alternative to Carter, doesn't offer much, just as Carter didn't offer much on an alternative Gerald Dell's advice.
What exactly are the issues that Brown supports during the last three years? We've been relying on nuclear power and oil, and a balanced budget. What is so flaky about
I've heard Brown called an opportunist so many times that I tend to ignore the fact that he was an opportunist? The very definition of "politician" is "opportunist"; the two go hand-in-hand. Jimmy Carter was being the most enthusiastic candidate a year before the 1976 election, but no one called Carter flaky for that action. I don't know what called an opportunist, I don't know who can do it.
Brown is, quite simply, honest and open in his campaign. Brown has changed his mind before, and probably will again, just as all politicians do. He has been batered by some of the voters who only after it was voted in by California's people, yet he has explained repeatedly that he felt it was his duty to follow the obvious mandate of his constituents. Would that be true?
It seems likely that Brown will not win the nomination of his party or the election next year—that much is apparent. America fears
We're all agreed that our government has to stop paying the rent. Jerry Brown is the only governor who has done anything concrete to stop the waste. He refuses to live in the grandeur that usually comes with a budget.
We all know that fossil fuels, like oil and uranium, are doomed to run out before another century is over, but let a politician come out in favor of alternative energy, and he's called a fake. Even President Carter agrees with Brown that the federal budget should support it, but Carter wants to procrastinate, while Brown wants to balance the budget now.
One thing that scares people about Brown, I think, is the fact that he's not a conformist; he can't be pegged a liberal or a conservative; he doesn't follow his party's line.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
The other thing about Brown that scares our provincial public is the fact that he has never been a president. The people are upset by the fact that a presidential candidate sees more in Zen Buddhism than in born-again Christianity. Mr. Brown, who Jerry Brown, but I think that can be accounted for the provincialism and the provincialism of the American public, not by Brown's "fakness."
Ronald Bain
candidates that are different, and for that reason, will continue to have the same kind of imaginative, nept leadership that we've had for decades.
Lawrence senior
To the Editor
Art studio facilities warrant official aid
As a jewelry major, I feel that the whole story was not told in Kate Pound's article on the jewelry department on Oct. 9.
First of all, the health hazards existing in the studio were underemphasized. Last semester, one course was held in a 15-by-20-foot room with one door, no windows, no air conditioning or ventilation, using a Kinetik at degrees and a fuming sulfur acid bath.
Pound did mention the structural improvement we students made in the studio, but what was not made clear was that we had not learned three weeks of education while doing it.
The students of the jewelry department appreciate the Kansas's attention in this matter. Now if only the Board of Regents and the state Legislature would listen.
Although we have made structural improvements, we cannot put in a ventilation system, and the University is not about to do it because they consider our studio tem-
Marv Pringle Price
Lawrence senior
To the Editor:
Waving blonde hair, blow by the stuff fall wind of Mount Oread. Such a typical sight, if you ask me. Then again, so is the woman on I had to look all over. If I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I knew better, I had to look all over. I know
Windy-day photo of woman too dull To the Editor.
I couldn't keep it in any longer. I may be beating a dead horse, but then again photographically speaking, so is the Kansan.
Oh, and then last Friday. I had to send a copy to Mom and Dad. Sure there are more interesting things than a woman intent on catching a cold. Geometrics, right? Look
Be it known, I've never written to criticize the Kansan, but you guys are going
to be professionals, and KU's journalism school is not capable of turning out rejects. Well, may a few.
How about a perspective of the Jimmy Green statue?
To the Editor:
Dreux DeMack
Olathe senior
Communication key to racial harmony
I have read some of your editors that say minorities are not treated fairly. I believe you are sincerely. So I would like to recommend, to anyone interested in a truly democratic form of government. Tom Buchanan, book, "The Challenge of Nationalism."
It is written in language that all can understand, regardless of education, or age.
I have learned many things on this course, the students and my whole canine community. But man don't seem to understand that, with an honest smile, effort, communication is possible.
The greatest discrimination problem we have is the inability to say "hello" and learn a part of another one's customs before a gap that needs mending occurs.
Floyd E. Cobler
1600 Haskell
Letters Policy
The University daily Kanan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters can be written in English or not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the Kanan institution, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanan reserves the right to edit the letter if it is deemed necessary or delivered personally or mailed to the Kanan newsroom, 112 Flint Hall. Because of space limitations, the letter must be the right to edit letters for publication.
Thursdav. October 18, 197?
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Lawrence police investigated a rape, firefighters responded to a house fire and KU police reported the recovery of a large manhole stolen by car stereo equipment
Compiled by Mark Spencer
A KU STUDENT WAS RAPED early yesterday morning by three men who broke into her apartment while she was sleeping, a Lawrence police spokesman reported.
The men broke into the apartment, southwest of 24th Street, by popping out a window screen and opening the unlocked window, the spokesman said.
The attack occurred at about 2.45 a.m. and was reported to police at 3.78, the police said. The victim was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and released, he said.
The men also took an undetermined amount of money from the apartment, the police said. There are no suspects in the case.
A FIRE CAUSED $2,000 worth of damage to a one-story structure at 623 Michigan Tuesday, the Lawrence fire department reported.
Five units, including three engines and a
snorkel truck, were sent to the fire, which started at about 1:15 p.m. When firefighters arrived flames were shooting out the windows of the wood structure.
Firefighters said the fire may have started behind a television set in the living room of the house.
The $2,000 structure, owned by Lawrence Property Management, sustained $15,000 worth of damage. Its contents, valued at $15,000, received $7,000 damage.
The police recovered the equipment after locating six juveniles who live in a community near Lawrence, he said. He would not release the name of the community.
KU POLICE HAVE recovered a large number of car stereos and speakers that were taken during the last three months of police custody. The man was killed in KU Police Captain John Mullens said.
The problem, however, is that the police have been able to match only one set of equipment to a reported theft, Mullens said.
"We have the car descriptions from the kids," he said, "but no reports that indicate similar cars."
Mullens said 11 pairs of speakers and four or five stereo sets, plus a number of other equipment. Police located the juveniles last week. Since then, he said, the juveniles have returned to the scene.
The police have questioned the juveniles and two adults but no arrests have been made. Mullens said the adults possibly were involved in buying the stolen items.
Police have talked to the juveniles and their parents, Mullens said, and charges are possible.
Most of the burglaries, he said, occurred at large university and residence hall parking lots between dusk and 11 or 12 p.m.
Mullens said people who had strenge taken and did not report them to police should be given an opportunity to ask where and when the equipment was taken, what type of equipment was taken, serial numbers or identifiable marks on them and identified marks on the vehicle they were stolen from, he added.
Any people who have already reported stolen equipment will be contacted by police if their equipment is recovered, he said.
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KANSAN On Campus
WIE VALUABLE COURTOR REDEFEMABLE IN ALL STATES EXCEPT ILLINOIS THRU OCT
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**TODAY:** THE GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. at 496 Wescone. The topic will be "Hermann, Missouri Rhineland." KASHIMA SHINY RHUV will sponsor a Japanese swordlighting demonstration from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the east side campus.
TONIGHT: THE BASTIST STUDENT UNION will sponsor a lecture on "The Black Christian Experience" by Edward L. Waiden, the Director of the Room of the Union AUHR GENERAL ASSEMBLY meeting will be at 7:15 in the Walnut Room of the Union. AUAP DINNER will be at 6:30 in the Kansas Room of the Union. At 6:30 in the Kentucky Burgess, novelist, critic and composer, will be at 8 at Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. KANAS WOODWUND QUINTET will have a faculty at Swarthout Recital Club, Murhall Hall.
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6
Thursday, October 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
RUN A MILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS IN LESS THAN A YEAR.
Supply officers are the professional business managers of the Navy. Financial management, auditing, merchandising, purging, and inventory control must be performed through them. Even at a junior level, the Supply Officer responsible for a single ship runs an operation equivalent to that of an officer.
If you’d like to know more about Supply School and the Navy Supply Corps, contact your local recruiter or send your
Lexie Castleman
610 Florida Street
lawrence, Kansas 66044
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NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB,IT'S AN ADVENTURE.
JOHN G. WATSON
BROTHER OF JIM WATSON
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george burns, bob hope in "the jack benny show" (1954)
AARON COSTEIN
groucho marx in "tell it to groucho"
bing crosby in a mack sennet short
thursday, october 18 7:30pm
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sponsored by SUA films african studies KANU-fm and radio-tv-film
BALTIMORE (1) -- Remarkable Willie Stargell cracked a game-winner two-run home last night to give Pittsburgh a 4-1 triumph over the Baltimore Orioles and make the fourth team to reach a 3-1 game胜记 a last-best-of-seven World Series.
Stargell, known affectionately as "Pops" by the rest of the Pirates, put the third of his four hits for the night over his team's first game, leading us for his third honour of the 1979 Series.
Pirates crowned World Champs
The 38-year-old captain of the Pirates who was named the Series' most valuable player in 1971 won the 1971 World Champions who clinched their title exactly eight years ago, also earning the league's top award.
He was the 40th player in World Series history to get four hits in a game and the fourth batter to do so in this Series.
Phil Garner opened with a double to left—his 12th hit of the Series—and scored on Omar Moreño's third hit of the game.
Stargell unloaded against lefthander Scott McGregor, who pitched a courageous game in defeat for the Orioles.
In the ninth, Pittsburgh added two insurance runs, against a parade of five Baltimore relief pitcher's.
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A single by Tim Foli moved Moreno to third and then Dave Parker and Bill Robinson were hit by pitches, forcing home the final Pirates run.
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The energy needs of tomorrow are the challenges we must meet today.
The Series loss was a heartbreaker for the
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They launched a crowd-thrilling comeback attempt in the eightieth inning that was ended by Pirate relief ace Kent Tekuve with three Orioles on base. TeKuve, the
They went into a stuffing slump after Game Four and never came out of it, snapping a string of 21 scoreless innings with a run in the third.
Orioles after they had won three of the first four games.
brought up Robinson, who bats cleanup in Manager Chuck Tanner's lineup against left-henders but sits on the bench against righthits.
Robinson ripped a single past shortstop to the plate. Gaig waited no time. He just first pitch from McGregor and sent it soaring high and far. From the crack of the bat, Robinson made a dunk.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
fourth Pittsburgh pitcher, went on to complete a four-hitter.
Pittsburgh's historic comeback from the 3-1 deficit matched the accomplishment of their 1922 club that came back against the Washington Senators, the Detroit Tigers against the St. Louis Cardinals in 1968 and the Boston Celtics in 1970 against the Milwaukee Bears in 1985.
The Boston Red Sox did it against Pittsburgh in 1903, when the Series was best-of-nine.
MegGregor nursed a 14 load through the first five innings, a laid provide by a third innings. MegGregor was loud, long lodge celebration by the crowd of $7,330. Speaker of the House Thomas "T" Opell N.
McGregor opened the sixth by retiring Parker on a ground ball to second. That
homers that landed beyond the Pittsburgh bullein in right field well over 400 feet from home plate.
It was Stargell who also scored the winning run in the final game of the 1971 Series, a seven-game team that late the儒罗 Clemene. But 1979 belonged to "Pops."
Sargell sparked his club with a record seven extra-base hits, four doubles and the three home runs, in this World Series. His 25 home runs are the record set by Regeckie Janko in 1977.
Stargell has made the Pirates' chase to the title a personal crusade this season. He was joined by Drew Pearson and started the "Family" slogan that accompanied the team through an exciting National League East Division race with a three game playoff sweep of Cincinnati.
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The Pirates' fifth World Series championship did not come easily.
First they had to overcome Dauer's early iomer. The Orioles' second baseman had only nine all season and 20 in his three years with Baltimore, but he reached Pittsburgh starter Jim Bibby for a shot into the left wing on the first pitch of the third innning.
Bibby was the first of four pita-tires pitches that Bibby had made when he reliever Don Robinson got in trouble with two out in the Baltimore fifth, left-hander Grand Jackson came to no end the
Jackson worked into the eighth, and with one out, pinchbitter Lee May walked and then Al Bumby walked.
Jackson hadn't allowed a hit yet, but Tanner decided it was time for the lanky Tekulve.
Ken Singleton, who had 10 hits in the Series, was next and the Pirates walked him intentionally, loading the bases.
The sidewind right-hander already had two saves in the Series and had pitched three innings the night before in Game Six. But he was back again.
First he faced pinch-hitter Terry Crowley, whose two-run pinch double had beaten him in Game Four—the last time the Orioles won. He then hit a drive to roller to second as the runners advanced
COMMO
That brought up Eddie Murray, who epitomized the Baltimore slump. Going into Game Seven he was locked in 0-6-17 nightmare and he stretched to 0-4-20.
Murray fouled off the first two pitches and then Teklive tried to get him to swing at a bat. He didn't succeed, but Teklave cleanup man watched them, running the count to 2-1. Then he sent a flight to right field. Parker started in on the ball, then staggered back and caught it one-handed, ending the game.
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Thursday, October 18, 1979
Fambrough worried about hostile crowd
The Kansas football team will face an Iowa State squad that is coming off a 7-3 conference victory over Kansas State last weekend.
The Jayhawks also will have to contend with their second hostile homecoming crowd in as many weeks, a fact that concerns Coach Dod Farnbrough.
"They've got a lot of people back from last year's 8-3 team," Fambrough said. "They know how to win, plus it's their homecoming.
"Their win last week over K.State had to give them confidence and morale. I think it will be a real exciting football game."
Quarterback Kevin Clinton returned to practice yesterday after missing the team's
workouts for two days this week because of bruised ribs.
Offensive guard Jim Ragdale will miff
the pittance of a punished baffled sufferer inacked battered suffered in August Kyles will fill in for
Kyle's absence. The spot will. It will be
Kyle's start of the season.
Fambridge said the 'Hawks showed signs of improvement in yesterday's practice after a poor workout Tuesday.
"We had a good practice today," Fambridge said. "If we keep it up tomorrow and Friday—right up until game time Saturday—we'll be ready to play."
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KU coach Bob Lockwood said the entire Kansas team saw action in last night's match. Lockwood also said he was pleased with the speed and quickness his team had, and his teammate that was lacking in KU's last to Kansas State last week.
The KU women's volleyball team nipped Benedictine College 15-7, 5-15, 15-12, 13-15, and 15-last night at Robinson south evennium.
The win was just KU's second in its last 11 matchs. Lockwood said his team will now concentrate on regional firefairy clinics which visits Lawrence Wednesday night.
Volleyballers end long win drought
University Daily Kansan
KANAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—John Lucas
was shot by a police officer and led the Golden State Warriors to an 107-94 victory over the Kansas City Kings last night in National basketball Association game.
The Kings, the defending Midwest Division champs, never led as the Warriors took 48-43 halftime lead and quickly pulled away after intermission between Lucas and
Kings lose first
Kansas City pulled to within two at 61-98 on two unanswered buckets by Bill Robinizein with 52 left in the third quarter.
Then Lucas and Short went to work and fashioned an 18-4 surge that gave the Warriors a commanding 79-20 at the end of the game. The team never came closer than 11 points after that.
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CORDS & DENIMS
27-38 27-46
7 colors
LLTWINS
DOWNTOWN 831 Mass.
8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. October 18, 1979
---
Herbs
BAYTOWN
FINE PORTAITURE
711 W. 23rd Main Street
842-8822
Foreign & Domestic Parts
DON CHICK AUTO PARTS
—Part Stain
1209 East 23rd
841 2200
MEISNER -
MILSTEAD
RETAIL LIQUOR
FEATURING:
FINE IMPORTED AND
CALIFORNIA WINES
AND
10 VARIETIES OF
COLD BEER!
FOR KEGS CALL
842-4499
IN HOLIDAY PLAZA
(2 DOORS West of KIEF'S)
ViN
Come in and Celebrate the Octoberfest
at the Town Shop
Thursday. October 18th through Sunday October 21st ..
October 18th through Sunday October
a very exciting weekend.
... in keeping with Octoberfest ...
* get a free quart of Beer with each
purchase of $10.00 or more.
* you may win a drawing each day for
two pounds of Bratwurst from the
Stinky Cheese Shoppe ...
selected SHIRTS & SPORTSWEAR 25% OFF
CORDUROY COATS $69.**
remember our COUPON DAYS coupons
WOOLRICH SHIRTS
Wool & Chamois
25% OFF
FREE Turtle Neck
Shift With Each
Regular Price
Sportcoat Purchase
FREE
Tie With Each
Regular Price Purchase
FREE
Pendleton Muffler
With Each Regular
Price Coat Purchase
WOOLRICH DOWN
JACKETS $69.**
COWHIDE BOMBER JACKETS 25% OFF
Whitenight's
PUBLIC HOUSE
Town Shop
Whitenight's Town Shop The Mens Shop
downtown Lawrence
THE NEW YORKER Italian Sandwiches PIZZA
meat or garden toppings with the purchase of any size pizza
two free
Pizza
offer good oct. 16 to oct. 21
no coupons accepted with this offer
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Zen master to lead local retreat
By AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Reporter
Zen is a practice taken from the Buddhist religion, directed toward clearing the mind of illusions and finding the true self, Rottman said.
The three-day retreat, which begins tomorrow, will be at the home of Judith Roltman, assistant professor of math, and her husband, Stanley Lombardo, assistant professor of mathematics.
Zen master Seung Sah, leader of the seven Zen centers in the United States and Canada, will lead a meditation retreat this week at the home of two KU professors.
"He is the only well-known Korean Zen master in the U.S." Rohrmann said last week of Sahn. She said that a small group of friends, including her, would entertain every evening at the couples home.
"We try to break through the things we mistakenly think are important, things we protect us," she said. The main object is to "getting the armor" she would be "letting down the armor," she said.
SAIN BECAME a 2e master in 1947 at the age of 22 after briefly serving as a Buddhist monk in Korea. He was abbot of a minnery before moving to Japan where he taught at the University of America and students and headed temples in Japan's Korean communities.
Bucky's
SPECIAL — This Weekend
Offer Good Now thru Sun.
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER only 79°
2120 9th
Buckys
OAS
Denmark Denmark
مجال إثبات الخدمات - أعلاه بالإعلان
THE ORGANIZATION OF ARAB STUDENTS
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
P.O. Box 712
LAWRENCE
KS 86046
سُمَّ الْقَرَاءِ الرَّهْنَانِ الرَّهْنَانِ
بمعاني النقابة السابقة، لأنه لم يكن المعلوماً في النقابة السابقة القائمة للنقابة.
د. س. ٤١٨ الدراسة اللغوية العمومية للمنطقة المحددة في المملكة
العشرات من قيم المبيعات سنوياً على بطاقات و
والرجع من أول النشرة على الرسالة واستخدم به بسببها، فيا
"Community Build" / 1994
السنة الماضية لم يخرج منها " منه " في
الحسابات الدقيقة للعراق
مسلم بن شعبة القدسي من الشيعة إلى مرجع البحر
النفسية والكامل
اللغة العربية للنظام العربي
SENIORS
SayCheese!
Senior Pictures have been extended until Oct.26
Call the
Call the Jayhawker Yearbook appointment.
864-3728
Only $1 sitting fee
He now heads Zen centers in Providence, Cambridge, Los Angeles, Berkeley, Calif., Ontario, Canada, and Krakow, Poland.
Rohman said she met Sahn in Cambridge, Mass, when she was a faculty member at Wellesley College. Cambridge. However, teachers began in 1824 in Providence, J. R.
Lawrence Zen followers had tried for more than a year to bring Sahna here for a retreat, Rotman said. She and Lombardo were married last year and even married had year by year.
Through Student Union Activities' Free University, they offered a course in Zen meditation early in 1977. Soon, a group attended the class regularly.
ROTMAN SAID that she knew of one other Zen meditation group in Lawrence and that it was once a part of the 10-member group she meets with regularly.
The two groups differ in style and practice, she said, and represent two branches of Zen: Chogye or Rinzai, and Soto.
"It's a question of form," she said. "Ours (Choge) is more formal, we use more chaning. We feel that we can teach the very basics of meditation."
But Soto follows do not believe it can be taught in a class. They do not practice chanting, Rottman said Choyge "feels more energetic" while Soto "feels more quiet."
"We weren't really aware of it until it happened," she said.
While ancient Chobo was practiced by the Samaras and Soto by the farmers and peasants, the split between the Lawrence and Chobo was distinct, she said, but instead very loose.
Although the retreat ends Sunday, Sahn will remain in Lawrence until Monday, when he will give a public lecture at 8 p.m. in the Jahaykw Room of the Kansas Union
Common to both, however, are the basic Zen teachings and the ultimate goal of clear thought.
You can help increase the safety of our campus. The Campus Safety Service needs men and women volunteers to provide escort teams for those people on campus who request them. For more information see the ad in the Notice column of the classified ad section and call KU-INFO, 864-3506.
October Clearance Sale 30 to 50% Off
Bridal Gowns Special Occasion Gowns Veils and Hats Thru Oct.31
八
Bridal Fashions by Jan
above the flower Shoppe
1101 Massachusetts
841-2644
Lawrence, Ks.
9 A.M. - 5:30 P.M. Mon.-Sat.
New Members
Always
Welcome
Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
Environment
MINGLE TONIGHT! COUNTRY-WESTERN NITE
Margarita Special
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat 6 pm - 3 am
Sun 6 pm -1 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W.6th
842-7030
Thursday, October 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
9
Dykes seeks raise for employees
By DAVE LEWIS
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes will propose a salary increase for unclassified university employees today at a Council of Presidents meeting held at Baltimore State University.
Staff Renorter
The Council of Presidents includes the chief executives of the seven Regents schools.
However, the Kansas Board of Regents, the board of trustees of the school, applied on the plan to President Carter's new inflation guidelines are released. The guidelines are expected to request volunteer input.
Dykes requested last month that the maximum increase allowed under the guidelines be accepted by the Regents.
The Regents will consider requests from the various ad hoc committees, which also meet this morning.
The Budget and Finance Committee is expected to request that $840,000 in general fee funds be released to Regents schools as a payment for the provision of general fee补贴 appropriation. The request
is being made to cover costs from higher-than-expected enrollment at Regents schools.
The committee request is based on an actual enrollment increase of 2,722 students; a predicted enrolment decrease of 1000 was the basis for funding.
In other business, the Academic Com-
mission of the proposed Kansas-Nebraska-Missouri
which would allow graduate students from
these states to pay instate tuition at any of
their universities.
McFarland said both the Nebraska and Missouri school systems approved the agreement.
Joel McFarlane, a Regents staff member, said yesterday that students attending professional schools such as the medical school may not be included in the agreement.
However, a report documenting how many Kansas graduate students attend Nebraska and Missouri schools was still needed, he said.
The committee also needs to determine
The academic committee also will discuss recommendations from the Council of Academic Officers, a group of academic leaders from each institution.
whether Kansas lacked graduate programs the other states had.
Academic planning, a 5-year plan in which faculty and University staff predict which schools and departments will have shifts in enrollment, is one of COCAO's
This would help the University plan changes in personnel and academic programs.
Also, the Building Committee will request that old Green Hall be renamed Lippincott Hall to honor the University's fourth 'hancellor'
COPIES'4c no minimum KINKO'S
904 Vermont 843-8019
Police were expected to conclude their investigation today into the possible assault of a man in 711 Connecticut St., Douglas County District Attorney Mile Maele said.
Police to end study of death in park
Jones died Tuesday at the University of Kansas Medical Center after head injuries he received Friday night while on his campaign Park, Second and Indiana streets.
Vehicular homicide is a misdemeanor he said.
"We are not talking about an intentional homicide, but one involving a vehicle," Malone said.
Sun
Jones
Mon-Sat 10-6
841-4450
1002 Massachusetts
nest to General Jeans
XEROX
Jam Jones
Where an original idea built an industry.
Check with your college placement office for details and schedules. Then talk to our campus representative.
XEROX
Xerox is an affirmative action employer (male/female)
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
$2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50
$1.00 $2.00 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
for run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UKW 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 notice or message to be called the UMN business office at 841438.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Very Simily:
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. If
Watch for truck parked at 8th & Illinois. Home of the Best Wheat Pie in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also aided, Raisin sauce and Fresh Potato Pie with Bacon and Yellow and white pancake, butter, and whiskmilk.
The Hole in the Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also roasted, cooked, and raw potatoes. Vegetables include broccoli, yellow and white peaple, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday we serve Harvie Hardt Anderson. It
Use Kansan Classified
9F
The entry deadline
for the intramural
Swimming Relays is
Monday, October 22
at 5 p.m.
More information:
208 Robbinson
864-3546
Zen practice nightly 6 p.m. Free lecture by Zen master Seung Sahn, Sabh; Monday, Oct. 22, 8 p.m., jayhawk room, student union. For information mail 482-7010. 10-22
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% nationally
and 30% nationally. BOOKLUNKS ALL of our 56,000 paperbacks are价 $2-way have been and always will be 13
4644 in and in bovine at 1401 Maslah
2888
**Christmas in. October:** BAZAAR, R.L.D.S.
**Christmas in. October:** BAZAAR, R.L.D.S.
1. 2 handsmade gifts and crafts, 2 omelet made,
2 handsmade gifts, candy, plants Homemade
flower, party room for 5 people.
Fri.-Sat. 3-5
Evanceance Soft Center presents a weekend of *SAMKA* Shellcock Johnson, Community and Vermont Streets; Sat. Oct. 10 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 812. For information call 812-5763. 840-109-108
Free lecture on Christian Science, "The Consequences of the Healing Christ," by John A. Grant. In First Church Church, Scientol. 1701 Manuscriptum, Monday, October 22, at 8:00 a.m. to 10:23 p.m.
JIM CROW--Get out of Lawrence. March on
$henugins, Saturday. October 20th. 9:00 P.M.
10-19
Employment Opportunities
Check with the opportunities career. A representative for the Office of Justice at the Placement Office, 202 Summerfield, OT, 25 or call Robert L. Shields, CLU, District Agent, 8417, Lawrence National Campus.
Friday, Oct. 19
CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN
w.Southern Fried
Ticket Info.
Dosers open at
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Lawrence
Opera house
Call for concert info 6930
ENTERTAINMENT
Tradition begins at 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28 on
the hill on the hill. See Homecoming Parade
10-26
Homecoming Parade
"Roy's Bar and Bail, a night of women's music," Friday, Oct. 19, 8:00. Off the-Wall Hall. The bottom of the Barrel Band, Nebo guitar, mandolin, yodlin, Oct. 20, 8:30. OFF the-Wall Hall. **10-19**
The Harbour Miltenweave has gone crazy! 1PC Com-
panion for 2-hour class. From 6:00 p.m. you can get cold quarts of Coarse Wine at 8:30 p.m.
And the Glass of Wine pair together at The Harbour Life if your
wine palate is good. Come to the Harbour Miltenweave in the first-class class.
FOR RENT
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW REST.
Bedroom, furnished and unfurnished, from $170;
bedroom, furnished and unfurnished, from $170;
parking. On KU bed room; INDOOR HEATED
floor; on KU floor; on KU front door;
$41 Front Door.启放 to Rent East.
$41 Front Door.启放 to Rent West.
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone: 847-9579. If
FOR SALE
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
roomers near KU. Possible rent reduction for
labor. Call 841-6254 or 842-4055. 10-31
1 to-23
7 to -12 pm.
10 to-23
2 Leen 2-buset alarm, att. gar, avail. Oct 20th
$210 mo. Call: R9-0507 or M4-6011.
10 to-23
3 bdmr. house, close to KU bus line. No pets.
15 bdmr. house, couple or coupler, $34/month. 1067,
octavio. 1068.
For Rent, newly remodeled two bedroom apartment, 313 east 87th, $19 plus deposit. Graduated students preferred. Call 642-5729
FIRST MONTH FREE WANT Free shirt to wear to class
FOR SALE
SunSpecs—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably
priced. 1213 Mass. 811-570. TP
*white, WITHTE LIGHT, 704, Mass. 643-835.* **Tf**
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Make-up
shampoo. See instruction for make-up preparation.
**3** For exam preparation. New in-
preparation. **3** For exam preparation. New
in preparation. **2** For exam preparation. New
in Town Crier, Maik Bookbinder and Oread Book
1970-1986 used cars= please let me be your pulse when purchasing a used car. Call and find out why so many KU students buy used cars from Bob Smith-Landers Ford-Nord 435-800. 10-19
WATERBED MATTRESSES $39.98, 3 year guarantee.
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 13683. TF
1971 Dodge Monaco four-door, fully equipped.
Superclean. See to appreciate. 842-1078. 10-19
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Pouch. Mopeds.
Rick's Blue Shop, 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. TF
Alternator, starter and generator specialists
Parts service, and exchange units. BELL ACO-
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-960, 3900 W. 6th., tr.
PUCH sport moped. 875 miles, neat condition,
fully equipped. FW, KS. (93) 640-0177. 10-18
Four United Airlines $5 discount coupon. $85
Two rooms of sculptured green carpetting and padding. Approximately 10' x 10' and 9' x 12'. $12.50 each. Wool cloth jacket, size w, worn only 10 times. $380.8, 842-6097. 10-18
9 week old Ferrets, make adorable pets. Cat
843-4843 6 a p.m.
10-23
Sony digital clock radios reduced; New model with battery reserve if else, goes off—special at $29.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mann. Open Thurs. piles. 10-12
1971 Pinto, 4-second, 67,000 rules. Must sell, price
call. Keith Call, 843-503-70. 10-19
Grunding Dictaphone, gram (grain) scales, pump pump motor and an encyclopedia of railroading. Phone Rick at 841-4822 10-18
For Sale—'89 Ford XL, 2 door hardtop. PS, PB,
AC, studied snow tires on it. Call 542-3378 morning or evening.
10-23
each. Call 842-8378. 10-18
Pioneer XS428 Stereo Receiver $100 Ultralinear
Speakers $15. Call Jeff, 811-2381) 10-21
One way Air station air ticket to Phila, PA. Good until 12:15 $33 each or B.O. B64-605
For sale. United 1; fare coupon Best offer. Call Rick. B64-600; evenings. 10-19
V-W Rabbit—76–$6,000 miles with 2—anowires.
$2600
10-31
868 Rambar station, wagon, 4-door, new battery,
heater, runs well. Call Jeff. B64-9490 (-800) 10-22
Michelin Tire Sale 20, 25, and 30% discount at
the store. The appliance has a discount with
discount tire deal.
Hummingbird lawn sale, indoor. if rain sat, rain $10.
Beehive kitchen table, indoor. if rainy, $25.
Lemonade coffee tables, footboards, yarn,
garden trees, tomato plants, picture frames,
gardens, garden chairs, etc., etc.
Garden trainers, etc., etc., please. No coats,
trainers, or shoes.
Men's shearing coat-size 42. Worn very little—
81-922 evening, keep 17/20. Worn very well—
81-922 evening, keep 17/20.
1973 Volvo 144 4.4-speed, A low mileage, radians,
good condition, $440, Call # 82-1729 after
taking a test drive.
Stereo Camera Equalizer—Spectro Acoustic model 212c, Only 3 month old-mid condition. $175.00 or best offer. 841-924-8285, keep trying. 10-24
1975 Fiat 131S, Lc. 4-speed, 48,000 miles, must
set immediately. $1850, call 841-8433.
1975 CHIPMAN Shape Hoods motorcycle, e-clever shape, sold to sell 182-202 10-26 We now have children's Classic Books Male bookstore, Ltd w23. W21-752 10-18
FOUND
Small gray poodle, male, between Indiana and Maryland, Stairs on 9th Street, call 810-635-1089
430-3130
Identification cards found around. Ridge Court apartment: Contact Traffic and Security. 10-19 Found gold bracelet near chicester's residence.
song, song hair kitten, 8 months* on straw
cocktail, wine, wine, wine
Oliver Hall, 624-624, after 8 p.m. 10:22
Karen Stuckey, 527-798, after 11 a.m.
HELP WANTED
Pound gold bracelet near chancellor's residents.
Call 841-7842 to identify. 10-19
HELP WANTED
Pizza Hut
MÉNÉMIE WOMENMÉNIE JOURSAL CURRICULATEUSE SALI-
MENT MEMÉMIE JOURSAL CURRICULATEUSE GINDERGELUPT
BACARDI EN BACARDI
OVERSEAS JD-SUMMER year sound. Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fees (IDR
$21,000 monthly). expenses paid. Bissellfree.
S. America, I.C. JB-23-RA, CKA-24-MA. De-
19-29 CA 92652.
restaurant industry, weve always
As one of America's leaders in the
considered people to be among
So, if you've been looking for a full
and the people we serve.
804 Iowa
934 Massachusetts
1606 W. 23rd
Language, Project Preschool Bureau of Child Development data collection and analysis. Must have completed all prerequisites, including data curation and data tide, and training observers. Salary based on position offered. Application deadline Oct 31. 118th Louisiana Applicant deadline Oct 31. An equal Opportunity, Affirmation Aero emphasizes the right to exercise reasonable regard of race, religion, sex, disability, age, national origin or status.
Bureau of Child Research, Achievement Place,
Boston, MA. Child research available. Salary up to $30,000. Experienced staff working with adolescent youth preferred. Own schedule provide early afternoon and evening sexual application deadline October 31. The Bureau of Child Research Personnel are responsible for coordinating sexual application deadline October 31. Sexual Application Project, 111 Hawkeye way. 10-19 WANTED - part-time for life in Life Research Center. Job duties include
Substitute teachers for Basehor-Linwood USL
458. Contact Board of Education Office 911-
274-1296 10-
Civil Engineering Department of the University of Iowa seeks a civil engineer as assistant professor of civil engineering to teach both undergraduate and graduate courses in the areas of civil engineering computer-aided design, structural analysis, acoustics, Aquiline must have B.S. and Ph.D. in civil engineering and dynamic Rial element models. Be ready for
XILLOE GRADS AND PEOPLE WITH EXPERIENCES
XILLOE PROJECTS. If you have experience in farming, a skilled trade, have a college degree or be a professional and want to work in useful and creative jobs, Pelo Corp volunteer. Must be 18, single and unemployed. Pelo Corp volunteer. Must be 18, single and unemployed. O-Larry on Oct 22, 23, 24
HOME ECONOMISTS-You can be more than a home economist. You can be a Cornell Vote Campbell graduate, develop banking overviews, You need trained accountants or train others to teach. Pay travel and vacation. Must be U.S. citizens single mother in now for interview at Assessment Center. Apply online at assessmentcenter.com.
COLLAGE GRAB PEACE CORPS, AND VISA CARD PROGRAMS FOR FOUNDATION SCHOOLS. USE THEM YOUR KNOWLEDGE BEGINS. OFFER A GRANT TO ALL OF ARGINA, LATIN AMERICA, ARIA AS well as TURKEY, NEW ZEALAND, AND FORESTS FOR OPENINGS IN A VARIABLE ARE PROVIDED FOR MORE INFORMATION OR how to FOR INTERNET WAY PLACEMENT CENTER.
TEACHERS-- If your degree is in English, math, or foreign language, you can serve Corps needs. You teach in primary secondary schools, develop curricula for other schools, and travel. Pay travel; monthly living insurance; health care; 48 days paid with no dependence. No upper age limit. Send resume to Center, No. 228 College Center, Glenn-Garlow-LaSalle 228 College Center.
MATH SCIENCE TEACHERS - Confer an alterate on arithmetic, algebra, and statistics in Africa. Asia is asking for Peace Corps volunteers to complete math assignments for creative, energetic individuals with advanced math skills. Health care assignments: 48 days paid vacation. Must be U.S. citizen. Applicants must have an upper limit age. Includes the Peace Corps Sign. Mail applications to Peace Corps, Attn: Lisa Rowe, Office of O-Logy, Inc., 201 East Columbus Avenue, 16-19
LOST
10 week old male puppy. Solid black. Brown flea collar. Needs medication. Please call 842-3501. Very attached. 10-19
Lost slick, black and white with spot on
Lost blush. Black Rattlesnake 841 5322 10:33
Gold women's L.D. bracelet with gold heart
band, silver crown. Stainless steel.
Sock on back. Cellular 641-854-100-22
Women's silver watch with band, white-w
wrist. Restate, Wear Card at 843-852-909
12 week old, shiny black kitten. Lost near the Hawk.
Dreserally want "Horace" back. Please:
841-4733. 10-24
MISCELLANEOUS
Ment's black wallet and KU blue pass in blue
Ment's money important. I needlicense.
863-8687 10-24
NOTICE
THEIS BINDING COPYING--The House of Ubice's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their bindings and copies in Lawyers. Let us help you at KM SaaS or phone 482-3600. TP
EMERGENCY FOSTER PARENTS - If your family wishes the challenges of caring for our children at home, please consider joining Children's Service League invites you to call 800-725-3096 or visit www.childrensservice.org. State license and training required.
THE CAMPUS SAFE SERVICE is being organized to ensure that all campus and the KU police department. The CSS requires them. Escorts will work in teams of one individual for each student who is wearing a wristwatch or for escort transports. If you would like to be escorted, call KU-1208340 for more information. Please call before Monday, Oct 25 at 9:30 a.m.
Papers due soon! Will provide personalized bibliographies on your topic in scholarly or encyclopedias. Send resume to: M.D.
GAMMA OMICRON BETA will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in the COUNCIL, ROOM. All G.O.B.'s attend 10-18
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal 518-524-3604
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-anirises up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling Tubal Ligation. For appointment at Mercy Hospital, 4801 North St., Overland Park, KS. 4801 North St., Overland Park, KS.
If you're looking for a bar with a chew beer, good food and great wine, you're going to love the Harbour Lite. People you'll like from this cozy day and Friday afternoon for TOIF! Now serve up your favorite cocktails at the Harbour Lite. Get your joint together at the Harbour Lite.
GAIL CUNNINGHAM REFERENCES through Head-
quarters, M14234 and KU info. 860434-106
Can't offer or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Affiliate -M14234
The San Luis Obispo The Creatures
PSYCHIIC PERSONALITY HEADINGS $25, $50,
831-341-911
10-19
The San Louis Odisbo Tar Creatures.
1
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every new occasion. Birthday, Anniversary, Get Well. Secret Alert. 841-35-11
Advance tickets for the movie JESUS available.
Call John 843-6064
10-18
PERSONAL
This letter is personal as it can be. Since every person has a family, of any kind or another, Free State form of slavery, of any kind or another, Free State form of individual personalities. These those called Martin Luther King Jr. when he insulted them in tax payers' hearings, said they had the right to be called this year when the KluK Lion King was refused March in a city in the South, constituted to be a museum of African-American history. I have the college education among people think I've proved of, but I don't see anyone apologize for this. I am a bobblehead person for Martin Luther King Jr. and a people for women into the citizenship. Some I have met personally also to write this letter, but I now realize it was written from my perspective, it fact is very personal. Flower Boy Larry
"THE BLACK CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCE"
*by Edward L. Wheeler, Atlanta, Georgia*
*Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union Big 8 Room.*
tn.18
Archei 'The Art & Design building needs a new name, how 'bout Lambapples Hall?' 10-19
Come to the all new MAD HATTER Happy Hour
m. w. monday thru friday, Open 7 am-
10:35
Sigma Nu and the Wheel present the 1929 Daly Maill-Look Auilie, contest, KU's only campus-based beauty contest. Oct. 20 at the Sigma Nu House, 1:30 p.m. free beer.
Don't miss!!! 1792 Daly Mae Look-Alike Com-
plex Sat. Oct. 20 at the Stigma House N 1
30 p.m. Free beer, Fun & gamet Sponsored by
Sigma Nu, Seg and the Wheel. 10-1
BIG DOG (Babbies) Nibble, it takes two hours, but you'll be a better person for it, there's always a first time. Love Muchly Always, Mildred (Baby Cakes)
10-18
Veterans for employment assistance contact Campus Veteran - 181 B Kannan Union, 643-4525 iff. Roses, Roses are red, but you twice an ice, or lone heat, you might be able to finish at 10:26
After the Homeseconger Parade at 14 p.m., Friday, we are due to see the Dame in Pittsburgh and the Daime in舞会. Dance to the music of Light Gang with Claude "Filder" Williams and Light Gang with the Sailtea in both Areas are free.
Stay on the hill Friday, Oct 26 3 p.m. see the first KU Homecoming Parade of bands, boats, yells, and jerks to Jawahirk. Student organization Jawahirk had a performance at Jawahirk Bend. to X-zone park 10-26
RED_DOG INN will roll your blues away. All you Kanaa Sig be there and dance square! Love those boards.-Lila 10-19
Halloween Costume Sale, wigs, hats, accessories,
dresses, men's suits, 626 Ohio. Oct. 20, 9-10
19
2017, JUNE 16, BOSTON — DANIEL
your vitamin B. W. Bear.
jp-18
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10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 18, 1979
Fraternities . . .
from page one
get a membership application," she said.
"They told us that they would send us some information, but we never got it.
"We have had trouble with Panhellenic in general," she said. "they say they will send us things, but when we don't get them, they说 that somehow things got lost."
Mcall said, "We have gotten along very well with Panhellenic in the past." She said that her sorority, Sigma Gamma Rho, still might consider joining Panhellenic.
Lydia Belt, Panellinic adviser, said that although no black socialists currently had ties with the organization, "the door is always open."
"It would be a waste of time for the non-servile sororites to attend Panhellenic meetings because they conduct their rush activities more directly than the sororites within Panhellenic."
Belot said, "One reason non-residential sororites haven't joined Panhellenic is that Panhellenic deals extensively with rush.
FORMAL RUSH for Panhellenic
formal ball. The guest will be
time, a woman who wishes to join
a security is invited to a number of
security house, one or more of which may ask her to
provide a phone number.
McPall said rush for the four black KU sororites was completely different than rush held by Panhellenic members.
"We rush by putting up posters around campus and by sending letters to people who were there," she said. "We had said she knew no black sororities who had white members, although they had been
much the same way, except that their formal rush is in the fall.
Betty Rodrique, Panellenic president, said sorely insists in Panellenic black members this year. She refused to state how many black members were, however.
Senate . . .
Lawrence City, Commissioner Marci Francisco was attacked by a man early yesterday morning as she walked home after a commission meeting, the police reported.
Francisco told the police she was walking past a car accident that attacked in front of W10, 11th St. by a man who may have had a knife a police report said. The police are classifying the incident as a shooting.
The assailant fled when a man came out of the house in response to Francisco's screams, the report said.
"Each year we get into a dogfight over funding."
A police spokesman said that Francisco was not injured and that there were no suspects in the incident.
From page one
THE BLACK Student Union's budget request was cut from $3.275.85 to $9.25.85 in preliminary deliberations by the budget committee,
At the Senate meeting, an additional $150 was allocated to the group for advertising in the University Daily Kansan.
Francisco, 29, was elected to a four-year term on the city commission April 3.
The main reason for the budget committee's decision to cut the group's request was because of a lack of specific justifications for the requests, according to
He also argued that it appeared the group had sufficient funds for the fiscal year.
Francisco attacked while walking home
Jim Roller, graduate student senator, said that if the group used the funds wisely, it should be funded.
"Black Student Union is an effective organization," he said. "It has proven itself to be cost-effective."
Melanie Andersen, co-chairman of the Student Services committee, said the additional request for advertising would have been granted during spring budget hearings, but her committee did not have the funds.
Wharton said the black fraternities conducted rush differently than the fraternities with full IFC memberships.
He said members of his fraternity had been invited to the houses of fraternities with full membership in IFC.
THE BILL passed last night by the Senate funded 13 organizations which have received funds for the current fiscal year.
"It was interesting to talk to them and go to a different setting," he said. "They were interested, so there's a good means of communication between both of our group but that it's not the same."
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A general meeting of the African Students Association is scheduled for 6 pm Saturday, October 20,1979 at the Council Room Kansas Union.
African Students Association Meeting Notice
The agenda for this first meeting of the new executives is pregnant and the new executives solicit the help and support of all members in steering the association. Hope to see all African students on campus at this meeting. Thank you.
Appolo E. Dimbo General Secretary
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1
Male dancers strip to cheers, applause at The Bird
Bv ANN LANGENFELD
A man walks into a Lawrence private club. "Are you here to dance?" the owner asks.
A look of surprise, a glimpse at the stage, and the man shakes his head and hurries out the door.
It's ladies night at the Flamingo Club, otherwise known as the Bird. Women only invited. Men will be allowed.
The attraction? Male dancers.
And about 75 ladies have come to have a good time. The younger-looking college women sit in the booths and tables around the room. In a tight knit cluster, to the front sit the 'townies'—most appear 30 to 40 years old.
No matter what the age, the ladies are booting,
bullering, whistling, stomping their feet and poun-
ning.
"Show us some skin!" they cry.
Standing on a table top is a young man, dancing to the music, while the generous and generous man sits nearby.
He is blind and he has a wide, friendly grin. His round, baby face has an appeal few women can handle.
HE JUMPS OFF the table and dances throughout
the room. The dollar bills bribe from his shorts,
the honour never leaves his face.
Back on stage, under the red and blue lights, the sweat glistens off his broad shoulders as he moves around the stage.
"I love to dance. I go to the discs all the time. This is great." The dancer, a KU student, says.
1. have a girlfriend, "me." said she. "goes to college somewhere else, if she knew I did this, she kill me"
He begins to roll down his shorts, slowly. The shrieks and applause are deafening. But just before too much is shown, the shorts quickly are rolled back into place.
"I love to tease them," he says, "If I took off my shorts, half the appeal of my act would be gone."
"The first night I came on the owner told me I couldn't take off my shorts. It's against the law, I could."
He finishes dancing, moves to the side of the stage behind the tutletable set up, and mulls on his pants.
"I started doing this a few years ago, he says "Some might a friend and I quite drunk really."
we knew they were naming dancers out here so we called up and asked if they needed me, but none of them too much.
i drive to The Bird takes in little-frauded parts of Lawrence, over the Kansas River bridge into Kansas City. We get a nice bit of T-intersection and directs seekers of the Flamingo Club to turn right, off to the left, lights glow and opens the entrance to the Museum.
"IT'S NOT TOO bad having a bunch of women
seven you would wilt think?"
from that night, but I've been back three or four more times to do it again.
THE SECOND DANER walk to the center of the stage. A college man with dark brown hair and a white shirt.
His blue T-shirt is soon removed. He takes longer to remove the curled blue jeans, much to the concern of his mother.
And when the green, blue and white abstract-pattern baked cookies appear, chews, whistles and sips.
"Take it off!" they demand.
Once again, dollar bills are slipped into shorts. Some women attempt a peek or a feel at the same person.
The first dance says, "I just tell myself that I wear swimming trunks in the air or my shirt. I look to the mirror."
The third dancer, older and wearing blue eye shadow, quickly strips to his yellow bikini briefs. He teaches the women with a red scarf she has seductively withdrawn from his shorts. Then, in a flash, he
WE CAN DRINK all we want while we're here. I try not to eat too much. But it does get easier to eat when you're hungry.
That movement is greeted with a single shriek from a woman in a red-felt derby. The whistles and rattle of her feet are heard.
"He won't get many dollars that way," one woman observes.
He leaves the stage and moves through the audience,站在 talk back here, stealing a kiss there.
THE YOUNGER-LOOKING women begin to drift toward the door in threes and fours.
What do you say to a naked man?
Soon the room, filled with Fermina-covered tables, an ectopic mix chairs and black boots, is almost
The hard-core group at center-stage front remains. The club owner is on stage demanding that the
"You never know if a woman stripper gets turned on," a woman notes. "I guess some male strippers
appears to be in a sexual fantasy all his own. He doesn't smile. He doesn't seem shy.
The dancer leaves the stage and seeks long, deep tears from any willing woman. His look of aloofness
The blond dancer comments, "He loves doing this. 'do it even if he weren't paid. I be very emerald."
As the turned-on dancer finishes his act, the women shout. "We want Tom. We want Tom."
one time a woman about 40 years old wanted me to go to the back room with her. Tom says, "I tell you."
And the blond teaser from the first act is back on stage.
"I don't even enjoy kissing them. Some of the guys let the women kiss them. I don't. I'm here to give em
One of the categories listed is "medical, psychiatric, psychological or sociological records." Stephan questioned whether "sociological" records could be easily found.
"Another time I danced at a private party. Some girl was getting married. They it was. It was a very special day."
A cartoon drawing of a bird-like character wearing a scarf and boots, walking on a grassy ground with clouds and sun in the background.
KANSAN
"Can you imagine? If I'm doing this now for fun, what will my grandchildren do for fun?"
Carl Monk, dean of the Washburn law school, also said "sociological" was too
See RECORDS back page
CLOUDY
"1 CERTAINLY AND agree that formal complaints and court files should be open to the public. 2 The rules should not be open because it might be harmful to individuals and harmful to the community."
Vol. 90, No. 40
The bill currently lists 17 categories of information that would not be considered sensitive by current laws, including records, personnel records, testing materials, security records and real estate records.
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
proposal. However, he asked that certain law enforcement records be kept closed.
Friday, October 19, 1979
1924
Public records bill hits committee snag
While most other students were riding the bus during yesterday's thunderstorm. Andy de Valpine, Lawrence freshman, chose ride his bicycle and stay dry with the aid of a wet bike.
MIKE WILLIAMS/Kansan staff
Opposums used in venom study
TOPEKA-A Bill to open more public records in Kawasaki will have to be drafted for the fifth time because too many questions are being raised by the federal and State Affairs Committee meeting.
The state legislative committee had been expected to approve the bill today. However, certain phrases and definitions in the proposal did not satisfy some officials.
The bill would open to the public any record that is made, maintained or kept by any public agency.
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
What bus?
The current law makes available only those records that are required to be kept by a public agency.
Attorney General Robert Stephan, who earlier called the current law a "closed records law," told the committee yesterday that he was "very thrilled" with the
See story page nine
Tornado strikes four-county area
From Kansan Staff and Wire Reports
An unusual fall tornado hit a half-mile-
wide area of southern Kansas counties yesterday afternoon and evening, injuring 11 persons and causing
No deaths were reported, but one woman was flown to a Wichita hospital in critical condition, two others were hospitalized at the scene, and another was taken to a Mapphospital.
All 11 persons were injured when the tandoo struck a poultry farm just east of Clay County, killing and destroying about half a dozen buildings and killing thousands of chickens. Clay County has been hit with at least 26 bites.
THE TWISTER first touched down northwest of Minneapolis, Kan., about 4:15
p. m., where it leveled three farms, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.
The tornado then skipped northeast through Clay County—where most of the damage occurred—Riley County and Pottawatonna County, the patrol reported.
Passing to the south of Clay Center, the funnel destroyed at least four long, sheet-metal chicken houses and severely damaged two-story house occupied by the family.
Conser said most of those injured were in the house or a nearby office, but at least four persons were crouched in a ditch when the twister dumped debris on them.
TWO OTHER barns in Clay County were damaged by the tornado, which also overturned a mobile home, the sheriff said.
An unoccupied mobile home near
After destroying the chicken farm, located two miles east of Clay Center, authorities said the tornado lifted into the
In Manhattan, a hay barn at Kansas State University was destroyed by fire when it was discovered that damage was estimated at $35,000. A university spokesman said the blaze did not involve any structural damage.
The tornado that struck the chicken farm first touched down in Ottawa County, where it destroyed several buildings on three farms but caused no injuries.
Leonardville in Riley County was overturned, and several cars were destroyed, the natrol said.
Two persons suffered fractures near Oranga in northern Potutwatonic County, where several farm houses and outbuildings were damaged, authorities said.
The National Weather Service said confirmed tornadoes were reported in Marion, Saline, Ottawa, Clay, Cloud, Riley and Potawatomi counties. Some damage was reported near Louisville in southern Kentucky where storm winds were clocked as high as 100 mph.
clouds before dropping to the ground again near Randolph, where more farm buildings were damaged and an undetermined number of livestock were killed.
NATIONAL WEATHER Service officials in Topera reported that 1.08 inches of rain had fallen on Tuesday, ending at midnight yesterday. Winds in Topera reached 45 mph at 9:30 p.m.
Rainfall amounts and storm damage reports were not available for Lawrence as of 1 a.m. today.
Staff Reporter
Bv BOB PITTMAN
Plan to house new sorority in residence hall meets up with opposition at AURH meeting
A resolution to oppose admission of the Owner's sorrow into the residence system at an association and withdrawn at an Association of University Residence Halls general meeting.
AURH members debated for more than an hour about the desirability of providing living space for Alpha Omicron Pi security at UW-Milwaukee of a University residence hall next year.
McElhenie said representatives from the
"We have made a commitment at this point," he said. "I don't know that students determine who will and who will not enter residence halls."
However, Fred McElhene, director of the office of residential programs, said that Alpha Omicron P1 pliedges would be living in a university residence hall next year.
national organization of Alpha Omicron I
met last spring in New York, and an Ame-
rii life, and Anu Envire, director of student organizations and activities to discuss housing options for the nation.
LESLIE WELCH, traveling consultant for Alpha Omicron Pi said, "To my knowledge, we have been promised spaces."
She said when national representatives of Alpha Omicron Pi met with University of Florida students, she recognized on campus this fall and provide competitively-priced housing in a security house by the fall of 1981 in return for living spaces next up on a floor of a University building.
Aly Opicorn Pi has 51 pledges and is holding informal rush to obtain more members, accordant with the plans of his secretary for the sorority and vice president of Lewis Hall. She said the
sorority also would participate in formal rush this January to obtain more members.
Smith said that if the *i*orosity could not fill a floor of a residence hall next fall, the additional spaces on the floor would be contracted to other students.
MCELHENIE SAID he, Eversole and Smith had not yet determined which residence hall would house the pledges.
However, Jay Smith, president of AUHR, said, "I believe that Alpha Omicron Pi's preference is Lewis, Ellsworth and Oliver, in that order."
Representatives for two of those residence hills said residents of their halls were strongly opposed to location of the sorority members in their halls.
Ann Shields, Lewis Hall president, introduced the proposed resolution to bar sorority members from Lewis.
"This entire thing has gotten further than Lewis Hall wants," she said.
She said a poll was taken two consecutive nights at the hall during dinner, and 189 residents had voted against any move to allow the use of the hall. About 25 had supported such a move.
"Lewis Hall is the only all-women's hall free from any ties with sororities," Shields said. "We have a unique atmosphere."
SHIELDS BROUGHT a petition to the meeting with names of 400 Lewis residents who were against the sorority's entrance into the hall.
Miriam Elderman,教授 of Ellsworth Hall, said, "Ellsworth Hall members oppose such a move just as vehemently. Although it's not been discussed at the Ellsworth Senate yet, it has been discussed among the students. We have strong hall support behind us."
Smith said members of the sorority would have to pay the full contract price, as do
See AURH back page
D. A. M. BORISCHKO
Author hates 'Clockwork Orange'
PETER E. BURTON
Rv AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Reporter
Seasoned with cigar smoke and a crisp English accent, Anthony Burgess' words flowed vigorously yesterday.
But then Burgess lives for the sound of words.
In a KU humanities lecture last night at the Kansas Union, the novelist-comperee Laura Jubler used Woodruff Auditorium for nearly two hours with a tik-tak The Novelist's Daily
Although he did not publish a novel until he was 30 years old, Burgess 62, is the author of "The best known is 'A Clockwork Orange.'" The book was published in 1902 and made into a film.
"The sound of words is what I live for"—Anthony Burgess
PETER L. WEBB
"If an author is known at all, it's for something he detests," she said, explaining that "A Clockwork Orange" was not his personal favorite. This book, like all his works, is based on his inherent conviction of freedom choice and the free will of the human being.
BURGESS TRACED this belief to his origin as an northwestern Irish Catholic Englishman. He was reared in Managua, where he played mother-giver and dancing girl-baker.
"In northwestern England, if you have any talent at all, you become an entertainer," he said. So at the age of 15, Burress been composing music.
But "late in life," he said he realized that he was not going to be an outstanding
composer and that "it must be easier to compose a novel than it was to compose a symphony."
He said he wrote his first novel as a hobby to determine whether he be occupied with novel-writing for a long period of time.
After his first two efforts failed to be published, Burgess taught at a colonial school in Malaya and this was born first and published work, "The Malaysian Triplet."
THIS WAS HIS only truly autobiographical work, he said in an interview viedearday afternoon.
"It's not true that you need to experience everything to write about it," Burgess said. "You can guess your way into it. All
He said he tended to view the "real events of the world as potential fiction."
experiences are capable of being imagined."
His characters are, however, very real, he said, and are taken from people he has met. From these beginnings, he said, his characters come alive.
'My characters take over the story.
Thus the novel is never born artificially
and the ending is never planned; it can't be
predicted what the characters will do.'
"There is no money in the writing of
NOVEL WRITING is a "faculty imposed upon us" he said, and is part of the novelist's daily damnation, part of the cross he must bear.
literature. I will never be rich, but then I expected to be."
are also said he never expected to be a figure and denied that he was one now. But Mr. Orange cataplummed him onto college campuses into the libraries of universities into the colleges of university.
"I'm not the cult figure; Kubrick is," Burgess said. "That was his "Clockwork Orange." Not mine.
His book is the story of a hoodlum, Alex, who with his companions, pilages the countryside, raping, stealing and killing, and being programmed in prison to do nothing but good.
GESS SAID he wrote the novel in
Susan BURGES page 10.
See BURGESS page 10
2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 19, 1979
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wire Services
Chicago gets busing ultimatum
WASHINGTON—The government took the first step toward what could be the nation's longest and most bitter school busing battle yesterday to serve notice on Chicago that it will sue to force an end of alleged widespread classroom segregation.
Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Patricia Roberts Harris said he had notified the Chicago school board that unacceptable school desegregation plan was submitted by Oct. 27, the matter would be referred to the Justice Department for legal action.
Harris' actions followed the Chicago Board of Education's rejection Wednesday of HEW guidelines for reducing the city's school segregation.
Regulations in the Civil Rights Act require a 10-day interim period between the time of a government decision to bring suit and the actual filing of that suit. Chicago school Superintendent Joseph Hannon released a statement in response to Harris' notification,owing that the school officials would fight the
Iraa raises its oil price 10%
NEW YORK — Iraq has raised the price of its oil at 10 percent, oil industry organizations said yesterday. It became the fifth member of the Organization of Muslim Countries to raise the oil price.
Iran is OPEC's second largest member, but sends very little oil to the United States. Most OPEC oil goes to Japan and Europe.
Consequently, the Iraqi move is expected to have a negligible effect on prices of gasoline and heating oil in the United States, but the combined effect of it and other increases probably will add a penny or two a gallon at the gas pump and on heating bills.
Unlike Libya, which announced a price increase Monday, Iraq did not raise its prices above the $23.0 bar of a steel set by OPEC in June.
Firemen's strike likely in KC
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Negotiations between city representatives and firefighters back off yesterday and the firefighters scheduled membership
The president of Local 42 of the International Association of Firefighters, John Germann, said after today's meeting that a strike vote was "likely."
Both sides blamed the other for lack of progress and lack of settlement in the seven-month negotiations.
Firefighter representatives said they would present the city's latest proposal to the membership at today's meeting but would not present it with any
Rock Island main line open
The main disagreement between the city and the union representing the city's 939 firefighters centers on the length of the work week. The firefighters have proposed a four-shift, 42-hour week, while the city has been pushing for a three-shift, 48-hour week.
TOPEKA-The Federal Railway Administration yesterday notified the Kansas Corporation Commission that it had waived federal track standards along a Rock Island branch line from Belleville to the Colorado border, permitting rail operations at speeds of 10 mph or less.
The federal waiver means the northern branch line of the Rock Island line is in service, a KCC spokesman said. The entire line now is in OKC.
The line previously was embarged by the Kansas City Terminal Co., the firm directed by the Interstate Commerce Commission to run the financially-
KCT had alleged that track conditions along several Rock Island branch lines were unsafe.
The Belleville line was considered the most critical because of the lack of other rail service to move northern grain supplies to market.
Rishov denied execution stau
WASHINGTON—Supreme Court Justice William Rehmann refused yesterday to delay the execution of convicted Nanaise murderer Jesse Bishop.
Lawyers, who submitted new arguments without Bishop's permission, quickly exercised an option and requested that the arguments be submitted to Bishop. The judge rejected the request.
The full Supreme Court on Oct. 1, voted 7-2 to reject the arguments of two Nevada public defenders seek to keep Bishop Allyssa. Justices Thurgood Marney and James R. McDermott will preside.
Bishop was sentenced to die after pleading guilty to the 1976 shooting of a Baltimore man during a Las Vegas casino robbery. He has resisted all at-
Kansas Citu FBI agent resigns
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—An FBI agent under investigation for allegedly pocketing money intended for informants and for joining a theft ring he was supposed to investigate has resigned, one day after another agent suspected in the case was fired.
FBI Director William Webster ordered Alan Rotton, a supervisor at the bureau's Washington headquarters, to be fired and Stephen Travis of the bureau was fired.
Travis later turned in his resignation to Lester Lee, head of the FBI's Kansas City. Mo., office, who accepted it.
Payments on Kemper pending
cover the cost of any more repairs on Kemper Awning, whose roof collapsed June 4 in severe weather, until it receives a full accounting of reconstruction costs.
The sports authority also has demanded that he reimbursed for legal expenses it may have acquired because of the collapse and for any such expenses it may have incurred.
In 1973, the sports authority sold $10 million in revenue bonds to help finance the building's construction, which made the authority the largest single investor.
Despite its large investment, the authority holds no seat on the Arena Corporation board of directors.
More Demos backing Carter
NEW YORK - Half of the nation's Democrats now say they would like to see president Jimmy Carter try for re-election in 2010, according to an Associated Press poll.
This is an 11-point increase over the 39 percent who favored a Carter reelection try in a similar poll conducted in early September.
There were no big Carter triumphs in the last five months to account for a 5% drop in the number of students attending college. There is also possibly significant turnaround in the public's opinion of Carter. This increase has been offset by an improvement in other measures.
In the Oct. 15-18 poll, 41 percent of the Democrats opposed a Carter bid and 9 percent were not sure.
Greek poet wins Nobel Prize
STOCKHOLM, Sweden- Greek poet Odysseus Elytis, 68, was awarded the 1979 Nobel Prize for literature vexeday.
Eglys, little known outside the Greek language, edged out a half-dozen prestigious honors, including English novelist Graham Greene and Doris Kearns Goodwin, and English graffiti artist
Elytis, a pen name for Alepudhelis, is the second Greek to win the Nobel for literature.
The literature prize, awarded by the Swedish Royal Academy of Letters, was the last of the six 1792 Nobel Prizes to be awarded.
Weather ...
Today should be partly cloudy after early-morning showers, according to the KU Weather Service. The high should be near 72.
There will be a chance of thundershowers tonight with a low in the low-58s. Tomorrow should be partly cloudy with a high in the low-70s. Winds
Tomorrow should be partly cloudy with a high in the low-70s. Winds should be changing to northwestly tomorrow but remain light.
extended outlook for Sunday and Monday calls for a chance of rain throughout the period with highs in the low-70s and lows in the 50s.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Carter administration is confident there will be no interruption in U.S.-China relations, despite a judge's ruling that President Carter acted unconstitutional to force Israel to defend peace with Taiwan, State Department sources said yesterday.
U.S.-Sino relations termed stable
The officials, who asked not to be identified, said they were still assessing the effect of the decision in U.S. District Judge Oliver Gailch declared Wednesday that he would hold two-thirds of the Senate or a majority vote by both houses to end the defense treaty.
THE PEKING GOVERNMENT had made termination of the U.S.-Taiwan treaty a
State Department officials said the only firm decision the administration had made since the announcement of Gasf's decision have been to seek an expedited appeal before the Supreme Court.
precondition to normalizing relations with the United States.
Acting Assistant Attorney General Alice Daniel, who heads the Justice Department's civil division, said the government would take action against nine members of the U.S. Court of Appeals.
"We think it will be overturned," one official said of the Gosch decision.
THE DEPARTMENT'S spokesman,
Hodding Carter, was instructed to say
nothing publicly about the case because of
the pending appeal.
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Speaking privately, officials said the administration would probably do what is needed to recognize the government in Foking and dealing with Taiwan on a nongovernmental basis.
"Our lawyers advise that a matter under litigation should not be discussed," Carter said.
IF APPLEAIS OF the Gash decision fail, they said, the administration probably would go to Congress and ask for approval of the decision to end the treaty.
They said much would depend on whether the family wants to stay there, or demand in the matter, of muddy yesterday, there had been no consultations about the matter, and there were comments about his decision officials gave.
If that failed, the officials said, the administration probably would try to continue its policy toward the People's Republic of China.
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We have positions to fill.
President Carter has called the fight for tomorrow's energy the "moral equivalent of war." The front-page industry that's tackling the nation's greatest challenge needs superior engineering graduates. We can put your skills to work NOW, Kansas City Power & Light has choice career openings that place you and your classmates will be in five years; at high levels of authority and responsibility with earnings and hire now.
benefits to match.
Kansas City Power & Light Company is a billion-dollar utility and energy supplier to over a million people in a major commercial and industrial center encompassing 23 counties in two states. Because of growing energy demand, expansion, and promotions, we need engineers with leadership capabilities to take over in these areas.
Fossil Plant Construction and Engineering
Two Mechanical Engineers, one
Two Electrical Engineer and one
Engineering firm will be able to
review the work of and
coordinate with Consulting
Engineering firms involved in
engineering plants. These engineers will also design modifications to existing
plant systems to will superior contractors.
District Commercial Operations
We need two Service Engineers with degrees in Electrical or Mechanical Engineering (or Engineering Technology) to deal with representatives of the company and with Engineering and other departments of the Company. In addition to having good engineering skills, the graduates must be able to remain in position under pressure. These positions require extra savvy.
System Planning
One Mechanical, Electrical or industrial Engineer (or Engineering Technology graduate) is needed to perform studies of the cost benefit ruled out of designs of project sites. This individual will need course work in Economics and the ability to program in PORTRAN. Communication skills are also important as this involves interface with other engineering familiarity with economic modeling is an asset.
Energy Management Services
We need two Engineers with degrees in Mechanical or Electrical Engineering (or mechanical engineering) to explain electric heating, air conditioning, conservation techniques, and renewable sources of energy to customers. We also need engineers consulting engineers. This involves constant research to remain current with the industry. Candidates must demonstrate accurately and tactfully.
Generating Stations
Three Maintenance Engineers with leadership skills are needed for trouble-shooting, special studies, efficiency tests, and training. This is a "fast-track" into supervision and management. Graduating students who will have degrees in Mechanical or Electrical Engineering (or the following) are invited to discuss with us the following locations, some in congenial small town locales:
Distribution Engineering
One Electrical Engineer who has taken power engineering courses in needed to design both overhead and underground distribution systems. Some field experience is required opportunities to promote into Construction and Maintenance or technical supervision.
The Manager of Generating Stations is seeking an exceptional mechanical engineer for top level staff. Electrical Engineers as well as Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Technology are also considered. This person will assist in administration of the Preventative Maintenance and Efficiency Programs and the Management Systems. Candidates must be good at planning and, due to the nature of the liaison work, possess a strong understanding of unique and very challenging opportunity requiring a sharp individual able to work with all levels of the Company. It is essential to ensure to top management.
System Power Operations Staff
KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT
Our representatives will be interviewing on campus in the near future; we will be placed at the placement office.
An Equal Employment Opportunity Employer M/F/V/H
KCPL
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. October 19. 1979
'Hawks battle first loser
3
By TONY FITTS Sports Editor
After playing Pittsburgh, Michigan and Atlanta, the Browns' Iowa State may feel like a breather to the Jayhawks, Iowa State, 2-3, is the only team with a losing record Kansas has met this season.
Iowa State has defeated Bowling Green and Kansas State and has lost to Texas, Iowa and Pacific.
But KU football Coach Don Fambrough has said the Jayhawks should not take the Cyclones lightly.
"Iowa State is a big, strong football team," he said. "If they get some of their injured players back, they're a good football team."
But Iowa State may not have some of those injured players back to tomorrow. Chris Boksey the Cyclones' leading defensive tackle, is still doubtful for the middle guard, is still doubtful for the
The Cyclones may also have to do without Their top rushers, Danny Goodwin and Rocky Gillis. Goodwin will suit up for the Cyclones, who only a little. Gillis is listed as uncertain.
He's so strongest point is probably its pass defense. The secondary, comprising Mike Schwartz, Joe Brown, Larry Crawford and Jeff Stallworth, the lead Big Eight in them.
-KANSAN-
Sports
terceptions with 10, and pass defense,
allowing only 92 yards per game.
The Cyclone offense is not strong. It has been weakened by injuries and lacks experience. The best players available are Mike Payne, the junior tailback, and Walter Grant, senior quarterback. According to Fambrough, Iowa's offense is similar to
"They've emphasized the passing game a little more," he said, "especially throwing to the back."
Kansas will be almost at full strength, after sufferings and bruises at the Muggs game. JR Maggs miss the game because of a harmless pull he suffered during practice Monday. He will return to training on Thursday.
Kevin Clinton should play, despite a recurring rib injury that caused him to miss practice Monday and Tuesday.
"He's made up his mind that he can still go," Framambue said. "It's probably going to hurt him for the rest of the season. Those things don't get well until they reust them for a while."
Yesterday, the Jayhawks worked out in Memorial Stadium, which was wet from the
mermittent rain showers. The condition of the field may have helped the players, Fambrough said.
"I'm glad we got outside and worked on a wet field," he said. "The forecast is for a 40 percent chance of rain Saturday."
"I feel we are ready to play. This game is very important to Iowa State—it's their homecoming—and it's very important to us." It's going to be an exciting football game.
Starting Line-ups
KU Offense
JSU Defense
JS- Jimmy Lee - KU-CLIQ-Loy Chin
LG - Kenneth Kyles
LG - Huguenot Kyles
BG - Whitman
BG - Whitman
RT - Dave Fletcher
RT - Dave Fletcher
RB - Brian Bethesda
RB - Brian Bethesda
WB - Willie McCaw
WB - Lloyd Leaev
WB - Joe Brown
WB - Joe Brown
FS - Mike Schwartz
FS - Mike Schwartz
K-Mike Hildehack
P - Perrit
Kansan predictions
KU Defense
LB-O-Reb Crawford
TE-Tran
NJ-Garber
NI-Sun Garber
LG-Ted Clapper
RJ-Bom
RJ-Bom
RD-Dock Clerk
RB-Jim Zold
RD-Dock Clerk
RD-Dock Clerk
LS-Boy Young
SE-Jerry Lennard
LD-Boy Young
SE-Jerry Lennard
WD-Dilmer Miller
WD-Dilmer Miller
SB-Water Grant
SB-Water Grant
S-Leray Irwin
FB-Job Sackbecker
TB-Jim Leech
PL-Griffin
PG-Griffin
| Game | Davis | Dressler | Earle | Fitts | Frakes |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas at Iowa State | Kansas 24-13 | Iowa State 14-12 | Iowa State 14-7 | Kansas 17-10 | Iowa State 14-10 |
| Missouri at Colorado | Missouri 17-7 | Missouri 27-18 | Missouri 31-10 | Missouri 28-10 | Missouri 35-10 |
| Nebraska at Oklahoma State | Nebraska 38-14 | Nebraska 48-14 | Nebraska 45-14 | Nebraska 56-0 | Nebraska 35-7 |
| Oklahoma at Kansas State | Oklahoma 45-14 | Oklahoma 35-7 | Oklahoma 35-3 | Oklahoma 63-0 | Oklahoma 45-7 |
| USC at Notre Dame | USC 17-16 | USC 17-14 | USC 21-19 | USC 13-10 | Notre Dame 10-7 |
| Texas at Arkansas | Arkansas 14-10 | Texas 25-15 | Texas 24-18 | Texas 21-17 | Texas 20-10 |
| Purdue at Michigan State | Purdue 21-12 | Purdue 27-14 | Purdue 27-20 | Michigan State 13-10 | Purdue 37-14 |
| Houston at SMU | Houston 28-17 | Houston 28-6 | Houston 35-31 | Houston 27-10 | Houston 39-7 |
| Season Totals | 32-16 | 32-16 | 32-16 | 30-18 | 29-19 |
Last week correct Kansan predictions hit a season low .425
average. Predictions are made by Tony Fitzsure, science editor; Mike
Earle, associate sports editor; Nancy Dressler, managing editor; BBI Franka, assistant managing editor, and Ken Davis, KU sports editor.
Soccer Club seeks funds
By DAVID BURNS
Sports Writer
The KU Soccer Club doesn't want to be a club. It wants to be a varsity team.
Soccer has been played at KU for a number of years, funded by the Student Senate and various contributors.
KU is coming off a successful year. They placed third in the Big Eight tournament last year, although there isn't an official Big Eight League for
The team is playing against smaller colleges this year in the Heart of America conference. So far they have a 6-2-1 record.
"We're a good team," said Pat McGee. "I want to play well and need to expand outward where the better competition is. I think we have a team that could play tough with some of the best players in our league."
"What we're looking for now is support from the University," Cassidy said. "That's what I'm involved in."
The 25-man team, coached by Jay Yoffe and Tom Boogher, has 15 matches scheduled this fall with hopes for a better showing in the Big Eight journey in the
Lassusay said he planned to start a team of U and eventuates the program to raise awareness of MAW powers such as Indiana, the Air Force and the University of Missouri at St. Louis.
bours.
"I really think a university this size
could support an NCAA soccer team." he said. "All I've been getting is a lot of flak that it isn't possible."
that it is a paediatric he said nonrevenue women's sports received the funding they needed, but soccer didn't.
"There are more women's sports teams in college campuses than there are men's," he said. "I'll be a bit about Title IX. Well to be blunt, I'd say both. I'm getting screwed by the team."
The team received its funding this year from the Student Senate and the department of health, physical education and recreation.
In '175 it was like putling teeth to get $1,000 from the Senate, and that wasn't much considering we have to pay for uniforms and the referee—they cost us $240. The team usually said, "There's equipment to pay for and need. We definitely need more."
"Last week when we have went to Lincoln, Neb., it would be nice to have had our way up there paid, if nothing else. If we get the bill, we will pay the bill. The team members pay for gas. If we have to stay overnight, we have to get just a couple of miles. What we're getting just isn't sufficient."
He said the differences between KU and the nationally ranked teams were finances, varsity recognition, and a paid, full-time coach and staff.
"It would be ideal if we could go the
"I don't feel soccer has been given a chance on campus. The sport has gained a lot of popularity recently. With support, better players might come out and play. A lot of our key players can't go to all our games." We're worried about travel expenses.
route of the football and basketball teams. I think if we had at least $5,000 and a coach we could put the players on the field of that happening are zero right now.
Cassidy said he had taken his complaint to Phyllis Howlett, assistant athletic director, but had gotten little assistance.
Howlett said yesterday that it was unlikely there would be intercollegiate soccer at KU, as long as soccer was not a B艾 Eleight sport.
"He was concerned with forming an intercollegiate team on campus," she said. "I was not interested in various schools concerning soccer. I thought he might be interested in reading."
Cassidy said his next step was to contact state legislators in Kansas City, Kan. Johnson County and Wichita to help their assistance.
"Right now I'm drafting letters to these legislators, he said. "Soccer is big in all three areas, so I hope they can help me out."
The Jayhawks play Benedictine College Sunday at 1:30 p.m. in Atchison.
Men netters shuffle lineup for matches
KU's men's tennis start a hectic schedule in Columbia, Mo. with a 3 p.m. match today against the University of Missouri and an 8 a.m. match tomorrow with last year's NAIA championship of Southern Illinois at Edwardsville.
Tennis Coach Tom Kivisto will use a single lines of David Thiee at No. 1, Weyman Seal at No. 2. Bill Kritzma at No. 3 and John Ramlee at No. 4 and Rick Wertk at No. 6.
The doubles teams were changed for the weekend competition. Kivisto said.
Thies and Runnels will still be the No.1
team, but Collier will play No. 2 with Krizman. Wertz will team with Kevin Lehr for the No. 3 duo.
Linkers play finale
After finishing third in the KUInvitational last week, the women's golf team plays in the Missouri Invitational this weekend in Columbia, Mo.
The 36-hole tournament will be played on the par-72 University Golf Course. KU Coach Sandy Bahan said she expected the tournament to take place in the Kansas tourney to be in Columbia.
OAS
Coca-Cola Nation
مجموعة المعلومات - أدوات الإعلام
THE ORGANIZATION OF ARAB STUDENTS
سَمِعُ الشَّفْرَ البرَاءَ من العربَة
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The second annual 10,000 meter Jayhawk
Jog, sponsored by Gamma Phi Beta soraity
and Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, will begin at
9:30 a.m. this Sunday.
Runners wishing to enter the day of the race show support. For those attending the day of the race, fees are $2 per before Sunday and $5 per the day of the race. Fees may be paid in 1972 or the Kappa Pel house at 1007 West 11th St.
P.O. Box 712
Lawrence
KS 88046
Jayhawk Jq T-shirts will be given to all entrants, and trophies will be presented after the race to the first three female and male runners. Entry fees will be donated to
Jogathon this Sunday
According to race consultant Jon Blongewicz, the jog attracted more than 400 participants last year.
تستخدم المجموعة من الخدمات البحوث للمشاريع التجارية في
مسجد بيئة الحكومة المتخصصة في التعليم العالي والمعلمية
المدرسة في نقطة أخرى من الطلاب الذين يتعلقون بالرياضة و
شغلة في المجتمع الحديدي للجامعة والتطور سوقاً مكانياً في
الجامعات المدنية والعلومية 19 / 12هـ. "Community Build"
الجماعات المدنية والعلومية "Mass of All "الفلاح "Flower shop" .
مثلا يُنشئ البطاقة مطلوبة التحقق من إعادة الاتصال في السجل
"We need to have good games this weekend to help carry us through the winter." Coach B Stancifluid said.
KU, which split a doubleheader with Nebraska at Lincoln last weekend, brings a 3-5 record into this weekend's contests.
الاستلام العالي من الشركة
الله وَمَا جَعْلُوا لَهُمْ بِالصَّلَامِ
العلاقة التشغيلية
Simms, the strong-armed rookie quarterback the Giants nabbed out of Morehead State in the NFL's first draft round last June, combined with a disappointing offensive showing of the season, rolling up 377 yards total offensive in a 32-16 victory over San Francisco.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The New York Giants and their high-flying rookie tandem of Phil Simms and Earnest Gray meet the Kansas City Chiefs, still smarting from a through spanning at the hands of Denver, in a National Football League game Sun-
Southern Illinois-Edwardsville is led by Juan Farrow, who won the championship five of out six years as a receiver in the Big Ten. The selection last year, posting a 31-1 record.
Livingston gets starting assignment
Softball team plays last game tomorrow
The KU baseball team closes its fall season with a doubleheader against Nebraska at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Holcom Sports Complex.
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Simons completed 17 of 29 passes for 300 yards and two touchdowns while Gray, a second-round choice out of Mississippi State, scored 14 touchdowns and touchdown receptions of 13 and 11 yards.
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Victoria House
The Chiefs, 4-3 after the 24-10 loss to Denver, have experienced a big loss in quarterback confidence. Rookie Steve Fuller, who had been starting since the third game of the year, was bounced late in the playoffs. The Chiefs would be Livingston would be starting against the Giants.
"I just believe that is the right change to make at this time," Levy said. "But
depending on the game situation, Steve could play Sunday."
WZR
106
The game promises to be less than a banana for fans of offensive football. The Giants rank 14th in the National Football League. The Cincinnati Chiefs are No. 14 in the AFC in total offense.
THE SOUTHPLAZA CHIROPRACTIC CENTER WELCOMES KU STUDENTS & FACULTY
For spinal related conditions feel free to contact
DR.WILLIAM A.MILLER
Member.
Kansas Chirpective Association
Kansas Council on Reptology
Kansas Council on Orthodontics
Kansas Institute of Veterinary
Parker Center Research Foundation
2032 West 27th St.
Lawrence, KS
Phone: 842-4114
SMOKEHOUSE second big hog heaven weekend
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rib big end rib small end
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanans
signed columns represent the views of only the writers
October 19, 1979
Tenant bill equalizes
It's a basic law of our society—where there's a landlord and a tenant, there's bound to be disgrieve.
Unfortunately, the corollary to that law is that the landlord usually wins. In fact, although Kansas has a Landlord-Tenant Act that lays down the rights of both landlords and tenants, landlords are guaranteed more rights than responsibilities.
However, if all goes well for a proposed revision of the Act in the Kansas House Judiciary Committee this legislative session, tenants just may find themselves with a little more power and a few more rights.
THE BILL, introduced in the House by Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, would revise the current act by including a "self-help" provision. That provision would allow tenants to make rent payments without giving landlords seven days notice.
That would be a definite improvement over the current law, which allows a tenant to do one of two equally valid actions: (1) to allow it to make repairs promised in the rental
agreement or required by state law. One is to move out after giving 30 days notice; the other is to make repairs and replace the money in small claims court.
The difference in the advantage given to the landlord in the current law compared to the proposed revision is tremendous.
UNDER SOLACH'S bill, the tenant would make the repairs after giving the specified notice, then take a receipt for the repair cost and a month's rent money to the district court where an escrow fund would be set up.
What is so appealing about the proposed revision, then, is that it evens the odds for the tenant.
If the landlord wanted the rent, he could get it -minus the repair cost. If he wanted to contest the repair, he could take that option.
Landlord-tenant relationships are a permanent part of our economic order, of course. So if they're going to always be there, they should at least be equal
Solbach's proposed revision would be a step toward that needed equality.
Big Oil wins again with price decontrol
the U.S. House of Representatives last week approved President Jimmy Carter's plan to build a new energy research which is an important part of Carter's latest billion-dollar energy program to reduce the cost of energy.
The deregulation allows the price of domestically produced crude oil to reach the same prices as foreign oil, undoubtedly double gas prices at the pumps, as well as greatly increase the cost of energy.
The price deconcentration issue was a controversial element of Carter's energy package. The president fought hard to get it underway, but regulators to act for the good of the country.
CARTER AND those legislators in favor of oil price counterpointed that the industry would receive higher selling prices would be an incentive for further expansion.
Arguing that cheap energy is no longer feasible and that the country needs to realize this, deregulation supporters argue that price decontrol would promote conservation. In order to cut energy costs, they suggest it is more important to invest in care instituting their thermostats.
In the end, this exploration and conservation will lead to a reduction in nation's dependence on imported oil, which currently is the lifeline for our country.
WHILE THESE arguments appear to be logical solutions to our energy problems, they ignore the potentially devastating deforestation would have on our country.
For instance, the increase in oil prices will add to our current sky-rocketing inflation, as oil has become more than an just another necessity every day; lives it has become a necessity.
It is used for plastics, heating of homes and businesses and, more important, transportation of goods and people. Consequently, we will be paying more for the goods we need. Many economists already point to rising energy costs as the reason why consumers are resulting in consumer losses, resulting rise in consumer prices and fuel could have a serious effect on the poor.
John
COLUMNIST fischer
while causing only some minor inconveniences for the rich.
THESE AGAINST ALSO claim also that it "will line the pockets of big oil companies." Supposedly, the extra profits resulting from the price decrease are to help defray the costs.
However, during the past several years, big oil companies already have been making good, even exorbitant, profits. Instead of using them to find new reserves, however, they have invested them—and registers think this practice will continue.
There also is the unanswered question of how much profits will have to increase to be sustainable. In fact, most companies have not set a figure, and apparently there are no government policies to regulate them.
ANOTHER ARGUMENT against price decontrol is that if there is exploration for energy sources, it is in terms of finding new oil reserves.
But it is a fact that at all is a limited resource and one that we are about to completely drain. Wouldn't the money and time be spent on improving energy, energy, wind power or energy from biomass?
WITH RESULTING INCREASES in the price of fuel, people will look toward cheaper forms of transportation. But although the high cost of transport and trans, which could serve an important function in this regard, has been derailed by Carter, Congress and their own soapy financial
Also, the price deregulation currently leaves us with very few choices of alternative forms of transportation.
Although price deregulation will promote conservation measures and help reduce our reliance on foreign oil, its by-products may be a source of revenue in terms of the economy and morale.
The list of chores is long for a family that relies entirely on wood-burning stoves for winter warmth.
Gene Berndosfy, after many years of experience with wood heat, thinks he knows the best way to get those chores done in preparation for the coming chill.
It appears as if the big oil companies have won again—at the expense of the public.
City order galls brush pile owner
The problem this year, though, is that the city of Lawrence thinks it knows better and has ordered Bernofsky to change his wavs.
Or. at least, to change his brush pile
ERNOSFKYS brush plume—a mound of limbs and bounds 10 feet in diameter and five feet deep—has been deemed unsightly and is a threat to the city's environmental ordinance.
"I've been a film maker for more than 20 years," Bersoftod protests, "and I feel I qualify as any someone else to make aesthetic incidences."
But the city's environmental inspector, who did not agree with the film maker's建议, visited the rambling frame house at 1201 New York St. two weeks ago. Ten cords of tape around the fence back fence and kids and cats playing in the yard were not enough to persuade Swarts Tarris.
SWARTS SAYS Bernofsky can keep his brush pile—he'll just have to arrange it more neatly for it to pass muster.
Bernofsky was given a choice: clean up the brush pile in 15 days or go before the city commission.
"They want me to make it SIGHTLY,"
Bernafeld says with a note of disbelief in his voice. "I stack it loosely in a pile so it can dry out."
"This is not equal justice under the law," Bernofsky fumes, warming up to the subtlet.
"What about the hideous town Bell was permitted to erect on Vermont Street? That's not only an eyesore dominating the city—that is dangerous!
"And how about the huge signs that everyone has been saying for years should come down? The city just gave them a six-month extension.
"IF I GOT a six-month extension on my kindling pile, it would be gone."
COLUMNIST
Having his brush pile called a mess is not the only thing that galls Bernofsky.
"I love Lawrence, and I love this neighborhood. But I think the city fathers
lynn byczynski
have some fancy pretensions for Lawrence. They've enacted this environmental dress code and they expect neighborhoods to look like the new neighborhoods.
"My wood lot might be out of place over in old west Lawrence, but here it fills," he says.
Bernodsky's indignation grows as he thinks about the implications of the city's order.
"IT SEEMS like you try to do something to save energy, and they won't let you," he says.
The date hasn't been set yet, but one of the Tuesday nights Bernalsky will have the chance to vent his frustrations to the team. He has chosen what was chosen over cleaning up the brush pile.
Maybe he can convince the commissioners that his need for the kindling
pile is more important than their standard of beauty.
"I feel I've got a long, cold, hard winter to face and three kids to keep warm," he savs.
OR MAYBE HE won't be able to persuade the commissioners to change the environmental inspector's verdict.
"I'll go to court." he vows.
But maybe by that time the spring sun will be melting the snow from the last few twiggs in his back yard, and it won't matter anymore.
For at least one winter, Bernofsky will have won.
A RAPTOR IN THE WOODS
Exigency dismissals a faculty issue
To the Editor:
When financial exigency strikes, the most logical procedure is for any dismissals to be
I was distressed to read in the Kansan Friday, Oct. 12, that some members of the faculty do not support the principle of elected committees of academic departments or schools being entrusted with these decisions be dismissed when and if financial exigency comes to KU.
On Oct. 8, 1976, Dr. Daniel Adler, associate secretary of the Washington office of AAPU, visited this campus and appeared at a meeting of the state AAPU at Baker University in Omaha to make the final determination on such dismissals was being debated at KU.
For some time, I have been making the point that it should be a faculty-elected committee rather than determined in a number of conversations with members of the AAUP's professional staff, of which Adler was one. Adler Dr. Adler is the co-ordinator of the faculty who decides such matters. After all, the faculty has the predominant role in the development of the entireure, who is promoted. Why should members of the faculty wish to relinquish the responsibility of the disdiscipline of financial exigency?
To avoid the unfortunate political and personal turmoil which some are currently afraid may happen, the simple solution is to use the current structure of the promotion and tenure committees. These committees are elected or appointed by the faculty for promotion and tenure. The overall charge of these committees is faculty status.
1. Runker Clark
determined by the Chancellor, upon recommendation by the promotion and tenure committees. This works for promotion and tenure; it will work for dismissal.
Professor of Music History
Kansas AAUP Conference Newsletter
Tennis rule unfair for true competition
After playing two unusually long matches that lasted from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m., without a break, my partner and I asked to have enough time to rest and eat lunch. The girls went to bed and said we could have no longer than one half hour, hardly long enough to get in a car and drive to a restaurant and back. We explained we needed more time to rest, but our mother wanted us to go half hour more. So we chose to default, rather than play under those circumstances. We left angry and disillusioned with the purpose and meaning of a meal. She told me she had gone Hills or an intramurra activity play for fun and enjoyment.
To the Editor:
As an experienced tennis tournament player and recent participant in the Recreation Services intramural mixed doubles tennis tournament held on Oct. 13th, I question the validity of having the air balloon played at play at any time in a "recreational" event.
It is an unwritten rule of tennis elitique that you extend more time to a team who has had an unusually long match or has not played against the opponent. That rule was violated in this tournament.
WHO WANTS to play against a team that is dead trespass? What is the true meaning of this tactic in a game with no opponent my opponent plays, the more I will be challenged to play against me, and in this case we have "capabilities."
TYPICALLY, THE PURPOSE of a rule such as "You must be ready to play at any time" is to speed up play in tournaments where there are a large number of entries, few of them usually being the same, tenuous to finish the tournament within a certain time period—usually a weekend. None of these circumstances existed in this tournament because the draw was so small. There were so few entries, in fact, that the tournament was played on Saturday, the same day it started!
My partner and I wanted to provide that challenge, but under the circumstances we would not have been able to do so.
A carefully thought out decision by the tournament director to extend our rest period would have given us the opportunity to play in the final and we chose for those chose adherence to the existing rule.
I hope the purpose of future intramural tennis tournaments will be for everyone to have fun and recreate and that directors
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
institution and university.
Postmaster. Small changes of address to the University Daily Kanzaan, Flint Hall, The University of
Nebraska-Lincoln
650405
KANSAN
[5167-5646] Published at the University of Kuala Lumpur during May and June 2013 and May and June 2014. The authors are Mary Ann Madden and Maria Peña, Lawrence Luanne, Karen Sainsbury and mary a. sainsbury. Subjects: Acquisition, Accounting and Administration. Copyright 2013 by Elsevier. All rights reserved.
Mary Hoenk
Managing Editor
Nancy Dreiner
Campaign Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Associant Campus Editor
Assistant Managing Editor
Senior Editorial
Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Associate Theater Editorial
Special Sections Editor
Makeup Editors
Designers
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Writers
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Photographers
Editorial Contributor
Business Manager
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Retail Sales Manager
National Sales Manager
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General Manager
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Editorial Editor
Mary Erwin
Phil Timsley
Phil Garcia
Lee Van Eckert
Brandon Setteil
Tony Fitts
Tony Fitts
Dana Miller, Sports Planner,
Brett Schauer, Brett Schauer,
Sandy Herd
Carlin Goodwin, Graphics
Fernando Brennan
Brett Wilson
Larry Bryson, Jobs, John Laggin
John Laughan
David Preston, Marketing Trumpet
Jeff Harring, Jeff Hether, Harith Kimber, Chris Todd
Juan Martin
Venture Coils
Lance Creel
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Dawn Trevel
Alan Trevel
Jeff Kone
Jayne Schbell
Advertising Advisor
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Mark DeMoss
THE
BIG APPLE
WIRKOW
OFF
Lawrence graduate student
and players will participate in that spirit.
Sally Lange
Lawrence graduate student
Violence necessary for racial defense
To the Editor:
Tuesday's Kansan story about the speech of Dr. Finley Campbell may have given some people an erroneous impression in the International Committee Against Racism (iCAR) and its members. iCAR is not a new organization. Nor is it a novel one.
Violence and non-violence are tactics, different ways that one can defend one's self. They are both appropriate and correct responses to different circumstances. To avoid being punished for being non-violent, for non-violently marching to their deaths in Nazi concentration camps. Surely, when the Gestapo kicks your open door, and, at gunpoint, marches you off to a death camp, you have the right (and responsibility) to use "any means necessary."
Unfortunately, we live in a violent society. Dr. Campbell was shot by members of the mob. He was wounded in Miss. The Rev. Emanuel Cleaver has had his life threatened, Malcom X and Dr. Marantha Hunt have been assassins. Members of incAR, like everyone else, deserve the right to defend them.
IT IS entirely proper to condemn unnecessary violence. To conder the violence of genocide is not only the violation of millions of black people in the United States. To conder the violence that sent six million Jews to the gas chambers. To conder the violence that killed another million the violence of genocide. But we cannot conder the victims of racist violence when they refuse to march, bowed and surrender.
At the same time, much can be achieved through the positive force of non-violence. The march on Shenangans, Saturday Oct. 29 at 9 p.m. will be a peaceful protest
WE ARE NOT going there to look for a fight. We certainly are not going armed. the demonstration will be marshaled by demonstrators themselves (and, presumably, we will have to use a firebrick for that no one in our group allows themselves to be baited or provoked. If we decide to integrate Shenanagans, it will be done peacefully and legally. We invite members of the club to bring in multi-craffit fighting. If available, we will not enter the premises.
We ask members of the community and students at the University of Kansas to join us in telling Jim Crow that he is not welcome here.
Ronald Kuby
InCAR member
345 Michigan St
Fridav. October 19, 1979
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
SUNDAY: TEXTILE EXHIBIT by
Shigear Spekern will open at 1:30 p.m. in the
CARLILLON RECTAL by Albert Gerkin will
begin at 3 p.m. KU CHAMBER CHOIR will
**TODAY:** Companies interviewing in the School of Business will be Union Pacific, and Peat M. M. in the School of Engineering and Natural Gas, Shell Oil, Texaco and Texas Eastman. In the School of Law will be Kuhrs, Nelson, Fanning, Hike, Kellog and in the department of Geology will be Shell Oil SERIES will present 'Sentences of Silence,' "Indian Art of the Pueblos," and "Maria of the Pueblos" at 9:30 a.m. in Room 303 of the VIRGINIA BANK OF RELIGION AND PUBLIC EDUCATION executive committee and business meetings will be this afternoon in Smith Hall. VIVERSTING ARTIST SERIES will present the March Arts and Design Building Gallery, BIOSOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. AN OBSERVATORY OPEN HOUSE will be at 7 p.m. in 600 Linden Hall. KU POLAR DANCE will be at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Holson Center.
TOMORROW: MUSEUM OF NATURAL
HISTORY WORKSHOP with Nancy
Zuschlag for children ages 5-7 on
Monday, April 20th. Meet RooR!
will begin at 9:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
The
University Daily Kansan
Other Place
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sua films
(1978)
Friday & Saturday,
October 19-20
BREAK AND CHOCOLATE
Directed by Franco Brussi, with Nino Martenna and Annika Kastan. An Italian author, who is passionate about earning a living which the Italian economy is unable to provide. A battle against the criminalism of two national temperaments. Winner. New York Critics Award for Best Comedy.
(1972)
Sunday, October 21 THE GODFATHER
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola,
with Marion Brando, Al Pacino,
Cameron Diane, Keaton, Tailor
Shaun, Joel Cohn, John Mayer
& Abigda Vogel.
Monday, October 22
FAHRENHEIT 451
Directed by Francis Truffault, with Julie Christie and Oskar Werner. Based on Ray Bradbury's futuristic novel of book burning.
Tuesday, October 23 WAIT UNTIL DARK
perform at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall THE **BIG HALLOWEEN** BILLS of Saturday's game at 5 p.m. in the southeast lounge of the Satellite Union
Directed by Terence Young, with Audrey Hepburn, Alan Akins, Richard Creenne, and Efram Zimbabst Jr. Three killerz terrorize a recently blinded child who lies behind a shipment of smuggled heroin is in an apartment.
MONDAY: WOMEN GRADUATE STUDENTS will meet at noon in Cork 1 of the Union. A PHYSICS AND ASTROLOGY ENGINEER, University of Missouri-Rollia and MASUI Honor Lecturer will speak on 'Molecular Aspects of Clusters of Water' papers in the Mount Holiath Campus of Malolay Hall. CAMPUS SAFETY SERVICE information and training session will begin at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Union. INFORMATION SYSTEMS and CARER Career will present Carol Duffy McKewell, Topela attorney, on "Legal Ease," and women's rights under Kansas Law at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Building. RESEARCH AND CARER EXAMINES SWIMMING DELIVERY ANEUTS will be at 7:30 p.m. at Robinson pool. A FACULTY RECITAL by James Meeson will be at 8 a.m. at the Pipmouth Congregational Church 259 Vermont St.
(1968)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7.30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
dismiss.
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and
Sun at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise
specified. 15:00 admission. No Refreshments.
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By JEFF SJERVEN Staff Reporter
Classified Senate action disputed
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes' decision Wednesday to acknowledge the existence of the classified Senate without granting it formal recognition received a mixed response yesterday from a Senate spokesman.
The spokesman, Joseph T. Collins, interim chair of the Classified Senate's steering committee, said he was pleased that the Senate would be allowed to use University meeting rooms, but questioned the consistency of the administration's
policies concerning University governance groups.
Dykes, in a letter to Collins Wednesday, said that the University would be forced to waive all rights in determining the composition of the Senate if it formally recognized the Employee.
Mime information
714-611-810
Mime information
714-611-810
Collis said this policy applied only to classified employees and not to other University personnel.
"The Faculty Senate is recognized as a unit," Collins said. "Other faculty organizations across the country have raised concerns about the administration's reasoning is tenuous at best."
Colins said he would ask the administration to consider an amendment to the Senate's code that would guarantee that the Senate would not become a union.
"If we can give them that guarantee," he said, "we hope they can extend formal recognition."
Richard Mann, chairman of an administrative committee that forwarded recommendations concerning recognition to the Senate, said he believed given the same type of recognition the Classified Senate wanted. Consequently, he did not allow for unionizing, he said.
"The Faculty Senate has specific duties under the University Code to assist the administration in formulating academic policies," Mann said. "This is very different from the Classified Senate's role as a 'representative of state employees.'"
Mann said formal recognition probably would not bring the Senate more benefits than it had.
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Mike Davis, University general counsel,
Collins to discuss the amendment to the Senate code that would preclude the formation of a union without consultation with other members.
Weaver'S
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Clip this coupon and save 15%. Britches Charge Mastercharge and VISA are welcome.
6
Friday, October 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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Quickly heat water for coffee, soup, tea and other beverages and foods. Heat for 2 to 6 cups. Perfect for kitchen, office and dormitory
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Long Stem Fireplace Matches SALE 88°
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COMMUNITY PRESERVATION
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Clean burning natural hardwood logs. Burns 30,000 BTU's per log, 4 logs per box.
SALE 88c
Firoplaco Tongs SALE 1.77
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12 Ft. 8 Gauge Booster Cables SALE 7.77
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Friday, October 19, 1979
7
Students choosing Work Study to avoid paying loans,official saves
By DOUG WAHL Staff Reporter
The number of students participating in the Work Study financial aid program has increased from 404 last year to 616 this year. The new director of financial aid, said this week.
McCurdy said she thought the increase indicated that more students wanted to supplement their income but did not want to repay a loan after they graduated.
"your study is self-help," she said.
"The difference between it and other forms of assistance is that a student won't have a loan to repay after school."
Students can work a maximum of 20 hours a week under Work Study and can earn up to 8,000 a semester.
Work Study jobs included clerk-typists,
research assistants, museum guard, desk
assistants in residence halls and library assistants.
"It is beneficial for departments to hire students on Work Study because they only have to pay 20 percent of their salary," she said.
THE REMAINDER of a student's salary is paid by the University and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
This year HEW granted KU $74,824. KU is required to match 20 percent of that amount, which brings the total Work Study fund to $74,730.
McCurdy said students who wanted to apply for Work Study must fill out an American College Testing Program application. After a student's financial need was assessed, the school will give the number of dependents in a family and other factors, the office awards the
number of hours a student needs to work to have enough money for the school year, she said.
"IF A STUDENT has a problem getting a job, we are obligated to get them a job," McCardy said.
The student then is issued a work referral slip and is interviewed for a job. She said there were only four or five students a year who could not find jobs.
Schools and departments are awarded a maximum number of hours for employing Work Study students, she said. The vice chancellor or office determines the number
For instance, the School of Architecture is able to employ students for 4,500 hours of work. Study the School of Business receive a total of 35,000 hours of libraries received a total of 35,000 hours.
GRADUATING ENGINEERS
Have you considered these factors in determining where you will work?
1. Will the job offer challenge and responsibility?
2. Will your future employer encourage job mobility?
3. Will your future employer encourage, support and reward continued professional education?
4 How much choice will you have in selecting your work assignment?
6. Can you afford the cost-of living in the area?
At the Naval Wearers Center we have given these things a lot of consideration and believe we have the answers for you.
5. Big starting salaries are nice but what is the salary growth and promotion potential in the job?
Arrange to interview your placement office to interview with our representative(s)
Maurice Hamm
Bob Hintz
on November 8
We think you will like what you hear.
If you cannot fit an interview into your schedule, write or call.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON D.C. LORD OF WARS COUNTY
C. KAREN ALTIERI
Professional Employment Coordinator
NAVAL WEAPONS CENTER (CODE 9291)
China Lake, CA 93357-7141 939-2690
AnEqual Opportunity Employer
These are Career Civil Service Positions
U.S. Citizenship Required
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University Daily Kansan
Mall proposal postponed
By ANN LANGENFELD Staff Reporter
A proposal for public review of the downtown Lawrence mall is at least two months away, officials involved with planning the mall said yesterday.
About a month ago, Don Jones, assistant manager of the mail, proposed the mail, had said the proposal would be ready within a month. However, changes in the mail plans still are being made.
Glen West, executive vice president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said, "I optimistic that in 45 to 60 days we will have something to talk about with the public."
Last summer planning for the downtown mall was assigned to a private committee of 15 local civic and business leaders, known as Action 80, Inc.
Jacobs, Viscusi and Jacobs Co., of Cleveland, proposed early last year a plan to build a regional mail south of Lawrence.
However, the idea of building a regional mail was tabled, and instead a proposal for a downtown mall is being discussed with representatives with representatives of the development firm.
JACK Areensberg, a member of Action 80,
said the committee last met with the
developers three weeks ago. He said the
development is complete and the developer's
proposal for more changes.
Arensberg was not sure when representatives of Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs would return to Lawrence with the plan; plans would be finished at the next meeting.
Arenberg said concerns be discussed in the community. How could we integrate the mail and how it would be integrated into the community. Other considerations include the location of the mail and parking space.
"There are no specific timetables with this project," he said. "I cannot speculate on when there will be a public announcement."
"This is a long and involved project," he said. "We want a plan the developer can live with and we can live with."
---
SENIOR Class Card Holders Gather At
The Mad Hatter 700 New Hampshire
Friday, October 19
3-6 p.m.
2 for 1
Memberships Available
---
ALEXANDRA JENNINGS
Give the gift of life . . .
Today is the final day to make an appointment for the BLOOD DRIVE—October 22,23,24
Representatives will be:
-In front of the Union until 4:30
—Residence and Scholarship Halls at dinner time
—Fraternities and Sororities, see your representative
Walkons will be discouraged because of limited nursing staff and bed space.
Sponsored by the Panhellenic Association and the Interfraternity Council.
8
Friday, October 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Music
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Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available
NEW 15 Passenger Vans 2340 Alabama
ARRIVALS: 1980 Chevettes 843-2931
SUPPLY AND INVENTORY MANAGEMENT
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
841-4376
American Management, a University contracted custodial service corporation, may once again be the target of complaints by KU custodians.
More than a year and a half ago, when the corporation was initially contracted by KU to provide housekeeping services, the company had been complied with about the new program.
Now the Custodian's Action Committee, a group representing most of KU's custodians, is alleged to be unethical and American Management is illegal because it violates affirmative action guidelines. A new consequence will be negotiated at the end of this year.
Custodians allege discrimination
The committee was organized in late 2015 by members of the alleged discrimination at KU, according to Irving VanDuyne, committee chairman, who is employed by the University as a
Discrimination against older workers and harbors discrimination in harassment, unreasonable work conditions, and dismissals were some of the complaints the committee has been investigating,
THE COMMITTEE WILL make a statement today at a press conference at 3 p.m. in 4053 Wescow and will release some of it has compiled, according to VanDuyne.
American Management, which is based in Denver, has provided supervision of custodial services for the KU Medical Center. The company is responsible for the Lawnworks company in December 1988.
The company was contracted by the University to improve the effectiveness of custodial services at KU.
The transition to American Management housekeeping services was rough as the company encountered problems, including petitions complaining about its program from custodians and a threatened walk-in center. March 1967 to protest working conditions.
A charge also was filed March 20, 1978 against the company with the state Public
It also called for a reduction in staff by attrition, from 180 to 129 employees at the Med Center and a reduction from 155 to 135 employees on the Lawrence campus.
Employees Relations Board in behalf of the custodians, complaining of unfair labor practices.
THE COMPANY's initial program for the universal equipment training, including the equipment training, the employees in better cleaning techniques and defining the responsibilities of each employee in a company.
Representatives of the custodians said at the time that the reduction in staff size made the new program ineffective.
Nuclear plant protesters to release balloons
BY TED LICKTEIG
Staff Reporter
By TED LICKTEIG Staff Reporter
Members of the anti-nuclear group, Radioactive-free kansas, will release about 400 helium-filled balloons Sunday from a site near the Wolf Creek nuclear plant to the construction of the plant, Chris Meacham a member of the group, said yesterday.
Pat Slick, a member of another anti-nuclear group, Wolf Creek Recovery Project, said about 20 protesters would go to the plant site at Burlington.
Bob Rives, vice president of system services for Kansas Gas and Electric, coworker of the plant, said he was not bothered by protest group demonstrations.
Slick said his group would be planting wheat to indicate their intention to regain the plant site for agricultural use.
Rives said the demonstrations did not affect public opinion enough to warrant a counter-publicity by the utility.
He said the protest groups always contacted the Kansas Highway Patrol before a
demonstration and the patrol let them act as they saw fit.
Rives said that in states where the issue of nuclear power was brought before voters, most states approved its use.
"Most people currently support nuclear power. People support the concept of nuclear power as an alternative energy source," he said.
Slick also said his group was considering a plan to disrupt construction of the plant.
"We're considering occupying the plant in
the spring, he said, "It might be as few as two people or as many as those that want to be in the classroom through nonviolence training because we are in favor of nonviolent civil disobedience."
Rives said the plant was 40 percent complete and was guarded 24 hours a day by the Pinkerton Security Co.
Mochum said the balloons would have cards attached warning the finder that he could be killed by radiation from the plant because it could travel as far as the balloon.
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9
Snakebit opossums to aid antivenin study
By PAMELA LANDON
Staff Reporter
The opossum lay curled in the far corner of the metal case.
As Hank Guarisco, Lawrence graduate student, opened the cage and reached for it, the animal opened its mouth threateningly.
"There fell." It's so okay. I won't hurt you," he soothed as he picked up the opossum and began to stroke it. The animal relaxed.
The animal is one of five opossums that Guarisco plans to test for resistance to copperhead venom.
"This one has adapted really well. He's the tarnest of them all." Guarisco said.
He also plans to test the resistance of skinks and gorillas to the venom.
If the animals prove resistant to copperhead venom, he will conduct tests to determine why.
Gauricano his research "could lead to the possible development of a more effective, less dangerous antivirus than what is on the market today."
HIS PRELIMINARY work has involved collecting animals needed for the experiment and practicing his experimental techniques. He plans to begin the research soon, under the guidance of John Zimbrik, a radiator radiationophysic and inchemistry.
Guriano, who is working on a master's degree in radiation biophysics, said his interest in snakes had prompted him to do the research.
It's hard to say how I got interested in snakes. I've just always been interested in them since I was about five years old, especially anxious ones." he said.
Gurinisce has 20 copperheads at home from which he will extract the venom for his experiments.
"THE ALWAYS BEEN interested in venom, too, and how it does what it does. It's such a small amount of matter and yet it has such a drastic effect."
While doing some reading about snakes, Guarisco discovered several articles that gave him the idea for his research project.
Two Maryland researchers have found that opsonum serum, the noncellular portion of the blood, is just as effective as combo opsonum serum and combo smoke venom in mice. Garcia said so.
Hematoxic venom, found in snakes such as copperheads and rattlers, attacks blood cells and tissues. Neurotoxic venom, found
in coral snakes and cobras, attacks the nervous system, he said.
THE RESEARCHERS found oposums to be just as susceptible as other animal to neurotoxic venoms, Guarisco said.
He said he hoped not only to duplicate the test results of the researchers, but to expand the test to other animals.
*Skunks, for example, share the same habitat with many kinds of snakes. Perhaps they also have built up some kind of resistance to make venom.*
If opossum serum proves to be an effective combatant of hemotoxic venom, he will attempt to isolate whatever substance is present and equally blocks the venom's effectiveness.
He estimated that he could test the venom against a few different animals within a couple of months. But finding what it is in the serum that counteracts the venom could take years.
GUARISCO is excited about the research, despite the possibly lengthy process.
"It has a lot of potential. There is the possibility that it could revolutionize the antivirus industry," he said.
currently, horse serum is used to make antiviral and many people are allergic to it, he said. In fact, the reaction to the serum can be dangerous than the sake snake vaccine.
If there is something in opossum serum that is successfully fights toxemia versus *C. difficile*, it should be developed into an antivirus that might be safer than anything on the market today,
He said he would be using his own money to start the research. However, he said he thought he could get some research grants as soon as he had results to show.
The Douglas County Sheriff's Department investigated a sexual assault yesterday and released the evidence of indecent exposures and a rash of larceny and vandalism at the Malls Shopping Center.
KANSAN Police Beat
21-YEAR-OLD WOMAN was sexually assaulted after she accepted a ride while hitchhiking Wednesday, according to a sheriff's department report.
The woman was hitchhiking to Lawrence from Eudora when a van traveling west on K-10 Highway passed her, then returned to Eudora with a shirif's department spokesman said.
The van, occupied by four men, turned off on Mount Bleead路, about a mile east of Lawrence, where two of the men sexually assaulted her, the spokesman said.
She jumped out of the car, the spokesman said, and flagged down a ride back to Eudora where she contacted police.
Officers have descriptions of the men, the spokesman said.
LAWRENCE POLICE REPORTED that camera equipment valued at $1,070 was taken Wednesday from a residence at 1021 Connecticut St.
A police spokesman said the residence was entered through the rear door.
LAWRENCE POLICE Also REPORT three cases of indecent exposure yesterday. One occurred Tuesday evening in the 800 block of Kentucky Street one hour before a block of wall. 26th street and one Wednesday evening at Kennedy School and 1605 Davis Dr.
SEVEN INCIDENTS OF auto larceny and cars parked at the Mallia Shopping Center, 2411 Louisiana St., were reported to Lawrence police yesterday. The incidents which the police said probably occurred on Tuesday and Wednesday.
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University Daily Kansan
"The Consciousness of the Healing Christ"
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
The above question is asked by God Almighty Himself in the second Psalm of His book, the Bible, Do you ask God to take care of your children? Deeps in love and devotion depart from wil in his walk, his siting, and his standing. Delight is in the law of the Lord, and in Lord law doth he bless them with grace. He blesses on account of our efforts to meet and fulfill these conditions? In John 6:44, etc. Jesus said "No man can come before me without a shearer." They shall all be taught of God. Every man therefore that hath knowledge of God, we put ourselves in position to be "taught of God" by searching the Scriptures and meditating on His Word! We appear we are always "passing the buck" to the Almighty.
In the second Palm there is the opposite picture of the "threatened man." It shows us men raging and rebelling against God, who wields his mighty sword away the cords of His "Fifth shall not seals." His Moral Law and Ten Commandments. But, instead of being blessed men and women in the world, they are in darkness.
We blame this man that, and this nation that, and that according to God's message here the blame lies at the door of our mouth. The Lord said to Elijah, "Behold the Almighty, Read Luke 13:1-5, and make the application. Elliah, the man taken to heaven without dying, by passing the graves, said to King Ahab: 'I have not troubled Israel, but I have been given the commandment of the Commandments of God.' . . . 1st Kings 18:18.
"He maketh the judges fools - He poursh entrop upon prince, and weakestness the strength of the might." Job 12:17:21. And they are numbers of other such passages that have been given to them and actions laid on men and nations that lost their Lord.
and derision. His wrath and displeasure that sorely vexes mankind.
"There is no peace at my God, to the wicked. Cry aloud,
spare not, lift up thy voice like a lumpshorn, and show my
sorrow." *Aeneas*
"Bebid, at the door, and knock; if any man hear my voice, and I stand at the door, I will come to it, and will sauspice you."
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
Prof to visit Poland to discuss KU-Warsaw exchange program
BY HAROLD CAMPBELL Staff Reporter
Jaroslaw Piekalkiewicz, professor of political science, will visit the University of Warsaw in Poland next week to discuss the future of Warsaw exchange program. University of Warsaw exchange program.
Piekiewicki, who came to the United States from Poland in 1959, will leave Sunday for two weeks to negotiate possible changes in the status of Polish students attending KU and increased stipends for students attending the University of Warsaw.
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Although the KU department of Soviet and East European studies sponsors the program, American students in the program can be enrolled in any American
Pekaliewicz said that because of inflation he was forced to remediate the stipends paid to American students in Warsaw. The present stipend is $800 a month.
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month for students' expenses and is paid for by the university of Warsaw.
He said Warsaw would begin sending some of its less experienced professors to KU instead of its students.
"KU should benefit more from having faculty members here because it will be a learning experience for both American and European students, as well as faculty members," Pekkiwiewicz said.
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University Daily Kansan
Fridav. October 19. 1979
All his world's a stage design
By KATE POUND Staff Reporter
From a tiny, renovated janitor's closet bucked deep in the corners of the University Theatre have come the colors of Constantinople, the magic of a fantasy kingdom and the dark settings of death, all created by Delbert Unrhub, associate professor of the
Unuruh, head of the stage design program has spent a year developing his role to the stage. His job at KU is to design sets for University Theatre productions and to teach undergraduates
In his office filled with theatre posters, sketch pads, fabric samples and set models, he prepares materials for productions as "Candide," "Homme and Juliet," "Southern Pacific," "Equus" and "Astro."
HE MAY SPEND several weeks designing a set, while conferring with the director of the show daily, Unruh said this week.
"If you're honest and want to do a good job, you have to live with the thing when you do a play," he said.
Unruth's unbelief the work is the set for Michael Cristerist's "The Shadow Box," which will finish its run at 8 tonight and tomorrow night in the University Theatre.
Directed by John L. Groubeck-Tedesco, the drama is set in a research hospital for the terminally ill. The action takes place in the hospital grounds in the California mountains.
Unruh's set for the play consists of joined platforms of varying heights. They are designed, Unruh said, to give the impression of a wave of footages, all made from the same blueprint.
The platforms are surrounded by tall, dainty trees, which give the impression of a park. An old building, Unrush, is subdued, he said, to look like the fadion afternoon sun filtering through the trees.
"EVERYONE HAS had an experience of being alone in a forest," he said. "It's peaceful, beautiful. I wanted to capture that feeling."
"I also wanted to capture the feeling of isolation that the dying characters feel." The feeling of being enclosed and protected and also being lost."
To design the set, Unu said, he first had to determine the meaning of the play. To do his he had to become familiar with the characters and the plot.
"For me that's the most important thing, I can be able to visualize what the play is saying, and I can also play with the play so that the set is not a passive thing that the parade sector in of, but, if I were to make it more active, the
UNRUH THEN draws his ideas and makes detailed models of the set. Often, Unruth said, research is needed for a good food and furniture are researched, he said.
"For Shadow Box, I went to places that sell cheap building supplies, to get a feel for
Each show has different requirements, he said. The set for "The Shadow Box" is modern and streamlined, but his next project is the set for Wagner's "Das Rhingeold," an opera about the king of the gods, which will require a totally different set.
the casual, mass-produced type cottage I envisioned "Urlaub said.
"Think of it," Urhahn said, "you can't get any higher than the king of the gods. What kind of environment is inhabited by the king of the gods to do with realistic cottages or trees."
THEE ARE problems involved in the use of a designer. In sex and difficulties in construction often occur. The worst thing a designer can do, he is said to try to solve problem sets too much.
"When you hurry, you risk losing the image you started with." Unruh said.
Set designs and difficulties are often smoothed out by using past experience and the ideas of other designers.
"There are new shortcuts everytime you do another show or see one done," Unruh said.
Set designers use the ideas of other artists and designers in their work.
"An honest designer will tell you they 'borrow' ideas all the time," he said. "That's one of the great things about this business, there are no copyright laws on borrowing from others only on borrow from the best—use the ideas to the best painters, sculptors, designers."
50
Scene setter
Shadow班," by Michael Cristofor. Unurh, the head of KU's stage design program, also teaches classes in set designing.
Spare Time
Music
FACULTY RECTAL SERIES
Swarthock Reacall Hall
James Moeser, organist, 8 p.m.
Monday.
FALL CONCERTS
KU Chamber Choir, Chair Ralston,
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LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE 642 Massachusetts St.
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MEMORIAL CAMPANILE
Albert Gerken, University carillonneur, 3 p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Wednesday
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Rosie's Bar and Grill, tonight. Bottom of the Barrel, tomorrow night. Doors open at 8; music begins at 9.
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Theatre
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The latest Rolling Stone magazine Top 100 albums chart shows 17 new wave albums doing well in competition with disco, rock, country and other kinds of groups.
But are these strong national sales reflected in the Lawrence area?
Kansan Reviewer
Their songs concern seemingly mundane subjects like food, shelter and love. Byrne expresses a wide range of moods like fear, anger, pride and joy.
According to Steve Wilson, buyer for Kie's Discount Records and Stereo, 25th and Iowa streets, several new wave artists are selling well here, including the Talking Birds, the New York City Carrham Parker. Other groups enjoy steady, large not support in Lawnery, he said.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New wave inspires record-buying
The husband-and-wife combination of drum Chris Frantz and bassist Tina Weymouth is strong and inventive. They use a wide range of materials copyled by Weymouth's sinuous bass lines.
The recording business is experiencing an industry-wide slump and recording and distribution of music is going thing to boost sales. A bright spot in this dark picture has been the strong sales of CDs.
Their first album, "Talking Heads 77," released in 2014, was followed by success received with their second album, "More Songs about Buildings and Food," which contained the hit, "Take Me to the Music."
CURTIS REINHARDT, general manager of the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massa-
PERHAPS THE most striking feature of the Heads' sound is leader David Byrne's vocal and lyric style.
On top of this foundation is Byrne's percussive lead guitar and Jerry Harrison's keyboards, giving the Heads a catchy, driving sound.
Arts and Entertainment
He said the increasingly fuzzy line between new wave and rock music had helped the movement.
Counter to their lyrics is the Heads' musical style. They are not a mile-a-minute, three-chord group, like some other early punk bands.
"The more we show we do, the more we'll be able to bring people in so that when they hear of a band they're not familiar with, but when they see it they're amazed and a good time last time," Reinhardt said.
"THE MORE these acts get into rock and roll, the more you can dance to it and the better it is," he said.
Bryne's voice owes much to the swooping style of Berry Fryer, a member of Roxy Music, a British band that influenced Bryne. In her music, Bryne Byrnes his lyrics in terse phrases.
The Talking Heads have achieved a style that manages to be intellectual without taking itself too seriously. They are a major audience of the press. They have a sound and a message all their own.
Rinhardt said the response to these two shows could determine the future of the show. He added that artists he said he hoped to establish L.A.'s stop on a regular circuit for wave-type shows.
chusets St., has booked a new wave dance action to the halle and mime plans for several nights appearing at the Opera House on Sunday, 4, and the Buzzocks are tentatively scheduled.
Three Rhode Island School of Design graduates formed the group and became part of the emerging punk scene at New York's CBG club in the middle 1970s.
Area rock fans will have a chance to hear one of these groups at 8 onight when the Talking Heads play at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan.
Burgess . . .
From page one
three weeks after he had become "greatly troubled" with the growing occurrence of juvenile crime.
He said did not like the film and was shocked by "to much vulgar display" in it. But he thinks the film was well-made, with good camera play.
Many critics of the film and of the novel
claim that it is violence for the sake of violence and that Burgess is "the father of all evil."
His words were as important as what he created, Burgess said. The language he used was less formal than the ones designed so the hoodwuns would be "international things," speaking a language he knew well and not at all familiar.
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THIS IS THE type of literature that Burress said was characterized by opacity, literature in which the language tends to thicken.
would never grow old because it had never been used.
"The language in this fiction is not important. It is not obstructive. This work is just aching to become film." he said of his novel, *A Clockwork Orange*. He surrounded a *AClockwork Orange* was due to his work not being conducive to cinema. He did not work with Kubrick on the
film, although he had worked with the artistic director or the Tyrone Guthrie Theater in Minnesota in the late '60s.
Besides writing novels, Burgess transits somets, writes essays for British and American newspapers and engages in second activity." He lives with his wife and son in Monaco, a principally on the beach resort of Fuerteventura.
"I don't feel old," he said. "I still have much energy as I've always had. And if only one thing goes right for me, my day is made."
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Friday, October 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
11
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Renorter
Tenure change proposed
The American Association of University Professors yesterday expressed its disdain for the Regent Tempe Policy and Regenta Tempe Policy that could add years to the probation periods institutes serve.
T. P. Strivissan, chapter president of the AUAP, said the AUAP would recommend changes to the Regents Council of Chief Officers, which proposed the amendment.
The Council of Presidents, made up of the executive officers from all of the Regents institutions, yesterday referred the amendment back to COCAO.
"I am sure that they (COCAO) will get the message from the Council of Presidents," Srinivasan said. "If they are asking COCAO what is it, I am very hopeful that they will change."
However, Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs and KU's representative on COCAO, had said earlier that the amendment "was straightforward and a step in the right direction" toward clarifying the tenure requirement driving the change of members.
THE AAUP ADOPTED a resolution
criticizing the amendment, contending it was too vague.
Brissinasan said the AUAP would recommend to COCOA, that the amendment specify when the University can add years to an instructor's probation period.
Srinivasan said the AAUP would recommend that two exceptions be added to the curriculum so that the service that substantially differs from the faculty member's KU position and prior service at an institution that is not considered compatible to the University of Kansas.
The KU Faculty Council approved the same recommendations Jan. 28, but COCAO did not include them in the amendment.
Upon Chancellor Archie R. Dykes' again approval, the AAPL's recommendations again will be forwarded to COCAO's November agenda, Strivsnan said.
ALTHOUGH COCAO rejected the AUAP's recommendations earlier, Srinivasa said he was hopeful that COCAO would approve the recommendations in November.
"Once they realized how serious this was and the strength of faculty sentiment, the Council of Presidents realized that this should be reconsidered," he said.
The amendment would change the
probabinary periods teachers must serve upon being hired by the University.
New instructors at the University usually are placed on a seven-year probationary service period before being awarded tenure. The new instructors must be submitted to release from the University.
Under the current policy, an instructor serving more than three years of probation at another institution would be placed on leave if hired by the University of Kansas.
HOWEVER, the amendment states that the institution must admit that four years of probationary service, the employing institution provided that probationary period at that institution does not end.
The AAU executive committee said an instructor could have served probation in excess of 10 years if the amendment had been approved by the Revents.
The AAUP's resolution said, "We探听 the fact that this amendment was adopted by the Chief Academic Officers of the disgraced in disregard of faculty sentiment.
"We urge that the amendment be revised to stipulate that an extended probationary member should not be ordinary, and will be limited to circumstances involving a significantly different responsibility in the past from that of an official such that the faculty member is being appointed."
Women Regents given respect by their colleagues on the Board
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
After more than six months of working in an environment dominated by men, the two women on the Kansas Board of Trustees agreed to待 and respected by their colleagues.
By TONI WOOD
Sandra M McLennan, Hutchinson, and Margaret Glades, Yates Center, were appointed in February by Gov. John Carlin on the 18-member Board of Beegts.
"Sometimes, you think you're going against a stone wall," Glades said. "But later, see they've taken your views into account.
"The other members do listen and are very cooperative—not in a condescending way. They haven't made us feel that you don't know as much as they do."
McMullen agreed that the other Regents members had listened to her opinions.
BOTH WOMEN said they often had been
"I think I bring a different set of experiences and point of view to the Regents," she said. "Everyone brings a different perspective because of the experiences in the past."
on boards or committees of which they were the only female members.
McMullen was chairman of the Hutchinson Junior College Board of Trustees and was the only woman on the board.
Giades was the only woman among about 30 men on the Baker University Board of Trustees.
"Sometimes a woman's view may differ," she said. "I can remember times when I was the only one on a board for or against something."
whether of the women have full-time jobs, but are involved with community activities and with their families.
BOTH WOMEN said being a Regents member meant not only attending the monthly meeting, but also studying the issues, reading the information they provided, and working with Regents staff, keeping up with correspondence and visiting campuses.
Glades said she and McMullen had visited each of the seven Regents institutions last spring to acquaint themselves with the administrators and faculty.
Part of the learning process for McMullen and Glades has been made easier
by the full-time Regents staff in Topeka, according to both women.
McMullen said, "The staff keeps us very well informed. I feel adequately prepared for the Reentests meetings.
"THE THING that impresses me most is that we Regents have enough information on which to make decisions at each meeting."
Both women said they thought the meetings were conducted in a business-like manner. Many of the issues involve large amounts of money to the universities.
"It is rather mind-boggling," Glades said. "But we are dealing with a large budget when you think of seven universities."
Glades said she was satisfied both with the way the meetings were conducted and with the composition of the Regents.
"I THINK WE have a very balanced board," she said. "We have businessmen, a young view from Bernard Franklin, a former leasler and two women."
The women were appointed for four-year terms on the Regents, but will be eligible for re-appointment.
Registration: 8:30 am Robinson Foyer
Beginning & Beginning/Adm.
Master Classes: 9:00 am - 3:00 pm
Dance Films: 4:00 am - 6:00 pm
Tau
Dressin Mantley-mallet
Pandi Fidi-jazz
Joan Noss-modern
Juat Embart-modern
$2.00 non-members
Free to Tau Sigma members
Sigma Dance
Symposium
Saturday October 20—Robinson Gym
SIGMA NU and THE WHEEL present
1979
DAISY MAE
LOOK·ALIKE CONTEST
OCT. 20
at the
SIGMA NU
HOUSE
1:30
L
at THE WHEEL
LADIES THURSDAY at NIGHT 8 - 12 p.m. THE 5c DRAWS WHEEL
25c DRAWS
9th Year!
"THE BALLAD OF BLACK JACK"
P
DON MUELLER'S
FULL LENGTH, HISTORICAL
MUSICAL!
with
CHARLEY OLDFATHER
as John Brown
From Lawrence: Keith Weidenkeller
Frank Chaffin
Bob Newton
Kathy McGee
SPECIAL LAWRENCE BIRTHDAY PERFORMANCE!
To salute the city of Lawrence on its 125th birthday, all Lawrence residents may deduct $1.00 from the price of each ticket for the SUNDAY MATINEE!
FRIDAY, OCT. 19
SATURDAY, OCT. 20
Doors open one hour before curtain, each show.
Phone reservations must be paid for one hour prior to curtain. CHILDREN HALF PRICE: no infants will be admitted.
SUNDAY. OCT. 21
RESERVED SEATING: $3.75, $3.25
UNRESERVED BALCONY SEATING: $2.50
7:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
Baldwin City is just 15 miles from Lawrence. Take 59 to the junction of 56 and 59; turn east and travel 4 miles. Take 59 to the junction of 46 and 59, pick up and then pick up them at the door!
it's part of the 1979
MAPLE LEAF
FESTIVAL:
TELEPHONE: 594-3064 or 594-6451
ext. 536, 9 to 5, daily
Parade Saturday at the
woodland street, breakfast on
the prairie Carnival,
crafts, squeamish
dance.
Oct.20,21!
WEEKEND BOWLING SPECIAL .50*/game
Now thru Oct. 28
Open Sat. and Sun.
2:00 pm—Close
Raven
COLLEGE GRADS WANTED FOR INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Bowl
AGRICULTURE
BUSINESS
ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING
FRENCH
HOME ECON.
LITERAL ARTS.
NURSING
THE SCIENCES
SEE RECRUITERS:
BUN CAN BECOME INVOLVED IN AN IMPORTANT,
MEANINGLY MOVEMENT FOR WORLD PEACE AS A
MANAGER OF A UNION, OR A THIRD-WORLD COUNTRY WITH PROBLEMS OF POULTER, HUNGER IGNORANCE AND DISEASE.
SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW AT PLACEMENT
CENTER, CARRUTH - O'LEARY ON OCT. 22.
23,24.
IF YOU ARE WILLIING TO SHARE YOUR SKILLS WITH
OFTWARE, PLEASE MOVE THEM TO BUTTON PUT OFF CLIMBING THAT LADDER. GEEK
THESE BENEFITS AND ACCUMULATING POSES-
SURELY HAVE BEEN USED IN THE ALTERNATIVE FOR TWO YEARS OF YOUR LIFE.
JOIN THE NEW PEACE CORPS
sua films
Presents
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS
The
Godfather
Marloon Brando
Al Pacino James Caan Richard Castellano
Robert Duvall Sterling Hayden John Marley
Rickard Conte Diane Keaton
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS
The
Godfather
R
Color by Incentive
A Parquet Pattern
Ireland - Ireland - Ireland
Sunday, Oct. 21
2:00 p.m. $1.50
Woodruff Aud.
—No refreshments allowed—
Specifically, Northwestern Mutual Life
CARE TO LEARN THE FACTS OF LIFE?
We're big—world's largest company specializing in individual life insurance, and among the nation's 40 largest corporations.
An NML representative will be on campus October 23 at the Placement Office, 202 Summerfield to interview men and women interested in the job.
We're solid—9 billion in assets: $5 billion of life insurance in force, and 122 years of experience.
We're growing—$9 billion of sales last year.
The Quiet Company
Persons interested in individuality and compensation commensurate with productivity are especially welcomed. We also welcome individuals with special abilities.
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE—MILWAUKEE NML
ROBERT L. SHIELDS, C.L.U., District Agent Lawrence National Bank Blldg., Lawrence, Ks 843-1533
the GRAMOPHONE shop
642 1811 ASK FOR STATION #9
WE GIVE BIG DISCOUNTS!
WE CAN SAVE YOU A LOT OF MONEY ON THIS QUALITY STEREO COMPONENT
No Dealers Please
AIWA
ADM-200U
AS SEEN ON NETWORK T.V.
Built to Retail $270.00 INCREDIBLY PRICED $228.80
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
913-842-1544
25th & IOWA
913. 842.1544
12
Friday, October 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Veterans
Party
Saturday
Oct. 20
3 pm
Catfish
Bar & Grill
Beer and advertising
paid for by Campus Veterans
African Students Association Meeting Notice
A general meeting of the African Students Association is scheduled for 6 pm Saturday, October 20, 1979 at the Council Room, Kansas Union.
The agenda for this first meeting of the new executives is pregnant and the new executives solicit the help and support of all members in steering the association. Hope to see all African students on campus at this meeting. Thank you.
Appolo E. Dimbo General Secretary
The Eldridge House
would you like to go to a nice quiet place where you can speak across the table, listen to good jazz and enjoy a fine meal?
The Eldridge House has been newly redecorated to provide you with a casual atmosphere where you can enjoy their new exciting menu (prices start at $2.95 and up). They have a complete wine list to accommodate your every taste.
memberships available anytime for only $10
(10 day waiting period after application)
Listen for Eldridge House News Daily on KLZR at 11:35
the distinctive difference in good times
701 Massachusetts Street
Lawrence, Kansas 841-4666
New Members
Always
Welcome
Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
Environment
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
Paraphernalia
842-3059 15 W. 9th St.
MINGLE TONIGHT!
TGIF TONIGHT - Album giveaway DISCO PARTY SATURDAY
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat 6 pm - 3 am
Sun 6 pm - 1 am'
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th
842-7030
Jun
Games
Mon/Tue 10:45
841-4430
1022 Massachusetts
road #2, Boston MA
HOMECOMING FLOAT ENTRY DEADLINE
Oct. 19 5 p.m.
864-4861
Student Organizations and Activities 220 Strong
220 Strong
ALL living groups, registered student organizations and apartment complex organizations are eligible to enter. Make this first-ever Homecoming Parade the best ever.
HOURS:10:00-5:30
Mon. thru Sat.
LATE on Thurs.
WHITE LIGHT
PARAPHERNALIA
704MASS.
COUPON Offer Good Oct. 20-26
KEY CLIP
$1.98
钥匙
100% of your savings dollars are re-invested in this community when you save at LSA!
money market interest rate:
11. 716%
$10,000 minimum. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal.
Member F S. I. C
Equal Opportunity
Employer Lender
$ 50^{o}$, paid on Postbook accounts, no minimum interest compounded daily.
LAWRENCE SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
Ninth & Vernon Streets
PIE
JOIN VISTA...
...AND GIVE OTHER AMERICANS A CHANCE FOR A PIECE OF THE PIE.
PEOPLE WITH DEGREES OR EXPERIENCE IN LIBERAL ARTS, NURSING, BUILDING, ARCH., LAW, BUS., & EDUC. MAY BECOME VISTA VOLUNTEERS
Contact Recruiters:
SIGN UP NOW AT PLACEMENT CENTER,
CARRUTH-OLEARY ON OCT. 22, 23, 24
SenEx to discuss changes in Regents planning policy
The University Senate executive committee will discuss a proposed amendment today that could alter the focus of the Regents academic planning policy.
Academic planning calls for a comprehensive study of the University's projected enrollment手续 and personnel reassignments during the next five years.
The Council of Chief Academic Officers proposed an amendment Sept. 28 that would focus the study on credit-hour projections as opposed to enrollment projections.
Under the amendment, the Regents would base future changes in personnel and academic programs on distribution of credit
hours at each institution. The current policy bases future changes on enrollment projections.
KU's study will be completed April 1, 1980. The policy says, "The probability that students will drop in higher education in higher education beginning in the early 1980s pose a problem for public interest."
"There will be not only significant enrollment declines at some institutions during the 1980s but substantial shifts in enrollment one program to another at all institutions."
Bucky's
SPECIAL — This Weekend
Offer Good
Now thru Sun.
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER
only 79'
Bucky's
2120 9th
Bucky's
X
Bucky's
SUMMIT
TRAVEL, LLC
Ski the Summit
- 6 days/5 nights in luxurious condo
minibath kitchen and fireplace
* 3 days lift tickets
* 3 days ski rental
* 3 days ski party
ONLY $179-Copper Mountain
$179-Breakenridge
JAN.7-12,1980
( )
Terry Madden or Brad Herman
For More Information Call:
Aspen/Snowmass
JAN. 7-12,1980
841-8157 341-0070
- 6 days/5 nights in a Snowmass Condo w/kitchen and fireplace
- 3 days ski lift and ski rentals at Aspen Highlands
- Discounted additional lifts and rentals
- Discounted additional lifts and rentals
* Free ski party and mountain picnic
ONLY $179
Roundtrip party bus ONLY $
Last 3 days this season!
Last 3 days this season!
OUTDOOR
ROLLER SKATE RENTALS
Friday 5:00 p.m.-2:00 a.m.
Saturday & Sunday 4:00 p.m. - Midnight
Golden Gate Skates
13th and Oread
---
DUE TO YOUR TREMENDOUS RESPONSE WE WILL CONTINUE TO BRING YOU THE FINEST IN LIVE ENTERTAINMENT AT BULLWINKLE'S a private club
BULLWINKLE'S a private club
STRAIGHT FROM TWO WEEKS AT
CROWN CENTER
LUPE
WEDNESDAY OCT. 17 THRU SATURDAY 20
AND BY POPULAR DEMAND
THE MOFFET-BEERS BAND
THURSDAY OCT. 25
THRU SATURDAY OCT. 27
SHOW STARTS AT 10 p.m.
NO RESERVED SEATING
PLEASE COME EARLY
Friday, October 19, 1979
13
KANSAN WANT ADS
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
six two two three four five six seven eight nine ten
two two two three four five six seven eight nine ten
two two two three four five six seventeen eight nine ten
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
The UDR will not be responsible for more than the two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
11 Eliot Hall 864-4358
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also salted, roasted, and raw果 in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, rice, pasta, pomegranate, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday
Also selling wooden erates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
Watch for truck parked at 4th & Illinois. Home of the Cincinnati Reds, selling freshly prepared vegetable炒饭 Twice a week. Rotisserie of dry beans and chicken Sunday. Pumpkin, honey, corn, and sorghum Sunday.
Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. tf
The entry deadline for the Intramural Swimming Relays is
Monday, October 22 at 5 p.m.
More Information
208 Robinson
9F
864-3546
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% notably,
because they are too dark hard at J. HODGE
& CO. (300) 216-7498; price—winter, price—prey will be known and always will be
price. Come in and browse at 1401 Mastil-Mas-
chinelle.
Zen practice nightly 6 p.m. Free lecture by
Master Seeing Sahn, Monday. Oct. 22, 8 p.m.
Jayhawk room, student union. For information
call 822-7010.
*Christmas in, October* BAZAAR, B.L.D.S. Church, University Press, Oct. 17 (New York); Oct. 20, 18 to 2 p.m. Handmade goods and crafts, free ornamentals, plants; handmade foods served continuously.
Free lecture on Christian Science: The "Consciousness of the Healing Christ"; by John A. Ginbright. In First Church of Christian Science, Manassas, Maryland; Monday, October 28, at 8 a.m. 10-23
M JCROW-Get out of Lawrence. March on
themanigans. Saturday, October 20. 9:00
10:19
Lawrence Suff, Center presents a weekend at SAMA Shell Monroe Johnson, Community Bldge 11th and Vermont Street. Sat, Oct. 10, 9am-4pm. $35. For information call 817-2623, 840-159-109 or $15 for Information call 817-2623, 840-159-109
Employment Opportunities
HAD ENOUGH? Tired of terrorist inflation? Gov't officials are wary about three issues. The Liberties局 is sponsoring a meeting Tuesday in New York to discuss these issues. The Liberties局 is sponsoring a meeting Tuesday in New York to discuss these issues. The Liberties局 is sponsoring a meeting Tuesday in New York to discuss these issues. The Liberties局 is sponsoring a meeting Tuesday in New York to discuss these issues. The Liberties局 is sponsoring a meeting Tuesday in New York to discuss these issues. The Liberties局 is sponsoring a meeting Tuesday in New York to discuss these issues. The Liberties局 is sponsoring a meeting Tuesday in New York to discuss these issues.
Check with the opportunities carer. A representative of the Northern Western will be available inquiries to (808) 752-2361, mercifull. Oc. 23, or call Robert L. Shields, CLUED, Agent, BAG1163-355. Lawrens National Institute 16-19
ENTERTAINMENT
Tradition begins at 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26 on
the hill on the hill. See the announcement Parade.
10-26
finally Friday and your Harbour Mirage is set up. Our 18-seat cab with group $13 billets and $60 bottles and gas, and our 24-seat cab with just the driver and gift box, have all had ether and your car, give it to everyone and your car together at The Harbour Lift, 131 Manitou Street, New York, NY 10007.
Roxy's Bar and Grill, with two women's moustache, Friday, Oct 19, 8:30. Off-the-Wall Hall. The staircase of the Island Bar, Nebra guitar, mandolin, yodeler. Oct 20, 8:30. Off-the-Wall 19
FOR RENT
**STIMMER LEIGHT APARTMENTS NOW BEST OFFERED:** 850 West 46th Street, New York, NY 10022. For more information call (212) 335-5990. Payment. On JUAN or MAYO. INDEDGE BEHATES TICKETS FOR ALL OF THE PROOF ROOM. Next door to EAST Village, East 76th Street.
Room with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. tt
11-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes.
Rooms near KU. Possible rent reduction for la-
bor. Call 841-6254 or 842-4065.
10-31
All Frontier Rage Apts. 10 months rent free $50
security on all 1 bedrooms. 1f
*Single bedroom apt. for sublease, 2429 Oushalb.
*Fab. 32 after 5.00 p.m.
10-19
Please 2 bdmr duplex, att. gar. avail. Oct. 20th.
1210 mo. Call 843-0570 or 843-6011. 10-23
bedroom apt. close to campus. Call 842-0032
p.m.-12 p.m.
10-25
bdm. house, close to KU bus line. No pets.
prefer 3 students or couple. $340/month. 642-
670, evenings. 10-23
Lease 5 bdmr, older house, avail. Nov. 1, $300 a
call Month 843-6570 or 843-6011.
10-23
For Rent, newly remodeled two bedroom apartment, 315 east 19th. 19th $175 plus deposit. Graduate students preferred. Call 843-5729. 10-19
FIRST MONTH FREE Want female to furnish house $100 + 1/3 utilities. 842-6052 10-25
saintmith Hall has a couple of opening for the
out of the year. Both male and female. If interested business office at 843-859 any
time of the day
Must sublease 2 bedroom apt. Avalon Apts.
$240 monthly + electricity. Gas heat. Please call
841-5717.
10-25
1 or 2 matrine, responsible students bought to house them at 1439 Manhattan's Baths, 2 baths, bathroom for most furnishings, private international cooking, kitchen, modest prepaid; modern price 10-24 call 842-7207 10-24
FOR SALE
SunSpees—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF
Alternator, starter and generator specialists:
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 850-860, 3000 W, 6th. ifr.
SOLAR, 125-145, 3000 W, 6th. ifr.
western civilization
Western Civilization on Civilization Makes sense to use—1) As study guide, 2) For class presentation, 3) In textbook of Western Civilization 'available at Town Crier Books Mall Bookstore & Oxford Books'
WATKED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee.
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-138, TUF
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION Puch Mounts "k's bike Lake 103, Vermont. 841-6642. TF
1910-1980 used cars—please let me be your guide when purchasing a used car. Call and find out why so many KU students buy used cars in 'bob Smith-Landmark Ford' M4L-5600 10-19
9 week old Ferrets, make adorable pets. Call
843-4843 after 6 p.m.
10-23
1971 Pinto, 4-speed, 67,000 miles. Must sell, price
called. Call Ketchi 843-5073. 10-19
until 12:15 $83 each or B.O. 864-6005 10-19
Pair Sale. Uited 15 fare coupon. Best offer. Call
Rick, 842-605 evenings. 10-19
1971 Dodge Monaco four-door, fully equipped.
Superclean. All配备. 842-1078. 10-19
Sony digital clock radio reduced! New model with battery reserve if ice-elec. off—special at $2.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open. Thurs. nites. 10-23
For Sale—19 Ford XL, 2 door hardtop, PS, PB.
AC, studied snow tires on it. Call 542-3278
morning or evenings.
10-23
HELP WANTED
86 Rambler station wagon, 4-door, new battery,
heater, runs well. Call Jeff, J64-8950 (8-10) 10-22
Ray Stonebake's downtown. The appliance stores with discount tire dept. 10-30
V-W Rabbit- 76--56,000 miles with 2 -snowtires.
$2600. 10-31
Pioneer XS42 Xtreme Stereceiver $100. Ultralinear
Speakers 15 $ Call Jeff, 841-2831. 10-21
Hummingbird lawn sale, indoor for paint. Sat. Oct.
lamps, linen clothes, faxes, papers, yarn,
lamps, lace fabrics, table fabrics, yarn,
fabric, gloves, and other supplies. Sunny.
and children/climbing, pyrotechnics, HOW-
to train, etc., etc. Please no earrings,
10-19
Men's shearing coat-size 42. Worn very little—absolutely perfect condition. $150.00 or best offer.
841-6282, keeping try. 10-24
We've got brand new room size carpet marmants
656 between 8 and 10
656 between 8 and 10
1973 Volvo 144 *4-Speed*, AC, low mileage, radials,
good condition, $2400, $640, 847-7129 after 5:30
Water bed, high quality, baffled mattress.
Queen size w/inner, heater, simple pedestal w/
mabogany sides. $200 Moving must sell! 84-1296.
MEN: WOMEN JOBS! CRUISHBIRDS! SALING ING EXPEDITIONS! No experience. Good job. Apply to: MNWOC or APPLICATION INTO JOBS! to: CRUSEWORLD 133, Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 95806
FOUND
Small gray puppy, male, between Indiana and Minnesota on 9th St., call 842-853 or 842-6342. DAVENE
will immediately. $1800, bill 841-8433-10-20
1925 CHIP Super Sport Hydraulic motorcycle,
excellent shape, paid to will 842-297. 10-26
1925 822. 2400, mint. bill 843-196. 10-23
OVERSEAS JOBS--JUNES/year round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All flds,包
$1,20 monthly, expires paid 3/30.
J.C. FC, Box 3A, KCua. Defense Tree
JCAC, IBC, JC Box 3A, KCua. Defense Tree
Identification cards found around Ridge Court apartments. Contact Traffic and Security. 10-19
Calculator found in Flint Hall. Call Alan 841-
1661 to identify.
White, long hair kitten—8 months? on truck at New Green Hall, could have ridden from Oliver Hall. 842-6724. by 0:00 p.m. 10-22
Found gold bracelet near chancellor's residence.
Call 841-7542 to identify.
Cross pin in front of Carruth-O'Leary. Call 864-2925 to identify.
HELP WANTED
Small black puppy about 2 months old. brown
fiscal coat. Call 842-6019. 10-23
Siamsee cat found Tuesday at tennis court by Robyn Gymn. Call 843-7653 or 843-7654.
WANTED--students for part-time sales in Life
Services. You must have a bachelor's degree and
you learn with you an internship Program.
Accepting applicants: 30 Summer-School,
20 Summer-Program, or call College Shift. L
Ships: Agent, AGM 1823, Lawson School,
Bank Bank, 10/19
Liquor store clerk. Eves and Saturdays. 3-11 p.m. store. 842-7998 after 5 p.m. 10-25
Language Preschool Preschool of Children's Health, Louisiana; Language Preschool of Children's Health data collection and analysis. Must have completed pre-bed room preparation, data and data training observations, library card and data processing, data entry, and language preschool registration. 1318 Louisiana Application deadlines: Oct. 31 on an Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action, and to apply regardless of race, religion, sex, disease or disability.
Substitute teachers for Basehor-Linwood USD-
458. Contact Board of Education Office (913)
724-1206. 10-21
Civil Engineering Department of the University of California, Berkeley. Civil engineering as assistant professor of civil engineering teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses in the area of civil engineering computer aids and uses higher level software in areas of civil engineering and dynamic finite element methods. Serve research on Stanton Y. Bobles' Department of Civil Engineering at the University of California and opportunity employer employs 180.
HOME ECONOMISTS- You can be more than a million dollars away from your home Use *Home MK* degree in degree for your home education, or a 4th extension, to teach in second-grade, first-grade, third-grade, allowance health, care 48 hours with no dependents. No upper age limit. Run now on our October 27, 2013, b - (b) 19
COLLEGE GRADS AND PEOPLE WITH EXPENSE OF COLLEGE PROJECTS. If you have experience in teaching, rubbish the eleives, or are a health worker, work oversee, or become acquainted with work oversee, consider becoming a married or unemployed dependent on upper age limit and no dependents on upper age limit. Colleague-O-Leave on Oct 23, 22, 24 — 10-19
TEACHERS-- If your degree is in English, math, or foreign languages you need to teach in primary secondary schools. The Corps needs you. Teach in primary secondary schools and/or in a Peace Corps volunteer. Pay travel费. Apply to the Peace Corps as soon as possible. Pass the physical exam. Pass the medical exam. Become a U.S. citizen. Apply for no dependents. Nip up age limits and apply for a Peace Corps Center. Carry-Orient-Oil (Oct 21, 2013).
COLLAGE GRACE CORPS AND WISA
UNIQUE OPPORTUNITIES FOR QUALIFIED
UNIQUE OPPORTUNITIES FOR QUALIFIED
SKILLS TO HELP IN DEVELOPING NATIONS
OVER THE U.S. AND BUILD A BETTER
OVVER THE U.S. AND BUILD A BETTER
OVVER THE U.S. AND BUILD A BETTER
FIT OF FIELDS PROVIDING EXPENSES TRAVEL
OF FIELDIES MOVED FOR MORE USE ON HOW
BEFORE PARED IN INTERVIEW OR FOR
INTERVIEW AT PLACEMENT CENTER.
CARRITUH-LEARY ON DEC. 22. 23. 24. 25.
Pizza Hut
As one of America's leaders in the
restaurant industry, weve always
considered people to be among
our most important assets;
the people who work with us
So. if you've been looking for a full
or part-time position with flexible
or part-time position with flexibility
hours where your attitude, ability.
than your experience, apply at any
and personality are more important
of the three Lawrence Pizza Hut
804 Iowa
934 Massachusetts
1606 W. 23rd
MATLIY SCIENCE TEACHERS - Consider an alteration in teaching methods for a career in Asia. Africa is asking for Peace Corps volunteer assignments for creative, energetic individuals with experience in health care, 48 days paid variation. Must be U.S. native or foreignborn, upper age limit. Contact the Peace Corp Japan. Mail resume to O'Leary, O-Line at 10, 22, 23, 10-19
Cashier (2) part-time. Work 10 a.m to 5 p.m.
Saturday to 3 p.m Sun. Off work mid-week.
Flexible schedule Apply in person at Kuanas
Flexible Schedule Apply in person at Kuanas
Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer
DAY CARE STAFF AND SUBSTITUTES NEEDED
Interested individuals should have experience
curriculum. Interested personnel should have experi-
ence in a related field such as: teaching or recreation.
Applicants should be specifically qualified for the Kindergarten Program, specifically with the Kindergarten Program.
Apply by May 28th at 5:30 p.m. Apply in person at AA B13 Railroad
and 9:30 a.m. Equal Opportunity Employer
with 9:30 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. Equal Opportunity Employer
Wanted-Time, Apartment. Gymnastic Instructor, Tuns-Parts, and Thurs.eve. Edgeworth area, experience preferred, $8.00 hr. Call Carlo Hyrd. 287-304. 10-25
Fart-time maintenance person needed.
付 $350. Must be available 8-11 a.m. Mon.-Fri.
lifting and cleaning required. Mechanical
five days a week. Foods, 110; Mans-8-11 a.m.
10-25
Part-time, table service personnel needed. Must be available 11-4 MWF. Pay $1.50 hr. + tips. Apply in person Schumann Foods, 7191; Mass, 8-5 Mon-Fri,. 10-25
Live-in babysitter for 5 year old in exchange for room and board. Call Alan 841-802-6830. 10:25
LOST
Gold women's I.D. bracelet with gold heart charm. The name Jana on front, Love From Scott on back. Reward. Call 864-1420. 10-22
10 week old male puppy. Solid Black. Brown flea collar. Needs medication. Please call 842-3501. Very attached. 10-19
Women's silver watch with stretch band; self-
winding. date. Reward. Call Carla at 842-8258.
Men's black wallet and KU bue pass in blue holder. Money unimportant; I need license, ID's 83-867-88. 10-24
Lost stick, black and white cat with spot on
little. Please call at $41-5512. 10-23
12 week old, white black kitten. Lost near un.
Hawk. Desperately want 'Horse' back. Please:
841-4733. 10-24
MISCELLANEOUS
THESIS BINDING COPYING-The House of Ubber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for thesis binding and copying in Lawhaus. Let us help you at 858 Morn or phone 842-3610.
THE CAMPUS SAFE FIERY is being organized by several student organizations, living in the dormitories, to provide escorts for people on campus who will provide escorts for people on campus who women and one woman per person. Men and women would work together to secure more secure rooms. We call KU LIBRARY an important part of our operation. Oct. 20, 18-19 beginning operation. Oct. 20, 19-18
NOTICE
Papers due soon? Will provide personalized bibliographies on your topic in social sciences or humanities. Have M.A., MLS. Call 842-3021. 10-25
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid. 864-5064.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC- ANNEX up to 17
pregnancy. Pregnant healing. Birth Control,
Counselling. Post-natal care. Post-appointment.
Hospital 8 AM 4:30 PM (1952) - 460-191
10th, Over-St. Land, KS.
If you are looking for a bar with chew beer, pool and pizza people you'll find the Harbour Lodge. It has great people you like. The Harbour Lodge has day and day afternoons for TGIF New savvy and hard-working people. The Harbour Lodge Get your ship together at the Harbour Lodge.
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Headquarters, 841-2345 and KU info. 846-3566.
*Can’t afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid.-846-3564.*
The San Louis Opisbo Tar Creatures,
Is there life after acid??
84,000 people can't be wrong!!!
8,000 people can't be wrong!!! 10-19
PSYCHIC PERSONALITY READINGS. $25, $50
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every
anniversary. 1-Gen. anniversary. 4-Gen.
Admirer 81-31. 11-6
name, how **bout** Lancebees *Hmm*
Come to the all new **MAD HATTER** HAPPY Hour
4-8 p.m. Monday thru Friday, Open 2 nights a
week.
10-31
Archie—The Art & Design building needs a new
name. how `bout Lambcles Hall`?
10-19
Sigma Nu and the Wheel present the 1979 Daly Mae Look-Alike Contest, KU's only campus-wide beauty contest. Oct. 20 at the Sigma Nu House. 1:30 p.m. Free. beer! 10-19
Davis' mum! 1972 Davy Mac Lonak Alkire Conference Sat. Oct. 20 at the Sigma Nu House 1:00 p.m. free beer, fun & games Sponsored by Sigma Nu and the Wheel. 10-1
After the Homecoming Parade at 3 p.m. Friday, the crowd is cheered on by dancers, then dance to Paul Gray and the Gault Band with Claude "Fiddler" Williams and Jonas Sturm at 9 p.m. in the Satellite Auditorium. Both are free.
Veterans for employment assistance contact Campus Veterans -118 Bannan Union, 864-438-178.
Eileen, Rows are red, but you're twice as nice, and you might, you should, begin training Gary.
Stay on the hill Friday in July 10. Join See the Wonders of Alaska, a monthly Magic Shop show at the Fire Island Magic Shop Show. Stay with us for two days of the 2nd Annual Jackson Jawed 10.000 meter run. December 25th. 10:30 AM. Carnival can run. Call 843-765-9111.
RED_DOG INN will roll your blues away. All you Kappa Sig he there and dance square Love those beards—Lila. 10-19
Hallowen Costume Sale: hats, wigs, accessories,
dresses, men's suits, 626 Ohio. Oct 20, 9-14 10
To the beautiful girl that waved at me Sunday
@dayfive. I love you! Please 10-19
@843-8717-Dave. @843-8717
@843-8717-Nicole.
Don't drive, walk to Xanax let behind the Union Friday, Oct. 26 and see all the Homecoming flops in one spot. Food and drink available, Entertainment, too. Save gas. 10-26
Redemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod Invites you to worship them with at 30th and Haskell Lee Press Presbyterian Church, 1483 N. Fifth Avenue, 7th Floor, Call 643-8388 if you need a 10-19
Whoopoo!! Another Great 'Drinkin' Dinner!
Whoopoo!! Another Great 'Drinkin' Dinner!
People call Coach 'for details'.
10-19
ADPIx and dates get ready to bedify to the
bar and have a great time tonight
Sue. keep practicing that growl. See you at the
Meen: Thanks for two great years. Happy Anniversary.
Let's go for three. John. 10-19
L. S.—Hayne 19th Birthday Enjoy this year, it's the last ten days fling. How about spending years 20 and up somewhere warmer. I know of a certain date ashore of here. How you enjoy you life?
Mo: Nous etions les buveurs incurable. Oueh! Lambeakes.
10-19
Pledges, a share good in the land of cool
winter. A second set awaits your return. F. all Y. men.
10-19 If your toes don't have cold hard winter
floors, wear gloves and stockings. New carpet only £20.
Your pickup bag. New carpet only £20.
Pete and Ken. When the sun goes down the HABEST MOON shines bright, we're so excited for Saturday night, Shelley and Sharon. 10-19
To the bearded and beardless—Let's try for another classic party plc. Your Neighbors. PS. Let's not wreck my car.
Two to "two," Kappa Saga-We thought Daquqel's and Tjad went good together, but we knew Dawqel and the Red Dog will be a great team. Looking forward to a SPACE Dana and Saam. 10-19
Hey Fret Rats! Al Caup' Daisy Mac was a dumb blonde who loved hogs. "Nuff seed." A Free 10-19
Book!
Sarah O. Happy 18th. Party Hardy at the Peacock. Love. Your secret ssl. 10-21-79. 10-19
Bubble=Hope you had a super time at CC—
stock in the card company is going up. Remember me! Astro.
10-19
RED DOG DATES—Get keyed for a night you’ll never forget. If you can remember all I Sunday morn. Tum, that means you especially! 10-19
The Entertainers
LOUSE'S
$10 per person
$1.80 per person
$2.50 per person
WINE CENTER
1941 WEST 3RD ST.
HAMPTON, MA 02444
WWW.LOUSES.COM
Wed. Oct. 24th
OL' BLUE SUEDE'S HERE!
CARL PERKINS
Mr. Blue Suede Shoes
Donna's open at
8:00 am, thru 9:00
lawrence
operatic house
Call for concert info: 842 6930
926 Massachusetts
843-2644
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
C
GCP LOYDS
SERVICES OFFERED
West
Tuesday night — College ID
$31* all you can drink
Hospital Shopping Center
Boston Harbor
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 309-page catalog of collegiate literature. 10.250 topics listed. BOX 25097: Los Angeles, CA 90025, (213) 477-8236. tf
Disco tonight until 3 AM 701 Mass.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Other Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Sunday at 888 Mass.
EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 845785. MATH 115-709 call 845785. STATISTICS 845785. PHYSICS 845785. PRINCESS 100-500 call 845785. WOLLISH II and SPANISH II 845785-7077
The Bike Garage—complete professional bicycle repair. Garage space? "Tune-Ups" and "Total Overhaul." Call details call 812-2781. 10-22
Young mother with infant choices to stay at home and babayat. Let your child benefit Very reasonable prices, 18 mon(s) - 5 yrs. Days only. North Lawrence location: 941-5831. 10-28
BUYING LIFE INSURANCE? Check our rates and values first. Call Wayne. 842-604, 842-2092.
11-9
THE OTHER PLACE
$1.50
1717 W. 6th
TGIF—$1 pichers—all day
TYPING
Mating and framing done—call after 4:30 Mon
or 1:31 or anytime weeksends 826-8753. 10-19
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF
Typist Editer IBM Pixeal Rite Quality work.
Implementing call quality TP 842-9317-5100
layouting call Carl庐伊尔 842-9317-5100
TP 842-9317-5100
electronic IBM Selenium preprocessing spending spelling
spelling Microsoft preprocessing spending
Expertized Ttypist -Quality work, remainable
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
Journyman typographer, 20 years typing/typing-selling experience, 4 years academic typing; theses, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest Solitaire equipment. 824-4848. **TP**
Need some typing quality? Do work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at B13-8654, after 4 p.m. 10-28
Experienced typed-thesis, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correcting selective. Barb 864-3128; evenings 842-2310. If
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editors, self-correct Selectric. Call Elen or Jeannan. 841-2172. 11-5
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387.
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate service, low rates. 843-3653 evenings and weekends. 10-23
Quality typing at competitive prices—no jobs too big or small. 842-2756. 10-23
WANTED
Mature neonate requires for very nice three
double bedroomplex, 15 min. walk from campus,
$100 month + 1/2 utilities. Call 841-3205 after 6
p.m. 10-19
PSYCHIATRIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICE
PAINTER, REPAIRER, JOBS: Hospital Appliance,
Perg & Jewelry Manufacturing, 52 W. 6th, Topski, KS. Phone: (913) 263-5800
Applied to employer. Apply an equal opportunity
employer to apply.
People who have *Executioner*, Penetration,死徒
Marchanti, or Maitlain books - call David
10-29
Light housekeeping, cleaning. 3 or 4 hours week
Must provide own transportation. 842-109-128
10 appointment接待 for Ieale National Portrait Studies, morning and evening staff. $230 plus bonus. Apply in person, Westminster Inn, 225 W. 4th, Suite 201. 10-22
Roommate wanted to share apartment near campus. 841-2029. 10-24
Wanted 2. bedroom apt. for spring semester.
Write Richard, 7244 Roe Blvd., Prairie Village,
Ks. 66288
10-24
ROOMMATES. Naismith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 813-4528 any time of the day. tf
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
If you've got it. Kansan
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DONT.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kanana
Classified sells it. Just mail
the money order to 111 Flipt
Hall. Use rates below to
figure costs. Now you've got
it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Wednesday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
Write ad here: ___
--additional words
1
time
$2.00
01
RATES:
15 words or less
2 times 3 times 4 times
82.25 82.50 82.75
.02 .03 .04 .04
1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
to
5
times
83.00
.05
NAME:
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 19, 1979
Record...
From page one
vague. "I think the term could cause serious abuses." he said.
SEVERAL OF THE WHOLE who spoke to the committee challenged a requirement that a public record be produced within three hours of the request.
William Douglas, who represents the League of Municipalities, said some city clerks in small towns took care of business "out of their kitchens."
"Oh it’s a one-person office where things are not well-indexed or well-filled," he said. The person who was the most involved minutes of meetings, keeps fiscal records and purchase supplies."
Terry Harmon, assistant state archivist,
described in a written statement the condition of records in Miami County. He said they dated back 120 years.
"SEVERAL THOUSAND volumes and many boxes of unbound records were in a massive pile about 8 feet deep, 20 feet long and 6 feet wide against the back wall of the vehicle storage room behind sandbags, tires, tools and masonry equipment."
Other examples of inaccessible or disorganized records were given, but W. Davis Merritt Jr., executive editor of the Wighta峡岛 and Beacon,old the committee that he thought the three-hour time limit for finding records should be kept in
he did.
He said that if records were inaccessible all that was required was an explanation.
ANOTHER PART OF the bill that was challenged, was the "section," said the plaintiff, who calls it "the court" of actual damages, court costs and attorney fees" to the person who wins a public record victory.
The bill states that records should be produced "in the form of a detailed explanation given a detailed explanation for further delay and the place, time and earliest date that the public record will be made available."
Merritt said the section was "the real strength of the bill." He said the word "may" should be changed to "shall," so that it would not be confused with court costs if the needed a public record.
My real concern is with citizens who are
The last person who spoke to the committee was Bernie Dunn, who represented the Kansas Department of Corrections.
absolutely right, who need information and it costs them $1,000 to get it." he said.
HE SAID THERE were certain records that should be kept confidential but would be open to the public under the proposed bill.
"There are certain reports that have to do with an howimate is treated, when his mother is out," he said. "Those are open in the inn, but nevertheless, should not be open."
State Rep. Neal Whitaker, R-Wichita, chairman of the committee, said the members would meet today to consider yesterday's recommendations.
AURH...
other members, and would be assessed the same amount of residence hall fees.
From page one
BILL DAILMAN, chairman of the AUHR service committee, said, "I don't care if they live in one of our halls as long as they get no special treatment to get the
Meyer said members of her sorority had joined the organization thinking they would be living together next year.
"We were told that we would be living together, that was one reason why a lot of us joined. A large number of girls depended upon it." she said.
upon N, she said.
McElhenie said housing the Alpha Omicron Pi pledges was only a small inconvenience, considering the long-range benefits the sorority would bring to the campus.
THE "SORORITY" will work to our long-term goal of improving student motivation for students is not going to be better unless we develop options for other forms of housing. This will take the pressure off our families.
"ine women are going to have to live somewhere. Everyone seems to have overlooked that consideration."
AURH has tentatively scheduled a meeting for 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 23 it. Haskingham Hall's conference room to discuss the issue.
VIN
MEISNER -
MILSTEAD
RETAIL LIQUOR
FEATURING
FINE IMPORTED AND
CALIFORNIA WINES
AND
10 VARIETIES OF
COLD BEER!
FOR KEGS CALL
842-4499
IN HOLIDAY PLAZA
(2 DOORS WEST OF KIEF'S)
Look in your People Book for coupons worth 20% off on Dry Cleaning!!
Independent
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
6th & Indiana
843-4011
10,
Sun
to ben
entry fee
includes
and a
Jayhawk Jog
10,000 meter run
Sunday, October 21.
1979
Lawrence, Kansas
to benefit the United Fund
entry fee $5/$6 day of the race
includes donation to united fund
and a Jayhawk Jog T-shirt
Call for information
Gamma Phi Beta
Sorority
843-8022
Phi Kappa Psi
Fraternity
843-2655
What's So Special About Our Roast Beef Sandwich?
HENRY'S RESTAURANT
henry's
SINTH & MISSOURI 843-2139
DRIVE-IN CARRY-OUT
We'll tell you! Our Roast Beef Sandwich is made with home-cooked roast beef. That makes the difference between delicious and dry, tasty and tough. Our Roast Beef Sandwich is $1.49—a small price to pay for a big difference!
Henrys
Come in and taste what's so special!
At Henry's
You Have Your Choice!!
UNIVERSITY FLORAL
ROSES
$4.99 dozen
CASH 'N CARRY
KU
843-6990
KU
T. G. I. F.
at
THE HAWK
SPENCER'S
MEN'S WEAR
BIG and TALL
sizes
Holiday Square
2917 S. Topska Ave, Topska Ks
913-267-3104
Schlotzky's
SANDWICH SHOPS
Just one sandwich...it's that good!
Had your fill of hamburgers, tacos and pizza?
Try a SCHLOTZSKY
You know it'll taste great with all these good things going for it:
Cheddar Cheese • Mozzarella Cheese • Parmesan Cheese • Ham • Salami • Spiced
Lunchmeat • Lettuce • Tomatoes • Onions • Marinated Black Olives •
Mustard • Garlic • Butter • The Secret Schlotzsky Recipe!
Come in or phone
aloud and w/ Flavors!
waiting for you: 843-3700
Hours: MonThurs: 11-9
Fri/Sat: 11-11
Sun: 12-9
ROSES
*4.99 dozen
CASH 'N CARRY
KU
843-6990
2103 W. 28th St. Ter.
SPENCER'S MEN'S WEAR
BIG and TALL
Holliday Square
2917 S. Telegraph Ave. Spokane, KS.
912-267-3104
Schlotzsky's
SANDWICH SHOPS
Just one sandwich...it's that good!
Had your fill of hamburgers, lacos and pizza?
Try a SCHLOTZSKY
You know it'll taste great with all these good things going for it:
Cheddar Cheese • Mozzarella Cheese • Parmesan Cheese • Ham • Salami • Spiced Lancheson Mini • Lettuce • Tomatoes • Onions • Marinara Black Olives • Mustard • Curtis • Bursa • The Secret Schlotzsky Recipe
Game on or phone ahead and we'll have it waiting for you: 843-3700 Southwest Plaza
Hours: Mon-Thurs: 11-9
Fri-Sat: 11-11
Sun: 12-9
3c copies
til Oct. 31
Hours:
8-8 Mon-Thurs
8-6 Fri
10-5 Sat
12-5 Sun
• theses
• resumes
• reductions
• colored paper
• transparencies
• binding
• greeting cards
• passport photos
• school supplies
• film processing
904 Vermont
843-8019
CRAIG®
MICRO CASSETTE RECORDER
Featuring...
• One hand operation
• End-of-tape warning tone in record mode
• LED record/battery indicator
• Review mode for convenient back space and repeat
• AC Adapter included
• ABC (automatic battery charging)
Sale Price:
$86.00
CRAIG.
J500
Reg.$109.95
AUDIOTRONICS carries one of the largest selections of Portable Tape Recorders and accessories in this area.
AUDIOTRONICS
928 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNTOWN
Kinko's
Kinko,2
3c
copies
til Oct. 31
Hours:
8-8 Mon-Thurs
8-6 Fri
10-5 Sat
12-5 Sun
• theses
• resumes
• reductions
• colored paper
• transparencies
• binding
• greeting cards
• passport photos
• school supplies
• film processing
Kinko's
Kinko, 2
3c copies
til Oct. 31
Hours:
8-8 Mon-Thurs
8-6 Fri
10-5 Sat
12-5 Sun
• theses
• resumes
• reductions
• colored paper
• transparencies
• binding
• greeting cards
• passport photos
• school supplies
• film processing
904 Vermont
843-8019
CRAIG®
MICRO CASSETTE
RECORDER
Featuring...
• One hand operation
• End-of-tape warning tone in record mode
• LED recordbattery indicator
• Review mode for convenient back space and repeat
• AC Adapter included
• ABC (automatic battery charging)
Sale Price:
$86.00
CRAIG.
J500
Reg. $109.95
AUDIOTRONICS carries one of the largest selections of Portable Tape Recorders and accessories in this area.
CRAIG®
MICRO CASSETTE
RECORDER
Featureting...
• One hand operation
• End-of-tape warning tone
in record mode
• LED record/battery indicator
• Review mode for convenient
back space and repeat
• AC Adapter included
• ABC (automatic
battery charging)
Sale Price:
CRAIG.
J500
CRAIG 2H
AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN
200
Raleigh, Puch. A.D.
Centurion Bicycle in Stock!
We Repair All Bikes
RICK'S
Bike Shop
Empire 19th Ave
650 W. 48th Street
1033 Vermont
You can help increase the safety of our campus.The Campus Safety Service needs men and women volunteers to provide escort teams for those people on campus who request them. For more information see the ad in the Notice column of the classified ad section and call KU-INFO,864-3506.
lemon tree
11 w 9th behind weavers
low-calorie
nutritious
natural frozen
dessert yogurt
cones 45¢
offer good oct. 16 to oct. 21
no coupons accepted with this offer
sua films
Presents
"ONE OF THE BEST FOREIGN FILMS
OF THE YEAR! A lovely blend of
comedy and pathos." — ABC-TV
Franco Brusati's
BREAD and
CHOCOLATE
"DELICIOUS,
ABSOLUTELY
DELICIOUS!"
—ABC-TV
Frl. & Sat., Oct. 19 & 20
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 p.m.
$1.50 Woodruff Auditorium
—No refreshments allowed—
New fuel feeds custodial discord
By PAM LANDON and ELLEN IWAMOTO Staff Reporters
a new conflict in an old struggle between KU custodians and American Management Services, a custodial management service, emerged last week when a group of the custodians levelled allegations of work loads and unnecessary work loads against AMS.
The custodians, represented by the Custodian Action Committee, have been meeting since late August to research and document complaints against AMS.
Irving VanDuyne, CAC chairman and a member of the board of the committee is to let the public know what the (AMS) contract says and what problems it has caused for KU.
Custodians
VanDyne estimated that 40 to 50
Lawrence campus custodians were
members of the committee.
VanDayne said the CAC had not planned any specific legal action at this time.
The AMS was hired by the University to improve efficiency in KU housekeeping and food service programs. The program at the KU Medical Center and in December 1977 it took over supervision of the AMS.
However, the University's transition to AMS has been marked by controversy.
At the Med Center in March of 1978, petitions were circulated by the USPS to prohibit custodians from presenting Customs卫士 later threatened to stage a walkout to protest working conditions, but they were denied.
At a press conference Friday afternoon, the CAC alleged that the AMS had been giving custodians a work load longer than usual, especially handicapped and other workers.
DAVE BALDWIN, AMS director of housekeeping at the University, said he had been instructed that only the main AMS office would be involved, he could comment on the CAC alterations.
An official from the office, Frank LaFaso, director of management development for AMS, he was not familiar enough with the KU situation to
comment on the specific allegations by the CAC.
But he said AMS made every effort to assign handicapped employees jobs they could handle according to job descriptions.
He said AMS building cleanliness standards were based upon both national averages for the specific type of institution and on the conditions of the individual institution.
"WE DO NOT expect more work than the average individual can perform," he said.
proportion to the volume of the calculator.
Customists have been disciplined for such things as punching out a few minutes late and talking on the job, he said.
However, LaFasto said that AMS used a "progressive discipline system."
Employees go through five stages of discipline before they are fired, ranging from a verbal reprimand to suspension to termination, he said.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he thought AMS had made improvements in the KU housekeeping department, but he was not completely satisfied.
Rodger Oroke, University support services director, said he thought the statement of complaints the CAC made Frida was unfounded.
"I think they are a group of employees who have refused in their own minds to accept reasonable work assignments and have been disclassified." he said.
OROKE SAID employees with problems should express them through the established grievance procedures.
The University would not negotiate with the CAC because of an agreement with the Kansas Public Services Employee Union Local No. 1422, which serves the Lawrence area and supports the union was the sole bargaining point for facilities operations workers, Borke said.
Union officials advised KU night custodians at a union meeting yesterday in Lawrence that the CAC should work through the union to express its grievances against
Francis Jacobs, international representative for the union, said the
See CUSTODIANS back page
10,000 'munchkins' frolic in Topeka Oz II festival
Staff Reporter
By KATE POUND
The munchkins, more than 10,000 children, cavorted Saturday during the dayling OI II, a children's art festival held on the statehouse lawn.
Somewhere over the rainbow in Topopea to be precise - the worked with became one of our specialties and was replaced by friendly policemen and the statehouse dome towered like the Emerald City.
The children, brought by scout troop leaders, teachers and parents from as far away as Wichita, participated in the festival free of charge.
sponsored by the state Department of Social Rehabilitation Services and the Kansas University Hospital in Kansas, the festival was given in recognition of the International Year of the Human Rights and the state and honorary chairman of the Kansas IYC Committee, was one of the organizers
THE DAY BEGAN with a parade through downtown Topena. More than 800 children and performers were led down the route by a float carrying Gov. John Carlin, Mrs. Carolin and Margaret Marriott, who played in the 1930 movie "The Wizard of Oz."
Looking more like someone's grandmother than the evil witch of Oz fame,
Hamilton waved and smiled to the children who lined the streets. At the parade's end she sat on the float, signed autographs and gave eerie, witty laughs.
"Mommy, she doesn't look like a witch," a curly haired little girl said just before Hamilton gave one of her famous laughs.
"But she sounds like one!" the little girl cried.
THE CHILDREN unwilling to face the Wicked Witch found comforting friends in the Cowardly Lion, the Tinnman, the Scarecrow and Dorothy.
"How come you're always so scared, Lion?" a small boy asked.
"Well, wouldn't you be scared too, if there was a witch after you?" the tousled, maned beaked reilied.
The costumed characters, played by employees of the state Department of Economic Development, served as assistant development and officer and assistant-tenders during the day.
one UZ character also coordinated the day's activities, ranging from performances of the Lawrence High School Chorale to the IYC Troupe Clump from Wichita. The children have more than 90 boots with performances entertaining children and adults alike.
"HI, HONEY! You want a mustache like ol' Doc here?" asked Connie Hudnett,
See 12 back page.
See OZ back page
Mondav. October 22, 1979
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol. 90, No. 41
$ ^{1} $The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas 10 cents off campus
free on campus
LET US IN,
OR SHUT
IT DOWN!
DECHIK
Oregon
MIKE WILLIAMS/Kansan staf
Members of several groups gathered outside Shenanigan club a Saturday night to join with the International Committee Against Racism's protest the club's audience.
New members join InCAR after rally
By JUDY WOODBURN
No disco
Staff Reporter
Members of the International Committee Against Racism, which helped to organize a protest rally Saturday night at a local disco bar, said yesterday that the rally had ensured the formation of the ICAR branch group in Lawrence.
Grace Moreno, Kansas City, Mo., IncAR student, said nine Lawrence residents and KU students had signed up nightly to become members of IncAR.
"About 30 people signed up to receive more information about InCAR," she added.
JOHN SHEPPARD, manager of
Shenanigans, told reporters before the rally that the club would remain closed if the club were to leave the club would not airsvate any conflict.
Members of INCAR and the Progressive Labor Party, a Marxist-Leninist group, organized Saturday's rally, in protest of alleged oligarchy in municipal policies of the San Francisco 901 Mississippi SX., a private luxury club.
He was not available for comment last night.
Employees of Shenanigans kept the disco closed during the rally, which began at about 8:30 p.m.
About 30 protestors, wearing white armbands and bearing signs with slogans such as "Smash Racism" and "Stop the assaults entrusted in a circle near the club's entrance."
Lead by inCAR members who chanted over a loudspeaker from the front steps of a building, such as "Asians, Latius, Blacks and Whites, to smash racism, we must
The rally ended at about 10; 10 p.m.
THE MULTI-RACIAL group of the University of California, MECIA group, a Mexican-American student organization; the RU Committee on South Africa and Gay Services of the University.
Norman Forer, KU professor of social welfare, also marched with the protestors.
"I think we're doing some good here," he said. "We shut it down tonight and we'll shut it down again if we have to."
As marchers chanted anti-racist slogans, their faces were lit by the repeated flashes of cameras and the alarming flood light of a television screen.
of the nearly 50 bystanders, about 10 represented news media.
M. AJ.DARLEE STEPHENS, assistant chief of Lawrence Police, watched the rally from the noon to evening. Mr. Stephan had not expected any trouble, but were prepared nevertheless.
Capt. John Mullens of the KU Police said most of the KU police force had been on call during the rally.
Stephens said he was concerned that reckless drivers turning at the southwest corner of Ninth and Mississippi streets would create a hazard to the crowd of people.
Members of inCAR, however,
welcome the traffic, pass leaves
denouncing Shenanigans through
the open windows of cars that passed.
Dee Phillips, Overland Park senior, a bystander, voiced her support for the rally.
today.
"I THINK IT'S GREAT," she said.
"That's why I went around in the circle eight times."
A member of Shenanigans who waited at the door to be let into the club following the rally said he thought the "hair" had not proved much."
"I don't think the club is prejudiced," the member said. "I've seen some black people in the club frequently."
Paul Showalter, InCAR member, said he considered the protest a success. He inCAR and the Progressive Labor Party had scheduled a rally this Saturday to begin at 13:00 p.m. in the lobby of the March. Showalter is to commemorate the work of John Brown, a 19th century slave activist.
Regents may boost faculty raises
By JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Renarter
The Kansas Board of Regents decision to recode faculty pay proposals is in accordance with an indication from schools will receive larger salary increases than now are budgeted, Campus Archeter Acheline.
“这 indicates the Regents concern for our faculty members at time of unparalleled inflation,” Dykes said. “This is a positive sim.”
The Regents will reconsider the present 7-percent base-pay increase when the Carter administration releases its new inflation guidelines.
ministrative heads of all Regents schools. The Council forwarded the recommendation to the Regents.
Glew Smith, a Regents member, said the board was likely to support faculty salary increases more closely tied to the cost of living.
Dykes called last month for the maximum pay increase allowable under Carter's new guidelines at a meeting of the Council of Presidents, which comprises the ad-
"WE'VE done all we can do under the present guidelines. 'Saint said: "But we need to be careful about needs. When the new guidelines come out, we'll give our consideration to increasing them."
Evelyn Swartz, University Council president, said the Resden decision to reconsider faculty salaries was a step in the right direction.
"I don't know what to expect from the Regens," she said. "The outcome will
depend on what the guidelines say and what happens on the state level."
The Regents also decided to allow universities to request additional state funding because of unexpected increases in enrollment.
INCREASED ENROLLMENT, Dykes said, resulted in an increase in student fees collected.
"However," Dykes said, "all fees collected by universities are state funds. Even though we have the extra money, we demand the legislature for permission to use it."
If the Legislature released the funds, Dykes said, the Lawrence campus would be entitled to approximately $300,000 in additional funds, and the College of Health
Sciences in Kansas City, Kan., would receive about $7.000.
The Regents also approved a proposal to allow universities to seek increased state funding for non-student use of student unions.
SMITH SAIED THE Regents this summer appointed a task force at the request of the Regents Student Advisory Committee, to examine non-student use of Regents school unions. Based on the task force's recommendations, the Regents cleared the way for Regents to be distributed among Regions unions. Cover the response of non-student use.
In addition, Dykes told the Regents Friday that the University of Kansas was exploring the possibility of starting a health maintenance organization at the KU.
KANSAS
Band's day
KU quarterback Brim Bettie (left), KU football coach Dennis Baugh (with arm runs) and KU offensive coordinator John Hunt (right) were among the players.
the Marching Jayhawks with the game ball from KU's 24-victory over Iowa State Saturday. Fambrigh said the band "played like hell and helped me and the football team." See story page six.
Commune life stresses sharing
Rv.JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
Jennifer Powell smiled broadly and recalled how she had put her hand on her pregnant friend's belly and felt the baby kick the other day.
Powell, a member of East Wind, an equilateral community or communicate in unison with other communities to unborn child's new movements because she will share a special function in the infant's life.
She is one member of a four-woman birthing crew that helps the expectant mother through breathing exercises and aids midwives during labor and birth.
"Our friend doesn't have a primary relationship with a man," Powell said, "so the barring crew is there to act as a support for her."
Powell came to KU Thursday with another community member for a two-day visit with women living groups and the NCDC. She said it was acceptable at East Wind for a woman to choose to have a child although she was not committed to one man, who would care for her.
"SHE CHOSE A man in the community who was agreeable and he impregnated her. They are very close friends," she said.
After the child is born, the sharing of parental responsibilities will continue at the community she said.
Marcia Aitken, also a member of East Wind, said she was a "primary adult" for one of the three children in the community.
one of the three children in the family "Every child has three primary adults who have a special relationship to the child
East Wind, like the five other communities in the Federation of Egalitarian Communities, was inspired by behavioral psychologist B. F. Skinner's utopian novel *Warhead*. F. Federation is a group of warheads in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
and spend time regularly with them. The primaries may or may not include the child's biological parents, but they usually do." Alken said.
ATKEN SAID ONE of the purposes of East Wind, which was founded in 1973, was to form a society that would allow its members to shed租契, sexist and violent or competitive behaviors. The community has its 100 acres of land, its resources and its
Personal relationships in the community are free of jealousy, even though women or men may be involved in more than one loving relationship at one time. Aitken said.
POWELL SAID, "And we're friends. We all work together too much to let something like that stand in the way."
A primary relationship would mean greater commitment and intimacy with the partner. A secondary relationship means a less frequent relationship, with less contact.
The group supports itself by growing much of its own food and by the manufacture and sold of woven hammocks, hanging chairs and sandals, Powell said.
"For instance, Jennifer and I have had a relationship with the same man. It was a long time ago that we had a relationship for her. We avoided the subject for a while, but then we realized that it was a mistake."
"We base our labor system on the premise that all work is equally honorable." Aiken said. "If some work is particularly hard to do, we make sure that everybody has a little of it."
"WOMEN FIND that this is a good place to learn to skills, such as mechanics, from men who have these skills because society said they should be the ones to learn them," she said. "You'll see women with their heads under car doors or women driving in cars as often as you will, so you'll be sitting at the kitchen sink or dinner babies."
each member must accumulate at least 45 labor credits a week, a credit being worth one hour of work.
Men and women have equal opportunities to choose the types of work that appeal to them. Alfta said.
Members receive an allowance of $2.40 a week to spend as they choose.
"I buy Pepas with my money," Jennifer said. "But other people buy bounce or food goods. Marcia buys backpacking equipment - very slowly, I might add."
AITKEN SAID neighbors of the community regarded its members as hard-
See COMMUNE back page
2
Monday, October 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan Wire Services
Burned Marines flown to U.S.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas—Two U.S. Air Force hospital planes landed at KELLY Air Force Base here yesterday before the first of 38 Marines burned in a freak
However, one man died of his burns en route. His identity was not released. Two Marines could not be taken aboard the jets because they were too critical for them to land.
In all, 72 Marines and three Japanese suffered burns when winds and rains from Typhoon Tip damaged a 5,000-gallon rubber fuel container. The gasoline poured out, burst into flames and sent a river of fire through a Marine barracks area at the Mount Fuji base, 94 miles south of Tokyo.
Among the injured was Pfc. George S. Spotts, Wichita.
Lance Cpc. L.C. Malveaux of Beaumont, Texas, was identified as one the two marines who died at the scene, but the military declined to identify the
Oklahoma City sniper kills two
OLKAMAHIA CITY—A sniper killed a man and a woman in a deliberate attack in a shopping center parking lot yesterday afternoon and the fled in an
Sit, Tom Mundy said Jesse Eugene Taylor, 42, and Marion Vera Bresselet, 31, had left a grocery store with their three children shortly before 5 p.m. They were walking toward their car when someone opened fire with a high-powered rifle. The victims were from Oklahoma City.
The sniper is thought to have fired at least five shots. Mundy said he was hiding in some cedar trees on the north side of the Oklahoma State Fairgrounds.
The man and woman were reported dead at the scene. Police think Taylor was shot twice and Bristene once.
The children were not injured. There were no other injuries reported, but several curved cages were damaged by the gunfire.
Cable cars crash at Texas fair
DALLAS—Tuesday cars collised and plunged 100 feet from a midway ride on the final day of the Texas State Fair, killing a 41-year-old man and two children.
One of the cars from the "Swiss Skidey" crashed into a game booth where Millard was playing a bowling game with his family. Officials said the booth broke the car's fall. The other fell about 10 feet away, but snagged on the armor of an indoor booth.
An estimated 83 persons were stranded—same as long as three in the 11 cable cars that run the length of the midway of the fair, billed as the nation's "first national winter disaster."
Attack on Thai village kills 4
KHOK SUNG, Thailand - Mortraces firing from inside Cambodia pounded a Thai village marketplace with a barrage of shells yesterday, killing four
The attack, blamed on Vietnamese troops, heightened tensions between Thailand and Vietnam. It was the second mortar attack against Thai territory
That officials said it appeared that the shells were fired by mortarmen with the Vietnamese troops that have been fighting in Cambodia to wipe out the city.
Vietnamese military operations near the border in recent months have worried the Thai government. It has said it would consider its border violated under three conditions: If Vietnamese troops deliberately enter in its pursuit of Pol pot guerrillas, if they enter by mistake or if they fire mortars into it.
Carter praises rival Kennedy
WASHINGTON—President Carter said he is tighter with the government's money and stronger on defense than his potential rival, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. But otherwise, he said, "there is little real incompatibility between us."
The president assessed Kennedy's accomplishments and leadership ability as "excellent."
Carter's remarks were made during an interview at Logan International Airport after the dedication of the John F. Kennedy Library Saturday.
The appearance capped a good political week for Carter. His standing rose in the polls, he won the Florida caucuses by a 2-1 margin and he received kind words from Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne. Byrne also called on Kennedy to reconsider jumping into the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Pro-SALT coalition planned
WASHINGTON—After initial success in defeating amendments that would have killed the SALT II treaty, Senate supporters of the pact are trying to form a new compromise.
A panel of senators appointed by Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd will try to ease concerns and attract the votes of the largest possible number of senators.
One proposal will be an increase in defense spending to ease worries about a possibly growing Soviet threat.
Treaty opponents are trying to keep the pact from coming to the Senate floor soon, delaying it enough to out the issue into the 1980 political season.
At a news conference Saturday, Byrd said those who opposed the treaty "ought to hit the head issue on the road." That said the once pact was outof vote on Tuesday.
"Amending the treaty is a way to kill it," Byrd said. "That treaty should be voted on, up or down."
Ozark workers postpone vote
Negotiations have been bogged down since Oct 4, but Gilbert Kannenberg, a spokesman for the FCC, said the agency requested a negotiating session for Friday. The meeting ended early Saturday.
ST. LOUIS—Striking flight attendants have postponed until Thursday their vote on an agreement to end their five-week strike against Oaark Air
Ozark has been shut down by the strike since Sept. 14. The airline normally carries about 15,000 passengers a day on 195 flights to 67 cities in 21 states.
Ozark also is currently negotiating with representatives of the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association to replace its contract, which expired in May.
Strike ends at London Times
The agreement was announced less than five hours before a deadline set by the international Thomson organization, the Canadian-based parent firm of Nestlé.
Publication of the Times and three weekly supplements had been suspended for 10 and one-half months in a showdown with labor over manning, strikes and
LONDON - A last-minute accord yesterday between management and a printer's union saved the 194-year-old London Times, which is as much of a whimsey as Mr. Heskey's.
The company had threatened to fire 3,700 print workers and effectively close the papers if agreement was not reached p.4 m. yesterday. It planned to keep the workers on site until it had agreed.
Weather
The National Weather Service in Topeka forecasts diminishing clouds and cooler temperatures for today. Highs will be in the mid 80s and lows in the lower 30s. Winds today will be at 15-20 mph. There is a 30 percent chance of rain early this morning.
The extended forecast calls for partly cloudy skies Wednesday through Friday and mild weather with little chance of rain. Temperatures will be
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FAHRENHEIT 451
1966) Directed by Torkturt, Truftuff, with Julie Christie and Oskar Werner, Based on Ray Bradbury's futuristic novel of book burning.
Tuesday, October 23 WAIT UNTIL DARK
Directed by Terence Young, with Audey Hepburn, Alan Akin, Richard Creena, and Erem Zimbalist Jr. Three killerizes a recently blinded because they believe a shipment of hugged mother is in her apartment.
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Wednesday, October 24
BREWSTER MCCLOUD
Thursday, October 25
Cinema from India:
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Have you considered these factors in determining where you will work?
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If you cannot fit an interview into your schedule, write or call:
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Monday, October 22, 1979
Moshe Dayan resigns over Palestinian issue
JERUSALEM (AP) — Moshe Dayan, minister, angered by Prime Minister Menachem Begin's tough line on the Palestinian issue, which he called the "watershed."
The surprise resignation of the prime minister threatened to upset Benin's shaky government coalition. But its political effect could not be assessed imprecisely.
The opposition Labor Party immediately renewed its call for new elections, but Begin is expected to reject the idea.
The 64-year-old Dayan, who underwent cancer surgery earlier this year, notified Begin of his wish to resign in a secret letter Oct. 2. He confirmed it when he told Begin to begin at yesterday's Cabinet meeting, and the decision was announced.
IN THE LETTER, Dayan said that he already had expressed his reservations about the way negotiations on Palestinian autonomy were being conducted, because these conditions he saw no purpose in continuing in the government as foreign minister.
He said he thought the autonomy talks
of the past four months had been to a large extent, barren negotiations.
The solution seen by Dayan, who was Israel's chief negotiator in the treaty talks with Egypt, was coexistence on an equal level. He thought the Israeli government should work together in outlining a partnership. He thought not enough was being done to attract Palestinians from the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip in the talks. He has secret meetings leader this year with Palestinian leaders.
DAYAN'S RESIGNATION does not take effect until tomorrow morning, but it was unlikely that he would retract it.
Begin said he would take over Dayan's tasks until a new foreign minister was appointed and approved by Parliament.
The prime minister expressed deep sorrow over the resignation, which he called an important national and international event.
Dayan, a dashing patch-eyed army
of the 1968 Arm-Blarw and战
defense militaries who said they
said he would keep his Parliament
seat, but announced no other personal
contact.
On Campus
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TODAY: ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS for today: Peace Corps will be interviewing at the Peace Corps office, Pilzer Co. will be interviewing at the Peace Corps office, also at the Business office will be Navy, J.C. Penney Retail, Cargall and J.C. Penney Audit, Bell Systems, Dow Corning and GO Wireline will be interviewing at the Information department will be Chevron U.S.A.-Denver, WOMEN GRADUATE STUDENTS information luncheon game will be at the University of the Kansai Int’l Educaffery. PHYSICS and ASTRONOMY colloquium will be at a p.m. in 321 Malott Hall. James Kasner will speak on "Molecular Aspects of Clusters of Water Vapors in the Atmosphere."
TONGIT: EMILY TAYLOR Women's Resource and Career Center/Graduate Women's Group Workshop will feature Carol McDowell, Topke attorney, a woman with rights under Kansas law, at 7:30 in the Walnut Room of the Union. INTRAMURAL SWIMMING relay entries and meet will be at 7:30 at the Robinson Pool. FACULTY CREDIT by James Moeer; organist, at 8 in BUNGARY Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
TOMORROW: MUSEUM OF ART
COLUMBIA SPACE
Spencer Museum of Art. MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING SEMINAR on 'Solar
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at 4 p.m. in the
Friday afternoon
2009 Learned Hall, AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS FOR AMNESTY exhibition and sale is from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Center for Contemporary Art in NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS organization luncheon will be from 11:30 to 1 p.m. at Cork 2 in the union. RU ANTI-FILM FESTIVAL will be from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Pine Room of the Union. GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL will discuss fee waiver and the relationship between film and education. The Student Senate at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. COMPUTER SCIENCES SEMINAR on "Introduction to Computer Science" will be at 7 p.m. will be at 7 p.m. in the Computer Services Facility Auditorium. LIBRARYAIRLANIANCE will hold an organizational meeting on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at ENNCRIVIZATION FILMFESTIVAL will present the "Slarry Messenger" and "Protest and Communication" at 7 p.m. on Friday.
University Daily Kansan
ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: at the Peace Corps office will be the Peace Corps. At the business department will be Northwestern Mutual Life, Southwestern Life, and Navajo National Engineering department will be Bell Systems, Bunc Corporation, Dow Corning and Public Service Company of Oklahoma. At the geology department will be Chevron U.S.A.-Denver. At the Law School will be Navy and Johnson, Surgical Brussels.
Oread residents pursue damages, drop injuction
By ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Renorter
A group of Oread neighborhood residents decided Friday to pursue a suit seeking damages for nuisances caused by the house and eight in-place in the 800 block Maine Street.
David Beckwitz, attorney for the Dread residents, said yesterday that the group also had decided to drop a second part of the suit against the owners and against construction on the apartments.
The residents decided against seeking the injunction because of possible countertesters, and instead sought to restrict the property where the apartment is being constructed, could countertest for alleged violations.
Frieda Caldwell, 917 Maine St., said the residents did not think they had the financial resources for a lengthy court battle.
"I AM DISAPPONTED that the construction could not be stopped," she said. "I guess we'll just sit and watch the apartment be built."
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The alleged nuisances named in the suit included increased traffic, parking, noise and sanitation problems that would be caused by the apartment complex.
Construction of the apartment began last week. District Judge Judith King Jr., ordered Judge Krug King Jr., to obtain a building permit for the apartment. City staff members earlier had to hold up to payment.
AT LAST WEEK'S city commission
seems to oppose Oed街 neighborhood where a dog was downzooned from multiple family to residential duplex. Under the new zoning, residents will be able to own a home.
However, King, in issuing his order, said a construction project could not be denied a building permit simply because an area might be downzoned.
Early last week a temporary restraining order halted the construction for about 24 hours. The restraining order was lifted when failures failed to raise a $10,000 security bond.
The downizing for the area become effective on Friday. The city commissioners decided to move forward with the downizing ordinance immediately to prohibit the issuance of building permits for new development.
Usually, a zoning ordinance would take three to four weeks to become effective.
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Creamery
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Stamped columns represent the views of the editorial staff.
October 22,1979
Recognition not crucial
A question of semantics may have kept the newly formed Classified Senate from being officially recognized by the University administration last week, but members of the Senate aren't upset. And the results unconcerned attitude is simple enough—they didn't really lose anything.
Although the administration did not want to recognize the Senate because of the risk of "officially recognized" groups converting to unions in the future, it did "acknowledge the existence" of the Senate.
THE CLASSIFIED Senate will now have the use of University rooms after hours, a better chance to voice their grievances to the University and the state Legislature and a good chance to influence the University governance body.
All the Senate needs to become part
of that governance body is the Student and Faculty senate's recognition. The Student Senate already has done so.
About the only thing that the Classified Senate won't have is the ease in forming a union that a recognized body has. When an employer recognizes an employee group as a unit, a labor union can simply call for a vote in that employee unit to decide whether to form a union.
THE LOSS of that convenience is irrelevant to the Senate, however, as it has professed a strong disinterest in forming a union.
The administration may have an affinity for avoiding conflict—even remote possibilities of conflicts—but it has given the Senate most what it wanted and needed—a voice in the University community.
The 1,300 classified employees who will be represented by the Senate are finding they can have a say about the laws and issues, as a privilege they lacked in the past.
Regardless of semantics, the classified employees have won a voice in their future.
Fall's vibrant spirit
The heat, the hovering canop of late summer, has been pushed rudely aside by the encroaching cold. The long summer days have be clipped at both dawn and dusk as darkness restablishes its authority.
walls or buildings. They are waiting for the children who will put down their school books and play in the piles.
The leaves on campus feel the twinge of cold air and react violently, exploding silently into rich shades of orange and yellow and red. They then fall aimlessly to the ground, their role in nature's scheme have been fulfilled. They swirl along the ground, only occasionally lifted into the autumn air by a gust of wind. They huddle in fluffy piles against hedges or
In the town, pumpkins lie in unsoid clusters, their potential identity lost without the decorative carving. In homes the pumpkins add to the spirit of the season by sitting in windows that reflect sunlight, known as the traffic rubbles by outside.
The cool air signals a return of sweaters and sandlot football and Halloween. It is a time for turning your face into the cool breeze and stuffing your hands deep into your pockets for warmth. It is autumn.
Tallgrass park foes motivated by politics
For many years, Kansas ranchers and environmentalists about the need for a tallgrass prairie park in the state, and it appears as though the fight isn't over. What's next?
Last week report. Larry Winn, R-Kan,
introduced a bill in the U.S House of
Representatives to create the Tallgrass
Prairie National Park Reserve that would cover 574,000 acres and stretch into northern Kansas to northern Oklahoma.
BUT IT is time that Whittaker, and our state officials against the project, continue to push for a stronger terms of what is best for it and not what is best to insure its aue-
As soon as Winn made his proposal, he received stiff opposition from Rep. Sanders, who said he would fight the bill because his 8th District constituent, many of whom own a school district, would
Although Whittaker argues that the current landowners are protecting the natural beauty of the land, we have no assurance that this always will be the case.
What a prarie park bill would do is provide that assurance without taking land from owners before they are willing to sell.
Wittaker's arguments against the primary reason for his opposition probably the potential devastating effect it would have on his next election bid if he supra-
HE SAYS that ranchers and farmers would have to "hand over" thousands of cattle to the state, a cattle and raise their crops elsewhere. He also contends that if the prairie were set aside, it would either become a "no" for cattle and other livestock or with "cattle shops and hot dog stands."
"Either way," he says, "Kansas loses."
But does Kansas really lose if the park is created? That depends on what one
John COLUMNIST fischer
means by loss. If one means, as Whittier money, then there is a loss. But if one considers what it means in terms of the environment and nature's beauty, there
And although Whittaker says the landowners would have to "hand over" their land, it isn't quite that simple. The landowners were asked by the men, as them proposed in the Wim bill, and it would buy it only when the landowners had agreed to acquire it and take decades to acquire all of the land.
But the setting aside of this land should not be considered only in terms of money or whether it will be used extensively. Rather, attention should be focused on preservation of the prairie, one of the last lands preserved of natural beauty in our country.
It is this unfortunate use of "hand over" and other bad choices of words, in most cases purposely done, that has given movement and others like it a new flavor.
If one refuses to take this outlook toward the creation of the park, then it is better to protect the mountains or forests that could instead be mined for important resources.
TRUE, the prairie of Kansas doesn't have the same splendor of the Rocky Mountains in Colorado nor the aesthetic beauty of the Redwood forests in California, but it still has a beautiful allure and no money value can be assented to it.
Kansas is one of the few states left that can boast an environment that has not been greatly affected by man, and we should try to be it that way.
The protection of the Kansas prairie is needed now before it is too late.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be written in English and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is afraid of being asked questions, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. You may also wish to right to edit letters for publication.
Carter, Bush show early strength
How about George Bush and Jimmy Carter in the 1980 presidential election?
If this past week's caucus and poll results are any indication, then such a matchup between the two candidates in the Democratic caucus elections in Florida, and Bush, not generally considered one of the top Republican candidates, won a vote of choice among GOP leaders in a dinner cup.
While the meanings of the two victories have been debated, the fact remains that they may be good indicators of the course the presidential election may take over the next few months. Carter's win in Florida has been especially baffled because of the president's power and popularity than many people are willing to admit.
TRUE, THE results were a little ambiguous, as both Carter and Ted Kennedy's workers claimed certain victories and that there were some revealing trends. But there were some revealing trends.
First, it must be kept in mind that Florida is not a typical Southern state. If critics thought they were checking the Florida results to see whether Carter still has the support of his native section, they were wrong. Or maybe they were only wicked.
The rural areas of the state, especially in
the northern part of the state, are composed of Southerners, born and bred with an interest in the South. That is not so in many of the large cities.
david COLUMNIST preston
Florida has become a state heavily populated with Northerners who have migrated to Miami, Ft. Lauderdale and Tampa. One has to search to find a native Floridian living in the well-populated area of St. Augustine (ft. Ft. Lauderdale). Instead, one finds many residents from the New England states, especially New York.
THIS GEOGRAPHICAL fact made the news last week when a pected in the rural areas, where he could on heavy support from the genuine audience, was showing in Dade County. After pollers last Wednesday, Carter held an edge over Kennett in the balloting for the 188 congressional race.
A Carter win in Dade County proves that he can still gain the support of a large percentage of the Jews, Hispanics and blacks who live in the cities. Those groups,
together with the large number of Northerners in the county, are traditionally attracted to the more liberal wing of the Democratic Party. But not to Ted Kennedy.
Kennedy did win in several large cities, but the loss in Dade was a dishearring setback for the Kennedy organizers in the state.
THIS CONCLUSION may be drawn: Kennedy workers have gotten together a competent, if not overwhelmingly powerful, organization in their fight to draft the senator into the race and unset Carter. In the first demonstration show of political power that month, they were against the incumbent with workers who already have run a successful campaign.
But more important, the supposedly falling Carter has shown that he still has enough clout and a strong enough organization to win not only the rural vote, but also the urban, traditional Democratic votes. The conservers had all but conceded to Kennedy.
states since he announced his candidacy.
This past week in Iowa, an early caucus
state, he won a victory over the GPO field by
placing first in a poll taken at a party fund
Even in Carter should hold off the bid by Kennedy, he would have to be looking over his shoulder, hoping that he was not seeing a plane crashing, or a hurricane, this time from the Republican side.
BUSH HAS been working steadily to organize well in key primary and caucus
Bush won 35 percent of the vote, placing himself well ahead of second-place John Connally who finished with 15 percent. Robert Dole was third with 14 percent.
Democratic nominee named Carter was a similar poll at a Democratic fundraiser and the victory propelled him into the public eye and gave him a campaign of a tremendous boost.
IN SPITE of a Da Moines Register poll that shows Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford and Howard Baker as the GOP leaders, the Iowa victory for Bush will be important to voters. The Republican news show that the former Republican national chairman has organized well in key places.
Perhaps the results of these two contests will in no way reflect what is going to happen as the presidential race gets into full swing. But I do doubt it.
THought
Carter has just proven to many people that he still has the kind of people needed to organize and run a good campaign. Kennedy and his people are in for a tough fight.
FLORIDA CAUCUS
DON'T GO AWAY MAD TEDDY...
JUST GO AWAY!
Fedman
And maybe Bush will have the most effective campaign organization. Carter did in 1976.
FLORIDA
CAUCUS
Kenny Hayden
GSC Executive Coordinator
PHASE I of the Legal Services program
Legal Aid transition should be gradual
DON'T GO
AWAY MAD
TEDDY...
JUST GO
AWAY!
When the Legal Services program was researched, many programs from different universities were taken into consideration. In some cases, the program also waited while other programs immediately dealt with litigation. In our investigation, it has been found that programs that immediately moved into litigation proved to be unsuccessful. Thus instead of providing legal services, those programs did not take a comprehensive legal Services program cannot successfully survive without carefully studying each campus' needs and utilizing the appropriate legal, such as the program here at KU.
METROPOLITAN
In regard to the Kanssan editorial on Oct. 17, "Legal Aid Lacking," I feel some clarification needs to be made.
It is my impression that the Kansas is pushing for immediate implementation of Phase I of the Legal Services program.
To the Editor:
Union Bookstore 'security' deplorable
To the Editor:
Someone came into my office today to tell me that the textbook section of the Kansas Union Bookstore is closed to the public. I asked him to block my way. I asked the student employee behind the table why the barrier was there. He said, "The barrier is 'inventory and security.' When I asked him how long this situation would last, he said, 'You should be able to him to be more specific, but he wouldn't."
I then asked if I could go behind the table and see what was on the computer, in browser, or two students behind it. Two students behind them they knew just what books they wanted and just where they were denied access. A teacher told me not to look at the computer.
When I returned to the table, I asked what would be allowed behind it. The employee at the computer browsed the browsers but he then said that he wasn't supposed to allow anyone, even
While I'm at it, I might say that the Bookstore's cosmetic philosophy is typical of KU as a whole.
A CURIOUS anomaly may be seen:
Browsers may look at the books; buyers
may not. But when one thinks about it, it
is not so curious: 1) Inventory—books have to be there to be counted. Browsers don't disturb the count; buyers do. The ideal state is that they are sold by the book selling; 2) Security—people who say they want to buy books really want to steal them.
If this situation is to last for only two or three days while the books are counted, fine. But if it is to continue then some must be replaced. If it is to continue it is typical of the continuing deterioration of Bookstore services. The upper part of the Bookstore was remodeled in 1978. Then it was re-remodeled in 1979. But nothing has been to improve (or even retain) services.
has been a very successful one, and in fact has received positive feedback from students who have taken advantage of that and that of the Legal Services Board, the Legal Services program is ready to move into Phase II, but it will be in an intermediate phase.mediate. Phase II can be successful if the transition is a gradual one instead of an immediate one such as the Kansan
The transition to Phase II must be carefully administered to, and the needs of the campus are to be investigated before the students can move forward with allocating $20,000 more of the students' money into a program that needs to prove itself in its gradual change into a professional education. And other student leaders are "sacred" to move into Phase II is definitely a bad display of journalism, is being used inappropriately, or not having the backbone for making radical decisions, which in effect could turn out to be disastrous for the Legal Services department.
Boh Rocha
I FEEL IT is time for the administration to give its approval for a gradual transition to Phase II.
I is my feeling that Phase II should start at the beginning of the second semester with which the Student is the student in the defendant and is represented in court. The Legal Services office also would monitor the cases of the student. If the student has been determined, the Legal Services office can efficiently estimate the needs of the student toward a comprehensive Legal Service. With the implementation of Phase II at the beginning of the second semester, the impact of Phase II be felt by April 15.
Acting Chairman Legal Services Board Kansas City, Ks., senior
With careful investigation, the transition can be successfully administered, but to immediately move into Phase II if such a phase would have a negative effect on the program.
African investments promote legal racism
The KU Endowment Association invests some $7 million in corporations that operate outside the United States. The investment is based on apartheid-South Africa's legalized racism where skin color is used to determine job opportunities.
To the Editor:
There are 18.6 million blacks and 4.3 million whites in South Africa. Education is racially segregated. Schooling is compulsory and free for white children, voluntary and expensive for black children. Health care is racially segregated. There is a huge gap between the 44,000 blacks (1977 United Nations estimate) the list sees on and on.
This apartheid system entenches economic inequality. By exploiting black labor and attracting foreign economic capital, the apartheid system enjoys one of the highest living standards in
KANSAN letters
the world. Although blacks constitute 72 percent of the work force, they only receive 23 percent of the income. Whites make up 18 percent of the work force, resulting in 67 percent of all new incapital capita incomes in 1977 for blacks was $30.70 and $248.40 for whites. Black workers are confined to the lowest paid categories of the workforce due to access to technical and vocational training.
At the heart of the apartheid policy are the homelands. The government claims that these lands were taken from which came from an officially designated "homeland." These homelands are the most desolate, least developed and least white, with 13 percent of the land-whites own the other 87 percent. A family either starves there or the bread-bins are not in their homes. The "white" areas. This person is treated as a migrant in the white area, becoming an alien or a nationalist, stripped of all ambiance of citizenship.
To keep migrant workers ineligible for urban residents, all labor contracts and agreements must be one year, the worker must return to the bornean and register again with the labor union.
The United States is one of the foreign countries economically attracted to South Africa. After Britain, the United States is one of the largest donors. Have U.S. corporations been a progressive force against the maintenance of apartheid? According to a 1978 U.S. Senate report by the subcommittee on African affairs, U.S. governments have not been a progressive force.
After an extensive survey of corporations in South Africa, the report concluded: "Collectively, U.S. corporations operating in South Africa have made no significant impact on South African business, establishing company policies which would offer a limited but nevertheless important model of multinational responsibility. Rather the net effect of American investment has been to strengthen the corporate identity of South Africa's anarchist regime ...".
T. W. Khamble, a South African high school teacher, explained the importance of reply help, don't help. It stabilizes the government. When the economy is good the rulers can enforce their repressive policies.
Violence is inherent in the South African legal system. An Ancestral International Association, which is densely on political detainees, and that the government detainees do use. The report highlights that the highest rates of judicial executions in the 1970s-七十年 people were executed in 1976.1
A letter from a black South African amply illustrates the living conditions: "The situation here is rather tense. One never knows what is the morrow moving for us. Our house is quite small, but it is surrounded and the yards very small. Now the roof of my house is cement, the walls cement, the
floor cement. In winter these houses are frigid, in the summer an oven. No white in this country can ever be accommodated in them.
"This week we are told the rent will be raised. This is without electricity, the barbaric way of life should not be the order of the day. Humanity should be respected."
I urge everyone associated with KU-users, faculty, staff, admirer to write or email their comments disapproval of its continued investment in corporations operating in South Africa.
Laurie Brandt
Hillsboro sophomore
To the Editor:
I would like to make some corrections in Amy Hollowell's article on Zen in the Kansan.
Kansan's Zen story misrepresents group
In Zen, and generally in Buddhism, you do not follow anybody. You study with them. This is an important distinction. Two students of the Rinzai master Edo Roso, as well as being students of the Chogye master Seung Sahn. In Buddhist practice it is common, and in Zen expected, to study with more than one master. There are no gurus
The description of Soto Zen in the article is not a fair description and needs to be corrected. Soto students do teach meditation, but generally need more training. Certified as teachers. That is the local Soto group does not hold formal classes.
Chanting is part of Soto practice, but is less important. The introduction of Soto Zen in the 1980s led to a rise in Buddhist Buddhist practice, and Dogen, the man who brought Soto to Japan, was one of its first disciples.
Finally, Choyne and Rinzi Zen are not the only practice or historical background of the study but they are similar enough for students of one to generally feel comfortable. But I would ask that you see samurai—
Judv Roitman
Judy Kollman
Lawrence Chogye Zen Group
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
USPS 690-490. Polished at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, KS, and delivered to the university day except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postal mail for Lawrence, KS, to pay a $25 fee or a yearly dormitory and $18 for six months or a year. Deduct $10 from each sentiment; paid through the student activity fee. Daily Daxen, Fint Hail, The University of Kansas, Daxen, Fint Hail, The University of Kansas,
Editor Mary Hoenk
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Monday, October 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
5
SenEx delays support to alter academic policy
Staff Reporter
By DAVE LEWIS
The University Senate executive committee voted Friday to delay reauthorization of the grantment that could alter the focus of the Kansas Board of Regents academic colleges.
Academic planning calls for a comprehensive study of the University's projected enrollment shifts and performance assignments during the next five years.
The current academic planning policy bases future personnel changes on enrollment projections.
The amendment would focus the study on credit-hour projections instead of enrolment projections. The Regents approved the amendment, and officers proposed the amendment Sept. 28.
The proposed amendment was referred to the Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee, which will review the amendment and report back to SenGn.
Under the amendment, the Regents would base future changes in personnel and academic programs on distribution of credit hours at each institution.
FOR EXAMPLE, if the University has two hours taken by students in one school projecting a decrease in another school, appropriate academic and personnel training may be necessary.
Lawrence Sherr, professor of business and a member of SenEx, questioned the effectiveness of the academic planning policy, with or without the amendment.
"This proposal does not deserve the name of a comprehensive study," Shern said. "It only produces data for forecasting."
The academic planning policy was approved by the Regents in 1972.
KU's study is scheduled to be completed April 1, 1980.
THE REGENTS policy says, "The probability that there will be general enrolment decreases in the early 2010s with the only posses a problem for public institutions
"There will be not only significant enrollment declines at some institutions during the 1808's but substantial shifts in faculty and program to another at all institutions."
The comprehensive study would prepare Regents schools for these shifts.
By TONI WOOD
Crusaders debate points of ERA
Staff Reporter
or those Kansans persisted last week by Phyllis Schulz to oppose the Equal Rights Amendment, their last hope to have passed. We would rescind Kansas' approval of ERA.
Schlaffy, who has led a nationwide anti-ERC crusade, was in Kansas City, Kan. Friday night to debate Maggie Tripp, a New York writer and lecturer who supports
Kansas was the seventh state to ratify ERA in 1972. However, a bill to rescind that action was introduced during the 1979 Legislative session by State Sen John Fermiland. It would permit the State to vote on to the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, where it remains.
Sen. Edward Reilly Jr., R-Leavendown, who is the chairman of the committee, will decide whether members will take any action on the bill.
He said the bill might be ignored during the 1800 session. "But there are no assurances that the bill won't come up," he said. "The legislative process is unpredictable."
BEFORE ERA can be added to the U.S.
Constitution, it must be ratified by 38 states
by 1986. Thirty-five years have approved it,
including Kansas but excluding Missouri.
The Equal Rights Amendment, which would be the 27th amendment to the Constitution, states, "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex."
The Schlaffly and Tripp debate drew a crowd of more than 375.
"I thought it was a great debate," Schlafy said. "I changed many minds—people have already come up and said so."
TRIPP, HOWEVER, was less satisfied with the debate. She said, "That's the first time I've debated Phyllis Schlafly and the last time."
"I can't debate her, because she uses such illogical arguments, and I think she does it purposely.
"I don't mind being challenged, because I think women's issues are very important. But I have a very logical mind, and this kind of stuff is silly."
The issues debated were based on questions from the crowd of men and women, many who wore big buttons that said, "ERA YES" or "STOP ERA."
Throughout the debate, Schlafly contended that existing state laws were adequate in protecting women, and that some of the proposed amendment a "free ticket" to intermingling laws.
ONE WOMAN IN the audience asked why only 3 percent of the women who were
granted child support continued to receive money after six months.
Tripp said state laws in that area were inadequate, but she cited different statistics: of all women who receive child support, only 35 percent actually getting any money two years later.
Schlachly did not refute those statistics, but she had also asserted laws "make-neutral." She also said that she joined with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to "destroy the
Another member of the audience asked whether women were ready to accept the political and social pressures of equality.
**TRIP SAID.** "I would be presupposed to speak on behalf of American women, but I do think they are ready to take on equal status and equal responsibilities."
Schlaffy said women already have political equality.
"No, I don't think women want the same treatment," she said. "You didn't hear women during the wars running to the line and running back to take my brother, you have to take me."
One of Schlafly's primary arguments against ERA is that women would have to be drafted into the national armed services.
Tripp said women would not be drafted
because there is an all-volunteer army. For
those people who do serve in the military,
they get 1 percent go into actual combat,
she said.
ONE MAN WEAING a "STOP ERA" button asked how the ERA would affect children's schools, such as Boy and Girl Scouts, that are for boys or girls only.
Tripp said, "ERA affects the law. It does not affect social customs and social mobs. There is no reason why the children's cougues could not continue."
Society said that such children's organizations would be affected because they sometimes meet on school grounds or in buildings. ERA would affect dorms, the girls' clubs, GIRL Girls, Cub Scouts, mother-daughter gardens and father-son groups, she said.
The debate was sponsored by the Wyndotte Mental Health Clinic in conjunction with a "Women in 1980" workshop held Saturday.
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University Daily Kansan
Mondav. October 22, 1979
'Hawks put it all together
By TONY FITTS
Sports Editor
The Kansas football team has been trying to prove a point all season long. They have been telling us that they are a decent football team, in spite of the legacy from last year. They never really convinced anybody that they would do anything when they deflated Iowa State N24-7.
Granted, Iowa State is not the toughest team in the Big Eight season with losses to Pacific and Iowa, but they did hold No. 15 at 17 points and they did beat eight opponents.
And there might be some doubt that the Hawks proved anything except for the fact that they dominated a football game. They played with 47 points and defeated the cavalry in the ball with little trouble against the
-KANSAN-
KANSAN Sports
ISU defense. And Mike Hubach's pains—aided by a strong wind—kept the Cyclones deep in their own end of the field for most of the game.
Jim Zud, outside linebacker, said, "It had to happen sometime."
"TOTAL TEAM effort and a balanced offensive attack" were the important factors in KU's victory, according to tight and Lloyd Sobek. "The key was two words: offensive line. They blocked well and opened everything up. The running attack opened
Kirby Criswell, the other outside linebacker, said, "We had to play a team that was more our caliber of team."
rut the important thing to the Jayhawks was winning; no matter how they did it.
The wind and a determination to make the running game work made KU keep the ball on the ground for most of the game. Harry Vince had louser, with 123 vards on 17 carries.
"OFFENSE IS getting better every week," Sydney said. "When the offensive line plays good, we all play good. We felt going into it we could win this game."
John Hadi, offensive coordinator, agreed that Saturday was the day the Jayhawks put it all together.
The backs were running, the line was blocking and the defense was getting us the ball. The team did a good job overall—for 60 minutes.
"You gotta give the offensive line all the credit. They came up before the game and they wanted to run right at them. They felt they could handle it."
AND HANDLE it they did. The offensive line came on in the second half, under Karyla Kyles; Kirk Taushaus and Dave Fleicher; tackles; and Sobek, tight end, opened big holes for Sydney all af-
Sydney's yards weren't all the result of the line blocking. He broke many tackles on his runs, making some of the plays look like they do in practice against the scout team, especially a 48-yard late in the first quartet, which got KU out at a deeble hole at 12:03.
"Iowa state hit hard," he said, "but they do a lot of tackling the ball. It was easy to push them around and get some running room."
FAMBROUGH SAID the team had to establish the running game, wind or no wind.
"We had to run, run, until we established our running game," he said. "Our passing game is not worth a nickel unless we can run."
The passing game was working well too. The 'Hawks didn't pass as much as in previous games, but they didn't have to.
A 29-year screen pass from Brian Bettek to Solek up set KU's second touchdown in the third quarter on a 44-yard, first-down bomb from Bettek to David Verser.
BETHEK AND Bill Lilia combined for 116 points and had a 83 percent completion rate. Bethek won the season at the end of the third quarter, but ISU moved the ball only 29 yards to the basket.
"We weren't really sure what they do".
Bethke said. "We kind of had an idea, but the linenen just started blocking real well and it worked."
BIG EIGHT CONFERENCE STANDINGS
| | W L T P Op P | W L T P Op P | W L T P Op P |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nehrasura | 2 0 0 79 | 0 0 0 | 258 52 |
| Mukhena | 2 0 0 78 | 1 0 0 | 532 84 |
| Mukhena | 1 1 0 27 | 2 1 0 | 118 70 |
| Oklahoma St. | 1 1 0 27 | 2 1 0 | 118 70 |
| Oklahoma St. | 1 1 0 27 | 2 1 0 | 118 70 |
| Kansas | 1 1 0 24 | 4 1 0 | 113 16 |
| Kansas | 1 1 0 24 | 4 1 0 | 113 16 |
| Nashville | 1 1 0 49 | 4 1 0 | 140 82 |
| Nashville | 1 1 0 49 | 4 1 0 | 140 82 |
Nebraka 36, Oklahoma State 0; Oklahoma 38, Kansas
State 6; Kansas 24, Iowa State 7; Missouri 13, Colorado 7
24, 10th Street 7, Minneapolis 55201
முன்னேற்பு நிரல் எடுத்து வருகிறது.
Colorado at Nebraska; Iowa state at Oklahoma; Kansas State at Missouri; Oklahoma state at Kansas
high, where he was thinking of it," he said, "but we just had it in our minds to do a really good job and stay with it."
Bethke said the wind, gusting from 21-24 mph, was not a major concern.
THE TEAM acknowledged some off-the-field help after the game when they awarded the game ball to the KU band, which had driven to Ames, Iowa, the night before.
"They busk broke and they got in late," Fambridge said. "They played like hell out there, and I know they help me on the baseball team, so we gave them the game ball."
Robert Foster, KU director of bands, said Fambridge told him the team wanted to give the ball to the band because they used the band had done for them during the game.
"Most people would be so excited for themselves that they would forget about the hard work and dedication that another group of kids put into the game," Foster said. "Pambridge and Hadi are nice people to watch, but I would go head of a hand earthed a nane ball before."
"IT WAS THE most generous and thoughtful thing I've ever heard of a coaching staff do."
KANSAS 0 14 10 0 - 24
IOWA STATE 0 0 0 7 - 7
KU=Veter 5 cam (Halachack kick)
KU=T Jome 3 cam (Halachack kick)
KU=Verse 44 pass from Bethel (Halachack kick)
KU=Verse 44 pass from Ruby (Giffrord kicks)
| 68,100 | KU1 | BM1 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Pitcher yards | 15 | 14 |
| Runs batted in | 35-28-18 | - |
| Rangers yards | 14 | 12 |
| Rangers field goals | 7 | 5 |
| Pitches | 7 | 5 |
| Pitchers hit (%) | 7.2-1-1 | 13.3-2-0 |
| Pitchers lost (%) | 1.2-1 | 0.1-1 |
| Pitchers lost to | 1.1 | 0.1-1 |
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
MHcSrGnT
KU-Sydney 17-121, Mack 2-29, Capers 17-36, Bethke
3-4), T. Jones 8-28, Verser 15, Higgins 3-4, Kemp 3-2,
Davis 3-4)
ISU- Payme 15-38, Grant 8-19, Mack 6-4, Goodwin 1-3,
Seabrook 3-2, Rubber 3-(1-2).
KU—Bethak 6-11-108 (one interception), Lillis 1-1-6
INS—Rubley 8-15-81, Grant 8-18-77
KU-Verser 3-12, Mickens 1-34, Sobek 1-29, Davis 1-8,
Capsel 3-1.
ISU= LeBlair 44, Andrews 2-30, Payne 3-18, Buck 1-12,
Summer 2-4, Mack 1-(-1).
KU-University 10.22d Milieu 7 Tempurat 5 Foe 4
KU-Junior 8.22d Milieu 7 Tempurat 5 Foe 4
KENNEDY
KU pitcher LaAmN Stanxw eyed the plate as she wound up in the first game of a doubleheader against the University of Nebraska Saturday. Stanxw held the Cornshakers scoreless for six innings, but KU lost the game 2-4.
'Hawk hurler
Softball team splits games in season finale
For its season finale, the KU women's softball team scheduled a doubleheader with Nebraska. The teams split the two games Saturday, but it took 23 innings, or three games' worth, to do it.
The Cornshorns won the winner at Holcom Sports Complex-2
0.1n 16 minings, and KU captured the nightcap 1-4. The long first game was played in three hours and 10 minutes, and the second game took 1:20.
In the inpper, Nebraska's Lauren Mizeren, 9-2, pitched all 16 innings, scattering 10 hits and striking out one. Lacking overpowering speed, Mizeren used precision location and a rising fastball to stump KU.
KU's third pitcher, Magaret Mab. 9-2, received the loss. KU earned its runs on four walks and shortstop Chris Willett's run.
The Jayhawks quietly attempted a rally in the bottom of the 16th. With two down, Pam Cox sapped a long single to center. But the rally died on Gay Bozango's sharp grounder to the Cornhusker shortstop.
KU had a chance to mitigate Mizmer earlier. In the first, Jilse Sandgrass beat out an inflict hit for a single. After Ruth Lasi Sandgrass hit the back of her head.
LaAnn Stanwix and Daria Johnson were KU's other pitchers.
The runners advanced on Becky Ascencio's ground out, but the threat ended on Kelly May's fly to right.
KU pushed across the game's only run in the fifth. With one out, Cox received a base on balls and stole second. Kately Manegree followed with another wksh and Larson doubled in the fourth. Cox and Larson combined with Laura Lowe were the only extra base hits in the doubleheader.
In the second game, Marla Meskimen picked up her third victory against one defeat in shutting out the 'Huskers.
one spit brought KU's record in its first season of fail competition to 4-6. Last year, the Hawks were allowed to play at Madison Square Garden.
Ascenci, despite going 60-10 in the doubleheader, still ended the season as the team's leading hitter with a 382 mark. She was batting .542 entering the game. Larson and Sndgrass were next with 375 averages.
Nebraska is now 14-7. The season series between the two teams is 2-2.
24
IEEE MARRING/Kangaroo Stall
Bruising back
KU liftback Harry Sydney bullied past Iowa State defenders in route to some of the 121 yards he gained on 17 carries.
brake a 32-wheel from KU's own nine-yard line that launched a 91-air towdeck down March in the first quarter.
Fumble haunts KC again
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP1-All-PRO)
William Mikesleff bats 22 yards with 1:42 in the game to give the New York Giants a wild 21-19 victory yesterday over the Kansas
Williams fumbled while attempting to sweep right end from his own 23-yard line and Carson carried the ball untouchened into the Kansas City end zone for the Giants their third straight win. New York came up with 3-5 while Kansas City dropped to 4-1.
The Giants rallied for the third-quarter touchdowns on a 53-yard pass from rookie Phil Simms to Earnest Gray and a 5-3 run in the first half. A 304-half deficit and take a 140-late lead.
But Kansas City reclaimed the margin on a 38-yard pass from Mike Livingston to Henry Marshall with a 3:2 left in the game.
Kansas City took that 10-0 intermission lead on a 24-yard field goal by Jan Steurend and a 1-yard scoring run by Arnold Morgado.
The Chiefs made a valiant effort at yet another comeback followed the Carson touchdown when Livingston completed 5 of 7
passes for 64 yards to move the Chefs to the New York. But he threw three incompleteness in the final 10 seconds to fall short as the Chefs fell to 4-4.
The loss rumored brilliant showings by both Larry Laing and halffoot R. Trey Reed Landingman in the 2013 Tour closed 210 yards total offense. He rushed 204 turns for 106 yards and caught eight passes
Defensive end Gary Jeter set up the first two New York touchdowns with third quarter turnovers. He recovered a Reed
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
At A Glance
American Conference
B-1
Herbs
HANDMAKER
SINCE 1980
W L 0 T Pct. PP PA
New England 6 0 750 291 114
M. N.J. 4 0 750 291 114
N.Y. Jets 4 0 750 170 130
Buffalo 4 0 750 128 105
Ottawa 4 0 750 102 103
Pittsburgh 5 2 0 714 170 183
Cleveland 5 3 0 828 170 183
Houston 3 3 0 828 176 182
Cincinnati 1 7 0 126 146 197
San Diego 6 2 0 750 282 114
Denver 6 2 0 714 114 101
Kansas City 4 0 0 590 140 122
Oakland 4 0 0 375 172 108
fumble at the Kansas City 43 to set up the Gray touchdown and then blocked a Stenner field goal try of 25 yards to set up the Taylor score.
National Conference
| | East | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Dallas | 7 | 1 | 0 | 453 | 201 |
| Philadelphia | 7 | 1 | 0 | 262 | 128 |
| Washington | 6 | 2 | 0 | 730 | 119 |
| N.Y. Giants | 6 | 2 | 0 | 178 | 128 |
| N.C. Hornets | 6 | 2 | 0 | 118 | 105 |
Tampa Bay 6 2 0 730 169 133
Minnesota 6 2 0 730 169 133
Chicago 3 4 0 375 122 119
Green Bay 3 4 0 375 122 119
Cleveland 3 4 0 375 122 119
Los Angeles 4 4 0 500 141 165
New Orleans 4 4 0 197 185
Atlanta 3 5 0 750 160 181
San Francisco 1 7 0 129 149 219
Baltimore 14, Buffalo 13
Philadelphia 20, Tampa Bay 2
Tampa Bay 1, Green Bay 3
New York Air Force 28, Oakland 19
Atlanta 16, Chicago 2
New England 28, Miami 19
Minnesota 16, Pittsburgh 2
New Orleans 17, Detroit 1
Texas A&M 22, Atlanta 16
San Francisco 15, Seattle 14
Miami 14, Houston 15
New York Gladiator 14, Miami City 17
Tulane & Gulf Denver at Pittsburgh
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
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Men netters stage upset
The University of Kansas men's tennis team pulled off one of the biggest upsets in lowest tennis Saturday, upending the University of Illinois in a straight-set match.
Weekend Sports Roundup
Southern Illinois-Edwardsville was the Division II NCAA tennis champion last year.
"It was the best win I've ever had here in the three years I've been with the team. It was an incredible upset. We shocked Southern Conference."
KU played with its top player, David Thies, who pulled a stomach muscle in his match last week against Wichita State.
The Jayhawks whipped the University of Missouri Friday 8-0.
The No. 1 singles match between Thies and Dave Wilson was not counted in the scoring because Thires tried in the first set. Kivisto said that the cause of the muscle pull was not known and that he did not know how long Thires would be out.
necause of the injury, KU had to rearrange its double lines, moving the No. 2 team of Cheft Collier and Bill Krizman up to No. 1. John Runnels and Wayne Sewall played No. 2 and Rick Wertz and Kevin Lehr played No. 3.
Collier and Krizman fought off two of last year's top-ranked junior players. Juan Farrow and Hugo Umoe, in the Southern Illinois
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Field hockey team splits
A gusting wind and temperatures in the upper 85s played aigger role in the KU field hockey team's split of games at Emporia State Saturday than the team's opponents, Emporia and South Dakota State University.
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The 'Hawks had tied Bendective s3 with 88 Robert Alonterate's goal before the end of regulation play. A KU shot-on-goal in overtime failed when it hit the post. The Ravens came back to score two goals on KU goaltie Bill Evans.
"They put a lot of pressure on us all during the game," play-coach Jay Wafoe says. "We fought pretty hard to win, but they were not as tough as we thought."
The loss was only KU's second. Their record stands at 6-3-1. The next home game is Nov. 4, against Kansas State.
Monday evening,
October 22,
at 8 o'clock.
"The Consciousness of the Healing Christ"
All are welcome.
by John A. Grant
THE BEST FOLLOW FOR WILDWOOD
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
The KU soccer team missed an opportunity to take the lead in overtime in Saturday's match against Benedictine College, losing 3-1.
Jance Lound scored KU's first goal to tie the score. Latz and Kelly had assists on the play. But Emporia was in control the second time.
"TEN"
"TEN"
Hilcrest
KU soccer club loses
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat Sum 2:30
6:40 & 8:10
Foreign & Domestic Parts
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Part Size
841-2200
1290 East 5th St.
Granada
"It was very windy and we were playing in the heat of the day and it just took everything out of us," Beebe said. "Ten minutes before the half we got tired and Emporia scored its second goal to go ahead. We didn't let up, the wind was just too much for us."
"MONTY PYTHON'S JEFF OF BRIAN'"
Cinema Twin
Beebe said it was just "a case of too much in one day" when KU played impersonator. The game started only 18 minutes after the end of the match.
1. "STARTING OVER"
$1.00 $1.30
2. "THE GOODBYE GIRL"
$1.65 $1.95
3. "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS"
$2.00 $2.30
CALLS
Evs. 7:20 & 9:20 Sat-Sun 2:00
Bitzi Nishanpe came off the bench to score KU's goal in the first game with an assist from Jennifer Lutz.
KU beat South Dakota 1-0 in its first game and lost to Emporia 5-2 in the second. The Coyotes' record now stands at 4.8
"The first game was the best we've ever played," said KU coach Diana Beebe. "but we should have scored more goals."
Eve. 7.00 & 9.00 Sat-Sun 2:00
2. "JESUS"
Eve. 7:30 & 8:30 Sat Sun 1:30
Eve. 7:40 & 9:40 Sat Sun 1:45
2. HIJESCH
1. "SKATETOWN USA"
Walt Disney Studios
723-411-8118
Walt Disney Studios
723-411-8118
BLACK STUDENT UNION GOSPEL CHOIR REHEARSAL
WHERE: 4051 WESCOE
FUNDED BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE
PLEASE BE ON TIME!
TIME: 5:30 P.M.
WHEN: MONDAY. OCT. 22, 1979
---
Blane's Salon on The Mall Individual Styling for Men & Women Special Sale
CLONW
Curling
Irons
Reg $1295 Now $795
Featuring REDKEN Hair & Skin care products
Malls Shopping Center
842-1144
Monday. October 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
2
Walkers travel 11.1 miles to help world's hungry
The walkers began to struggle into Broken Arrow Park, 31st and Louisiana Streets, at about 4 p.m. yesterday. They immediately dropped back on the ground and poured themselves cups of ice-H C.
The annual warmer CROP walk for world hunger attracted about 55 participants, said Ehhan Smith, one of the organizers. The walk was 20 kilometers, or 11.1 miles.
The walkers worked for pledges that ranged from 5 cents to $1 a mile.
The Rev. Paul Berry, another walk coordinator, said he expected pledges to reach at least $1,000, although totals were not in yesterday afternoon.
Twenty-five percent of the money will help support the Douglas County Emergency Services Council. The rest will be used to help the hungry of the world.
Berry said there had been CROP walks throughout the country for the past 10 to 12 years. It is a multi-million dollar fund-riser to help the humble of the world, he said.
Vernay Gue, the $8-year-old, said she participated because, "I love the outdoors. I hate to do indoor things like baking. I hate to go to the beach and do for a good cause. I wake all the time."
The participants yesterday ranged in age from nine to 58 years old.
another participant, Steve Edwards,
minister at the First Baptist Church,
Bentucky St., roller-skated the entire
distance of the walk.
"I wanted to raise a lot of money," he said, "so I told my congregation if they could raise more than $200 I would roller-skate."
The congregation raised $240, he said, so last week he bought himself a pair of roller skates.
honey. I can say.
Cindy Giebler, Hays senior, said she felt good about doing something for a good cause.
"I can go home and eat now," she said.
"The hungry of the world can't."
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available
NEW
ARRIVALS:
15 Passenger Vans 2340 Alabama
1980 Chavettes 843-2931
RICK'S Bike Shop
entuition Bicycles in Stock.
We Repair All Bikes
815 726-2340
Chicago, IL 60611
(013) 917-8241
Vernant
Bike Shop
Enroll Now For Christmas Workshops
Knitted Christmas Stocking
Tuesday 7.5 p.m, begins Oct. 30 for 3 weeks
of knitting (includes materials)
Christmas Patchwork
Wednesday's 7-9 pm. begins Oct. 31 for 3 weeks
Canceled on Sunday.
[ ] [ ] [ ] [ ]
CAMP BAR
SCHOOL OF CINEMA
25
JUNE
WESTERN
(031) 784-6278
Mounting and Framing Needlework
Christmas Patchwork
Wednesdays 1-3 pm. Oct. 31 for 3 weeks
Class fee $7.00
Crewel
Mounting and Framing Needwork
1 session Thursday. Nov., 1-7, 9-pm
Class fee $2.50 (includes materials)
Cupboard
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer Each additional word
one time
$2.00
01
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
$1.25 $2.00 $3.25 $4.00 $5.00 $6.00 $7.00 $8.00 $9.00
ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday p.m.
Tuesday Fridays p.m.
Wednesday Mondays p.m.
Thursday Tuesdays p.m.
Friday Wednesdays p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UM business office at 8414508
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4158
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also salted, and raw peanuts in the shell. Pleasant variety of dry beans, rice, and popcorn, pomegranate, and sorghum. Every Sunday.
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.
o selling wooden crates. Herb Allenbernd. tf
Watch for truck packed at 9th & Illinois, home of the World Fashion (Jachawk Foods) and the chefs' clubs. Also served: Raspberry and Raw Pearl cheese. Also served: Roasted and Raw Pineapple yellow and white popcorn, honey, and sorghum
Zen practice nightly 6 p.m. Free lecture by
Master seeing Balm, Salmon, Monday, Oct. 22, 8 p.m.
Jayhawk room, student union. For information
电话 822-7010. 10-22
Free lecture on Christian Science, "The Consciousness of the Healing Christ," by John A Grant. In First Church of Christ, Scientist, 125 Massachusetts, Monday, October 22, at 8:00 p.m.
PAPER BACK SALKS are down 15% nationally
while online book sales of $78,000,
BOOKSELLER ALL of our 50,000 paperbacks is
price-year have been and always will be.
I have seen in brownd and at 149.1
4644
March 14, 2013
10:31
The Manager's Meeting for
Intramural Volleyball (Men's and Women's)
Thursday, October 25th
at 7:00 p.m.
in 205 Robinson.
For additional information call 864-3546,
Recreation Services.
R
HAD ENOUGH? Trend of less Infantially Goev's
leadership about these things in the Liberal
阵营. No, it's just about the Liberal阵营.
Union Speaking with Mr. Minton Minister Rathmines,
Mid-Western Union Speaking with Mr. Minton
Minister Rathmines, Mid-Western Union
FOR RENT
The entry deadline for the Intramural Swimming Relays is Monday, October 22 at 5 p.m.
More information:
208 Robinson
864-3546
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. ff
TIMBER LEAGUE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING
Three bedrooms, one bathroom,
1 month's rent on bedroom 1,
1 month's rent on bedroom 2,
Two hundred square feet,
large kitchen with stainless
furniture, double sink,
For appointment at 842-6444 or see at
www.timberleaguestwo.com
1 bedroom apt, close to campus. Call $42-0032
7 p.m. m-12 p.m.
10-23
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
room new $42, per rent reduction (8/3)
2-4 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
All Frontier Rides Ages: 1, 1 month rent free; $50
security on all beds
2 Lease 2 bdmire duplex, gar. avail, guard
$210 mcm. $453 - 0750 or $451-071.
10-23
3 bdmire house, close to KT bus line
and/or couple, or couple, $42 month.
10-23
68:07, evening.
FOR SALE
Lease 5 bdmr, older house, avail. Nov. 1, $390 a
month. Call 843-0570 or 843-6011. 10-23
Mast sublease 2 bedroom apt., Avalon Ants.
8240 month + electricity. Gas heat. Please call
841-5717.
10-25
nished house. $100 + 1 / 2 utilities. 842-652-10-25
Nailmith Hall has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business offer at 843-859-89
www.nailmith.com
ENTERTAINMENT
1 bdrm. apt. All utilities paid except electricity.
Cole to campus. Call 842-2322 between 2:30-5:30
M-F. Avalon Apartments.
10-26
Sublease, efficiency pft. Five min., from Union
Shared bath, partly furnished, all utilities paid.
Monthly spraying for bugs. $120/month. Call 841-
6753, after 6:30.
10-26
1 or 2 mature, responsible students sought to share spaces, comfortable, room to house at any time. Formal rooms, most furnishings, international cooking furnishings, occupancy, modest price. Drop by or inquire.
Tradition begins at 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26 on the hill on the hill. See the nerd Homemaking Press website.
'Blue Monday, but the Harbour Lites in a first-class dive so join us tonight for $15 purchase and can cans and batteries between 7-8 p.m. you want your ship together at the Harbour Lights. 10-22
WED. NIGHT
ROCK, BOP & DANCE TO
"MR. BLUE SUEDE HOUSE"
CARL PERKINS
w/Fire
Doors open at
8:00 a.m.
& 8:00 p.m.
only
$4.99
Glastown
Opera house
door
46930
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialties
Passive service, and exchange units. BELL AU-
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900 W. 6th. tf
SunSpaces - Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-
refractive lenses are our collection, reasoned
1021.5148 841-573-07
Stereo Camera Equalizer—Spectro Acoustics model ZI02. Only 3 months old–mint condition.
$175.00 or best offer. 941-4928, evening. keep trying.
Sony digital clock radio reduced. New model with battery reserve if cue. dies off—special at $42.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Thurs. 10-23. pics.
Men's shearing coat - size 42. Warm very little,
absolutely perfect condition, $150.00 or best offer.
841-6283; keep dry, keep tryng. 10-24
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $35.98 3 year guaranty
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-136 TUF
1923 Volv 144 14-4 Speed, AC low mileage, good condition. $2400. $421-7129 after 5 years.
For Sale—49 Ford XL, 2 door hardtop, PS, PH.
AC, scored snow tires on it. Call 542-3378
mornings or evenings.
10-23
0 week old Ferrets, make adorable pets. Call
483-4543 after 6 p.m.
Rambler chamber station wagon, 4-door, new battery,
heater, rinsed well. Call Jeff, 864-4950 (8-1) 10-22
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization in this course. 1. For class preparation. 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. New from T at Town Center, Mail Books席和 Ordn Book
Michelin Tire Sale! 20, 25, and 30% discount at Ray Stonebuck's downtown. The appliance store with discount tire dept. 10-30
1975 Fiat 131s, I.C. 5-steered, 48,000 miles; must
immidulate, 1850; capil. call: 8143-10-26
1975 CB1750* Super Sport motorcycle, ex-
cellent condition.
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION: Mouch. Popshelf Rick's Kit bike 1032 Vermont: 841-76422. TF
9 week old Fortress make adorable patrol Calls 441-5755. ATTENDS 10-23
V-W Rabbit—76-56,000 miles with 2 snowflies.
$2000
10-31
Pioneer X5248 Stereo Receiver $100 Ultrafireal Speakers $15. Call Jeff. 841-283-1801 10-21
1975 280Z, 24.000, mint, call 843-1496. 10-23
FOUND
Water bed, high quality, baffled mattress.
Queen size w liner, heater, small pedestal w/
machogony sides. $200. Moving. must sell! 84-13-
7296.
1875 CB7150F Super Sb40f Hold Head cellulent shape, price to sell. 842-2927. 10-26
We've got brand new room size carpet remnants for $2.00 a yard. If interested call Mary at 81-10-65 between 8 and 5.
White, long hair kitten—8 months? on truck at New Green Hall, could have ridden from Olive Hall. 842-6724 after 6 p.m. 10-22
Small black puppy about 2 months old, brown
flee collar. Call 642-8019.
Cross pin in front of Carruth-O'Leary. Call
864-2925 to identify.
10-23
Ttextbook "Biology," the word of Life," near 18th and Louisiana. To call, claim a945-4913. 10-32
Siamese cat found Tuesday evening at tennis courts by Robinson Gym. Call 842-7053 or 843-7959.
10-23
Small, brown puppy in front of Snow Hall. Call
804-2384. 10-24
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
MEN! JOBB'S WOMEN! SATURDAY 10-25
MON! JOBB'S WOMEN! SATURDAY 9-24
842-798-9888 or visit www.jobb.org
MEN! JOBB'S WOMEN! SAILS/HARBOUR
Europe | South Pacific, Bahamas, World Send $45
Europe | South Pacific, Bahamas, World Send $45
World LIST, 11th. Bali, Sumatra, CA, 93506
World LIST, 11th. Bali, Sumatra, CA, 93506
Language Project Preschool Bureau of Child Development data collection and analysis. Must have completed the following: data collection and analysis, MAP development and data track, and training observers. Salary range: $25,000 - $38,000 per year. 1218 Littleton Avenue Applicant deadline: Oct 12th in New York. An equal Opportunity Affirmation Action action is available. Regardless of race, religion, sex, disability or other factors, applicants must demonstrate regularity of race, religion, sex, disability or other factors.
OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer year round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all. fields $100-
$120 monthly, expensed paid, Sightseeing,
Freeport-McMoRan, DC, IC Box 543, BoxCA-1944,
Del-10-29
Substitute teachers for Baker-Linwood USD-
Contact Board of Education Office (0313)
721-289-6500
Civil Engineering Department of the University of Pennsylvania is an assistant professor of civil engineering and has both undergraduate and graduate degrees in civil engineering. The areas of civil engineering computer software problem oriented education development, Civil Applicant training and P.D.I. in Civil Applicant training and experience. Please send resume and letter of application by January 15th to D.E. DeSoto, Inc., 402-837-3961, *D.E. DeSoto* Center, *University of Pennsylvania*, affidavit online, equal opportunity employment.
Cashier (2) part-time. Work 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Requires experience and knowledge of Java programming language. Please contact Personnel Office at 830-320-5000.
LOOKING FOR MORE THAN JUST A JOB?
Wanted-Part-time, Acad. Gymnastics Instructor, Tues. and Thurs. eve. Edwardville area, experience preferred, 80.00 hr. Call Carol. Byrd 287-3541 16-25
DAV CARE STaff AND SUBSTITUTES NEEDED:
For Referee and After School Bus,
teacher or co-worker working with children ages 6 and on training
hours for staff at 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., working in various
areas including child care.
Hours for staff at 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., working in various
areas including child care.
Prices vary, apply in person at A3 B13 Railway
@ 9:30 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. Equal Opportunity Employer
@ 9:30 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. Equal Opportunity Employer
Part-time table service personnel must. Must be available 11-4 MWF, pay $15.00 + hr. tips. Apply in person Schumm Foods, 719'i' Mass., 8-15 Mon.-Fri.
Village
lmn
Part-time maintenance person needed. Starting pay $3.50. Maturity be available in 8-11am. Mon-Fri. Heavy lifting and cleaning required. Mechanical fencing, food processing, FDG. Foods, T19%, Maturity 8-5 Mon-Fri. 10-25
assistant manager for the night shift and opening hostess.
LOST
TEACHERS--If your degree is in English, math, or science, you can teach at a Peace Center. Peace Center needs you. Trace in your primary secondary school and take a semester with us as a Peace Center volunteer. Pay travel; visit our campus. Must be U.S. citizen, single-married, and paid vacation. Must be U.S. citizen, single-married, and paid vacation. Contact us on **Peace Center** Sign up now for interview at Peace Center, Carroll-Gleason, on line at **Peace Center**.
Responsibilities are immense, but so are the rewards.
MATH SCIENCE TEACHERS - Consider an alternative. Join the Poe County Developing nations under teachers in math and science. Challenge under leaders in math and science. Prepare under leaders in math and science. care for 84 hours of postdoctoral. M.E.S. in Math or Biology at UC San Diego. Apply to age limit. Contact the Peace Corps Sinnamon Carruthrud on Oc. 22, 25, 29. In 23
CONTACT; RON DILLEY
Village Inn Pancake House is looking for an
Bring your drive and enthusaam in Lawrence's family restaurant
842-3251
COLLEGE GRAD GRACE, JEFFREY, CORPUS AND VISITOR ASSISTANTS. OVERSEAS INFO OFFICERS QUALIFIED FOR FOREIGN EXECUTIVE SERVICE AND QUALIFICATIONS OF AFRICA LATIN AMERICA ARE ARAB ALL WORKING FOR OTHER ENGINEERS, OPENSING IN A VARIABLE ARE PROVIDED FOR MORE INFORM ON HOW TO INTERVIEW AN OPERATIONS MANAGER FOR A CARE PROVIDER FOR MORE INFORM ON HOW TO INTERVIEW AN OPERATIONS MANAGER FOR A CARE PROVIDER FOR MORE INFORMATION
. . .GEAGE GRADS AND PEOPLE WITH EXPERIENCE.
JEFFREY COURTESY. JEFFREY COURTESY. JEFFREY COURTESY. JEFFREY COURTESY. If you have experience in forming a skilled trade, have a college degree or a related professional and work hard in useful and professional positions. Join Corps Power volunteer. Must be 18 single, female, with a bachelor's degree. Sign up now for interview at FACILITY Center, 507-642-2300.
HOME ECONOMISTS-You can be more than a salesperson using your Home Use BEd. You're degree in many areas, including home care, ar or 4x extraction, to teach in second-chance, monthly living allowance, health care, 48 hours monthly living allowance, health care with no dependents. No upper age limit with no dependents. No lower age limit. Carroll-Griffith O on Oct. 23, 1975 10:25
Gold women's LD. bracelet with gold heart charm. The name Jane on front, Love From the Heart. Women's silver watch, hand-made. Women's silver watch, hand-made. Women's silver watch, hand-made. Reward. Coll Carla at 843-8029
MISCELLANEOUS
Men's black wallet and KU bue pass in blue
holder. Money unimportant; I need license. ID's:
843-8887. 10-24
Lost sick, black and white cat with spot on
chin. Please call Scot. at 414-5512. 10-23
Pancake House Restaurant
12 week old, shiny black kitten. Lost near the Hawk. Desperately want 'Hornet' back. Please: 841-4733. 10-28
THEIS BINDING COPYING—The House of
Uber's Quick Copy center is headquarters for
Diesis binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us
hear you, at 838 M弘 or phone 843-3610. This
phone is 838 M弘 or phone 843-3610.
NOTICE
Papers due soon? Will provide personalized bibliographies on your topic in social sciences or humanities. Have M.A., M.S. Mail: 463-1021 56-23
Northern Natural Gas will be on the KU campus, which includes the Mechanical & Electrical & Civil Engineering in Mechanical & Electrical & Civil Engineering there will be interviews for Mechanical & Electrical positions. You are interested, step by step, to join our team.
Sekio and Bulova watches. 16% less than retail.
Factory warranty. Call Kent, K41-8074. -15-24
PERSONAL
A learning atmosphere for cross cultural interaction. Tonight and every day at Operation Friendship 7:00 p.m. at the Center, 829 W.18th (West of Oliver Hall on 19th), 10-12
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Abl. 861-564. tf
If you’re looking for a bar with chew beer, poolside bars are the best. They’re more people you can talk to. The Harbor Lakes are day and night afternoons for TILF New Year's Eve parties. The Harbor Lakes Get your skin together at t
FOSS HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abuses up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Tubal Ligation. For appointment 9 AM. AAM. To attend 400, 460, 101 Bt. Overland Park, KS.
Can't afford or find a local a torney? Call Legal
tt
804.5564
GAY COUNSELING REFERMALS through Head-
quarters, 841.2325 and KU info, 864.3306. fe
Come to the all new MAD HATTER Happy Hour 4-9 p.m. Monday through Friday. Open 7 nights a week. 10-35
ANTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every occasion. Birthday, Anniversary, Get Well, Secret Admirer, 811-4515 11-6
Veterans for employment assistance contact Campus Veterans: Imani B. Kansan Union, 86412-4f8
***
Emile, Roses are red, but you’re a nine anite,
because, ahead you might be able to sneak
Gary.
10-26
Don't drive, walk to X-suite left behind the Union Frist, Oct. 26, at Jekyll and all the Homecoming hosts in one spot. Food and drink available. Entertainment, too. Save gas. 10-26
Stay on the hill Friday, Oct. 26. 3 p.m. See the first KU Homecoming Parade of fists, bands, hats, and skirts. Hyundai Student Organization fair, the Great West Expo. Jawaharlink Basketball, O-Z zone parking. 10-26
If your toes don't love cold baird winter floors,
great happy toys! Our carpet takes your looze and
your pocketbook too. Now carpet only $2.00 a
vard. Call 81-655 between 8 and 5.
10-26
--to run:
Monday Thursday Friday 5 pm
Tuesday Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Monday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
If you remember these songs you won't want
Remember ...
"BLUE SUEDE SHOES"
"HONEY DONT"
"BREATHE HOSTEL"
"ROCK ISLAND LINE"
???
you remember these songs you want to miss a Spencer's concert with a singer. CARL PERKIN cause he wore all three songs.
Wed Night
Duke's open at 8:00 ahour at 9:00
Tamance Opera house
Call us 845-8281
HOPE Award Honor for Outstanding progressive
finance Final Winner Wednesday thuringia,
Day. Oct. 26
10:26
A learning atmosphere for cross cultural interaction tonight and every Monday at Operation Friendship 7:00 p.m. At the Center, 829 W. I9th, (West of Oliver Hall on 19th). 10-22
Whosephe?!Another great Drinkin' Dandel'! **Brainstorm** (in 'People' call brainstorm) **Brainstorm** (for details)
10-22
OLYMPIA PARTY Thursday night at CHA-
BOYS. Real cheap beer and lots of novelty
prizes. 10-24
TONY CHAVIERAN, one of the riling young leaders in LOS ANGELES, taught boys 163 MEMs, from 7 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tony CILI: Cold sniffs of Cool math from formulas and graphs; Tony CILI: Cold sniffs of Cool math from formulas and graphs. Tony CILI: Cold sniffs of Cool math from formulas and graphs. Tony CILI: Cold sniffs of Cool math from formulas and graphs.
Hey, Seniors! It's your last chance. Thursday,
Friday vote HOPE Award at Summerfield, Wes-
cow, Union.
10-26
SERVICES OFFERED
EXPERT TUORING: MATH: 000-102, call 847-585-7738 MATH: 115-718, call 847-585-7738 STATISTICS (call course): 847-585-7738. C.S. 100-649, call 847-585-7738 ENGLISH (call course): 847-585-7738 EXAMS, and SPANISH 847-585-7737
SERVICES OFFERED
Mating and framing done—call after 4:30 Mon-
Fri, or anytime weeksends 842-6875. 10-19
The Bike Garage-complete professional car repair. Garage specialty- "Time-Ups" and "Total-Overshares." Details call 841-2781. 10-28
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ushers Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 M on Monday to Friday, 9 AM on 1 PM on Tuesday to 838 Ms.
IMPROVE YOUR GRAFTS Send $1.00 for your 39-unit catalog of college literature, 10,250 titles listed, BOX 2007G; Los Angeles, CA, 90213) (213) 477-8726.
HUYING LIFE INSURANCE? Check our rates and values. Call, 842-7049, Bailen 842-7049, 11-9
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peerg. 842-4476. TP
PROCESSIONAL TERMINAL SERVICE 841-4900.
Experienced typist—Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 843-3910. TF
Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work,
reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome;
edit/layout. Call Joan 842-9127.
Experienced Typit—term papers, theses, misc., electric IBM Selectric Proofreading corrected. 843-9554 Mrs. Wright. TP
Journalism typographer. 20 years typing (typing experience). 4 years academic typing; thesis, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest Selective college. 842-4484. TUP
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
articles. Direct荐利 Selective Scribner or Jeannain, 811-2172. 11-5
Experienced tplist-types, dissertations, term papers, mises. HMI correcting selective. Barb cathode.
Need some typing doteq? Quality work, low rates.
Contact Cindy at 843-8654, after 4 p.m. 10-28
All kinds of typing expertly done, fast, accurate service, low rates. 843-3653 evenings and weekends. 10-23
Quality typing at competitive prices-no jobs too big or small. 842-2756. 10-23
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Grammar corrected. Call 841-3297.
Experienced t帅员, typist work. IBM Correct-
mented t帅员, available. Sandy 88
604. Evenings, 748-9818
WANTED
PSYCHIATRIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES
WORKSHOP
Peggy Hargen, Job Service Center,
W2 15th W. Topkapi, RS Phone: (1) 923-5810;
Male encouraged to apply An equal opportunity employer.
People who have Executioner, Penetrator, Death Merchant, or Matt Helm books—call David 864-2333. 10-29
10 appointment secretaries for Isle National Portrait. Studio, morning and evening shift $30 plus bonus. Apply in person, Westminster Inn, 252 W. Bickham, Suite 201.
Roommate wanted to share apartment near campus
841-2009. 10-24
Wanted: 2. bedroom apt, for: spring semester.
Write Richard, T244 Roe Blvd., Prairie Village,
Ks. 66288.
10-24
ROOMMATES. Naimush Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 813-8599 any time of the day if
BAR TOWN
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DONT.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kanna.
Classifieds sells it. Just mail
the ad to 1111 Fashion
money order to 1111 Flint
Hall. Use rates below to
figure costs. Now you’ve got
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8
Monday, October 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UPETT
Clowning around
Topeka clown Susan Roth entertains a group of children as part of 01 Hc held on the grounds of the state capital in Topeka. An estimated 10,000 children visited the
Oz...
From page one
dressed as Miss Kitty from Dodge City's Longue Saloon.
Sponsored by the Dodge City Arts Council, players from the 1806's Front Street restoration painted mustaches and beauty marks on children.
Across the lawn, beneath a cottonwood树, Susan Roth as Giggles the Clown had a crowd of children giggling and shrieking with her magic.
"Look out Cookie!" the children yelled as Roth performed tricks with a Sesame Street Cookie Monster pumpet.
ON THE OTHER SIDE of the statehouse, Flokore Topicano, a Mexican folk dance group from Topeka, twirled colorful skirts and sombreros in fast-paced dances. The group was sponsored by whom had just visited the face painting booth sponsored by the IYC Committee.
"It's cooald!" a Topeka Brownie Scout cried as the colored face cream was applied to her freckled cheeks.
"Yeah, but you look great. Just like the Tinman," a fellow Scout said.
Wandering from the face-painting booth, children came to the play dough mud sponsor by the Salma Arts Council. They were given clay characters and pressed them onto wire frames.
"Ma am, can I help make some of that dough stuff?" skylly asked one little boy who said his name was Todd.
GROWING WEARY while exploring the festival, visitors were treated to apples, milk cheese and raisins.
Babes slept in strollers and parents stretched out on the lawns, exhausted from chasing their children through the festival. Entertainer, too, became tired.
Dressed as Dorothy, Andrea Gleim, from the Department of Economic Development, said, "We're tired, but the whole thing has been great." We were frilled. We're frilled by the response we've gotten.
WZR
106
"Hey Dorothy, " a young fan yelled. "Next time, ya gotta bring Toto!"
STUDIO ONE
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Custodians . . .
From page one
University legally could recognize only the union as a bargaining agent for the custodians.
"WE WOULD HOPE the CAC would get with us. They're going to have to work through us to accomplish anything." he said.
The CAC was formed because the union was not moving quickly enough in blocking a new AMS contract with the University, the said. VanVayne is a union member.
Jacobs said the union had attorneys examining the AMS contract, but so far the attorneys had not publicized their findings.
However, VanBuyne had stressed at the press conference that the CAC was not a bargaining unit for the custodians.
HE ALSO SAID the CAC had been formed to help represent KU supervisors as they cannot represent them because they are considered management.
The CAC also has alleged that when it tried to organize, AMS supervisors tried to attend the meetings to app on the custodians and to write down their names and harass
Daniel Wildet, a representative from the Lawrence chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, and the ACLU recently had contacted by the CAC about possible civil liberties violations.
"But from the reports we have had about supervisors threatening workers if they attend a meeting, it is clearly a First Amendment violation," he said.
THE ACUW WILL consult a lawyer early this week about possible legal action, Wildfetd said, and also will try to find a lawyer to represent him for attending a custodian's meeting.
working people. But it wasn't always that way, she said.
"They used to preach against us in their churches," she said, shaking her head. "After a while, they realized that we're not doing anything." He poked out in the woods not doing anything.
Representatives from various organizations also spoke at the press conference.
Commune ...
From page one
Powell said members of the community often helped neighbors bale hay or perform other jobs. Several members donate blood and some have volunteered in the public library.
"The hippie-commune image has been hard for us to shake." Powell said. "My group is working with the artist decided to join East Wind because the media painted such a blasé picture in my own mind."
"The WORDS 'intentional community' usually conjure up thoughts of the
Jonestew massacre or the Moonies," she said. "Most people just aren't aware that there's a whole other world out there."
People think the revolution died with the early 1760s, but they're wrong. There are tens of thousands of people in this country who believe that the revolution was an alternative economic system," she said.
Alfken said that although the group had just recently begun investing larger amounts of time and labor in recruiting new members, the group was always committed.
"We're hoping for 750 members someday," she said. "It may be 20 or 30 years from now, though."
Community living soon would be a viable alternative for the whole country, she said.
"I really do believe it the wave of the future," she said.
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VISTA
Members of the support group also include social agencies, community service organizations, faculty and students.
Are you interested in the power of the
Come find out every Tuesday 7:30 pm Regionalist Room KU Student Union
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Sponsored by Mustard Seed Fellowship
Northern Natural Gas Company will be on the KU campus November 5
If you are interested, stop by 4010 Learned Placement Office for reservations.
to interview for December and May graduates in Mechanical & Electrical & Civil Engineering. These are for full time positions. Also, there will be interviews for Mechanical & Electrical & Civil Engineering students for summer positions.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 42 free on campus The University of Kansas-Lawrence, Kansas 10 cents off campus Tuesday, October 23, 197
Tuesday, October 23,1979
---
JEFF HETLER/Kansan staff
Psychic reflection
sandra Harper's psychic abilities enable her to see into the past, present and future of people who come to her for psychic predictions and analysis. Her clients are people from
all walks of life and from all over the country. Harper has one client who calls her regularly from Washington, D.C. for predictions over the telephone.
Psychic perceives subconscious messages
Staff Renorter
By TONI WOOD
The memories and impressions of a lifetime have been collected, filed and neatly packaged into layered images that most people don't know exist.
It's her way of getting to know a stranger. She doesn't have to ask about her client's past. She can see it.
she doesn't have to ask how he is feeling or what mood he is in. She can see that too, in the colors that radiate from his body.
But psychic Harper can see those cloudy dimensions, can get into a client's personal files, and can dredge up memories, painful events and harpy occaions.
She answers the questions without hestitation, speaking in a quiet, professional voice.
For $25, a client can spend 30 minutes with Sandra and can ask outrageous questions. "When will I marry?" "Will I live with Sandra or career?" "Is my house really haunted?"
SANDRA'S OFFICE is her kitchen, one of three rooms she and her cat occupy in the back of a large white house in North Lawrence.
ine setting is quiet and relaxing. Her appearance is also calming—long, wavy,
rou hair, a cotton dress that falls shapelessly to the floor and an Egyptian amulet around her neck.
But if the client pays money for dramatics, he is in the wrong kitchen. Sandra is lery of psychics who depend on too much energy, such as Tarot cards.
"I have a sense of knowing what someone else is thinking," she said. "I see visual images and I hear things."
"It's nothing unusual. It's something everybody has."
SANDRA'S CLIENTS include basically everyone, some who have become regular customers. She has one client in Washington and another in California, reading over the telephone.
"When I plug in, it just keeps coming,
sometimes I know what I want,
but sometimes I want to know everything. Most of the time, what I tell them is helpful and can help prepare me."
to be—healing, supportive or informative."
"I become whatever someone needs me
Sandra was recently hired to "read" the clothing of a woman who had been murdered. She said the clothes had a warm, bloody and nerve sensation.
By coming in contact with the clothing of victims, Sandra can sometimes tell the setting of the crime, who the victim was or other circumstances of the crime.
CLIENTS OFTEN bring objects, such as clothing or pictures, for Sandra to read. One widow brought a picture of her first husband and asked Sandra to contact him.
The widow was about to marry for the second time, and wanted her first husband's approval. Sandra saw the man's image as an oval shape by the woman's
Sandra is not frightened by contacting the dead, including ghosts in haunted houses. She said her first apartment in Brooklyn was home to a victim of a man who committed suicide there.
Sandra said the first husband gave his approval to the marriage, but was worried about the relationship between their son and the second husband.
Sandra often heard a tired, slow voice calling, "Sandy, Sandy." She also heard dragging footsteps outside her door and
many of her belongings were moved around.
She was recently in a house in Kansas City that at one time had been a nursing home. Sandra and the room was haunted by the memory of people that it was painful for her to be there.
SANDRA'S POWERS go beyond psychic readings. One of those powers is still undeveloped, but involves moving objects by mental concentration.
She was in her living room one night waiting for a phone call. She said she was in the middle of an intense concentration caused a Fertos bag on the other side of the room to pop open, and then she ran into the hallway.
"I'd like to fake my mind into cleaning up my apartment," she said.
Sandra says her an 85 to 10 percent accuracy rate. That level can be tested because Sandra readily offers predictions, especially those for people who may not be happy a person will be in 20 years.
Sandra said she predicted the date, place and event of Gov. George Wallace's attempted assassination in 1972.
In the early 198s, she predicted that Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, would be elected president in 1980 and re-elected in 1984. She still stands by that prediction.
Suicides predictable, preventable
BY LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
David is a junior, a pre-med major with good grades, many friends, close family ties. He's thinking about killing himself.
David never before had any doubts about his future—be would go to medical school and become a doctor as his father and grandfather had. But now his dreams are slipping away. He has been the chemistry last semester and now he's worried about his grade in biostatistics.
David is a fictitious character, but his plight is very real. And suicidal feelings seem to be much more common than in the past. The University of Kansas was in previous years.
no statistics on student suicides are kept at KU. Of the eight persons who killed themselves in Lawrence that month, 10 of the students whose names are removed from the enrollment lists each year, there is no notation of how many died by their own hand.
The only information on the student
Sydney Schroeder, a psychiatrist at alpine Mines Medical Center, told patients who had made suicidal "gesture" continued, it would mean an increase of 10 to 18 percent from
And, according to those people—psychologists, counselors, police officers—the cries for help that usually preceded them are increasing dramatically this semester.
MATERIALIA EFSTEIN, director of
MARCAFIA EHPSTEIN, center at 6025
Masachusetts S. C., salf she was stumbled by the
MASSACHUSETTS S. C. salf she was stumbled by the
suicide rate comes from people who face the issue in the course of their jobs.
"I can't explain it. It goes up and down from year to year. This year it looks like it's going to be um." Scherdep said it.
"We've had six contacts in the past week," she said.
Ruth Mikkeison, associate director of residential programs, said four people had attempted suicide in KU residence halls so
Scott Jarsus, graduate assistant at the KU Information Center, said he had noted an increase in "personal assistance" calls, the category that includes potential suicides.
The fictitious student, David, however, illustrates traits that many counselors say are a common ground for most suicides.
far this semester, compared with 13 last year. All the attempts were unsuccessful.
David, first of all, is suffering from a loss of self-esteem. A great loss, be it of a boyfriend or girlfriend, or at something less painful, may result in a lack of confidence, can trigger a suicide depression.
WHAT HAS caused the increase in suicidal feelings among KU students this year? There are no definite answers to the question, and not even any theories.
"There are as many reasons as there are suicides," Gary Bachman, assistant director of Headquarters, said.
devil also is losing his dream of being a doctor and, in his mind, is letting his family down. The thought of disappointing others another trait shared by many asocial individuals
students. For example, studies show that suicide
rates are higher at the beginning of the semester than at other times and that suicides are more likely to occur among students than among others, Neeringer said.
"It seems to be a problem of adjustment," Charles Neuringer, a professor of neurochology, said.
And, contrary to expectations, mid-terms and finals do not boost the suicide rate.
"Everyone thinks exams are traumatic, but there really doesn't seem to be a problem," Neuringer said. "A test may be the last straw in, and of itself, it is not a crucial one."
OTHER STATISTICS offer no precise explanations, but can draw a profile of student suicides.
More women than men attempt suicide, but twice as many men are successful.
More graduate than undergraduate students kill themselves.
succents who live alone are more likely to commit suicide than those who have roommates.
See SUICIDES page three
Two Kansas legislators express serious doubt yesterday about the chances of formula funding being approved for use in Regents institutions.
Hayden, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said adoption of the present formula funding proposal would require schools to "chase an entrance fee."
Legislators skeptical about formula funding
BvJEFFSJERVEN
Staff Reporter
"We need to determine whether the formula would require cuts in funding for these schools or would call only for raising funds for schools where a deficiency was shown."
State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-DLawrence,
and State Sen. Katherine Hogan, both
legislators had doubt about using the funding levels of selected peer universities as benchmarks for the formula
"The Regents say they want to bring in more high school teachers to the average of their peers, Berman said. "They are two regents schools, Pittsburgh State and Emporia State, have funds that exceed the budget."
HAYDEN ALSO said it was dangerous to compare funding in Kansas with that in other states.
"Comparing KU's budget with the ones from other companies is anything," he said. "That doesn't take into account the different income tax rates, property tax rates and standards of living in the city."
"As we improve funding at our schools," Hayden said, "so does everybody else, especially in these times of severe inflation. Is that a good benchmark to base our fun
The peer institutions of the University of Kansas are the University of Colorado, the University of town, the University of North Carolina and the University of Oklahoma and the University of Oregon.
Formula funding does not fit well with many types of university programs, Hayden said.
HAYDEN SAID the legislature was not likely to approve formula funding for computing the fiscal 1981 budgets of Regents schools.
UNDER FORMULA funding, according to a report by the Regents task force on funding, each university prepares a budget request for programs already in existence. Each university also calculates a "benechmark funding at peer schools" from analyzing funding at peer schools.
"The intent of the formula funding proposal is to give a picture of how Regents schools compare to their peers," Lowman said. "Great care was taken in choosing the students in states with similar population patterns, academic emphasis and tax bases."
James Lowman, dean, at the KU school of medicine and a member on the Regents task force on funding, said the funding formula was based on the benchmark for determining school budgetets.
"The Legislature will move very slowly on this," he said. "At most, it might decide to use the formula to determine funds in one year." But that is a very openist outlook."
"No comparison is perfect. There is not another, Kansas."
However, the report said, the Legislature and governor are not obliged to adhere precisely to funding requests based on the new formula.
The benchmark is computed by considering the level of funding, the number of student credit hours and the size of each university.
Last year Regents schools calculated budget requests under the new formula. However, Gov John Carlin decided to use a full-time equivalent enrollment.
Late pay irks committee
The TIAM invests the retirement fund principal in mortgages and other annuities, while the CREF invests the principal in stocks.
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Reporter
The Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association and the College Retirement Assistance Program pay 8% percent interest on the deductions for the faculty member's
Under University retirement programs, 5 percent of the budget is dedicated each month. The University then matches the deduction, making the total retirement contribution 10 percent of the budget.
"The loss per faculty member per month is in the range of $0 to $50 depending on the department." The report said, "However, cumulative losses are employer- statewide are considerable over time."
if the TIAA and the GREF do not receive the deductions within a 30-day grace period from the first of each month, they will not receive them from the faculty member's retirement fund
Each time a paycheck is late, the State Division of Accounts and Reports (DAR) can not send any deductions to the appraisal resultin resulting in the loss of a moll's interest.
some faculty use tax Shetterley and others. If the HAA and the CREF, TSA deductions are handled separately by the DAR, but must be used when the other retirement funds are used.
the committee recommended that the deductions be wired to the retirement companies instead of mailed.
the acuity members who participate in the faculty injury members who participate in the TIAA or the CAM companies that companies do not allow a 30-day grace period.
NEITHER COBLER or Martin were available yesterday to comment on the late paycheeks or the committee's recommendations.
"The U.S. mail service to TIAA/CREF is slow," the report said. "Perhaps payment could be wired, gaining time for institutions and risking of late payments."
The committee report said, "The State requirement that the basic and supplemental payroll must be recruited before the DAR results are released to the DAR results in all faculty risk loss.
"Second, changes in employment and the addition of new faculty increase the chance for error in record information."
The "payroll process contains several elements which may contribute to lateness. First, the state reporting requirements have a heavy load on University bookkeeping.
THE COMMITTEE suggested that the DAR include the retirement fund problem in its study of the State's payroll system.
The Faculty rights committee recommended that James Cobler, director of the DAR, and Martin Jones, KU's associate director of business affairs, seek to change the institution's policies to hold University staff deductions until all are received before sending them in.
The DAR began a study in August to determine the needs of the State's payroll system.
The committee further recommended that the University and state should:
- Inform those faculty investing or considering investing in private voluntary TSA
See PAYCHECKS page seven
Activity fee raise needed to keep pace with inflation
Staff Reporter
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
Staff Reporter
An increase in student activity fees is a benefit for students. The student organizations funded through the Student Senate Revenue Code, Margaret Berlin, student body president said.
"The increase would be at least 90 cents per student," Berlin said.
The increase is necessary, she said, to keep up with inflation.
Under tbl Senate revenue code, fourteen
of the 11.129 student set a percentage
of the $11.129 student enrollment. A portion of the fee also is set aside for other student organizations and
expenses.
"The maximum increase could be about $2." Berlin said. "But it will probably be only 90 cents."
ORGANIZATIONS are included in the revenue code if they serve a large number of students. We have well-established on campus and must have a record of spending their total allocation
Berlin said she did not think asking for an increase in student activity fees was unreasonable.
For example, she said, the KU Bands have not had an increase in their allocation in 10 years.
The Concert and Chamber Music Series
would like to include funding for its summer music series, Berlin said, and probably will request an increase in its allocation.
"We haven't had an increase in student activity fees for quite a while," she said. We're trying to be as cost-efficient as possible.
IF A STUDENT activity fee increase is needed, Bedin said, the request would have to be approved by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and the Kansas Board of Regents.
During spring budget hearings, Berlin said, each organization in the revenue code must come before a Student Senate committee to justify its block allocation.
"These groups are deemed as being worthy and responsible to receive funding every year." Berlin said.
Organization funded under the revenue code and the portion each receives from the $11.10 student activity paid by each student are:
Recreation Advisory Board, $2.55
University Daily Kansan, $2.25
Theatre, $80; University Concert Series,
$125; Band, $30; KU Fonerics, $10; JKH-KF M-
Radio, $25; Legal Services Council, $12;
Associate Student Council, $8; Adjunct
Student Council, $41; Architecture and Urban Design
Council, $02; Student Bar Association, $02;
Student Senate, $58; student organizations,
$25 or the $5 for the Senate's unallocated
fund.
2
Tuesday, October 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wine Services
Sears sued for discrimination
WASHINGTON—The federal government took Sears Roebuck and Co. to court in five instances on charges that the retailer practiced unfair competition against a consumer.
A commission appointed by the state's legislature to investigate the federal court in Chicago accused Sears of violating the Civil Rights and Equal Pay acts by discriminating against women in 48 cases.
Four other suits filed simultaneously in New York City, Atlanta, Montgomery, Ala., and Memphis, Tenn., comply with a discrimination law that requires suits in four areas.
The salts, brought by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, are among the largest employment discrimination cases ever launched by the
Sears is one of the nation's largest employers, with a workforce of 400,000 in five states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. The company has 562 retail locations across the country.
Burned Marines may not live
SAN ANTONIO, Texas—Nineteen of the 37 Marines airlifted after a fire in Japan area on Saturday that injured their bodies and have less than a 50-60 percent survival rate of the Army's 104th Air Force.
Fruitt said four of the victims were burned over more than 80 percent of their bodies and seven had burns covering 60 percent of their bodies.
"We anticipate more deaths," said Col. Jalal Sultan, one of the commands in the attack. "We have had five victims we have died from but two others. Prout said four of the victims were burned over 80 percent of their body."
becomes and even seven years old but the chance of survival would have a better chance than most burn victims because they were all young, from 17 to 22 years old, and in existence.
More than 70 sleeping Marines were buried before down Friday when fire swept through an enlisted man's barracks at the Mt. Fuji base, 90 miles
Paint in a 1,000 gallon container ignited after it was damaged by wind and rain from Tyvhoen Tin.
Ozark strike could end today
ST. LOUIS - Flight attendants balloted yesterday on whether to accept a new contact with OAK airlines and end a strike that began Sept. 14.
voting by the 475 attendants began in St. Louis and will continue today in Chicago. The ballots will be drawn to the union's national headquarters in New York City.
Linda Beaver, chairman of the Local 28 of the Association of Flight Attendants, said results would be announced tonight or early tomorrow.
Union leaders 'had announced' Sunday they would postpone voting until Thursday because of problems with the proposed contract and ballots printed. However, the printer was able to complete reprinting the material overnight, and it was decided yesterday to proceed with the voting as originally planned.
promised a contract agreement was reached Saturday. Details were not disclosed pending the vindication vote, but union leaders said they would continue with their deal.
Israeli settlement ruled illegal
JERUSALEM—In a landmark decision that surpassed the nation, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled yesterday that the government illegally seized private property in Jerusalem.
using the first in which an Israeli court found a settlement in the occupied West Bank insult, came a day after Mose Deyan resigned as foreign minister.
Dayan disagreed with the government's tough stands, led by Prime Minister Meng Kexin, on Palestine autonomy and West Bank settlements.
The five-judge Supreme Court ordered that the settlement at Elon Moreh, near the town of Nabus in the West Bank of the Jordan River, be dismantled within 30 days. The court was acting on an appeal by 17 Arabs whose land was appointed for the settlement.
The developments dealt a blow to Begin's ruling coalition, which will face several motions of no confidence in the Israeli parliament today. The coalition is expected to survive them, however, and Begin will probably reject the opposition Labor Party's call for new elections.
Bishov confesses before dying
CARSON CITY, Nev. —Jess Bishop, the hardened killer who spurned efforts to prolong his life, died in Nevada's gas chamber yesterday after telling his friend he was killed by an ambush.
that was loaded into the gas chamber, last used in 1961, shortly after midnight and was strapped into a freshly painted seat. She smiled at a reporter through a window. "I'm not sure," she said.
mishop, 46, convicted of murdering a man who tried to stop him from robbing a Las Vegas casino, was the second man to be executed in the United States this year.
Nevada Prison Director Charles Wolfr. Jr. said he had heard rumors from unofficial sources that Bishop had killed as many as 18 others.
And Judge Paul Goldman, who sentenced Bishop and later visited him in prison, said Bishop had told him about committing a number of homicides.
prison, said Bishop had told him about committing a hamburger on church bibles. Bishop spent more than 20 years in prison for robbery and drug crimes but
Broken bar cause of derailment
OFFERLEL - a broken angle bar was the cause of the derelishment yesterday of three sleeper cars of Amtrak a Southwest Limited in which 24 passengers were
Most of the injured suffered only cuts, bumps and bruises. Three persons required hospitalization.
Santa Fe Railway spokesman Richard Bradley said railroad investigators had determined an angle bar, which holds two pieces of rail together, had been struck by a train.
The final three cars of the 11-car, three-engine train left the track as the train neared the city limits of Offerle, a town of 300 persons about 30 miles east of London.
A train jumped the tracks in Lawrence Oct. 2 leaving two dead and nearly 70 injured. Authorities said the train that d叙职 in Lawrence was traveling 78 miles per hour in a 30 mile per hour zone when the crash occurred.
Firemen reach tentative accord
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Negotiators for union firefighters yesterday reached a tentative agreement with the city's first breakthrough in a scheduling agreement.
The tentative agreement calls for a relief plan under which firefighters will fill in at no more than two different stations and at only one during a week's stay.
The plan will be presented to the city's 930 members Thursday or Friday, officials said.
Fire officials said the agreement would replace the current "floating" shift schedule with a "refired" plan...
KPL undecided on rate appeal
TOPEKA-Affiliates of Kansas Power and Light said they would examine a Kansas Corporation Commission order before deciding whether to take an action.
The KCC yesterday denied a rehearing of a KPL rate increase request that the KCC cut by $25 million.
Commissioners denied the rehearing without comment. An order is expected to be drafted later this week.
Weather
The National Weather Service in Topeka forecasts sunny skies and warmer temperatures for today. High temperatures will be from 6 to 60 and lows in the range of 45 to 50 degrees Celsius.
Temperate areas should be sunny and warmer with cools in the rain too. In summer, the snow will melt through Saturday with little or no chance of rain. Highs should be the 70s and lowns in
also should be sunny and warmer with highs in the mid 60s
sua films
Presents
AUDREY HEPBURN
ALAN ARKIN
RICHARD CRENNA
CRAIG
What did they want with her?
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A. SAYS
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We have positions to fill.
President Carter has called the fight for tomorrow's energy the "moral equivalent of war." The front-page article identifies the nation's greatest challenge needs superior engineering graduates.
industry professionals to create successful careers. City Power & Light has choice career openings that place you where your classmates will be in five years at high levels; at high levels of authority and responsibility with earnings and now opportunities to work in a dynamic, diverse role.
Kansas City Power & Light Company is a billion-dollar utility and energy supplier to over a million people in a major commercial and industrial center encompassing 23 counties in two states. Because of growing energy demand, expansion, and promotions, we need engineers with leadership capabilities
Because of growing energy to take over in these key areas:
Fossil Plant Construction and Engineering
Two Mechanical Engineers, one Electrical Engineer and one Civil Engineer are needed to coordinate the project with a coordinate with Consulting Engineering firms involved in building plants. The engineering plans. These engineers will also design modifications to existing plants and at times will be required to install
District Commercial Operations
We need two Service Engineers with degrees in Electrical or Mechanical Engineering (or Engineering Technology) to deal with representations of engineering skills, and with Engineering and other departments of the Company. In addition to having good engineering skills, the graduates must be able to remain on the job while being positioned under pressure. These positions require extra savvy.
System Planning
One Mechanical, Electrical or Industrial Engineer (or Engineering Technology Engineer) perform studies of the cost benefit trade-offs of designated projects involving generation capacity, technology and course work in Economics and the ability to program in Computerization skills are also important as this involves interface with other departments. Familiarity with economic modeling is
Energy Management Services
We need two Engineers with degrees in Mechanical or Electrical Engineering (or机械工程) to explain electric heating, air conditioning, conservation techniques, and renewable sources of energy to customers. We must also consult engineers. This involves constant research to remain current with the industry. Candidates must communicate accurately and tactfully.
Generating Stations
Three Maintenance Engineers with leadership skills are needed for trouble-shooting, special studies, efficiency tests, and overseeing contract crews. They provide supervision and management. Graduating students who will have degrees in Mechanical or Electrical Engineering (or Engineering Technology) are required to serve the following locations, some in conenial small town locales:
Iatan Station — live in Kansas City
LaCayne Station — live in Louisburg or Paola, Kansas, 20 to 40 miles away
Monroe Station — live in Clinton, Missouri, about 60 miles from Kansas City
Distribution Engineering
One Electrical Engineer who has taken power engineering courses in need to design both overhead and underground distribution systems. Some field work is involved with construction to incorporate into Construction and Maintenance or technical supervision.
System Power Operations Staff
The Manager of Generating Stations is seeking an exceptional Mechanical Engineer to staff as well. Electrical Engineering as well as Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Technology is considered. This person will assist in administration of the Preventative Maintenance and Efficiency Programs and the Systems. Candidates must be good at planning and, due to the nature of the liaison work, should have a unique and very challenging opportunity requiring a sharp individual ability to work with people of diverse uniqueness. It also affords good exposure to top management.
KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT
Our representatives will be interviewing on campus in the near future; and they will be placement office.
An Equal Employment Opportunity Employer M/F/V/H
KCPL
University Dally Kansan
Tuesday, October 23, 1979
Suicides . . .
3
From page one
Most student suicides occur between midnight and 6 a.m., and the most common method is the use of a firearm.
But these trends are based only on numbers. Suicide is not reserved for those who fit the statistical description.
"Suicide is an alternative that is available to every one of us," Bachman said.
WHATTEVER THE CAUSE and whoever the person, what Nearring calls a suicide “continuum” can quickly carry a student from depression to despondency.
Anyone—parents, friends, roommates—can use the tools of the professional counselor to break that continuum.
"You have to watch for the non-verbal signs," Mikkelson said. "In one case, a student started selling his clothes."
Residence hall advisers are taught to watch for those signs, which usually begin with social withdrawal and can also include
a lack of interest in school, excessive eating or drinking, starvation or vacillations in mood from despondency to frenetic cheerfulness.
If a person seems to be on the path to suicide, Mikkelson said, the residence hall advisers will "draw a net" around him.
They will try to involve the student in hail activities. They will help the help of other students to learn important life skills and friendly faces. And, if suicide accompanies imminent, they will not leave the student.
"Our staff has intervened in several cases and, I know, saved lives." Mikkelsen said. "In one case it meant going to a bridge and talkin' the person out of it."
EPSTEIN AND Bachman, at Headquarters, said several fallacies about suicides must be dispelled in order to help prevent such individuals more effectively.
"It is not a trial assumption that, because a person talks about it, he won't do it," Baichman said. "In one study, 80 percent of the patients who admitted surcaced suicide had talked about it before."
And, most often, if a person is thinking hard, it helps him lose out and calling him insulted. It instead, he might say, "I don't feel my life is worth it," or "How would they feel if I were gone?" Epstein
And once someone starts to confide his feelings, it is not a good idea to avoid mentioning suicide in the hope of dispelling the thought.
"You have to bring it up," Epstein said.
"You have to eventually say, Hey, are you thinking about killing yourself?" That will bring either a firm no or a sign of relief.
"Giving the person the opportunity to talk about it helps him deal with it."
AT KU, there is no dearth of professional
help. The people at KU Information Center are trained in crisis intervention and they can also refer a caller to a counselor 24 hours a day.
Headquarters and the Bert Nash Mental Health Center, 4th & Missouri streets, are open around the clock.
The University Counseling Center in Bedford Hall, the Psychological Clinic in Praise Hall, and the Mental Health Center in Twente Annex and the Mental Health Clinic at Walkins are open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Wednesday).
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• Dick Hamilton
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• Joe Drake
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For Appointments
Sorority Rush 1980 Registration Meeting
October 25 at 8 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Come and pick up Rush registration packets.
Bring your questions!
Rush will be held January 9-14, 1980.
A FOREVER LOVE STORY
BLOOD DRIVE
. . . continuing Today and Tomorrow 11:30-4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Give according to appointments scheduled last week. Walk-ins are encouraged but should expect to wait.
Sponsored by: Panhellenic Assoc., Interfraternity Council, Assoc. of University Res. Halls, and Circle K Club
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan only the writers. Signed columns represent the views of all
October 23.1979
Fair budgeting vital
The activity fees of 25,000 KU students brought in more than $428,000 this year. That's a big pile.
Each fall and spring the Student Senate sits down and decides who gets how much of that pie.
In theory, all students get a return on their activity fees, either through recreational services, legal services or dozens of other activities. But the truth of the matter is that some students get more return on their money than others. And the Student Senate helps decide which students those will be.
THE FUNDING process has two parts—the regular funding in the spring and the supplementary budgeting in the fall.
The process is bound to have arbitrary elements in it—as any legislative process should be. The legislative process is personal preferences of the legislative body's members.
However, the budgeting process in the Student Senate leaves itself open to more arbitrariness than seems likely in the best interests of the student body.
Although the full Senate has the final say on the allocation of funds to campus groups, it is the 25-member Budget Committee that first reviews the requests and makes the recommendations for funding to the full Senate.
UNFORTUNATELY, the 25-member
committee rarely draws more than 10 members to its meetings to discuss the funding requests. The groups go before the committee, the review of their requests are made and the recommendations are forwarded to the Senate.
The groups have the opportunity to make changes in the requested funding before the Senate with the backing of a senator. But the committee's recommendations often go through as submitted.
The Senate bylaws restrict to some degree the discretion of the committee members in making their recommendations. But the bylaws have to be interim, and the committee members see fit. That, by definition, is an arbitrary decision.
THE ALLOCATION of funds is perhaps the Senate's primary responsibility, yet the attention paid to it is weak at best. The Senate committee, or the Senate, has been unfathiable to its responsibilities in the funding process.
But we do suggest that if the Senate is to cut the student funding pie—as we feel they should—then they ought to take special care to see that responsibility is fulfilled honestly, with as little arbitrariness as possible.
To do otherwise only serves to shed further doubt on the Senate's handling of students' money.
Castro's aid plea a hypocritical ploy
Fidel Castro made a deep impression upon the countries of the world recently with his driving speech before the United Nations General Assembly.
It was in that speech that he denounced U.S. "aggressive" foreign policies and called for a $300 billion fund for Third World countries.
Sadly enough, he received strong support from many representatives for his unrealistic ideals and erroneous statements.
IF WE LOOK past Castro's attempt to
do a good-sight image, we can see him as
DT
Fidel Castro
his ever-cunning self. And we can see that his words were as hypocritical as ever.
INDEED, WHILE he was calling for
inadeed to Third World nations and labeling
them 'aggressive' and 'imperialistic', both
Cuba and the Soviet Union were
continuing to exploit the governments,
and America, the Middle East and Africa.
Uga is involved in more than 20 of these countries, and it is not in the form of financial aid to help them pulloves out of the quamigre of poverty.
On the contrary, Cuba is offering military aid to pro-Communist factions in these nations and is telling government officials how to run their countries.
John COLUMNIST fischer
IN MOST of these cases, Cuba is doing the dirty work for its friend, the Soviet Union, in exploiting these countries because they often under officers' commands.
So, while thousands of people suffer innocently in these countries, as Castro pointed out, both the Soviet Union and Cuba continue to take advantage of their plight for the sake of their own nationalistic tactic that Castro accuses the United States of using.
So what exactly were Castro's intentions in his speech? And why is he suddenly demanding that the US make concessions his country and the Soviet Union are exploiting? Has Castro received a divine revolution and conceived it as a way of characterizing beauside is usually known for?
A bomb is going to be dropped on the Third World today.
DON'T BE fooled, it is just a ploy by Castro to pull the wool over the eyes of those countries and add further tension in the game. This happens when those countries also not be fooled.
whether it explodes depends not only on the leaders of those nations, but also, to a large extent, on the indignation of the American public.
Castro is calling for $30 billion a year of the world to help resolve 'nations' of the world to help resolve the Third World Nations. But to raise these issues nearly politically imposes these days.
The bomb is the November issue of the magazine Mother Jones, and its articles highlight the common threats that American businesses, and even the United States government, has of dumping nuclear waste.
CASTRO'S CALLING for such a huge sum in aid is another play to hinder relations between the Western nations—especially the United States—and the Third World. Those underestimated nation, and any failure to provide it will only blacken the U.S.'s already farnished image abroad.
Pesticides that have caused sterility in Americans, contraceptives that have failed for American women, drugs that have been banned in American schools, people—all kinds of products rejected by the United States—are being shipped en maze to foreign countries, especially to the Third World.
Plagued by high inflation rates and plagiarized by economic problems, very few Western nations understand the amounts of aid without feeling political repercussions at home and economic repercussions abroad.
By standing silently to Castro's criticism, the United States is only making his charismatic appeal in Third World countries will play a dominant role in international affairs in the years ahead of us, and the United States cannot- and should not idle by.
KANSAN
TODAY, THE issue of Mother Jones is being hand delivered to every embassy in Washington, D.C. Copies are being sent weekly and you may be the key major newspaper in the world now has a copy. And foreign correspondents are scheduled to meet today with the authors of the exposé.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Presentation: New needs address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Institute 5K6405
The Mother Jones article is shocking and frightening. For that reason, and because public opinion can change the situation, it is important to summarize the low points of the investigation.
U. S. 105-6489-41 Published at the University of Kansas Daily August through May and Monday and Thursday and September through November 30, 2014. Publication date is November 27, 2014. Subscription price is $25 per month or $120 for a year. If a year is desired, contact Department of Psychology at U.Kansas.edu/psychology.
Editor Mary Hoenb
Managing Editor Nancy Dressler
Editorial Editor Mary Ernst
Export of banned products immoral
Business Manager Cynthia Ray
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
- In 1971, A.H. Robins Co. began distributing a contraceptive intrauterine device (IUD) designed to kill the complaints we were pouring in pelvic inflammations, punctured uterines, blood poisoning, even death. By 1974, when about 20,000 women in the United States, 17 women had died as a direct result of its use and more than 200,000 cases of adverse uterine infections had been treated.
But it is in this area that the practice of dumping comes full circle, to harm those who created the harm.
BUT THE Dalken Shield was sold overseas even after the U.S. government, which had purchased thousands of the IUDs from A.H. Robins Co., at a 48 percent price.
- Pamela, an antihisthetic by upiader Co. was killed in sales in the United States in 1929 because she was ineffective and dangerous, even lethal, to many people. But today, Pamela is known by another name.
It is no coincidence, then, that 500,000 people are poisoned annually by pesticides, according to a World Health Organization estimate.
lynn COLUMNIST byczynski
Those pesticides are sprayed on crops that are later harvested and exported to the United States. What was deemed too toxic for our corn is coming back in our coffee.
In 1977, 240 million pairs of children's saplains, all treated with the flame-vented Tris, were banned in this country. A found to be extremely carmineous.
BUT IT wasn't until the next year that they had learned that they were banned for export. In that year, their surplus paajamas were bought up at a fraction of their former retail worth and went on sale.
- The pesticide DBCP was banned in
California after it was found to cause damage to the soil and had handled it. The Environmental Protection Agency has since imposed severe limitations on its use and is considering legislation for the site.
But again, what is unacceptable for the people of the United States is not necessarily the policies and actions of other nations. A provision of the law governing pesticides explicitly states that pesticides
AND THOSE pesticides are sent abroad without instructions for their use printed in the book. In all cases, the result, safety precautions are often recommended and recommended applications exceeded.
And if U.S. businesses cannot be convinced to stop the practice of dumping because it is so immoral, then U.S. companies must find alternative solutions for reasons of this nation's self-interest.
And in further interest of the Study of the American family, I am personally going to donate the first research specimen. BILLY MARIN DALLY KANSAS
Python film critics overly sensitive
To the Editor:
After seeing Monty Python's "Life of Brian," I am confused as to why certain church leaders felt it necessary to condemn the film. As I understand it, the church leaders are upset because the film makes derogatory remarks about the life of Jesus
I don't see how "Brian" could be considered an attack on Jesus or Christianity. It is an attack on the willingness of some people to help Jesus for their sake for the hope of salvation.
I CAN ONLY conclude that the church leaders who criticized this film are criticizing it for no apparent reason.
When I saw the film I saw none of this and even began to think these church leaders had been paid by Monty Python's agents to make these complaints for the publicity. That's how puzzled they be their compulsory if maybe they meant mother film.
If the church leaders were upset because the film handled the followers rather roughly, I would suggest they not take themselves so seriously. They should put things of the spirit before matters of the flesh, and Monty Python's film just says that.
IN THE FIRST place, Brian and Jesus are two separate and distinct characters in the film. The character of Jesus is even shown as a blind man who is listening to his sermon who are depicted in a derogatory way. That's the way it is throughout the whole film. The way he is depicted in the film is that of Monty Python's attack. In the second place, Brian is mistaken for "the messiah," not for Jesus Christ. "The messiah" for Jesus Christ. "The messiah" for free Jews from Roman domination.
Kevin Courtney 1108 Ohio
Arbitrary language is only 'trivial truth'
To the Editor:
The letter from Steve Pritchard bemoaning the "arbitrary" nature of language is worth looking at, not because it solves any problems or explains anything, but because it very clearly shows some of the real problems, usually using their confusion only behind the scenes.
We can easily imagine what it would be like if language were genuinely "arbitrary" as Pritchard suggests. Most of our everyday conversations are well ordered; we might well order pizza when we really want hamburgers, and the waitress would be likely to serve up fried chicken or chop some pasta. But when we would but we would shrub out our vexation with a sigh, recalling that language is, alas, arbitrary, and hence there is no reason to understand anything said anyone else.
One "nays" that the animal in the field is to be called a cow, as though that peculiar animal is a domestic animal, what a cow is. Linguistic standards are not arrived at by any procedure as complicated as universal consensus, nor by any circumstance, but a relationship between words and things.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
THESE OF us who talk to ourselves might misunderstand our own words so thoroughly that we would walk away from a conversation with fans would be in a perpetual tiring. For how could they rely on reports of their favorite teams when those reports are not reliable? "binary" language? One wonders where there is any evidence to suggest that our conversations have confusions about how language operates.
Of course everybody is "free to interpret anything or everything" as he or she sees fit. That is a trivial truth, and it is neither here nor there. If one pretends to contribute something to the education of confusion, then one abides by the common standards, traditions, and conventions which combine to make language meaningful and understandable. And that is also a tool for making the objects of knowledge; it makes those objects what they are.
LANGUAGE IS one form of experience and behavior. A word is one kind of thing among others. To separate words from things is not to simplify or explain; it is to postulate the existence of two orders of events, necessarily both inaccessible and useless.
G. L. Smith Mayetta graduate student
Because of its losses, Chrysler corporation is seeking loans from the U.S. government. But one of its largest investors would be to sell its $4 million South African operation.
Chrysler should sell S. African interests
The presence of Chrysler, and other U.S. corporations, in South Africa does not have the same impact on the undemocratic and racist minority government. According to the UN report, "The net effect of
To the Editor:
American investment has been to strengthen the economic and military self-sufficiency of South Africa's apartheid regime."
a reasonable condition on loans being granted to Chrysler would be that Chrysler sell its South African holdings.
Mark Cline Medicine Lodge senior
INFLATION
Spiriously Paul...
where are the brakes on this thing?
Dead ahead.
RECESSION
The Fed
October 7-13 was officially designated as Alcohol Awareness Week. It is ironic that a few daft comments have been written in a letter of complaint about University affiliated functions at which 'free beer' but no 'free' alternations are permitted. The course, paid for from the general funds of the sponsoring group and so is not free—it is, in fact, paid for by those who don't drink alcohol.
Many companies and institutions of higher learning have a stated policy that any function at which alcoholic beverages are served. The reasoning is that there are many people who may, on any given occasion, drink or smoke alcoholic toxicating and that there are others for whom "intoxicating" is exactly the right word, implying that alcohol is for them, and lethal poison.
Other beverages could 'spike' parties to the Fooler:
I deeply hope that the previous letter and these additional words may lead SUA, Residential Programs, the Senior Class, and the Student Class to alumni groups—to consider adopting a policy which requires the serving of alternative beverages at their functions on campus. Students should choose those places where such a policy is in effect, it has caused no drop in attendance or pleasure and has enhanced the gathering for success from necessity not choose to drink alcohol.
George F. Wedge
Assocate Professor, English and Linguistics, and Certified Alcoholic Counselor Committee on Alcoholism Committee on Alcoholism
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kanan welcomes letters to the eduinl letters should be in English, but any other language should include 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is african descent, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. They should also include the right to edit letters for publication.
Suicides
Tuesday, October 23, 1979
. . .
From page one
Most student suicides occur between midnight and 6 a.m., and the most common method is the use of a firearm.
But these trends are based only on numbers. Suicide is not reserved for those who fit the statistical description.
"Sucicide is an alternative that is available to every one of us." Bachman said.
WHILE THE CAUSE and whoever the person, what Nearinger calls a suicide “continuum” can quickly carry a student from depression to despondency.
Anyone—parents, friends, roommates—can use the tools of the professional counselor to break that continuum.
"You have to watch for the non-verbal signs," Mikkelson said. "In one case, a student started selling his clothes."
Residence hall advisers are taught to watch for those signs, which usually begin with social withdrawal and can also include
a lack of interest in school, excessive eating or drinking, starvation, or vacillations in mood from despondency to frenetic cheerfulness.
If a person seems to be on the path to suicide, Mikkelson said, the residence hall advisers will "draw a net" around him.
They will try to involve the student in hall activities. They will enlist the help of other students and teachers to make friendly faces. And, if suicide becomes imminent, they will not leave the student.
"Our staff has intervened in several cases and, I know, saved lives," Mikkelson said. "In one case it meant going to a bridge and talking the person out of it."
EPSTEIN AND Bachman, at Headquarters, said several failures about suicides can be dispelled in order to help treat such individuals more effectively.
"It is not a valid assumption that, because a person talks about it, he won't do it," Bacchman said. "In one study, 80 percent of the students who had sexed sadue had talked about it before."
And, most often, if a person is thinking about killing himself, he won't come right away. "If you don't feel like life is worth it," or "I don't feel my life is worth it," or "Would they feel if I were gone?" "Epstein
and once someone starts to confide his feelings, it is not a good idea to avoid mentioning suicide in the hope of dispelling the thought.
"You have to bring it up," Epstein said. "You have to eventually say, Hey, are you thinking about killing yourself?" That will bring either a firm no or a sign of relief.
"Giving the person the opportunity to talk about it helps him deal with it."
AT KU, there is no dearth of professional
help. the people at KU Information Center are trained in crisis intervention and they can also refer a caller to a counselor 24 hours a day.
Headquarters and the Bert Nash Mental Health Center, 4th & Missouri streets, are open around the clock.
The University Counseling Center in Bailey Hall, the Psychological Clinic in Bailey Hall, and the Mental Center in Twente Annex and the Mental Center in Twente Annex are open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays.
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904 Vermont 833-8019
EXGALIBUR
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Hair Cutting For Men And Women
NOW OPEN
REDKEN®
Heartfelt
We use & recommend
RK & Redken Products
• Dick Hamilton
• Eva Schroff
• Joe Drake
• Teresa Ledom
2711 W. 8th, Suite D
Lawrence, Ka. 60044
(913) 841-7667
For Appointments
Sorority Rush 1980 Registration Meeting
October 25 at 8 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Come and pick up Rush registration packets.
Bring your questions!
Rush will be held January 9-14,1980.
BLOOD DRIVE
. . . continuing Today and Tomorrow 11:30-4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Give according to appointments scheduled last week Walk-ins are encouraged but should expect to wait.
Sponsored by: Panhellenic Assoc., Interfraternity Council, Assoc. of University Res. Halls, and Circle K Club
Tuesday, October 23, 1979
5
Zidd earns Big 8 honors
KANSAS CITY, Mo. AP -AKANSas defensive life Jim Zidh has been named Big Eight defensive player of the week in Iowa on Tuesday in the 24-7 victory over Iowa State.
Daddy, a senior, logged a dozen tackles, including 10 unassisted. He turned in six quarterbackacks, for 43 yards in losses, and never wrecked the Cyclone score.
"He completely intimidated the team," Coach Don Farrambuck. "Iowa State could not block him. It was a tremendous performance. I don't think he could have done that."
Zidd admits it was probably his best game.
"I had five sacks once last year, but I feel it was my best game in rushing the passer.
"I can see us winning four of the next five games."
The Jayhawks have already played, and lost to, Nebraska, and must visit Oklahoma later.
"Oklahoma is always tough," he said "But I can see us beating Okie State, Kansas State and Missouri."
Steelers crush Broncos
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Taryn Bradshaw of the Pittsburgh hurled for 121 yards and two more scores as the Pittsburgh Steelers crushed the Denver Broncos 427 last night in a game that ended in a tie.
The triumph moved the Steeleers, 6-2, into sole possession of first place in the AFC Central Division. The Broncos, 5-3, slipped second place behind San Diego in the AFC West.
Harris, who managed his second 100-plus game of the season on 12 carries, scored twice and recorded 2 of 2 and 8. He set up a first-quarter touchdown with a 56-yard run around left.
Bradshaw completed 18 of 24 passes for 267 yards. He threw an 11-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter to Lynn Swann,
Bradshaw added a 17-yard scoring loss in the final quarter to running back Sidney Thornton, who also plunged for an earlier touchdown.
Steeler's rookie Anthony Anderson bent 10 yards for his first pro touchdown with 26 seconds left in the game to cup a drive that ended in an interception by linebacker Jack Lambert.
On their first series of the night, the Steelers put together an 80-yard drive that included Harris' 65-yard run and ended with Swam's touchdown catch.
The Broncos responded on their next series with the 64-yard touchdown by Mones, who made the catch near the Pittsburgh 58. The Browns scored a sprint free with a clear path to the end zone.
Swan's 6-8 pass play was the longest this season for Pittsburgh. He took the ball away from cornerback Louis Wright near the end of the first half, by safety Bernard Jackson at the Denver 16.
KLZR
106
Denver, beaten 33-10 here in the playoffs last year, managed its only touchdown in the first quarter on a 42-yard pass play from Craig Morton to Haven Moses.
sua films Presents
BREWSTER MCCLOUD
14
METROCOLOR
BUD CORT MGM
SALLY KELLERMAN
Wednesday, Oct. 24
Wednesday, Oct. 24
7:30 p.m. $1.00
Woodruff Auditorium
—No refreshments allowed—
sua films
Wednesday, October 24
ACTIVATED MOSCOW
(1968)
Tuesday, October 23 WAIT UNTIL DARK
Directed by Terence Young, wom-
Aubrey Hepburn, Alan Akkin, Richard
Creena, and Efrem Zimbali Jr. Three
killerz terrorize a ninely blinded
because they believe a shipment of
mugged heroin is in her apartment.
Directed by Robert Altman, with Bud Pinkham and Michael Dwulay, and other Altman co-workers, young man who lives in the Astrodome and dreams of flying with his helicopter.
Thursday, October 25
Cinema from India:
SIMARADDHA
(1971)
Social criticism of modern life in India is presented in this sardonian film by Satayi Ray. BengaliSushruta, is an film on the director will also be involved.
Directed by Hal Ashley, with Bud Curt and Ruth Gordon in a cull classic about a boy who's obsessed with death and an old woman who's full of
3:30 & 9:30-Friday 7:00-Saturday
THE OMEN
Friday & Saturday.
October 26-27
HAROLD & MAUDE
Directed by Richard Donner, with Gregory Peck, Lee Remick and David Warner in a thriller about a boy who is actually the anti-Chist.
Midnight Movies MARTIN
Directed by George A. Romero, about a modern-day man who can only survive in a city under attack. By the director who made NIGHT OF THE DEAD and DAWN of THE DEAD
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekend shows also in Woodfort at 3:30, 7.00, 8.30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted. At 1:50 am, $15 admission. No Refreshments.
TROMPETS
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available
NEW 15 Passenger Vans 2340 Alabama
ARRIVALS: 1980 Chevettes 843-2931
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PEOPLE WITH DEGREES OR EXPERIENCE IN LIBERAL ARTS, NURSING, BUILDING, ARCH., LAW, BUS., & EDUC.
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Contact Recruiters:
SIGN UP NOW AT PLACEMENT CENTER,
CARRUTH-OLEARY ON OCT. 22, 23, 24
SENIORS
Say Cheese!
Senior Pictures have been extended until Oct.26
Call the Jayhawker Yearbook for your appointment.
864-3728
Only $1 sitting fee
Foreign & Domestic Parts
Part Stop
Herbs & Studios
FINE PORTRAIT
711-230-8999 Mobile 956-482-8822
842-8822
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
COMMO
1209 East 23rd 841-2200
THE BEST FREEL HOST WWW30
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
Eve 7.30 & 9.45 Sat Sun 2:30
LIFE OF BRIAN
Eve. 7:00 & 9:00 Sat Sun 2:00
Varsity
Hillcrest
1. "STARTING ARGY"
Sat 10am 5:30
2. "THE GOODBYE GIRL"
Sat 10am 4:45
3. "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS"
Sat 10am 1:45
4. $enew
Cinema Twin
1. 'SKATE10WN USA
Eye: 7,40 & 9,40
Sat:Sun 1:45
JRATEL
Eve. 7:40 & 9:40 Sat/Sun 1:45
2. "JESUS"
Eve: 7:30 & 9:30 Sat Sun 1:30
Mouse information Mouse information
(TEL/FAX) 814-6257 (TEL/FAX) 814-6257
Julie's
SPAGHETTI DINNER ALL YOU CAN EAT $1.99
Julie's is offering Two Special Values in One . . . the Spaghetti Dinner you have always enjoyed at a special price and all you can eat. Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday only, a complete Spaghetti Dinner of your choice served with a toasted green salad and fresh baked Italian Bread . . . for the price of $1.99.
MONDAY. TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
WEDNESDAY ONLY!
Select Your Favorite
• Spaghetti with Meat Sauce ... $1.99
• Spaghetti with Marinara Sauce ... $1.99
• Spaghetti with Marinara Sauce covered with
a layer of Mozzarella Cheese ... $1.99
Hours
11 a.m to
Midnight
Monday
Tuesday
11 a.m to 1 a.m.
Saturday
Sunday
3216 Iowa
Lawrence, Kansas
842-7170
Curt Page 1979
NEW YORKER
thin smooth leather
NEW YORKER
TOWN SCHOOL
1021 MASS.
October Luncheon Special
offer good 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily
Soup and Salad bar Special $225
reg. price
$2.75
AIRBORNE MANAGER
图2-1 车间工作场景
图2-2 办公区环境
The energy needs of tomorrow are the challenges we must meet today.
100
Join us and be part of the solution.
The future depends on today's technology We're looking for responsible people wanting to meet the challenges of energy production and energy conservation for the future.
Mr. George Dorsey, Director of Personnel District Electric Company, will be on campus Oct. 19 to interview
EMPIRE
your electric company
TAKE A PHOTO OF YOUR FRIEND.
Bass
eight thirty-seven massachusetts 843-4255
MADE IN USA
royal college shop
monday-saturday
10-6
sunday
1-5
6
Tuesday, October 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIR
- Fast Service (week-10 days)
- Genuine Factory Parts
- 3 Master Watchmakers
- All work done on premises
- All work guaranteed
BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Massachusetts 843-4366
ALEXANDER WATSON
OPERA HOUSE
PRODUCTIONS
PRESENT
CARL PERKINS
"Mr. Blue Sauce Shoes"
Tomorrow Night only $4.00 at the door
Oct. 26 Joe Sun
Oct. 31 Halloween Party with PBF
Nov. 3 Billy Spears Spears
Tawrence Opera House
642 $ ^\circ$Mass. St. Lawrence $ ^{Ks} $ (913)842-6930
Now you have a chance to build a fraternity!
Alpha Epsilon Pi is reorganizing on the KU Campus by pledging men as brothers of the Kappa Upsilon Chapter, AEIH, a predominately Jewish fraternity, gives you the opportunity of building a strong bond of brotherhood. We want to offer you a life-time experience, AEIH will be holding meetings October 30, 31 and November 1. Alpha Epsilon Pi provides an opportunity to join a national fraternity with chapters throughout the United States. We are a member of the National Interfraternity Conference. Founded on November 7, 1913.
EVENTS:
Tuesday, October 30, Pine Room, Kansas Union, Orientation,
7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, October 31, Pine Room, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 1, Parlor C, Kansas Union, Pledging. 7:30 p.m.
For more information 843-9737
Kinko's
Kinko,2
3c
copies
til Oct. 31
Hours:
8-8 Mon-Thurs
8-6 Fri
10-5 Sat
12-5 Sun
- theses
- resumes
- reductions
- colored paper
- transparencies
904 Vermont
- binding
* greeting cards
* passport photos
* school supplies
* film processing
904
843-8019
Drink a QUART with TONY Cill Kansas City's own TONY CHIAVERINI will be at THE HARBOUR LITES
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Thursday, October 25
Cold Quarts of Coors Only 75* from 7:00-10:00 p.m.
The Harbour Lites will be selling tickets to Tony C's November 16 title bout with Joey Vincent. The fight is at 8:00 p.m
Friday, November 16, in KC's
Municipal Auditorium. Tickets on sale at The Harbour October 25.
THE HARBOUR LITES
A FIRST-CLASS DIVE
1031 Massachusetts
HENRY'S RESTAURANT henrys
CARRY-OUT
SIXTH & MISSOURI 843-2139
DRIVE-IN
Chicken At Its Best!
Come in and try another one of our tasty menu items—Fillet of Chicken Breast. This delicious dinner includes crispy fried chicken breast fillets, cole slow and French fries. All this for only $2.59! What a way to taste chicken—at its best!
We close at 9:00 pm Sun-Thurs
1:00 am Fri-Sat
At Henry's You Have Your Choice!!
Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358
BOB'S TUITION TELETHON
CALL 932-3673
There are easier ways to pay for college.
Conducting telephones, waiting tables, or parking cars may not be the only ways to help you pay for college. There may be a scholarship or grant available that you've overlooked. Or it may be as simple as cutting lines across the floor and lead the next issue of *insider* and find out
Ford hopes this next issue of *Insider* will give you a "better idea" for paying your way
through college. And if you need a set of wheels to get you around campus, check out College newspapers. Look for *Insider* - Ford's continuing series of College newspaper supplements.
FORD
FORD DIVISION
Ford
Owner will challenge city
The owner of a brush pile the city says is unsightly will plead his case to the Lawrence city commissioners at their regular meeting tonight.
The Commission meets at 7 on the fourth floor of the First National Bank Towers, 910 Massachusetts St.
The owner of the brush pile, Gene Berofsky, 1201 New York St., heats his house with wood-burning stones and has gathered the brush in his backyard for kindling.
In response to neighbors' complaints, city environmental inspector Marlene Swerts
STUDIO ONE
HAIR DESIGNERS
Today's Hair Care Center
Student discount
with KU ID
843-2229
REDKEN
2323 Ridge Court
---
ted Bernofsky to either clean up the pile or plead his case before the city commission Bernofsky said yesterday he planned to plead his case.
The commissioners also will consider a site plan for an office for the Lawrence Independent Living Resource Center, to be located at 830 Kentucky St.
The center is designed to help handicapped people become more self-confident and improve their quality of life from the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services and a $100,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health Human Services, formerly known as HHS.
WZR
106
CONTACT PROFESSOR OF NAVAL SCIENCE:
115 MILITARY SCIENCE BLDG.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS,
TELEPHONE:
(913) 864-3161
FULL SCHOLARSHIPS
FOR QUALIFIED MEN AND WOMEN, TWO AND FOUR YEARS PLUS MONTHLY LIVING ALLOWANCE.
NROTC
EDUCATION FOR
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS
OFFICERS
VISIT YOUR CAMPUS GIFT SHOP
THE
MUSEUM
SHOP
SPECIAL!
Printing Plates—50' each
look for us . . .
In the Museum of Natural History next
door to the Kansas Union.
Mon-Sat 10am-5pm. Sun & Holidays 1:30pm-5pm.
ATTENTION PRE-PHYSICAL THERAPY STUDENTS
There will be a meeting for all pre-physical therapy students on
Thursday, October 25, at 7:00 p.m. in Watkins Hospital Cafeteria.
Informal question and answer session will be held with students presently in the Physical Therapy program and a faculty member from the Med-Center. A trip to the Med-Center will also be planned.
ALL THOSE INTERESTED ARE URGED TO ATTENDI
Tuesday, October 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS for today: Peace Corps will be interviewing at the Peace Corps office. At the business center, Peace Corps will be interviewing Southwestern Law, Donnelly, Meiners and Jordan. At the engineering school will be Bell Systems, Bunce Corporation, Dow Corning and Public Service Company of Denver. At the Museum of Art, Chevron U.S.A.-Denver. At the Law School will be the U.S. Navy and Jochens, Sargent and Blues. MUSEUM OF ART, Spencer Museum of Art, MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR on "Solar Activities and Particle Beam Fusion at the Museum of Art," MECHANICAL STUDENTS luncheon will be from 11:30 a.m. to p.m. in Cork Room 2 of the Union.
Paychecks...
- Establish a procedure for monitoring the success of the State and University in making retirement payments on time.
From page one
programs whether the company selected provides a 30-day or similar grace period.
The late paycheck problem has hampered KU for many years, especially at the beginning of each semester when new job appointments are made.
Sherry Kopf, administrative officer for the payroll office, had said earlier that the current payroll system no longer could be operated in the forms required by state and federal law.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
Paraphernalia
842-3059 15 W. 9th St.
KU CAMPUS VETERANS
The effect of the "Deer Hunter" and "Coming Home" will be emphasized in the film "THE DELAYED STRESS SYNDROME."
Wednesday, October 24
Wednesday, October 24 at 10 a.m. & 3:30 p.m.
Thursday, October 25 at 1 p.m. & 3 p.m. Room 3 Old Green Hall.
Sponsored by Campus Veterans Disabled American Veterans
WATCH FOR THE HUGHES RECRUITER VISITING YOUR CAMPUS SOON.
Contact your placement office for interview dates.
HUGHES
Creating a new world with electronics
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
KANSAN WANT ADS
The University Dailv
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
$ one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
$ 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 4.50 5.00 5.50 6.00
$ see table for more details
$ 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 4.50 5.00
$ 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 4.50 5.00
$ 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 4.50 5.00
$ 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 4.50 5.00
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These adds can be placed in person or simply by calling the UB business office at 443-4288.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864.4358
The UUK will be responsible for more than two incorrect injections. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
B'nal B'rith Hillel Student Organization
Bogel's & Lox Brunch
All You Can Eat!
Sunday, Oct 28th
12:30 p.m.
$1 for Hilli Members
$2.50 for non-members
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
917 Halifax Place, Hilli-
mont, Ontario
--also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. t
$215.00
Winter Park
5 days skiing
Monah 9-15
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIPS WITH SUA
Steamboat Springs 5 days skiing
March 9-16
$277.00
SIGN UP NOW
WITH SUA!!
--also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. t
WHO . . . has had his songs recorded by Elvis Presley, The Beatles, Johnny Cash, Patsy Cline and many others?
WHO . . . wrote "Blue Suede Shoes," "Honey Don't'n", "Boppin the Blues"?
WHO . . . will be Boppin, and Rockin' Lawrence Wednesday Night. . . ?
CARL PERKINS
Dana's open at
8:00 a.m. to 9:00
p.m.
tavern
on the
warehouse
for contact with AA4300
Hole in-the-Wall, fresh fruits and vegetables. Also salted, roasted, and raw peas in the shell. Twelve varieties of potato, honey, popcorn, and sorghum. Every Sunday.
River's Sally.
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. If
Watch for truck packed at 9th & Illinois. Home
warehouse delivery. The well-selling fish, fruits and veg-
gies are freshly prepared in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, hay,
pure butter, white honey, and sugar, every Sunday.
PAPER BACK SALES IS 15% nationally because prices are too dummy high at J. HODGE and the prices we see are price—price have been and always will be.” Come in, browse and at 1041 MA-1831
Free lecture on Christian Science "The Consciousness of the Healing Christ" by John A Grant. In First Church of Christ, Scientist, 1701 n. w., Monday, October 22, at 8:00 a.m. *successthum*, Monday, October 22, at 8:00 a.m.
HAD ENOUGH TROUBLE? Israel's tension? Gov't has been accused of about three issues. The Likud can do something about these issues. The Law allows an organizing party in Palestine to be the Student Union. Swearing will be Milton Mason, National Security Analyst, and the Nuclear Activist and Active in the movement to draw the draft, and Ketel Petersen. *CHAPTER 10-23*
ENTERTAINMENT
Tradition begins at 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26 on Jayhawk Blvd. Stay on the hill. See the first Homecoming Parade. 10-26
14 Tuesday and The Harbour Lifes is still a first-class dive. Tenthal's nighttime is 41 pitches, 60 boats and battleset between 5-10 p.m. and ship together at The Harbour Lifes. 10-23 Mass.
FOR RENT
TUMBER LEDE ARMEMENTS NOW RENT
1 month rented at 1 bedroom, 1 and 2
months rented at 2 bedrooms, 1 and 2
two roominy flat, large walk-in closet,
two bathrooms, large laundry area.
BOOK FOR call 494-8426 or see
INSIDE BOOK POOL. Call appointment 494-8426 or see
inside book pool
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579.
If
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
room near KU. Possible rent reduction for
call. Bq 814-6254 or 842-4085.
10-31
All Frontier Ridge Apts. 15 months rent free. $50
security, on all 1 bedrooms. 1F
FIRST MONTH FREE *Wanted* Female to share furniture from 1000 - 2 10 units. B462-895-1025 FURNITURE AND LIGHTING FOR THE REAL OF the year. Both make and furnish. If interested, contact business office at 843-895-1025. IF WANTED
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guard-
ante. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 8348-3TF.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make use of these books to use them 1-12. As study guide, 2. For class preparation of Western civilization, please now at Town Crier, Main Bookstore and Dread Book Store.
2 or 3 mature, responsible students sought to share space, comfortable 10 room house at school. 4 rooms with most furnishings, private international cooking facilities, modest market prices. call 842-7267. Tel. 10-24
1 bedroom apt, close to campus. Call 842-0032
p. 1-12 p.m.
10-23
FOR SALE
Must sublease 2 bedroom apt., Avon Apts.
$240 month + electricity Gas heat. Please call
841-5717.
10-25
3 barm, house, close to KU bus line. No pet.
Please visit students or $45/month. 10-23
**11**
**12**
1 bdrm. apt. All utilities naid except electricity.
Copy to campus. Call 842-2322 between 2:30-5:30.
M-F. Aerval. Apartments.
10-26
Sublease, efficiency aft. Five min from Union.
Shared bath, partly furnished, all utilities paid.
Monthly spraying for bugs $130/month. Call 641-
0753,见 6:30
9 week old Ferrets, make adorable pets. Call
843-4843 after 6 p.m.
10-23
Digital sony digital radio reduced New model with battery reserve if else, goes off-special at $42.99. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Open Thurs. nites. 10-23
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Puch Mopeds.
Rick's Bike Shop, 103. Vermont. 841-642-6.
**DID**
**DID**
**DID**
For Sale—19 Ferd XL, 2 door hardtop, PB, PB,
AC, acced snow tires on it. Call 542-3378
moonings or evenings.
10-23
Michelin Tire Sale! 30, 25, and 30% discount at Ray Stoneback's downtown. The appliance store with discount tire dept. 10-30
Bundles-Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-prescription only, light selection, reasonably priced. Alternate starter and generator specialists. MOTIVE Electric 823-759-9000 W. 60 lbs.
Stereo Camera Equalizer—Spectro Acoustics model Z202. Only 3 month old-mint condition $175.00 or best offer. 841-6428. evenings, keep trying
Men's shearing cost -size 42. Worn very little -
absolutely perfect condition. $150.00 or best offer.
41-928 evenings, keep trying. 10-24
1975 Fiat 131S, ILC, S-speed, 48,000 miles, must
trim, immediately. $1850, call 841-8433. 10-26
1975 CB750F Super Sport Honda motorcycle, ex-
1975 CB750F Super Sport Horn motorcycle, ex-
still shave, price to sell 842-297J. 10-26
1975 280Z, 24,000, mint, call 843-1496. 10-23
We've got brand new room size carpet remnants
656 between 8 and 5.
656 between 8 and 5. 10-26
Nikon P-2, with 55mm Nikko Portrait Lens,
55mm Nikon Wide-Angle Lens, 200mm Bushnell
Telephone with travel case and travel case,
equipment. $600.00; call Kevin at 822-766-10-27
Water, bed, high quality, baffled mattress.
Queen size w/liner, heavy, simple pedestal m/
wahogyachio sided. $300. Moving. must sell! 84-12-
796.
1970 VW. New paint and interior; sunroof, am-fm cassette, fog lights; 35 mpg. 843-9737. Rob 106
Small black puppy about 2 months old, brown
flea collar. Call 842-4019.
10-23
Electric Portable Typewriter. Rarely been used.
Must sell before Thursday. Call Carol 843-4922
during day.
10-25
Cross pin in front of Carruth-O'Leary. Call 864-2925 to identify. 10-23
FOUND
Slammes cat found Tuesday evening at tennis
Bobin Johnson. Call 843-755-2160
7959. 10-23
Textbook—"Biology the Word of Life," near 18th and Louisiana. To claim, call 843-4913. 10-24
Black/white English Settar near 10th and Vermont. Phone evenings, 842-236-398. 10-25
Small, brown puppy in front of Snow Hall. Call
864-2384. 10-24
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS JOB -SUMMER/year round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, all Fields. £1250,
$1,200 monthly, expenses paid, Freeee
Fees. CA, Box 42-3A, Corona De-
CA, ACZ 9265.
MEN MWENN JOBSI CRUISHESPHIS SAILING EXPIRATIONS Good experience. No good pay or benefits. For APPLICATION INFOJOBS to: CRUISEWORLD 135, Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 95859
Liquor store clerk. Eves and Saturdays. 3-11 p.m.
842, 2968 after. 5 p.m. 10-25
Language Project Preschool/Bureau of Child Health collection and analysis. Must have completed child health data collection and data analysis. Must have completed child health training课程. Salary $20,000 per year plus travel and the bank fee. A minimum of 18 Bachelors in Education, Nursing or a related field. 121B Louisiana. Application deadline: Oct. 31 at www.louisiana.edu for an Equal Opportunity. Affirmation Action action may be REGULATED regardless of race, religion, sex, disability, gender identity, and sexual orientation.
Cashier (21) start time. Work 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. M-F. Job off work mid-Dec. to mid-Jan. Require cashier at a KKSA Union, Personnel Office 538 Action Employer. 10-22
Wanted-Part-time. Aerobat Gymnastic Instructor. Tues. and Thurs. eve.ewarddaville area, experience preferred, $80./hr. Call Carol Byrd 387-394. 10-25
Civil Engineering Department of the University of Tennessee is a national affiliate as assistant professor of civil engineering and teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses in the areas of civil engineering computer software, project management, and systems. Applicants must have B.S., Ph.D. and dynamic finite element methods. Send resume to Civil Engineering Department of the University of Tennessee. Kameda Koenig, Department of Civil Engineering Department of the University of Tennessee. An affirmative response to Kameda Koenig, 6000 S. 54th Street, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37812. An affirmative response to Kameda Koenig, 6000 S. 54th Street, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37812.
Lay baby/babies for 5 year old in exchange
for new ward, or if not available. Part-time maintenance person needed. Marriage pay £80 Must be available at 9:11 a.m. Mon-7/71
Part-time service personnel needed. Must be available 11-4 MWF. Pay $12.00 +hrs. Tips In person in Schumm Foods, 7191j Mass. 5-8 Mon.-Fr. 10-25
DAY CARE STAFF AND SUBSTITUTES NEDD-
ING INTERVIEWERS. Interviewees should have experience working with children ages 12 and 18 or training working with children ages 12 and 18. Participate in teamwork with staff members in the Kindergarten, working with children 3-5 years old. Apply by person at AA SIB IU 3-5:30 pm. Apply online at http://www.sibiu.edu/care/application/. All Rights Reserved. Equal Opportunity Employer.
**THREACHERS:** If your degree is in English, math, or science, please contact us. **THREACHERS** needs you Teach in primary secondary schools develop curriculum of this field. **THREACHERS** needs you Teach in primary secondary schools develop curriculum of this field. 48 hours monthly living allowance; health care: 6 days per week with no dependents. No upper age limit yet. Please visit Center for Education, Carousel O-Dearley at
MATH (SCIENCE TEACHERS—Confer an alter-
nationary exam for students in Asia. Africa is asking for Peace Corps vo-
lunteer assignments for creative, energetic individ-
uals to assist with health care. 48 days paid vacation. Must be U.S.
graduate or equivalent. Requires upper age limit. Use Peace Corp Signs.
Carroll-CO-Learry on Oct. 22, 23, 24 (10-23)
HOME ECONOMIST™ You can be more than a home economist. You can be a Peer Group中毒者 developing living overcrowds. You're needed in any job or train other than paid travel. Any inbound or train other than paid travel. Any vacation Must be U.S. citizens, single-member status up now for interview at Placement Center, NYC. Send resume to HOME ECONOMIST.
COLLEGE LEASE AND PEOPLE WITH EXPENSE WANTED NOW FOR NEW PEACE CORPS GRADUATE. Need a college farming, a skilled trade, have a college degree and/or have a master's degree and working time oversee, or be another Peace Corps volunteer. Must be 18, single or married. Sign up now for interview at Placement Center, 300 E. Fourth Avenue, New York, NY 10024.
COLLEGE GRADS DEPARTURE, CARES AND VISA
FOR USERS OF THE COLLEGE. USE OF THEM TO
USE FOR THEir KNOWLEDGE AND
CONFERENCE POSSIBILITY. USE OF AFRICA,
LATIN AMERICA, ASIA AND ALL
CLIENTS FOR OVER 150 OPENINGS IN A VARIABLE
ARCHITECTURAL AREA. ARK PROVIDED FOR MORE INFO ON HOW
TO FOR INTERVIEW AT PLACEMENT CENTER
OR ETC.
Immediate opening for talented singers. Must be uninhabited. Call 841-8515. 10-29
The University of Kamen Office of University Affairs is seeking an Associate for the position of College Advisor. Temporary position for college admissions, student orientation, and enrollment, February 15th through November 28th, 2019. Application closing date: Sc Oct 31st. Application deadline: Sct Nov 16th. Relational University of Kamen University, Kamen, Japan. Mail resume to: UofKemen Office of University Affairs, 418 Parkway, NW #200, Washington, DC 20007.
LOST
Women's silver watch with stretch band, self-
winding, date. Reward. Call Carla at 842-8029.
Lost stek, black and white cat with spot on upper left ear. Call cat back. Boot inside. 12 wedge, dark black kitten. Lest near the door. 841-4733. Desert want "Tornier" back. Fines: 10-24
Men's black wallet and KU bue pass in blue
Men's money important! need leather 1Need leather
843-867-868
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS BINDING COPYING-The House of Uber's Quick Copy center is headquarters for binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us hold at 835 Mason or phone 846-340-7190. You can visit us at 835 Mason or phone 846-340-7190.
NOTICE
Papera due non? Will provide personalized information on your topics in scientific or medical journals? Selfie and Bulb watchs 10% less than retail. Furniture warranty. Call Keni: 641-1078-10-24
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5664. If
FOX HILL SURGEY CLINIC-abort up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, EBirth Control, appointment, appointment, appointment AM to PM at Park KS 400 198th St. Overland Park, KS 632
If you're looking for a bar with a chic, bean-pooed ambiance, the Harbour Lodge is a crazy people you'll like. The Harbour Lodge has a sunny day and Friday afternoons for TUF! Now every Saturday and Sunday from 10am to 5pm at the Harbour. Get your ship together at The Harbour Lodge.
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every occasion. Birthday, Anniversary, Get Well. Secret Admirer 841-8515 11-6
Veterans for employment assistance contact Campus Veterans—118 B Kansas Union, 8644-7487 tf
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Headquarters, 841-2342 and KU info. 840-356-706.
*Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid - 840-356-706.*
Eliane. Houses are red, but you're twice as nice. Mary look ahead, you might be able to take 10-26
Come to the all new MAD HATTER Happy Hour
pm. Monday thru Friday, Open 7 nights a week
at 10am.
Don't drive, walk to Xzone int尔德 inside the Union Friday, Oct. 26 and see all the Homecoming floats in one spot. Food and drink available. Entertainment, too. Save gas. 10-26
If your toes don't love cold bare winter floors, we recommend taking them in a warm package your booklet包. Now carpet only E2A on the inside of the box and not on the top. HOPE Award. Honor for Outstanding progressive music. Won. First Pitching Final voting. Thursday 10:48 AM
Stake on the hill Friday, Oct. 26. 3 p.m. see the first K1U Homecoming Meeting of flats, bands, well leaders, Jawhawk. Student organizers and Jawhawk will meet at Jawhawk Hall and Jawhawk Bowl to X-zone parking for 10-26
For the Homecoming Parade at 3 p.m. Friday, Oct 26, are David Front at 4 p.m. His Audit Hall, 150 Fifth Avenue, at 10 a.m. Light Gang with Claude "Fladder" Williams and Jorge Ramos in 9 p.m. in the Sailcase. Both are free
OLYMPIA PARTY Thursday night at ICHA-BOYS. Real cheap beer and lots of novelty prizes. 10-24
TONY CHAVERIEN, one of the raring young singers, died on May 14, 2013. Born in 1831 Mass., from F-14 on p. Thursday, Tony C'14 graduated from St. Joseph's High School. Tony C'14冷 quartz of Coe's唱片 756 from a recording studio in New York. His goodwill tickets will need to be with 9-25
Hoy. Seniors! It's your last chance. Thursday.
You've MOVE Award at Summerfield, 10-26
Remember to give blood on the day you sched-
uled. 10-26
Joeh. Jon's run after the barber shop, I'll sit in the molder this time. Strawberry Field Paint for the door. I'll be there with you. Judy Shelly. Happy 21st. Wedgest will never be the same. Luv yu-lau-Lar. 10-24
FOR SIGMA UN—Conquered females present to the you 179” Alba” Abner-Lakei confect, only campus-wide content in search of women who must degrade妇女 themselves. 10-25
Watched women from Oct. Penthouse Forum, for pool party. Have bathtub, will travel. GWD 16. For an example of Classic Greek literature see Penthouse Forum; Fral Rat Rendition, GED.
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Tuesday, October 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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A flying frog
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 43
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
HOPE award finalists' profiles
Wednesday, October 24. 1979
See stories page eight
Arson cited in city fire
By MARK SPENCER
Staff Renorter
LITTLE BIG MOON
Investigators have determined that a fire that destroyed two downtown Lawrence buildings last month was intentionally set, and a suspect, described as a transient, is being sought by police. Fire Chief James McNeill said yesterday.
ocwcain said at a morning press conference the fire, which was reported at about 2 a.m. Sept. 20, was of an inertian type, and it is not being controlled.
Ll. Larry Steimerman, who headed the arson investigation for local police and fire departments, described the suspect as a white man with black hair.
The fire destroyed a building at 706 Massachusetts St., which formerly buried Burk Awning and Canvas, and a building at 708-710 Massachusetts St., which housed Freeman Real Estate, Public Hunting and Big K's Bar.
The total damage from the fire was estimated at $200,000
STEMMERMAN SAID the fire was started at about 1:50 a.m. by combustible substance near a rear basement door of a building.
Investigators found no physical evidence of combustible material at the scene, Stemmerman said, but the rapid spread of the flames and the extreme heat of the fire led them to think such materials were used...
CHRIS TODDI/Kansan stat
Lawrence police officer Eric Smith said an incident behind the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St., in which a motorcycle was overturned and all the gas emptied from the tank, might be related to the fire.
Distracted donor
Marianne Marrison, Parsons junior, paid little attention to the nurse. checking her blood pressure as she donated a unit of blood yesterday in the Kansas University Ballroom. The drive, sponsored by the
Stemmerman asked that the police be notified by anyone who saw anything suspicious in the area or had flammable material stolen.
SMITH SAID THE investigation, which consumed 300 hours and followed 85 leads, led back to the man whom police questioned for involvement in the case.
"He was questioned very thoroughly about his involvement in the fire," he said. "He never admitted to anything other than that he was involved."
The suspect is thought to be the same man who told a Kansas reporter the day of the fire that he had been questioned by police who said it was staged.
"I'd never been in this town in my life," he said. "Why the hell would I want to build a building on fire if I never even seen it?"
Would I have to be in contact with law enforcement agencies in the West but had no idea where the suspect was?
"HE'S LEFT OUR jurisdiction I'm sure." Smith said.
The man was further described as being 5 feet, 11 inches tall and weighing 180 pounds, with curly brown hair, sideburns and blue eyes. The police said the man was wearing a long-sleeve shirt and a brown sweat the morning of the fire.
Pankhelenie Association, Interfraternity Council, Association of University Residence Halls and Circle K Club, 11 in paddles ahead of its two-day goal of 400 pints. The drive ends at 4:30 p.m.
See ARSON back page
Blame exchanged for fund losses
Rv DAVE LEWIS
Staff Reporter
Losses in the retirement funds of KU faculty members have occurred because the University has submitted retirement deductions late, not because of state policy. William Wachs, head of the state's accounting control and services section, said
However, the Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee released a report Monday recommending that the state and University "remedy" the policy.
The policy requires the state division of accounts and reports to have all of the University staff deductions before it can send any of them to the retirement comin late because paychecks are issued late.
Each time a paycheck is late, his office cannot send any deductions to the app-
portment fund and a month's interest is lost.
Wachs said that the state and University needed to determine how to submit the deductions to the Topeka office before the deadline.
"I think the people are very concerned and they have a right to be," Wuchs said. "We should be able to talk about the present system. Our trouble is getting the premium list from the in-
WACHS SAID THE deductions were sent
Late paychecks usually occur because of paperwork problems, which result from new faculty appointments or reassignments.
Wachs said the policy that required all deductions to be submitted to the division of accounts and reports before being sent to the companies improved the accuracy of the
"If we sent in a late supplement to the companies, we wouldn't know if any names were in error." Wachs said. "We may have already processed the account. We don't have the list of names, only the list of contacts." The list could make the budget incurrable."
THE FRP COMPMITTEE report said that the majority of faculty members were risking losses, even though only about 50 paychecks were late each month.
of architecture and urban design and chairman of the FRP committee, said the report tried not to explain why the problem existed, but document the loss in faculty training.
The report also said that the University had sent the deductions past the deadline 13 times since January 1978.
"I don't think this is a controversy," Richardson said. "When we made the report, every department we contacted fully cooperated."
Gaylord Richardson, associate professor
Wachs said some of the FRPR committee's other recommendations were to better understand state and reports, which began a study in August to determine the needs of the state's pay rate.
THE FRP COMMITTEE recommended that a system be established to monitor the success of the state in making retirement payments on time. The FRP committee suggested that the office include the problem of late retirement payments in its
MUST HACE FACULTY MEMBERS participate in the debut of the College Association and the College Retirement Equities Fund two national retirement institutions.
Under the TAA and the GREP, 5 percent of students get an extra month. The University then matches the deduction, making the total retirement fund contribution 10 percent of the faculty salary.
Wachs said that the state office called the University when the deductions were late.
The TIAA and CREF pay interest on the deductions for the faculty member's retirement fund.
The TIAM invests the retirement fund principal in mortgages and other annuities, while the CREF invests the principal in stocks.
IF THE TIAA and the CREF do not receive the deductions within a 30-day grace period from the first of each month, they may be discharged to the faculty members' retirement funds.
Some faculty members use Tax Sheltered Annuity programs, independent of the TIAA Board, to pay for benefits separately by the division of accounts and records but must be sent when the other division is discontinued.
Faculty members who participate in the TSA could lose more interest than those who participate in the TIAAS and the CREP faculty. The TIAs and the CREP do not allow a 30-day grace period.
Libertarian condemns draft policy
By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
Americans who think the draft is designed to defend the United States against threats to the nation's interests mustaken, Martin Mueller, national director of the Students for a Libertarian Society, said in an email.
Mueller, who spoke to about 30 people in the Panamanian Union, said the Selective Service Act required all recruits to complete a draft registration in time of war, served to protect only the United States “comprehensively” and “consciously.”
"U.S. foreign policy is a fraud," Muelter said. "A major reason the United States is involved in global affairs is the belief in the corporate state, that is, a government which combines economic and political interests."
Mueller said adherence to that philosophy led many U.S. businesses to have privileged access to the government.
"The government believes it has a right to interfere to protect its worldwide economic interests."
"THIS ENDS UP being a massive welfare program to big businesses," he said, "and
we have to put our lives on the line to defend them.
"Let the businesses defend their own interests."
I
Martin Mueller
Paul Adams, a civil rights worker and history foacher in California, also spoke to reporters at the White House about things Americans were trying to escape when they fought for independence from the United States.
Mueller said that if the United States had not all-had volunteer armed services for the last four years, the United States would have been militarily in Iran, Nicaragua and Angola.
"WE WERE TRYING to get away from conscription for the collective good of the country," Adams said. "The government cannot give you life. If the government has the right to take it away, then your life is worth *n* more than a piece of toilet paper. There are too many people that have been conscripted in Constitution as toilet paper for too long."
Mueller said that all an-volume army was not an equitable solution to the draft because it forced a disproportionate number of minors and poor people to join. He said the government's military service by unreasonably high unemployment rates elsewhere in the economy.
He said the Selective Service Act of 1967, as it was enforced now, was also not acceptable.
"IF THE GOVENOMENT agrees that I am immoral to draft people in times of peace," he said, "then it seems doubly immoral to draw them from those times. Then the stand the chance of getting killed."
If American soil ever became endangered, Mueller said, there would be "more than enough" people who would volunteer to defend it.
Mueller the liberarian group was working to have the Selective Service Act repealed. The group has set Nov. 15 as a national "Ballistic Amendment" to protest posters and leaflets and will hold a nationwide news conference to draw attention to its efforts.
PAT GOODWYN, Overland Park junior and a member of the KU Libertarian Alliance, said the KU group would participate in anti-draft activities Nov. 15.
He said the group was considering circulating an anti-draft petition similar to the petition that listed the signatures of 1,100 KU students last May.
Classifieds settle for 'endorsement'
By.JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Renorter
The Classified Senate steering committee has withdrawn its request for formal recognition from the University of Kansas administration.
Joseph Collins, chairman of the steering committee, said yesterday that the decision to withdraw the request was made by his uncle, Mike Davis, University general counsel.
"We're backing off a bit on the recognition issue," Collins said. "The words 'officially recognize' have a dual meaning that bothered the administration."
"Davis said using a word like endorse would be more appropriate."
In a letter to Collins, Charanetor *m.* asked that the Commission should the Classified Senate's code, as Collins had suggested, would not remove the legal complications surrounding formal communication.
"We avoided using this term because we wanted to make perfectly clear that employees are employees at a campus organization, not an employee-representation organization under the same name."
THE ADMINISTRATION expressed
concern last week that formal recognition might facilitate the formation of a classified employee union. Recognition, according to Dykes, would have waived the University's right to be consulted if the Senate wanted to become
Collins also withdrew a request for recognition from the Faculty Senate and asked instead for an endorsement.
When the Classified Senate receives endorsement from the Faculty Senate, the Senate executive committee to incorporate it into the University gover
The Student Senate already has given its recognition to the Classified Senate.
STATE REP. JOHN SOLBACH, D.Lawrence, said the classified Senate probably would be most effective if it were managed through the University administration.
Collins said area legislators had shown interest in the Senate's formation and had asked about some of the concerns of classified employees.
Balloons for the Classified Senate election will be distributed to employees Nov. 2 and will be due by Nov. 14.
Carter gains support of state Democrats
By TONI WOOD
Staff Reporter
Support from officers of the Democratic State Committee seems to be tipped in favor of President Jimmy Carter for the 1980 presidential nomination.
Of six of the seven officers, three have voiced support for Carter and three have remained uncommitted. However, none have voiced support for Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.
He said yesterday that he was asked to be on the committee by Terry Scanlon, a national commissitee from Wichita who is Carter's financial chairman in Kansas.
John Montgomery, a national committeeman from Junction City, is a member of a steering committee for Carter's campaign in Kansas.
Shirley Wassenberg, a member of the Democratic National Committee from Marysville, and she was supporting Carter because his performance since the 1960s.
"I think he's a good, honest man who's doing a lot better job than people give him credit for," she said. "A president can't turn tensions around overnight."
SHE SAID SHE had not heard much from the Kennedy supporters in Kansas.
"People are less willing to support Kennedy," she said, "because they're a little bit afraid of him. He's pretty liberal and wants a lot of the more conservative during these times."
Mary Kay Peltzer, vice chairman of the state committee from Wichita, said, "I
See CAMPAIGN back page
2
Wednesdav. October 24,1979
University Daily Kansan
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
House approves gas rationing
WASHINGTON—The House completed congressional action on daytona and gasoline rationing bill, sending the measure to the White House.
The legislation, a compromise between versions previously passed by the House and Senate would give the president authority to ration gas during
Under the compromise, the president could order rationing if gasoline or diesel fuel supplies fell 20 percent and if a shortage seemed likely to last at least
the contents of booklets.
Carter is expected to sign the bill, although he had sought more flexibility for increased retention.
However, either house of Congress could block the action during a 15-day review period. The 20 percent trigger could be waived, but that would require
Kansas congressmen who voted against the bill were Rep. Jim Jeffries, Topoka, Rep. Keith Selibius, R-Dodge City, and Robert Whittaker, A-Rugenta. Rep. Gianlick D, Wichita, votes for the measure and Rep. Larry Winn, R-Overland Park, did not vote.
Stafford to appeal death order
OLKAHAMIA CITY—Roger Dale Stafford, 27, was sentenced yesterday to be executed by drug injection for the murders of six employees at a steakhouse 18
Stanford's attorney, J. Malone Brewer, is appealing the six first-degree murder convictions. The process could take years, making it impossible for a jury to determine guilt or innocence.
sidertofor to be placed detainer. If架子被扣下, Stuffard said he had no death wish and would take every legal step possible to
Stuffard said he had no death wish and would take every legal step possible to
He faces three additional murder charges in nearby McClain County where he will be arraigned tomorrow for the deaths of three members of a San An-
Ozark settles 39-day strike
ST. LOUIS - Flight attendants for Ozark Air Lines ended their 39-day strike against the airline daylight, nightly, a new contract by a vote of $19 to
Linda Beerman, spokesman for Local 26 of the Association of Flight Aftenders, said the new three-year contract for wage increases of up to 38 percent was approved on Thursday.
percent and improved retirement, this increases usability and actual benefits.
The contract was made redefinite to Aug. 1, 1978, when the old contract expired.
expired.
A back-to-work agreement was expected later this week, the union said.
A back-to-work agreement was expected later this week, the union said. Ozark spokesman Sharon Bhatman said the company was very pleased with the agreement.
A specific date has not been set for resumption of service by the airline to the 67 cities it serves in 21 states.
The 550 flight attendants walked off the job Sept. 14, forcing Ozark to shut down operations immediately.
Shah in N.Y. hospital for tests
NEW YORK—The deposed shah of Iran, said to be suffering from cancer, began extensive tests in one of the world's top hospitals yesterday after U.S. officials said he was dead.
Shah Mohammad Roe Pahali, who will be 60 Friday, arrived at LaGuardia Airport Monday night after a flight from his place of exit in Cuervaena.
Traveling with him were his wife, personal bodyguards and two Doberman pinscher guard dogs.
Responding to an unofficial description of the shah as "gravely lily," a spokesman at New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center said. "There is no reason."
However, State Department sources in Washington said the shah's aliment already had been diagnosed as cancer and a blocked bile duct.
and the comments on those statements by either the hospital or the shilu's entrapment
Six Czech dissidents convicted
PRIAGUE, Czechoslovakia—Dramatist Yacvah Havel and five other human rights activists were convicted on yesterday on charges of assault and were charged with murder.
Ceteka, the official Czechoslovakian news agency, said Havel, 43, was sent to 4+ years and Peter Uhl, a 38-year Trotskyte, was given five years at the end of the two-day court proceedings that ended Czechoslovakia's biggest dissident trial since 1972.
Lesser sentences were given to the four other defendants.
All of the sentences were disclosed by dissident sources and later confirmed by Ceteka...
An estimated 50 policemen took up positions around the courthouse before the verdicts were delivered. Journalists and supporters of the activists were barred from attending the trial.
The defendants are alleged to be founders of what the government contended was an illegal group formed to and dissidents and help foreigners make hostile actions.
U.S. to offer food to Cambodia
BANGKOK, Thailand—Three U.S. senators will go to Phnom Penh today with a new proposal to aid the anti-crime agencies. They will will the first U.S. senator to visit the country since the communist states implemented the war on drugs.
Sens. James Sasser, D-Tenn., John Danforth, R-Mo., and Max Baucus, D-Ment., would like they to go the go-ahead from the Phnom Penh government for their plan to send truck convns carrying a daily load of 1,000 tons of food into the country from Thailand for six months
Although aid programs have begun for the estimated 2 million people who face starvation, Pimph Perch continues to publicly refuse aid from agencies that provide food assistance.
Nuclear moratorium rejected
Sources in Washington said that although the West had been slow to respond to the magnitude of the problem in war-torn Cambodia, the keyholm to aid is still being built.
The remnants of Pol Pot's supporters are waging a guerrilla war against the Hene Sencrin government, which was installed by Vietnam last winter.
WASHINGTON—A presidential commission has concluded that safety problems do not warrant a halt in construction or licensing of new nuclear reactors.
The commission's advisory findings and recommendations probably will be presented to President Carter next Tuesday.
Correction...
ne-12 member commission, completing its six-month investigation, was sharply divided over the issue of whether to call for a moratorium on new amalgamations.
The moratorium was one vote short of being approved.
In a story about an anti-racism protest march at Shenanigans, a private club court in 109 Mississippi St., which appeared in the Kansas Monday, Oct. 22, a quote was mistakenly attributed to Norman Forer, professor of social welfare. "This will bring attention to the problem." The Kansan resigned the error.
Weather ...
Today will be most sunny with a high near 70 and southern winds from 5 to 15 mph, according to the KU Weather Service.
There will be clear skies tonight with a low near 45. Tomorrow will be warmer with a bighole around 75 and sutherland winds continuing.
The extended outlook for Friday and Saturday calls for no rain and pleasant temperatures with highs in the upper-70s.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. October 24,1979
3
Nondiscriminatory status sought for Chinese trade
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter agrees a trade agreement granting more of a trade treatment to China, which would give it tariff advantages not yet available in the U.S.
Most-favorable-nation status extends nondiscriminatory treatment to Chinese exports and must be approved by Congress before it becomes effective.
in letters to the presiding officers of the senate and House. Carter said, "Conclusion of this report is important because we can take to provide greater economic benefits to both countries from this document."
"It WILL ALSO give further impetus to the progress we have made in our overall
relationship since normalization of our diplomatic relations earlier this year."
The agreement should make possible an expansion of U.S.-China trade to 4 billion by 1985, up from $1.2 billion last year, and a corresponding secretary of commerce for East-West trade.
JENKSINAS the expected $2 billion in two-way trade by 1853 would be made up of $4 billion in U.S. exports and $1 billion in imports from China, leaving a balance of $2 billion in favor of the United States. But he also expected to strengthen trade in both directions.
Carter also signed a proclamation waiving requirements of the Jackson-Vank amendment to the trade act as they apply to it. The president has approved an amendment that prohibit most-favored
nation treatment for communist nations that fail to allow free emigration of their citizens.
BY LAW, the waiver will not take effect because he has 80 days in which to act. The Jackson-Vank amendment is named for its sponsors, Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., and Sen. David Koehler, D-California.
The United States has yet to extend most-favored nation trade treatment to the Soviet Union, which has refused to offer the United States immigration policies that Jackson wanted.
Meanwhile, Kansas Gov. John Carlin applauded President Carter's decision to extend most-favored-nation tariff status to China.
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"I will vote for confidence in the government I served until an hour ago," Dayan told a news conference.
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All five no-confidence motions were defeated by a vote of 59-47.
Earlier, Dayan announced he would help defeat the ouster moves.
Non-confidence motions offered by opposition parties are a routine feature of the winter opening of the Knesset, Israel's parliament. But these came when Begins
When the Knesset session started, Tayimba took a back-row seat that made him rethink his position. She shamed Sharir, who left Begin's Likib luked because she thought Dayan's policies cost her.
control seemed fraught—following Dayan's weekend resignation and a Supreme Court ruling that a government-approved West Bank settlement was illegal.
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Dayan acknowledged that Begin faces economic and political troubles, but said, "I think they will find a way to overcome it."
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Begin summoned traveling members of the Likdu back back to Jerusalem to meet the challenge and Defense Minister Ezer Brok his brook off a trip to Egypt to be released.
In its motions, the Labor Party opposition, led by Shimon Peres, called for immediate elections and the government's resignation.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan
owners. Signed columns represent the views of
only the writers.
October 24,1979
Offer more than beer
The heads of the social subcommittees of several KU organizations may think that an offer to join a school could entitle students to a social gathering.
Beer may still be the No. 1 beverage on campus, but many students—and the number is increasing—are refusing to go along with the beer-drinking
They have complained that beer was the only available beverage at the Big Blue Rally and the scholarship halls are advertising beer as the only beverage for a Halloween party next week. The list could go on.
The non-beer drinkers contend, and rightfully so, that just because virtually all KU students can legally drink beer in Kansas, not everyone can or will want to consume an alcoholic beverage at a party.
The KU organizations that sponsor such social gatherings where only beer
is served have left many students holding empty glasses.
Granted, students have the option of not drinking anything while attending these beer-only functions. Yet, they are actually paying for the 'free' beer dues and part of their class dues, scholarship, hall or Greek housing fees.
It's time for the heads of the governing boards of these organizations to create a policy to ensure that all employees is served at the parties they sponsor.
This should be considered as a matter of health for those people who for medical reasons cannot drink alcoholic beverages, for those who know they cannot drink alcoholic beverages, for those whose tastebuds have a contempt for the foamy liquid.
It also should be considered as a matter of freedom of choice.
Despite cost, pollution coal is energy answer
To wean the country from foreign oil suppliers, President Jimmy Carter, relying heavily on coal as an alternative energy source, did the doubling of the coal run by 1985.
The United States is fortunate enough to have a large reserve of coal, that can be cheaply mined and used.
One disadvantage is labor problems. Strikes by union nine workers have caused many inconveniences for the country in the past.
Last year workers walked out of the mines for more than three months, and the National Guard was almost called in by the company to harden their hands on the industries and the public.
There is no doubt that these workers would wield a great deal of power if the country turned to coal. Knowing that they could be forced to work on strike, miners could make outrageous demands that would have to be met by business and industry as well for the public.
Coal production and use also create some serious environmental problems. Mining practices, such as strip mining, can hurt the environment by erosion and creation unproductive soils.
Extensive use of coal is also expensive. Utilities and factories that rely on oil or natural gas would have to be changed, coal pollution control devices are very
Also, coal burning creates air pollution that is harmful if not controlled. It is believed that fumes from burning coal are by-products of combustion and which have a high acid content. By
John COLUMNIST fischer
poisoning the soil, the rain supposedly reduce agriculture and forest production and contaminate lakes and waterways, the killing in places like the firehole of a man's hand.
Also, it is reported that about 48,000 deaths a year are caused by coal emissions, and that an increase in the use of coal could increase that figure by 7,000 to 48,000 deaths a year.
To reduce air pollution caused by coal, the Environmental Protection Agency has set strict standards for pollution emissions.
For example, the EPA requires that all cigarette smoke be installed with scrubbers to remove it from the exhaust smoke, and that at least 85 percent of those pollutants must be removed.
However, the cost of meeting these standards is great, and businessmen and utilities have hesitated to use coal on a full-scale basis.
But the General Accounting office estimates the costs for pollution control devices reach $19 billion by 185, and $26 billion by 200.
Interest groups representing coal producers and users have tried to lower these standards, this would surely secure the environment and public health.
Despite the problems, coal is still America's best energy alternative. And because it is a sound choice, Carter and his administration should deal now with the challenges of balancing costs and environmental protection, and come up with some creative solutions.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Editor Mary Hoenk
Nancy Dressler
Mary Erström
Campus Editor Tim Sheehy
Associate Campus Editor Punt Garcia
Assistant Campus Editors Lori Jimmy
Basketball Editor Ben Selvin
Assistant Manager Editing Troy Fitzs
Sports Editor Mike Kulich
Associate Sports Editor Benjamin Walz
Copy Editors Daniel Miller, Toy Fitta,
Mike Kulich
Special Sections Editor Sandy Herd
Workup Editors Cainie Goodwin, Cynthia Horn
Entertainment Editor Tammy Terry, Bryant Washon
Hollywood Editors Douglass Washon
Lynn Beydon, John Logue, Brandon
Staff Writers David Preston, Jesse Thomas
Photographers David Eds, Jessica Thompson
Journalists Jeff Harring, Jeff Hecker, BarKenny, Chrs Taddei
Artist Attributes Jan Caterton, Shilah Kreugerhamm
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Retail Sales Manager
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Hospital Impersonator
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Chern Barr, Judith Bearden, Patrick Davis,
Sandy Gleiber, Eklaean Striaker, Katrina Kelly
Vivercell Custin
Cary Cuber
Cary Cuber
Allen Pinegrant
Alen Pinegrant
Kent Gullet
Kent Gullet
Phil Rousseau
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Chern Barr, Judith Bearden, Patrick Davis,
Sandy Gleiber, Eklaean Striaker, Katrina Kelly
Vivercell Custin
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
General Manager Rick Musser
He had seen him from the room window, a jean-clad figure walking steadily past the row of parked cars in the lot outside, and then he stepped on to any other student, but the steady gaze that scanned windwinds, and the rectangular aluminum pad held at his side were sure
KU Parking losing popularity contest
"Damm," he cried, breaking for the door. He raced down the stairs and burst through the lobby with a speed born of desperation.
He was too late. Underneath his car's windshield was a tan piece of paper, $7.50 worth of light cardboard, courtesy of the University of Kansas Parking Service.
"Damn you," he screamed at the retreating figure. "I hope you reach your stinking quota!"
These are supposed to be mellow times.
No great controversies seem to be dividing
the nation. There are no wars to fight or
protest, no great causes to join.
But one thing almost always manages to arouse ie in KU students—the University Parking Service. Rightly or wrongly, the Parking service has been the target of more verbal abuse and more hatred this week. The police officer, politician, or nightclub owner.
animosity stems from many things: from the rude shack of finding that a car is too expensive to refuel, and rending revelation that the fine is $7.50 now, $2.50 later. It stems from having your enrollment cards put on hold because you have been found out. It stems from finding out that more than $8,000 in unpaid fines is owed to the parking officer, and that added at least one dollar to the price of permits this year, according to parking officials, and could add more unless col-
Add to that such great public relations coops as售卖停车 permits for O. L. S. Parking, which feed the meters as well, and changing the restriction times on other lots. No wonder there are so many parking fees.
Admittedly the parking service has an extremely tough job, one that is not going to win many popular points even in the best of circumstances. But it wouldn't take a major public relations effort on the part of the business to turn some of that animosity around.
For example, during a brief period at the beginning of school each fall, parking violations can be warranted by warnings rather than tickets. These warnings might say, "You have parked in a violation zone." You will be ticketed if you park here you will be ticketed if you park here. "That would give many students a clear warning."
Another step in easing hard feelings would be to loosen restrictions on evening parking. After the early evening parking
COLUMNIST
John
logan
jam from 7 to 9, many parking lots are nearly empty, yet anyone who parks there is ticketed. Parking officers could check that there are only a few cars. After all, it makes little sense to park half a mile away when there are a dozen spots light right outside your door.
The parking service might also consider cutting its $600,000 budget. This could be accomplished by employing more students and fewer full-time officers, by collecting unpaid faculty and staff fines more easily, and on the use of the electric blue go-carts.
The student members of the KU Parking Service Board also need to get on the stick. Ralph Krone, a former board member, board was so bad that the chairman, Ralph Krone, wrote in the board's annual report, "I have always been an abysmal. Of four student representatives, only one attended regularly. Two never attended."
KU parking system lacks student voice
I'm writing in response to a letter by Bill Combs about KU's narking situation.
To the Editor:
Additional funds might be collected by charging more money for athletic event
This year's representatives should have students in shape KU's parking regulations. Without their input, the board seems to be almost blind to students'
Not all the initiatives need to be made by the parking service, however. Students are going to have to make an effort too.
offer ideas for improving the parking situation.
The "situation" has gotten out of hand.
We have to realize that we are simply students. The University has Administration, faculty and employees. The university have first shots at parking the University have first shots at parking the University can only have what is left. Nothing else matters.
parking, which now adds only $50,000 to the parking service coffers, or by charging visitors a token fee for driving on campus.
Realistically, most of us don't need to attend college. I work as a commuter school like Wichita State University or Johnson County Junior College. Most of us live within a mile of our school.
It wouldn't take much. A little effort would go a long way to problems in communication, problem consideration, would be a great help in easing hard feelings toward the parking
R. Ryan Dupton
Graduate Student
Environmental Health Engineering
We can also try to communicate with the parking service. We need to talk to them, tell them our grips, bitch them out if they're doing something wrong, but also
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANAK
Technology not inherently dangerous
To the Editor:
"we generally learn from University experiences that absolutes don't exist, but the editorial in the October 16 Kansan tasted how hard it was to get away. It has got to be absolutely the worst I have ever read. Through a series of unbelievable naive, morale statements, John Fisher wrote: 'In my life, we called it 'mishaps' (that) could have great consequence for us in years to come.'"
His statement that groundwater depletion is a product of man's slavery to technology, and that we have not realized that irrigation can lead to unbelievable. The Kansas and U.S. Geological Surveys have been studying groundwater depletion in western Kansas for decades. Irrigation as a technology does have its own advantages, a precious resource, man's greed does.
The connection between the recent Gulf of Mexico oil spill and the lack of rainfall in southern Texas is one people in south-central Texas who are just recovering from serious floods due to heat.
Doomday predictions aren't needed to get us to come to grips with our expanding technology. What we need is encouragement for innovation, and development is controlled by all of us. New technology won't sell if we won't buy it, and by analyzing critical our wants and our corresponding needs, technological threats to our existence, and a fulfillment of it.
Satting unequivocally that man rushes blindly into new technology without any experience, we can do another example of the simple-minded logic that were into composing the editorial. We are forced to admit that our authors are at the mercy of ourselves to use our technology for the betterment of destruction or our freedom.
Technologies are developed not to use man but to be used by man, and it seems our social and cultural makeup will more affect technology itself. Gunpowder was developed in China long before the West got its idea of firearms, and it realizes until its adoption by the West.
and I for one would like some logical answers.
Who conjured up this little parking system? Did the students or faculty have a say in who goes to park where? Did they approve of a reasonable perrent price? Were they consulted on the move to install meters in O-zone and Satellite Union labs?
First let me say that I realize that there is limited parking space on the hill, and it is only natural to regulate the use of this space for professors, delivery persons, and students. It seems that a permit system is the answer. But why on earth are they so expensive?
Certainly a more justified figure could be reached, and if the demand proved too high, we would probably need a third method could eliminate the congestion. Furthermore, that I match讲论 of these cases to the realities of our day, say 8.a.m. until 2:30 p.m. I've yet to see a full lot after this time except during the week.
With all of the other rules and regulations governing the alighty auto at this moment, I can almost be at best, an outrage. In all of this breauncury through all of the paper work, surely there is a just cause for this "system." If, I'd like to see it get better, I am sure and figures pertaining to the total amount actually collected and the amount spent for what and when, if such a thing is ac-
They have been granted unlimited space down below, which until recently, was KU's largest gym. They have been without, however, with the onlaugh of those Godforsaken meters, the cost has risen to 75 cents a day, with the stipulation that if the meter runs out, you caught, you must be accommodated for 80 cents a day.
AT ANY rate, now that the upper crust is up on the hill, what about the students and faculty who give this institution a purpose?
Lastly, I would like to suggest that if you are currently driving to school and parking in a metered or permit space, that you park on a side street easily accessible to the bus route, and pay only 25 cents up to your class, and 25 cents back to your car. You will have access to a variety of parking facilities. Leave KU Parking Services for a way to finance all of those ugly meters.
Don Consolver
Handicapped Bus Driver No. 63
White racism yields disco discrimination To the Editor:
I think the discrimination exhibited by Shemanigans and other private clubs in
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Lawrence is simply another manifestation of the white racist society isolating itself from involvement with any minorities, soocfically blacks.
Until we are allowed to freely obtain memberships to laurence private clubs, we must think of one objective—money. Thus, we must use the principle that caused us to enlist members to laurence private clubs to equalize with laurence—a tool to obtain equity with the upper white class. I propose and ask all minortimes, specifically those in higher education, Shennieshi and other Lawrence private clubs. And to further advance our presence, we should not be "Wheel" instead of patronizing private clubs.
If the lily-white patrons of Lawrence nightclubs cannot see fit to mingle with minors now, it may be that they then enough money to keep them from entering the real world. After all, the 19th Amendment gave us the right to vote, and a single right is an important opportunity to pursue happiness?
Willard Martin Chicago Senior
To Sandra Harper (the psychic who predicts the future and is not frightened by contacting the dead), and to her clients, I simply quote two passages from the Bible that show no one can be found among you who makes his son or his daughter pass through the fire.
Psychic's activities wrong, Bible says
To the Editor:
Joe Vusich
one who uses divination, one who practices witchcraft, or one who intercepts omens, or other mystical events, a medium, or a spiritist, or one who calls up the dead. For whenever does these things happen, we call upon a spiritist. "Do not turn to mediums or spiritists; do not seek them out to be deified by them. I am not a spiritist."
Joe Vusich
Fairway sophomore
Leaflet rule reflects knee-jerk liberalism
To the Editor:
The AAUPs, T. P.Srinivasan's and the
AUAps, T.P.Srinivasan's, against
definitary handouts to the baldersdash
the baldersdash and totalitarian liberalism
that runs in the blood of certain
Ned Kehde University Archives
Page one pictures receive unfair flak
To the Editor:
Tim Collins
I'm sick and tired of opening up the Kansean to the editorial page and seeing the photos. I don't know how to front page pictures. These people should be taken out and show, I appreciate the pictures of women on the front page and I like to see them. I want to work and keep those good pictures.
Tim Collins Valley Center freshman
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and include a heading. Please include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is african american, please include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. If the writer is not the right to edit letters for publication.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 24, 1979
5
Man gets sentence for kidnaping-rape
A Lawrence man, found guilty Sept. 26, knotting and raping an 18-year-old in Douglas County district court yesterday to five to 20 years in prison for each of the three charges.
Robert W. Brown, 1612 Tennessee SL,
was sentenced for a kidnapping and rape
that occurred in May. The sentences will
run concurrently.
Rondel S. Southard, 408 Indiana St., who pleaded guilty to aggravated sodomy in the same incident, was sentenced to one for five years in prison.
Judge Ralph King also recommended that both men receive evaluations at the Kansas Reception and Diagnostic Center in Topeka.
AURH to negotiate plan to house sorority
By BOB PITTMAN Staff Reporter
After nearly three hours of debate last night, the association of University Resilience Hall adopted a proposal to negotiate with Alpha Omicron Pi sorority housing policies in accordance with its rules.
Alpha Omicron Pi is reorganizing on campus and has been premised a floor on a second-story balcony in its own house in the fall of 1981, according to Fred McElain, director of the office of FCC.
The proposal included a friendly amendment that requested negotiations be held between representatives of the sorority, AURH and KU officials to discuss the issues and provide housing for the sorority pledge next year in a University residence hall.
About 70 people, including McEhlene, Jay Smith, AURH president, Ann Eversole, director of student organizations and academic advisers, and the director of the office of residential programs, crowded into Hashinger Hall's floor. Dover dance to attend the meeting.
The meeting followed a debated at宴 in an AURH meeting last week over the procedure for promising spaces in a University residence hall to the sorority.
The committee's proposal was drawn up by Miriam Edelman, president of Elworth University, and Judy Levy, AURH Campus Affairs chairman. The proposal should come up for AURH approval at the next full assembly meeting. The chairwoman is Bald Dahlman, housing services chairman.
The proposal stated that members of University residence halls objected to the "preferential treatment" used by the university in contracting rooms for the pledges.
Because pledges would be guaranteed rooms in one of the halls, the proposal said, the students could meet over both previous residents of the halls and new students who wanted to live in them.
The proposal also criticized the University for promising rooms to the pledges
during a campus housing shortage and said the move meant state support of a private organization.
Although the proposal recognized a need for new housing for sorority members, it stated that introduction of a sorority into the community was an unquestioned uniqueness of the residence hall way of life.
Smith, AURI president, said the decision to house members of the sorority was made last spring by McEhlenne, Everele and Carl Smith, dean of student life.
made at that time that promised the sorority living spaces on a floor of a University residence hall next year.
"Unless we would be so crass an to back away from our agreement with AOE, plus I will have been treated that really been agreed that they will have a place in the University residence hall."
McElhenie said a verbal agreement was
GRADUATING ENGINEERS
Leslie Welch, traveling consultant for Alpha Omicron Pi, said last week that the sorority would prefer not to move into a hall that did not welcome it.
Have you considered these factors in determining where you will work?
1. Will the job offer challenge and responsibility?
2. Will your future employer encourage job mobility?
3. Will your future employer encourage, support and reward continued professional education?
4. How much choice will you have in selecting your work assignment?
5. Big starting solaries are nice but what is the salary growth and promotion potential in the job?
At the Naval Weapons Center we have given these things a lot of consideration and believe we have the answers for you.
6. Can you afford the cost-of living in the area?
Arrange through your placement office to interview with our representative[s]
Maurice Hamm
Bob Hintz
on November 8
We think you will like what you hear.
If you cannot fit an interview into your schedule, write or call:
DEPARTMENT OF THE NATION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
WASHINGTON, D.C.
C. KAREN ALTIERI Professional Employment Coordinator
NAVAL WEAPONS CENTER (CODE 92901)
China Lake, CA 93555 • (714) 392-2690
An Equal Opportunity Employer.
Directions: Complete Civil Service Exam.
AnEqual Opportunity Employer
These are Career Civil Service Positions
U.S. Citationism Required
MASS. STREET DELI inc
941 MASSACHUSETTS
Cherry
Cheese Cake
50¢ reg. price $1.00
No coupons
accepted
with this
special
offer
good
oct. 24, 25, 26
No coupons accepted with this special
offer
good
oct. 24, 25, 26
2 FOR 1 TROPICAL FISH SALE
Buy One, Get One Free!
when you buy any fish under $5.00
Save 50%
Offer good Wednesday, October 24-Sunday, October 28th.
Offer good Wednesday, October 24-Sunday, October 28th.
Incredible Store Specials
Neons 10/1.00
Feeder Gold Fish 10/1.00
Glowlites 6/1.00
Black Tetras 6/1.00
Black Neons 6/1.00
Serpae Tetras 6/1.00
White Clouds 6/1.00
Pristilla Tetras 6/1.00
Baby Red Belly Piranhas 2.98
Many Other In-Store Specials
10 Gallon
Tanks . $7.98
20 Gallon
Tanks . $14.98
tropaquaria
of lorrence
2104 WEST 25th St.
HOLIDAY PLAZA
(Near Kief's Records)
842-4062
10 Gallon
Tanks . . $7.98
20 Gallon
Tanks . . $14.98
tropaguaria
of Lawrence
2104 WEST 25th St.
HOLIDAY PLAZA
(Near Kief's Records)
842-4062
12th Anniversary Sale (Thursday through Sunday, Oct. 28th)
It's our birthday and you get the presents: New fall looks at fantastic prices.
Save 20% to 50%
M
Cotton, polyster woven tops with tux
waistband, cuffs and collar. Black.
plum and tan.
$19.99
Reg. $24.00 Now
SELECT GROUP OF PANTS
Reg. up to $28
Now
$18 & $19
Bobbie Brooks Coordinates
Vest Shawl collar with pleated packets of polyester, rayon and silk. Reg $27 Now $18
skirt Matching mocha A-Line with silt front and stitching detailing. Reg $29 Now $18
bousse Tailored perma dress. Reg $20 Now $14
Stripe. Reg $20
One piece Qiina dress with side slit and matching red wood belt. Bag: $40
Now $19.99
Jackets, Coats, All-Weather Coats (Wools, furs, leathers, suede, poplin) SAVE
$20-$60
All Sales Final
Entire Stock
Not Included
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
OPEN
Thursday
until 9 p.m.
SUNDAY
1:00-5:00
6
Wednesday, October 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
OPERA HOUSE PRODUCTIONS
CONCERT CALENDAR
Like an audience in a stage, call the information
OCTOBER
Wed. 12 29 Archangel night
Mon. 25 11 All Stars night JEW BOW
Mon. 27 11 Amy's Night for Friends Blue Band and Blues
Mon. 28 11 Blue Band and Blues
NOVEMBER
Tue. 1 John Hammond and J.R. Paul Black Morton
Mon. 2 06 Amy's Night for Friends Blue Band
Mon. 2 7 Family Music Festival
Mon. 3 04 Pablo Picasso & Blue Band
Mon. 3 10 Pablo Picasso & Blue Band
This THEMED CALLAR is open
for registration and available
membership to the membership
to be offered at 8:00 or 9:00
Bank hours of
9:00 - noon at 9:00
Lawrence Opera House
Call for contact info: 812-493-9030
Town House
Dear客户:
8:00 AM - late at 9:05
Lawrence
Opera house
www.lawrence.org
842 6930
The
Other Place
1717 W. 6th
843-9706
MONDAYS— All Btl. & Can Beer 55*
WEDNESDAYS—
Drink* dry
Draft Beer
Ladles $1.50
Gents $2.50
All you can drink
FRIDAYS— TGIF Pitchers $1
Granada
COMMO
TEN
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat-Sun 2:30
THE BEST FROM HOLY MOOD:
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
MOVIE MARQUEE
"MONTY PYTHON'S
Varsity
Hillcrest
817 624 5970
1. "STARTING OVER"
Eve, 7:30 & 9:50 Sat Sun 1:30
LIFE OF BRIAN
va. 7 & 9.00 Sat Sun 2:00
2. "THE GOODBYE GIRL"
Fire 7:14:30
3. "WHEN A STRANGER CALLS"
Fire 7:14:30
4. Sun 2:00
Cinema Twin
CALLS
Eve. 7:20 & 9:20 Sat-Sun 2:00
1. "SKATETOWN USA"
1. SKATE/UTAH USA
Eve. 7:40 & 9:40 Sat Sun 1:45
2. "JESUS"
Ernst H. Bierd
Movie information Movie information Movie information
Julie's
SPAGHETTI DINNER ALL YOU CAN EAT ... $1.99
Julie's is offering Two Special Values in One ... the Spaghetti Dinner you have at an especially price and all you can eat. Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday only, a complete Spaghetti Dinner of your choice served with a tossed green salad and fresh baked Italian bread . . . for the price of $1.99.
MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
Select Your Favorite
• Spaghetti with Meat Sauce ... $1.99
• Spaghetti with Marinara Sauce ... $1.99
• Spaghetti with Marinara Sauce covered with
a layer of Mozzarella Cheese ... $1.99
Hours:
11 a.m to 11:00 am
Midnight to
Thursday
11 a.m to 1 a.m on Friday
Sunday
11 a.m to 11:15 pm
Sunday
2:34 o'clock
Lawrence, Kansas
843-7110
WHEN
he first entertainer to ever have
a record which he wrote and recorded,
reach top chart (all on three
songs) GSW, HAWK and R&B!
AT THE TIME SAME?
WHO
did his songs, recorded by Elvis
Beatles, The Beatles, John Cash,
to name a few?
WHEN
in Lawrence for a special
will be in Lawrence for a special show tonight...?
CARL PERKINS
"Mr. Blue Suede Shoes"
only $0.00 at the door
Duxes open at
8:00 alarms at 9:00
tawntree
Opera House
Call for contact info 842 6930
HOLLOWEEN
Mister Guy of Lawrence
Announces Its 2nd Annual
HALLOWEEN SALE!!!
One Week Only Wed.24-Wed.31
Save Big On These Season Favorites
Perfect for Homecoming Weekend!!!
Sweaters ... including solids, stripes in v-neck,
crew neck, shawls etc. a large selection
NOW $10
$15
Cotton flannel shirts values to $25
NOW $12.99
and $ \frac{1}{2} $ off
Outerwear ... including down parkas, hunting shirts
by Pendleton, fiber-filled parkas, and split
suede cowhide with pile lining values to $115
NOW 25% off
Chaps shirts by Ralph Lauren ...values to $29.50
NOW 25% off
Wool shirts ... values to $26.50
NOW $18.95
NOW 25% off
Suits ... including tweeds, solids, and stripes in two and three pieces ... values to $189.50 NOW $139.50
all stock not included
hours
m-t-w-f-sat 10-6
th 10-9
sun 1-5
MISTER
GUY
922 mass.
MISTER
GUY
Many other items on sale!!!
Higher prices for aluminum cans attract area trash bin scavengers
Aluminum cans are worth more than ever before. This has lured many people into picking cans out of trash bins and converting them to cash at area collection
By PAM LANDON Staff Reporter
Area collectors will pay 23 cents a pound for the cans, up 13 cents from five years ago. About 24 cans weigh a pound.
The number of aluminum cans brought by Lapea collection center in Lawrence to the market in May, previews previous years, Phil McNeal, vice president for sales marketing with Lapea, Inc., said.
By PAM LANDON
STEVE HALEY, Lapeka's Lawrence branch manager, said the higher prices now offered for the cans had contributed to the increase in cans taken to the center.
Lapke, a Coors beer distributing agency in this area since March 1988, has offices in Topeka and Lawrence. The Lawrence office is located at 625 E. Main Street, collecting aluminum cans since 1970.
McNeal said the Lawrence collection center received 24,254 pounds as compared with about 852,696 pounds of aluminum that was sold in those pounds, about 407,352 pounds, last September.
The used aluminum cans are more
valuable now, he said, because the price of new aluminum is so high.
A spokesman for Reynolds Aluminum Supply Co., North Kansas City, Mo., estimated the cost of a new aluminum sheet for a 200-square-foot, the same sheet cost about $1.80 a square foot.
Six months ago, Reynolds Aluminum also began collecting aluminum in the Lawrence area.
7:30 p.m. $1.00
REYNOLN'S ALSO PAYS 23 cents a pound for aluminum, including foil, according to Keth Kenny, manager of the company. The center in Leuven, Lepage, collects calls ¢
Presents
The higher price of new aluminum has increased the competition for aluminum cans. McNealssaid.
sua films
Barbara Wilkins, Wescoe Hall custodian knows the value of aluminum cans and also knows about competition.
"EVERYBODY'S SAVING cans now," she said. "For a while there I was collecting from $1 to $10 worth of cans a week. One week I collected $20 worth of cans."
For a white, Wilkins was one of only a handful of Wescoc custodians saving aluminum cans. But custodians in other camp buildings also have been collecting
BREWSTER
MCLOUD
R
METROCOLOR"
Wednesday, Oct. 24
BUD CORT
SALLY KELLERMAN
Woodruff Auditorium
She said she found many of the cans in faculty offices on the first floor where she works. But most of the cans came from the Wescoe Hall cafeteria.
—No refreshments allowed—
LOVE
RECORDS
AND TAPES
Paraphernalia
842-3059
15 W. 9th St
Cheley
DO YOU WANT TO WORK WITH YOUNG PEOPLE
ROCKY MOUNTAINS?
It is very rewarding,
but demanding work.
Starting salary $550
plus room, board,
travel expense
Wilkins said she saved the money she made for her grandson. Most of the other custodians said they used their extra money for gasoline.
"I also forse an increase in the use of aluminum by beverage companies because it is recyclable," he said.
McNeal said he expected to see an increase in people collecting cans as well as an increase in the price paid for them in the future.
Haley, Lapeka branch manager, said people of any age brought cans to the collection center.
HOWEVER, she said she had stopped going to the trash bin because she was tired of the competition. Now she collects cans from offices and makes $7 to $8 a week.
travel expense
Early June to Mid August
You must be 19 and have
completed your soph. yr
"We have no typical customer. They range from young kids to the elderly," he said.
APPLY BY JAN. 1 to:
CHELEY COLORAD CAMP, INC.
805 W. DAVIS ST.
Denver, CO 80206
ON CAMP INTERVIEWS
The trash cans are taken from the cafeteria and dumped into a huge trash bin, Wilkins said.
The first one to the bin gets the cans. "We all used to make a mad dash to the trash bin," she said.
McNeal said the energy saved by recycling one pound of aluminum would burn a light bulb for 80 hours.
HALEY SAID that aluminum could be recycled indefinitely and that one recycled can would make one new can.
Lapke sends the cans to a Wichita salvage dealer who puts the cans into 700 towers that are shipped by truck or cans by train to the Alcoa Aluminum Company, Alcoa, Tenn., where they are melted and made into aluminum sheets. The cans are then recycled into Colo., where they are made into new cans.
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
KLZR
106
Roadstar RS 3700 Car Stereo 1/2 OFF
1 Year Free Replacement Warranty
Installed
NOW $200.00
CR
ROADSTAR
FM
AM
Tuner
FREE RADIO
INSTALLATION
with this
coupon
PWR LOAD
AUX DCO
TURBOCHANGE
Save 50% on the great roadster RS 3700. AM-FM cassette, with Auto Search Tuning LED Indicator. Auto-Reverse and Fast Lock Forward/Rewind
LED Indicator.
Brighter Roads
843 6030
1420 W 23th
W.C. & me PIZZA
544 W. 23rd 841-6181
HOMECOMING SPECIAL
No Coupon Needed
2 For 1 Pizza Special
Buy One Medium Cheese Pizza at $4.95 Get The Second Medium Cheese Free Additional Toppings 65° Each
*
Offer Ends Sun. Oct. 28 at 12 midnight
NEW YORKCUP
WEEKEND SPORTS WEEK
NEW YORKER
WEST SIDE MASS.
1021 MASS.
October Luncheon Special
offer good 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily
Soup and Salad bar Special $225
reg. price
$8.75
[Image of bowls containing different types of rice, grains, and ingredients used in cooking.]
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 24, 1979
7
Bookstore closed for inventory
By AMY HOLLOWELL Staff Reporter
The entrance to the Kansas Union Bookstore's textbook department, blocked by tables for the past month, will remain closed for at least another month while books are returned to publishers. Betty Brook, book store manager, said yesterday.
“It’s clearly not safe for people to wander around back in the aisles because there are books everywhere on the floor, of shelves, everywhere,” Brock said.
The bookstore does not have the space to accommodate all of the books that have not been sold, she said, and the only way the bookstore staff can prepare the books
to be returned to publishers is to shut off the store.
This does not mean, that books cannot be purchased, although Brock said sales would decrease as a result of the inaccessibility to buyers.
"We know we are jeopardizing our sales, but we know of no other way to handle this situation," she said.
The textbook department is open to patrons wishing to browse through the stacks, but if the customer knows what he wants, he can find it at the entrance and find the book, she said.
Members of the bookstore staff are compiling a report, Brock said, that will reveal the cause of the "largest number of books stolen." The report was shared in her 14 years as a bookstore manager.
"If enrollment is up, we shouldn't be having this problem of extra books," Brock said.
Ideally, all of the overstocked books will be returned to the publishers by Nov. 1 and may then be distributed. Brock said, adding that she had not exhibited inventory process to lapse as long as it did.
She said most instructors simply ordered the same number of books they ordered the previous semester without considering a possible drop in enrollment.
She cited as an example one course in which more than 3,500 books had been ordered and only 500 had been sold.
"When we get it clear and safe, we'll open it up again," she said.
Med Center nurse tries to open counseling center for diabetics
BY ROSEMARY INTFEN Staff Reporter
Noisy chatter from the hallway fills the room as a nurse attempts to give bedside advice to a diabetic patient about his diet.
In the corridor other nurses advise patients on various methods they can use to prevent falls. For example, nurses' efforts are hampered by the incessant hum of TV monitors at the station
Center, a walk-in information center for diabetics.
On-the-spot counseling of diabetics is common at the University of Kansas Medical Center. But it is one practice that requires knowledge in endocrinology, is trying to change.
For the past two months, Eaks has been trying to open the Cray Diabetes Education
"I believe diabetics should have some place to go to talk about and learn about their disease. They are their own managers and they should help them that way," Eaks said.
LAST SUMMER, EAKS obtained permission to use a small room in Bell Memorial Hospital to set up the center. But lack of clerical help has kept the doors shut.
Eaks said all clerical service would have to be voluntary, but she is trying to get more
"The KU Med Center needs a resource center. We have the room, but if we can't get clerical help it will remain a locked center," she said.
money for the project through the department of endocrinology and nursing services at the Med Center.
The money to start the center was donated by the family for which the center was named, Eaks said.
If the center were opened, the hospital's self-management classes for diabetics could be taught there. Eaks said.
The program is a 17-week series designed to teach diabetics how to manage their disease, she said. For one hour a week, the program teaches them how to balance diets and inject insulin.
Eaks said the Med Center treated about 500 patients, with diabetes, most of whom receive insulin.
Sorority Rush 1980 Registration Meeting
October 25 at 8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
Come and pick up Rush registration packets.
Bring your questions!
Rush will be held January 9-14, 1980.
PORTRAIT OF A LOVE BETWEEN
BLOOD DRIVE
. . . continuing Today 11:30-4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Give according to appointments scheduled last week.
Walk-ins are encouraged but should expect to wait.
Sponsored by: Panhellenic Assoc., Interfraternity Council, Assoc. of University Res. Halls, and Circle K Club
R
Wednesday, October 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Five finalists vie for 1979 HOPE award Gurtler qualified by experience, not degree
A. C. B. M.
By PAM LANDON
Staff Reporter
Franc Gurtler
The University of Kansas has surprised Franc Gurtler again.
Gurtler, part-time lecturer of occupational therapy, said the University first surprised him when it called him without permission. The school asked him to teach a wood-working course.
The second surprise was being voted a HOPE award finalist.
"It was the greatest shock of my life and one of the greatest things that ever happened to me," he said.
Gurtler, a native Kansan, has spent most of his 61 years in Lawrence. After graduating during the Depression from Brown University, he went to work doing whatever was available.
He said that he could not afford to go to college but that he had no "hangups" about not having a degree.
Gurtler does not need a degree to teach his
His 32-year-experience in the cabinet-making business makes him well-qualified to teach the course. He has had a cabinet shop in LAwrence since 1947.
"I guess that is why the University asked me to teach—because of the local reputation that I have as a craftsmaker," he said.
shop practices class for the occupational therapy department.
"For example, I may ask them to design a device to help a particular patient turn on the water faucet," he said.
Gurtler said he often made up hypothetical patients whose problems his students had to solve.
Gurtler teaches his students, 95 percent of whom are women, the use and maintenance of hand and power woodworking tools as they relate to occupational therapy.
"So, using scrap materials in most cases,
they must design and make something that
can be attached to the faucet that the patient
can use."
He gives only one formal lecture at the beginning of the semester and uses no textbooks in the class.
The rest of his lectures are what he calls "spontaneous lectures."
He said he thought students deserved two things from a teacher-consistency in grading and individual attention.
Gurtler said he was glad the University was hiring more professional people like himself in some subject areas.
Although he does consulting work with several area occupational therapy clinics and has the unite committee and advising team, he is being at the University's to teach, he said.
"We have something to contribute to student education," he said, "I try to prepare my students for the real world." I can see how important it is. I know what you're sure to face."
He enjoys being around students and
istening to them, and said many of his
students know his office as the "listening post."
"The students know I'm their friend and they can come to me and just crash if they want to." Gurtler said.
"I tell these students that as long as my door is open, I've got nothing more important to do than talk to them. If there's a problem, I'll just call you. I don't face it front of me, I flip it over so I can see it."
"When I'm talking to a student, I wash everything else out of my mind."
This more than his teaching probably contributed to his becoming a HOPE award finalist, he said.
Gurtler said he would not have been the same person if he had not started teaching, which has made him much more liberal and understanding.
The Honor for an Outstanding Progressive Educator award is presented to a KU faculty member each full her memorial year. Students will be between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m., tomorrow and Friday. Students can vote in front of the Kansas Union, in front of the Gymnasium, or between Summerfield Hall and Robinson Gymnasium. The HOPE award will be presented during the halftime of the Kansas State football game this Saturday.
"I if had not started teaching, I doubt I'd be alive. The tensions and pressures of my business probably would have killed me."
Cell biology still excites Balfour
3y AMY HOLLOWELL Staff Reporter
"Minnesota" is stamped permanently in black ink on the large notepad on his desk.
His eyes light up and the silver-haired professor jeans back in his chair, smiling warmly as he speaks of his home state.
One of five finalists in the 1979 HOPE award competition, Balfour said that after more than 20 years of teaching, he still had a sense for his subject that he began his career with him.
But William Balfour, KU professor of physiology and cell biology, has not lived in Minnesota for more than 20 years. He came from University of Kansas in 1957 and has been bipolar.
Benjamin's fiction adds spark to'dull' classes
Staff Reporter
By KATE POUND
The sign on Beazel Benjamin's door says, "You are welcome anytime I'm in and I'm always in unless I'm out. The HOPE is in here to help you to be in and available to his students."
"I try to be responsive to students needs and to do that, I must be available as much as possible. Otherwise, I wouldn't be doing my job." Benjamin said last week.
Benjamin, a professor of architecture, has been nominated for a HOPE award three times in the eight years he has taught. This is the first year he has been a finalist.
An engineer by training, Benjamin teaches structural engineering to architecture students.
Benjamin's office in Marvin Hall has few of the trappings associated with engineer or architects. No T-squares, blueprints or calculators are visible.
Instead, books, papers and pamphils fill a bookshell, cover a table and overflow from the library's textbook collection, with titles such as "Structures for Architects," which benjamini himself wrote.
However, in a place of honor atop several technical tomes, all written by Benjamin, his yellow book, volume titled "Susan's Travels," that Benjamin's novel that Benjamin recently wrote.
"That is my favorite of all the things I've written," he said.
Benjamin has been writing fiction and children's literature since his college days in his native city, Bombay, India.
I do contribute writing to living. "But in India, it is impossible to live by one's craft," he said. "So I chose a different field when I went to the university."
He once considered writing for a living.
Benjamin Began studying engineering at the University of Bombay and then went to London University to earn his master's degree. He was then sent to the Hatfield Polytechnic in England to teach. 1971 Benjamin brought his family to Lawrence and began teaching in the university.
In England, Benjaminim said, regulations are in place for grading and grading. He prefers the American grading system to decisions on exams and grades are made by instructors and students have a chance to take the test.
Tests and grades, however, are not the most important elements of good teaching, he said. A good teacher clearly outlines the course content to students in the course material meets students' needs.
"To be a good teacher you have to be sure that your students understand 100 percent of what it is to teach," he said. "Otherwise it is a waste of the students' time and money."
It is also important, Benjamin said, for instructors to develop interests beyond their field.
"People get so immersed in their own profession they don't see anything else," he said. "I don't think that makes a good teacher."
Benjamin spends much of his free time writing and going to the theater, he said. He travels occasionally, taking trips to Canada and India to visit relatives.
"I enjoy my job and having reached this position," he said. "I am able to earn my living and still have time to indulge in my fantasies about being a writer."
P. S. C. H.
"Mow anes it to himself to fulfill dreams. If he doesn't, it 's a criminal waste."
Bezaleel Benjamin
"You can't be a good teacher without enthusiasm," he said. "I still try to impart my enthusiasm to my students."
Although Balfour has been a finalist twice before, he has never won the HOEP award. But Balfour said the nomination itself was "real's a good boot to the ego."
"Being nominated makes it seem all worthwhile." he said.
Balfour came to KU after a fellowship at the Mavo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
Born in California, he grew up in Rochester where his family had moved when he was six months old.
In 1932 he went to Dartmouth College and after two years transferred to the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis.
Then, after an internship in Rochester, N.Y., and the fellowship at the Mayo Clinic, he came to KU.
Along with teaching, *Baifal* ,who will be next month, is a "half-time" ambassador for the School of Biology and the physiology and cell biology majors, the physical therapy students and many pre-graduates.
Outside of his job, Balfour is interested in classical music, student concerts, collecting opera records and bird-watching.
Balfour also had said that he had a small greenhouse in which he "let orchids grow," and that he was addicted to guzzle画香.
From 1982 to 1976 Balfour was the vice chancellor for student affairs, although he continued during this period to teach the human physiology course.
"I left that office because I thought somebody else should handle those problems." Baifour said.
Balfour advises his pre-med students to be aware of current problems in the medical field.
"Medicine is changing," he said. "I think there's less respect for the profession as a whole than there used to be."
He said the growing incidence of malpractice suits was unfortunate because most doctors were "trying hard to do their best."
In the classroom, Balfour encourages his students to ask questions.
But he said many students thought their questions were not relevant.
He said one of the most enjoyable aspects of being an educator was telling people something they did not know before.
"I try to get my students to appreciate the beauty of the human body." he said.
H. L. H. G. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
William Balfour
Cigler conveys his zest for politics in class
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
Staff Renorter
As he speaks, Cigler, a HOPE award finalist this year, frequently cochs his head
From his office in Blake Hall, Allan Gigler, associate professor of political science can look out over the Wakarusa trees to paint the trees with gold and red.
toward the open window and gazes out over the multi-colored campus four floors below him.
Teaching political science at the University of Kansas is something Cigler enjoys.
"Where else could my job be my hobby?" he asks. "I am fascinated by the American political system—how it manages to persist."
JANE E. ROBERTS
JULIE M. WILSON
If the students are convinced that the teacher thinks the subject is important, Cigler said, they also will begin to think it is important.
Students sense that feeling that I have and it's a great asset in the classroom."
"I came to my subject matter convinced of its importance, convinced that students will be more knoledgable citizens if they understand why the making sense of American politics," he said.
Allan Cigler
Cugler came to KU in 1970 as an acting assistant professor. He graduated from the University of Maryland in 1967 and received his master's degree from the University of Maryland in 1967 and his doctorate from the University of Maryland in 1967.
"Teaching is increasingly becoming an important part of a university," he said. "because of things like the HOPE奖, automatically, it is a sign that teaching matters."
Teachers should have a "sense of mission," Cigler said, because they are doing something that society benefits from.
"We're training the next generation to make sense out of the world," he said. "And that's a terribly important task."
Cigler defines teaching as the communication of knowledge.
'When I think of teaching my first view is how can I communicate the subject matter
to the students" he said. "The subject matter is what I focus on.
Students' attitudes have changed considerably since he came to KU. Cicler said.
"Students are more cynical toward politics. That basic cynicism is reflected in the rest of society," he said.
"When I came here in the 1970s there was the Vietnam war and we still had the draft. We had the kind of personalities who got into politics, people, students, like N'com and Kissinger."
Although the interest still exists, he said, a catalyst issue or personality to get students interested in politics is missing.
"Political science is fascinating material," he said. "It's less that I have to spark interest than not put it out. The interest is usually there to begin with."
One of the rewards of teaching is knowing that a teacher can make a difference in his students' live, Culier said.
"There is nothing like the letter that tells me the student who has been gone for five years, a letter that makes you read something the other day and remembered me talking about it and then
"It's a tremendous uplift."
Ford never thought he'd be in this business
By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
Allen Ford, professor of business, says he never thought he would be a professor, much less be nominated as one of the five finalists for the HOPE award.
"As an undergraduate, I remember one of my naughty asking me wouldn't it be neat to tell him, 'no, no!' and telling him, 'no it certainly would not be at all.' Ford said, his voice just grew louder. "Ford said, his voice just grew louder."
But Ford caught the teaching bug as a graduate student at the University of Arkansas when he began grading papers for a professor there.
"I really enjoyed my association with the professor. I taught his class when he had to go somewhere and I got a taste of teaching," he said.
Ford taught at Washington State University, the University of Texas and the University of Missouri before coming to KU in 1976.
He began teaching as an instructor a year later and earned his Ph.D. from Arkansas in 1968.
He said he was impressed by the emphasis that the University of Kansas placed on excellence in teaching.
“It’s the first camp that I’ve been on, to my knowledge, that has awards for teaching,” he said. “It’s a nice indication that there’s an emphasis of the quality of teaching at KU. It’s a shame that students have预案 haven’t done something like this.”
"It's difficult to apply the same teaching methods to a group of students and get consistent, positive results. It really makes me admire professors who can go into a group of 200 or 300 students, bring the class together, and make them progress," he said.
Ford, who teaches courses in accounting and taxation, said it was important for teachers to remember that all students had different learning capabilities.
Ford said he tried to encourage his students to be prepared in class on a daily basis.
"Students typically fall into the practice going through the course for about two months. We teach them devoting their time and energy to it," he said. "It's so much better if a student just goes with it."
Ford said he made it a habit to ask numerous questions during class to keep the students from going to sleep.
extent.
"I used to have a teacher who would tell us that as students, we should be in a position to go to a movie and relax before a test. I really think that's a good approach," he said. "If a student does his work all along he'll be able to retain what he has learned." The teacher's advice is that he will be able to understand fully what the teacher is trying to say during class."
He he said he as much satisfaction from teaching average students as from teaching exceptionally bright students if the students used their learning capabilities to the fullest
"I strive to cause a student to stretch out a little bit," he said.
"And you know, once you stretch somebody's mind, it never goes back to its original shape."
Joseph Beuvers, Dame
Allen Ford
Wednesdav. October 24.1979
1
Brush pile issue settled; owner to make it sightly
The owner of a brach pile that was deemed unfit for discharged by the Lawrence City Commissioners last night to use one of two alternatives to comply with the city's requirements,
The commissioners told Gene Bernsikoy, 1201 New York St., that he would have to either pile the brush in his yard or lay it on a wooden fence within one month.
The commissioners directed city en-vironmental inspector Margene Swarts to work with Bernofsky to bring the pile into compliance.
Two weeks ago Bernofsky was cited for having an "unsightly" brush pile in his backyard.
Bernofsky told the commissioners that he considered the brush pile, which he uses for the two wood stoves that heat his house, to be attractive.
"How do you write a dress code for someone's backyard?" he asked.
HE GAVE THE commissioners copies of a petition with the 150 signatures that said the brush pile was aesthetically pleasing and a refreshing sight. The petition also
commended Bernofsky for saving energy by burning wood.
However, Bernofsky told the commissioners he was willing to compromise rather than be fines or sent to jail, which are penalties for violating the ordeal.
The commissioners agreed that they were not against the use of wood as fuel but that the pile would have to be made more attractive.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the company has four 31st St., and El Najo Joel Molet, 212 W. 51th St., one year to remove their signs, and the other large to comply with the city's sign requirements.
They also granted a variance to Corncopia Restaurant, 1801 Massachusetts St., for a third wall sign, which is prohibited by the ordinance.
The commissioners also approved a site plan for offices for the Lawrence Independent Living Resource Center to be located at 839 Kentucky St. The project will be handled by a project in Kansas to help handicapped individuals become more independent.
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Under the new program, freshmen must maintain a year-long GPA of 1.30, sophomores 1.50, juniors 1.70 and seniors 2.0 to graduate.
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"We feel that these are pretty minimal and we don't make many exceptions," Rogers said. "We try to get them in and get them into the system, people to use the taxpayer's money to go to
See "Annie" or Neil Simon's "Chapter II"
Rogers said students' academic progress was checked at the end of each school year. If a student's grades are too low, he is sent to a counseling service inelegible for financial aid the next semester.
See Toulous Lautrec Exhibit See the sights of Chicago
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Rogers said that if a student was denied aid, he could petition for re-admittance to the program by writing a letter to the Academic Standards Committee for the academic year. Mr. Rogers was强劳 Hail. He said that about one of five students who petitioned was reaccepted.
These students will have their aid discontinued until they raise their grade point average to reasonable progress by giving it by the financial aid office, Rogers said.
Rogers said a new reasonable-progress standard for students receiving aid was implemented last fall for the 1979-80 school year.
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Students receiving financial aid loans or grants have more to fear than parental disapproval if their grades drop below a certain grade level, director of financial aid, said yesterday.
He said that about 150 out of 3,500 students in the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant program at KU were turned down for loans or grants this fall because of low grades. He also said that about 140 out of 3,500 students in the campus-based programs were denied aid.
D
Financial aid dropped if grades fall too low
Campus-based programs are National Direct Student Loans, Work Study and undergraduate scholarships.
Sun 6 pm - 1 am
MINGLE TONIGHT!
DUNGEONS & DRAGON TOURNAMENT
school if they don't really want to go to school."
Wednesday, October 24th, 1979 6:30 p.m.
Student Senate Meeting Tonite...
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat 6 pm - 3 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W.6th
842-7030
Conclusion of Supplemental Budget Hearings.
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
University Daily Kansai
Big 8 Room—Kansas Union
MONTOYA
The.World Renowned Flamenco Guitarist
— Hat Parcel, Amsterdam
— Attonbladet, Stockholm
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— N.Y. Herald Tribune
All Seats Reserved
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The University of Kansas Concert Series presents CARLOS MONTOYA, Classical Guitar Sunday, OCTOBER 28, 1979 at 3:10 P.M. UCAINVISION THEATER
Tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office
PROCLAMATION FOR A UNITED NATIONS DAY OF SHAME
Whereas, the US def condemn the United States in 1957 for maintaining military bases in Iraq and in 1965 for importing nuclear and chrome from Communist countries.
Whereas, the United Nations has never condemned the Communist sytems for assailing property rights, defending the sanctity of the family, allowing property ownership to be determined by the will of its members.
Whereas, the United States has only one state in the U.N General Assembly, while the Soviet Union has three (N.Y.C., NYC, and the Ukraine), and
Whereas, the movie Americans "contribute" to the UN has not been used to support American ideals of the human rights and freedom, but instead has been used to support the United Nations' mission.
Whereas, America's taxpayers pay two-fifths of the UN regular budget, more than six times the amount that a member of the major national collectives contribute.
Whereas, in 1972 the UN expelled the government of Free China from its membership, and instead invited American Chinese tyrants who have murdered millions of Chinese civilians.
Whereas, just this year, the United Nations Development Program has approved a $15 million aid program for these same Communist Chinese, and
Whereas, two groups affiliated with the restored Palestine Liberation Organization (the Special Unit on Palestinian Rights and the Committee on the Exercise of the Indemnity Rights of the Palestinian People) have been receiving funds from the UN and
Whereas, UNICEF which claims to help needy children has issued medical combat packs to terrorists in Rwanda, and Ethiopia.
Whereas, far from being a meaningful debating society, the UN is actually the formal framework for a one-world government, and
Whereas, the United States should maintain its sovereignty and freedom, and should not allow the UN to control acquiritio on its citizens.
IT BE THERE MEMORISED that the United States should get out of the United Nations, and that they are anniversary on 14 October, 1979 be proclaimed.
For more information attend the film showing "Peace Never Unmarked" at the Kansas Power and Light Building, 9th and Tennessee, 7:30-pm. thursday, 8th, 25. This is a public service by the Laurence Chapter of The John Birch Society.
Old Green Hall renamed after Joshua Lippincott
There no longer will be two Green Halls at the University of Kansas.
The Kansas Board of Decisions last week to rename old Green Hall after Joshua A. Lippincott, the fourth chancellor of KU, who served from 1838 to 1890.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes requested the name change after he received a recommendation from an administrative staff. Scolly, Dykes' administrative assistant.
"One of the committee's reasons for recommending that Lippincott's name
be used was that he was the only deceased chancellor without a building named after him. "Scaly said
Lipincoff, a Methodist minister, was superintendent of schools in Scranton, Pa., and was on the faculty of the New York State Teachers College. N.J., before he came to KU in 1883.
He resigned in 1889 to become pastor of the First Methodist Church of Topeka.
Scally said the University administration had no plans to move the Jimmy Green statue that stands before Lippincott Hall.
CONTACT PROFESSOR OF NAVAL SCIENCE:
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Now you have a chance to build a fraternity!
Alpha Epsilon Pi is reorganizing on the KU Campus by pledging men as brothers of the Kappa Upsilon Chapter, AEII, a predominately Jewish fraternity, gives you the opportunity of building a strong bond of brotherhood. We want to offer you a life-time experience, AEII will be holding meetings October 30, 31 and November 1. Alpha Epsilon Pi provides an opportunity to join a national fraternity with chapters throughout the United States. We are a member of the National Interfraternity Conference. Founded on November 7, 1913.
EVENTS:
Wednesday, October 31, Pine Room, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, October 30, Pine Room, Kansas Union, Orientation,
7:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 1, Parlor C, Kansas Union, Pledging, 7:30 p.m.
For more information 843-9737
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10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesdav. October 24. 1979
'Hawks practice in cold
The KU football team practiced on a “beautiful day” yesterday afternoon. The weather was clear and cold, but KU head coach Nick Haskins said it was a perfect day to practice football.
"That's not implying we had a perfect practice," Fambrough said, "but it was a good practice."
The Jayhawks are recovering from the bumps and bruises they got at Iowa State. Linebacker Jim Zidd, who received the Big eight defensive player of the week award
for his play against the Cyclones, is in the worst shape, Fambrough said, but he should be ready to olav by Saturday.
"He's hurt in the ankle, knee and hand," he just literally beat up, Fambrigha said. "A lot of our players are, but there are not a lot of serious injuries."
Walter Mack, who left the Iowa State game with an ankle injury, practiced yesterday and should be at full speed for a game against Oklahoma State. Farnbrough, ed.
Kinko's
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Drink a QUART with TONY C!!!
Kansas City's own TONY CHIAVERINI will be at THE HARBOUR LITES
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Cold Quarts of Coors Only 75'
from 7:00-10:00 p.m.
The Harbour Lites will be selling tickets to Tony C's November 16 title bout with Joey Vincent. The flight is at 8:00 p.m.
Friday, November 16, in KC's
Municipal Auditorium. Tickets on sale at The Harbour October 25.
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Sports
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Huskers move to second
By The Associated Press
Alabama stayed on top, Nebraska moved to second place and Texas plummeted from No. 2 to 9. In the Associated Press football rankings released today
Alabama, which came from behind to beat nationally ranked Tennessee 27-17, was No. 1 for a second week in a row. Alabama's top-ranked Alabama State 384. moved from third to second.
Southern California, No. 1 until a 21-21 tie with Stanford at a weekend, whipped on Nebraska D4-23 and climbed from fourth to third. Ohio State got the other first place vote in the NCAA tournament. Buckeyes from sixth place into a tie for fourth with Arkansas at 1,089 points.
Oklahoma advanced from eighth to seventh with 883 points after a 38-6 rout of
Houston, which beat Southern Methodist 37-10, nonetheless slipped from fifth to sixth with 1,020 points.
Kansas State. Florida State, which was idle, slipped from seventh to eighth with 871. NuthPlace state had 864 points while Illinois, went from 11th to 10th with 757.
The A.T. Top 20 team
The Top Twenty team
Prince College
football team, with first place votes in parentheses, records
VIN
and total points:
1. Alabama (82) 6:00 1,241
2. North Carolina (9) 6:00 1,296
3. So. California (9) 6:00 1,296
4. Arkansas 6:00 1,089
5. Iowa (onto Ohio) 6:00 1,089
6. Oklahoma 6:00 1,089
7. Florida (state) 6:00 1,881
8. Texas 6:00 864
9. Texas 6:00 864
10. Michigan 6:00 757
11. Hibernation 6:00 757
12. Pittsburgh 6:00 494
13. Pittsburgh 6:00 494
14. North Dane 6:00 427
15. North Dane 6:00 427
16. Purdue 6:00 349
17. Purdue 6:00 349
18. Wake Forest 6:00 257
19. Wake Forest 6:00 165
20. Tennessee 6:00 123
21. Washington 6:00 99
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Senior Pictures have been extended until Oct.26 Call the Jayhawker Yearbook for your appointment. 864-3728 Only $1 sitting fee
Last week!
Riggins back to form
WASHINGTON (AP) -- After eight games, John Riggs has shaken off the mental effects of a fumble that cost Washington the center and the Redskins are rejoicing.
Riggins, running with confidence against Philadelphia Sunday, appeared to have regained the form that made him one of the runners in the National Football League.
The 6-foot-2, 230-pound Riggins, now in his ninth year out of Kansas, carried 19 for 120 yards, a 6.3-yard average, to boost his season total to 131 rushes for 542 yards.
After Sunday's game, Riggins said the fumbles against Houston in the opener and one the following week against Detroit have been on his mind.
He has 621 career yards rushing, leaving him 6 yards spins of 11th place all time in the NFL. He also plays well against game against New Orleans. Another day last week and he could surpass Floydlay.
"You think about them early," he said. "You've got to get over the furbishs before you can do other things. The one thing on my mind is that I have to go to Houston, we played very well. We are a
fumble away from being 7-1. Of course, that was my funble.
"You start off again and you start with basics. And you start out being conservative and hold onto the football as much as you can." There's a little bit away from your running game.
"But as you get back to where you once were before and you know you can still hold on to the football, you kind of go back to your home without anything else, what else is doing?"
Washington Coach Jack Pardee, whose retirement in the National Conference East behind Dallas, said the furnaces probably bothered Riggins more than they would some other players.
“Of course, that type of thing can be overstressed. When you got a good runner, he’s going to be running on instinct and you will think him thinking too much about not fumbling.”
"He's the kind of runner who has never been a fambler and after he had a couple, it was one," she said. "All you can do is tell your runners to concentrate as they go through the line to keep the ball in front of them as much as they can and keep it wrapped up in both."
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Wednesday, October 24, 1979
11
Barb brightens spirits, uniforms
By PAM CLARK Sports Writer
Four KU softball players and the team manager sat surrounded by 40 lbfly balls before the game, one night last March. They debated about the best way to get the grass stains out of Rene's pants, the ground-in dirt out of Kelly's jersey and the mixture of sweat and grime.
"Don't you think that load's too big?" one asked.
"No matter what, Kelly and Jill's uniforms are going to have to be run through twice," said another.
"At least," chimed in the third player.
"How much detergent should we use?"
asked the manager.
"At least," chimed in the third player.
"Do you think Barb would get mad if we called her collect and asked?" asked the fourth player.
"Where is Barb when you need her?" she asked.
"I vote that Barb comes with us on the next trim" said the manager.
"Barb' is Barbara Wilson, the equipment manager for women of Wilson at the center of this project. The demanator beholds the fact that this short, smiling woman in her 30s much more of a girl than a teenager is filled to the ceiling with various uniforms, warm-up suits and jackets, towels, socks and undergarments."
Almost as fast as one team's uniforms are cleaned, another team's dirty ones are dumped in a shopping cart in front of her door.
"Sometimes just the washing keeps me going all day," Wilson said. "I usually start out washing towels, but tomorrow I have to do uniforms. I have two voleyball squads going off in two different directions, the team left up, and the team left up and the golf team left this morning."
Wilson was working at a bank two years ago when she heard that the University needed someone to keep the women's uniforms and equipment in order.
"I was a physical education major at Emporia, although I didn't finish school," Wilson said. "But I was interested in sports in his job seemed like it was right up my sleeve."
In addition to her washing duties, Wilson mends uniforms and packs uniforms and equipment for most of the teams. Of the nine teammates who have not worn one that does not have team uniforms.
Wilson must keep the inventories in order, check in and out video equipment to the coaches and act as a part-time secretary and handman.
Those duties are all part of the job description, but every woman in the KU athletic department knows that Wilson takes her job much further than that. She
"Barb's like a friend to most of the players," said Patt Mason, a guard on the KU basketball team. "They can relate to her and they can talk to her about anything."
also is the department's top cheerleader and public relations agent.
"Every time I come in to practice and she's in the washroom she comes out to talk to me and crack jokes. Every time it's like you did or did it how someone on the team is doing."
Last year Wilson also had to take care of the three vans used by the women's teams, but since the merger of the men's and women's teams, the duty that duty has been assigned to someone else.
"It was kind of interesting to try to figure out how the teams were going to fit 15 people in a van with all the equipment and equipment." Wilson said.
"The swimming team has the most girls. One time their van broke down in Wellington and all 27 girls had to back in one van."
The softball team, Wilson said, has the most equipment to take on trips. At least once that caused a problem.
When the team traveled to Denton, Texas last year, the team's teamug was loaded on a rack on top of the van driven by Coach Boho Stiancif. When Stiancif drove under a low railing, the luggage and luggage rack were torn off, and the ceiling of the cavened in.
When Stancilift got the van home, Wilson did a patch job on the ceiling. The University still hasn't come up with the money to have the van fixed. Wilson said.
"Bob called me that night and told me what had happened." Wilson said. "He asked me what he should do and I told him to get it fixed so he could drive the van home."
Wilson admitted that uniform mix-ups were not always the players' fault.
"I left off a shirt on the volleyball team I one time," she said. "The team had to spread out in a circle with their jacket open to allow for change and go in and out of the name."
This year's softball team got off on the wrong foot when it traveled to the Creighton University tournament in Omaha, Neb. The team was so forgetten to pack the team a stork sucks.
"Bob was probably upset when he found out I left the socks," she said. "He said the girls felt conscientious about it, which I can understand."
Wilson said that she has had few problems with the coaches, but that most of them have been good players in which players were going and which uniforms and equipment they would be.
University Daily Kansan
"The worst part of the job," she said, "is getting the men all ready and in the vans and then not being able to go with them."
Intramural football enters seminal and final league play this week as 12 teams remain in the running for the two Hill Championships.
Sunday in the women's independent trophy league, On the Loose defeated the Butterfingers 6-1, and the Grider Girls defeated the Gator Haters 140.
Men and women play off for Hill Championships
On the Loose will face the Griddler Girls at 1 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 28 on field six in the independent finals.
The two league winners will meet at 2:15 p.m. Nov. 4 at Memorial Stadium for the women's Hill Championship.
In soriority league action, Alpha Gamma Delta defeated Chi Omega 9 and Pt Beta Phi the same day. The Gamma Delta will face Pi Beta Phi in the soriority决赛 at 1 a.m. Pct 28 on field
In the men's quarterfinal Sunday, the Generics defeated Koech's 12:8. Joe and Jets defeated the Green Machine 147, the Red Sox 150, the Mudnuts defeated the Radicals 9-7.
Yesterday, Class Action defeated the Generics 14-7 and Joe and the Jets defeated the Nazis 7-0 to earn spots in tomorrow's semifinal.
Class action faces the Dragons and Joe
and the Jets face the Mudpackers at 4:30
p.m. on field five and six. The semifinal
winners meet at 2:15 Oct. 28 on field six for the independent finals.
In the fraternity league, Beta Theta Pi
defeated Sigma Chi A 19-14 Kappa Phi.
Epsilon defended the Evans Scholars 7-0,
and Phi Delta Theta defeated Alpha Theta
5-6.
Tomorrow's semifinal action matches beta Theta Ptia against Kappa Phae A 3:30 PM and Delta Theta Ptia against Phi Delta Phae on field two. The two winners meet Sunday at 2:15 in field three
The top Greek and independent league winners meet at 3:15 p.m. Nov. 4 in the stadium for the men's version of the Hill Championship.
Spikers face WSU
The KU volleyball team will be home to the Wichita State University Shockers in a match that may decide who will go to the regional championship.
If Kansas bears the Shockers, and then beats Kansas State University Oct. 31, the Jayhawks will gain a berta in the regional tournament Nov. 15-17.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
The march will start at 9.00 p.m. at Robinson south gymnasium.
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer ...
Each additional word
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than the two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UM business office at 841438
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Every Sunday.
Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also toasted, roasted, and raw peanuts in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, honey, popcorn, honey, and sorgum. Every Sunday
ROCKABILLY HITS
THE OPERA HOUSE WITH
"Mr Blue Sneeze Shoes"
OPERAS
come down and dance on
the big dance floor
on Lansing Street
open on
8:30 a.m.
Lawrence
Opera House
Call for information 842 6930
*every Sunday.*
Also selling wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd, ff.
Watch for trak parked at 9th & Illinois. Home of the World Famous Jawfish Dodgers and the family. All tuna, roasted, and raw Pork Tenderloin. Also tuna, Roasted, and Raw Pork Tenderloin. Yellow and white popcorn, and surgum.
EPISCOPALIANS
AND
ANGLICANS
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% nationally because prices are too cheap. The paperbacks and bookpacks are priced always have been and will always be $10.644 in know and in about 10:31. 10:31-
Holy Eucharist
Thursdays at 12 noon
Danforth Chapel
SCIENCE FICTION MOVIE: SILENT RUNNING
—DYNE AUD. Ft. and Sat. Oct 26 and 27
7:30 p.m. $1.25. Ecosystem Disaster Catastrophe 10-28
Intramural Volleyball (Men's and Women's)
The Manager's Meeting
J
Thursday, October 25th
at 7:00 p.m.
In 205 Robinson.
Far home made chill and pie come to Walkin
for lunch. On Monday, from 4:00 to 5:00,
at 2:00 and 4:00, from 6:00 to 7:00.
October 28 from 4:00 to 5:00, at Al-Wa-
taiyah. Scholarship Hall, to 1009 Lame Lane
(Lakewood).
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
Tradition begins at 3 p.m., Friday. Oct 26 on
the hill and the on the hill. See "Homecoming Parade." 10-26
For additional information call 864-3546, Recreation Services.
DISCO TO GO offers quality and reliability not only for business travel but also for system training. Power crown is biodegradable. Alice sets up a neat lighting, and experienced air jackets with high visibility. Students receive room country. Rental rates include delivery, set-up, cleaning, training, and equipment. **KOHOLA 6044. With over 5 years experience and hundreds of satisfied customers** you will be glad to know what the power crown is.
It's Wednesday and Mermant's Dellight Night at
the Holiday Inn. There are three, $150 pieces and $26 drawn between
7:30 p.m. Come in and join the parade. . . you
will be welcome.
603 Mass Mass at the Harbor 10:30
TIMBER LEEDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
2 months rent on 1 bedroom, 1 bedroom,
3 months rent on 2 bedrooms.
1 hardwood floor, large window and
1 double room. Large window and
1 double room.
POOL. For appointment call 842-4444 or see at
www.timberleed.com.
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-8579. tf
All Frontier Rapta Apts. 1/2 months rent free; $50 security on all 1 bedrooms. tt
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
nearest near KU. Possible rent reduction for
labor. Call 841-6254 or 842-6055
10-31
FOR SALE
or 1-2 mature, responsible students sought to work in the classroom. Located at 1419 Manhattan streets, baskets, fireplace, furniture, most furnishings, privacy, international cooking, occupancy, modest rent; postal code 842-723-10; ID 842-723-10
Must sublease 2 bedroom apt., Avalon Apt.
3, electrician electricity Gas heat. Please
841-917-7130
1 bdm. apt. All utilities paid except electricity.
Close to campus. Call 842-2523 between 2:50-5:30
M-F. Avalon Apartments.
10-26
Naimith Hall has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested business officer at 853-659 any time of the day. **if**
FIRST MONTH FREE! Want females to share furnished house. $100 + 1/2 utility. 842-695-10-25
Sublease, efficiency apt. Five min. from Union,
Shared bath, partly furnished, all utilities paid.
Monthly invarges for baking $130/month. Call 841-
833, after 6:30.
WATERBORN MATTENNER $59.99, 3 year maintenance.
WATERBORN MATTENNER $59.99, 3 year maintenance.
Western Civilian News, Note on Blair Make
to use them! **1**, study guide of F for claustro,
**2**, study guide of F for clam dorsal, **3**
town Crater, Map Bookstore, & Great Boundary
Town Crater, Map Bookstore, & Great Boundary
Alternator, starter and generator specialties.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-908-6200, 290 W, 60 HZ.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-908-6200, 290 W, 60 HZ.
SunSpees—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1921 Mass. 841-5770. TF
3 bedroom house, close to KU bus line. No pets Prefer 3 students or couple. B426-8709, ecom@ku.edu
FOR SALE
Men's cleaning cost—like 42. Warm very little—absolutely perfect condition $150.00 or best offer.
841-823-2999, keep trying.
1975 CDT50F Super Sport Honda motorcycle, excellent shape, price shaped 812-429-102. 10-26
V-W Rabbit - 76-56,000 miles with 2-snowties
$2600. 843-5187. 10-31
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION: Poch Mepch Bike's Rick Ice店, 1033 Vermont; 814-6424 TPS
We've get brand new room size carpet remnants for $12.00 a yard. If interested call Mary at 841-6555 between 8 and 5. 10-26
Nikon P-2, with Wide Nikon Portrait Lens
Nikon P-2A with Wide Nikon Portrait Lens
20mm Buschman Telephoto along with travel case and some mine
equipment. go to c Kevin H. 16:24-16:27
looks like a video!
Michelin Tire Sale! 20, 25, and 30% discount at
the Michelin store. The appliance with
discount tire dept. 10-30
Stereo Camera Equalizer—Spectro Acoustics model Z102. Only 3 months old–mid-ointure.
$175.00 or best offer. 941-8928 evenings, keep trying
1971 Camaro -very nice, 350 auto, mag wheels,
stereo, reasonably priced. AT, PS, AE 843-9048.
Brighten up your Sundays by having the Sun.
New York Times delivered to your home or
apartment. 841-5073. 10-30
concrete; for lights, 25 mg. 843-977-810; Ben 10-26
Electronic Portable Tactile Pad. Very hard. Been used.
Must still be Thursday. Call Carol 843-1692
during day.
AKC registered toyoodles Very small. Call 887-6486, or 1-232-4548. 10:20
FOUND
Textbook—"Biology the Word of Life," near
12th and Louisiana. To listen call 853-7980
12-48.
HELP WANTED
Small, brown puppy in front of Snow Hall. Call 864-2384 10-24
Black-white English Settar near 10th and Vermont. Phone evenings, 842-2336. 10-25
HELP WANTED
Liquor store clerk. Even and Saturdays. 3-11 p.m.
842-7998 after 5 p.m. 10-25
MEN! WOMEN! JOBS! CRUISERSHIPS! SAILING EXPEDITIONS! Good experience! God paid for it! For APPLICATION INFO ADDITORS to: CRUISERHOVE 152, Box 60292, Sacramento, CA 93600.
LOOKING FOR MORE THAN JUST A JOB?
Village Inn
Village Inn Pancake House is looking for an
Pancake House Restaurant
Language project Preschool Bureau of Child Health collection and analysis. Must have completed data collection and analysis. Must have completed data analysis and training observers; salary from Fate Horse Language Project preschool. Job began Nov 5. Language project preschool is offered. Qualified persons are encouraged to apply. Quality Personnel required.
assistant manager for the night shift and opening hostess.
OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer-year round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields: $260-
$1,800 expenses paid. Sighting-free. Re-
sume: JC, JCB HS-34, Costa Rica.
CA 92525. Date: 10-29
Bring your drive and enthusiasm to Lawrence's family restaurant.
Civil Engineering Department of the University of California, Davis. Bachelor's degree as assistant professor of civil engineering and graduate schooling both undergraduate and graduate programs in the areas of civil engineering computer aided design (CAD) and mechanical engineering. Applicants must have B.S. and F.D. in civil and dynamic finite element methods. Send resume to C.E.I., 401 North Jefferson Street, De la Salle, IL 60247. To the De la Salle Yale Department of Civil Engineering, De la Salle, IL 60247. An affirmative reference from Kawai, Lawns, Kawai 60245. An affirmative reference from Kawai, Lawns, Kawai 60245.
Wanted-Part-time, Acrobatic Gymnastic Instructor, Tues. and Thurs. eve. Edwardville area, experience preferred, $8.00 hr. Call Carol Byrd 287-3941 16-25
Responsibilities are immense, but so are the rewards.
CONTACT; RON DILLEY
842-3251
Part-time maintenance person needed. Starting pay $3.66 Must be available in 8 a.m., Mon-Fri. Heavy lifting and cleaning required. Mechanical equipment, Foods: 710/9, Mast-6.5 Mon-Fri. 10-25
Part-time table service person needed. Must be available 11- MWF. Pay $1.50 hr. + tion. Apply in person Schumn Foods, 7191; Mass. 8-5 Mon-Fri. 10-25
Live-in babystay for 5 year old in exchange for room and board. Call Alan 841-8026. 10-25
an Equal Opportunity, Affirmation Action employer. Qualified persons are encouraged to apply regardless of race, religion, sex, disability, vera status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
The University of Kaiser, Office of University Affairs, offers a full-time position for a College professor. Temporary position for four years in the Department of History and U.S. Politics at Wesleyan University with 90% employment rate. AP Application to work at New York University with Nate Osterberg. Relationship of Kaiser University Kaspersky Laboratory of University Lawyers Kaiser University.
Waitresses and waiters, full or part time positions available. Apply in person, Country Kitchen, 1503 W. 22nd. 10-30
Immediate opening for talented singers. Must be uninhibited. Call 841-8515. 10-29
NEXED IMMEDIATELY, Nursing Assistants male and female. Starting旱助 AROVE MINIMUM OAKS. Openings on all chairs. Apply at www.nexed.org. Center, 2012-19 21st Street, Phone: 482-7253
LOST
12 week old, shiny black kitten. Lost near the
Hawk. Desperately want 'Horace' back. Please:
841-4733 10-24
Men's black wallet and KU bue pass in blue holder. Money unimportant; I need license. ID's 843-6677. 10-24
Large male cat, beige and white tabby, red collar with flag tag, lost near 19th and Tenn—Mach loach friend, call before 9 or after 6 at 843-3455. 10-30
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS BINDING COPYING-The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Use help you NBR MN, or phone #630-2100. Help
NOTICE
Papers due soon? Will provide personalized bibliographies on your topic in social sciences or other disciplines?
Seiko and Bulova watch. 16% less than retail.
Factory warranty. Call Kent, 841-8784 or 1023-5975.
in order, to test itself and we are offering the following awards for our employees who earn $10 or more and then customize a digital bank account for their company. Each award is comprised of one certificate, one experiential good, 5 piñones, 1 dollar, or up to $50. To win, you must pay each category in full by December 31st. You will be awarded $25,000. (Cash, Check or Monetary Fund), TO-Consult, or another form of payment. Up to 30% off all Catalogues used in Unit 12-17-98.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tt
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC- abortions up to 17 weeks, pregnancy treating, Birth Control Counseling, Tubal Ligation, For appointment with obstetrician. 426-306-4400, 480 St. 10th, Overland Park, KS.
If you're looking for a bar with chew benz beer pool, you might be interested in the Harbour Life. A couple people you'll like at the Harbour Life, a popular day and Friday afternoons for TOF! New arrivals from France or Belgium ship your skin together at The Harbour Life. Get your skin together at The Harbour Life.
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head-
quarters, 841-235 and KU info, 843-306.
Hey, Seniors! It's your last chance. Thursday,
Friday vote HOPE Award at Summerfield, Wescow,
Union.
After the Homecoming Parade at 9 p.m. Friday, the crowd gathers in a semi-circle to dance when they come to dance to the Rock and the Gayle Gang with Claude Williams and Williams at 9 p.m. in the Satellite Ball. Both are free.
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every occasion. Birthday Anniversary, Get Well Secret Admirer. 841-4515. 11-6
PERSONAL
Come to the all new **MAD HATTER** Happy Hour
4-8 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Open 7 nights a
week.
10-21
If your toes don't love cold hair winter shoes.
G happy toes! Our carpet loves your toes and
your pocketbook toe. Now carpet only $2.00 a
yard. Call 814-6555 between 8 and 5. 10-26
HOPE Award. Honor for Outstanding progressive Educator. Sectors! Final voting Thursday, Friday. Oct. 25-28. 10-26
Emilie. Roses are red, but you're twice as nice,
so look ahead, you might be able to sacrifice
Gary. 10-20
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid - 804-5564. If
Don't drive, walk to Xzone jot behind the Union Friday, Oct. 28 and see all the Homecoming floats in one spot. Food and drink available. Entertainment, too. Save gas. 10-26
OLYMPIA PARTY Thursday night at ICHA-
minum Real cheap beer and lots of零食
10-24
prizes
Stay on the hill Friday, Oct. 26, 3 p.m. See the first KU Homecoming Parade of bands, ballad yeah leaders, Jayhawks, Student organization leaders, Jayhawks, Black Hawk Jawhawk Blvd. or X-zone parking lot. 10-26
Veterans for employment assistance camp. Compton, Calif., will host the TONY CHAYNERING, one of the rising young stars in the boxing world, will be at The Harbour Lair 1211 Mine, from 7:39 p.m. Thursday to 10 p.m.,
Virgin Islands beach resort attends
member to give blood on the day you sched
10-26
Judy Shetton-Happy 21st. Westport will never
judge the Luv ya-Laurie. 10-24
sk1 the West-Ski Steamboat Spring Break!
$277, Contact SUA Limited space up now.
Bryer. Jon's run after the barber shop. I'll sit
on the couch. He'll have the Yard fields. Fries.
Credit: P.S. Fries, P.S. Nate, Wav
FOR SIGMA, UW-NC—Conference females present to the 1974 "I'll Adore Alice-Okate, KU's only campus-wide content in search of a small man who must decide women to exert control."
Wanted women from Port Pethouse Forum for pool party. Have hadthab. visit GI. 10-28 For an example of Greek Literature see *Pontis Forum*; Fri. Faal Rumain. December
You make me smile.
You let me cry.
Thanks for holding me.
I love you.
PAULMIST HAS MOVED. 716 N. 4th St. 841-4399
Charles Hamilton. 10-26
Happy Birthday Junah. I love you more than
Booi? Bozi? marion? Marion
10-24
**ATT** gives you the chance to build a fraternity.
Don't miss your chance!
10-31
Walk-in Blood donors will be accepted if you've got time to wait 16-24
SERVICES OFFERED
PRINTING WHAT YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Upper Quick Copy. Chair is available from am to AM 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 am to 1 PM (on Saturday) at 838 Mass.
EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 600-102-154
- 5785, MATH 115-701 - call 838-708, STATISTICS
(cales courses) call 838-708, C.S. 100-606 - call 838
708, PRACTICE (cales courses) call 838-708, ENF.
and SPANISH) call 837-707
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES: Send $1.00 for your 20-36-course college of collage绎. 10,258 tuites lib. (id) BOX 259071; Los Angeles, CA. C9055. (471) 477-8226.
BUYING LIFE INSURANCE? Check our rates and values first. Call 842-7491, 842-2090
CREATIVE ILLUSTRATIONS—Artwork and illustrations for advertising, personal use, and cartoons. Phone 811-7650 or 811-7658 10-28
We hrm and iron pants, skirts, coats, dresses.
Call 842-2161, ask for "kiro." 10-26
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work,
responsable rates. Thesis. These materials:
edit layout. Call Jonn 842-9172. TIFF
Experienced typist-Quality work, reasonable
Expert. Call Beverly at 931-5910. TF
T.Y.PING
Experienced Typet-form papers, thesus, mica,
electric IBM Selectric Proofreading corrected
643-9554 Mrs. Wright. TP
Exporiened, twist-thuses, dissertations, term
papers, misc. IBM correcting selective. Barb
864-3138; evenings 824-2310.
Journism typographer. 20 years typing/typing-setting experience. 4 years academic typing; thesis, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest S-electric equipment. 842-4848. TF
R-ports, dissortations, resumes, formal forms,
editing, adding Selective Catechin
or of enzymes 841-727-711 11-5
Experienced typist. Quality work. IBM Correcting
Sective References available. Sandy. 864-
4904. Evenings. 784-8918. (f)
WANTED
Quality typing at competitive prices—no jobs for big or small. 812-2750 10-38
Need some typing done? Quality work, low rates
Contactindy at 843-8654. 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
MASTEKMENDS professional typing. Fac. acctu-
sions. Spelling. Grammar corrected. RQR-
841-3397
People who have Executioner, Penetrator, Death
Merechant, or Matt Heim books—call David 864-
2833
PSYCHIATRIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES WORKED FOR HOSPITAL STATE SHIPMENT 912-643-8100 W 21st W. 6th, Tampa, FL KS Phone: (912) 643-8100 W 21st W. 6th, Tampa, FL KS Phone: (912) 643-8100 Employer. An equal opportunity employer.
Roommate wanted to share apartment near campus. 811-2039. 10-24
ROGMATMES Naitshani Hall has a couple of bedrooms, but there is no business office at $23-$59 per day of the time. If housesit for 4-bedroom house. Very close to campus. $85 per month. 1.5-phone service.
Want d. 2 bedroom apt for spring semester.
Witt Richard, 7244 Roe Bld., Prairie Village,
Milwaukee.
EDITOR for Graduate Newspaper, Requirements:
KU student; graduate preferred, written and
managed research projects. Send resume.
29. Send letter and resume to Graduate
Student Center Box 1, Kansas Union, Lawrence, KS
Wanted: female roommate Nov. 1, to share com-
fortable upgrades apartment. Close to Campus and
Downstown. $35.00 mo. Uill. pd. Call 82-6001
Keep trying.
Rresponsible female roommate wanted to share
brilliant two-story townhouse. Call 814-106-
to 39.
Car Pool needed, desperate, any area of greater K.C. 373-2327 after 5.00. Time flexible, Charlotte
Roommate to share excellent 3 bedroom duplex.
Finished basement, fireplace, waher & driver,
Reasonable rent and 1/2 utilities. Call 841-5092
11:46
**covid immediately!** Female roommate wanted
a share nice 2 dkm. apt, located on bus line,
hare 1) utilities, reasonable rent. Call 841-8743,
for Kay or Calyon.
T
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT:24,125 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kanaan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint FC. Check the figure costs. Now you've got it! Sellning Power!
AD DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Monday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
additional words
Write ad here: ___
2 times
82.28
.02
RATES:
15 words or less
3 times 4 times
$2.50 $2.75
.03 .04
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch • $3.50
DATES TO RUN:
8
times
$3.00
.05
NAME:
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
PHONE:
KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
12
Wednesday, October 24, 1979
KANSAN On Campus
**TODAY:** KANSAS SAVINGS AND LOAN LEAGUE INSTITUTE will be all day in the Union. MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, 1325 E. 6th St., Catty Duhigs for children ages $4 will be at 10 a.m. WEDNESDAY FORUM will host Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, on "The Adventures of Ding-Dong Scene," at 11:45 a.m. at the EM Center, 1204 Oread. Students interested in GERONTELOGY THE STUDY OF AGING Cork 1 of the Union. Ron Harer will speak.
University Daily Kansan
TONGIT: WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL, KU-WUE at 6:30 at Robinson gymnasium, STUDENT SENATE will meet at 7 in the HILLOON RECBITAL by Albert Gerikn will begin at 7. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in the Pine Room of the Union. KU CONCERT CHORALE CONCERT will meet at 7 in the Morning诗柏 poet孟慎沙洛琴will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. KU CONCERT CHORALE CONCERT will meet at 7 in the Murphy Hall ENGLISH DEPARTMENT LECTURE with Norman Holland, State University of New York-Buffalo, will speak at 8 in the Formal Room of the University in
TOMORROW: Companies interviewing in the School of Business will be Atlantic Tech, Southwestern Belfast and H & R Block. In the School of Engineering will be Atlantic Richfield, Brunswick Corp., Mobil Oil CI, Empire District Electric Co., and Empire Distribution Co.
JAPANESE DEMONSTRATION will be on the east side of Wescoe. INTRAMURAL VOLEYALL MANAGERS will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 265 of Johnson Hall, University of Texas, on **Alexander the Great--Myth and History**, will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. ACCOUNTING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Waltham Room of the Union. SCIENCE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parer A of the Union.
WZR
106
From page one
films sua
Campaign . . .
Wednesday, October 24
BREWSTER MCCLOUD
Thursday, October 25
Cinema from India:
SIMABADDHA
haven't committed myself, but I'm leaning toward Carter."
Social criticism of modern life in India is presented in this sardonic film by Satyajit Ray. Bengali-suites. A film on the director will also be showcased.
Friday & Saturday.
Friday Juryy
October 26-27
HAROLD & MAUDE
She worked for Carter in the 1978 Democratic primary, she said, and has been satisfied with his work in office.
(1972)
Directed by Hal Ashley, with Bud Curt and Ruth Gordon in a cull classic about a boy who's obsessed with the girl and an old woman who's killed of life.
- 3:30 & 9:30-Friday 7:00-Saturday
Directed by Richard Donner, with Gregory Peck. Lee Remick and David Warner in a thriller about a boy who is actually the anti-Christ.
Bill Clarkson, committee treasurer from Kansas City, Kan., also said he was undecided about a candidate.
THE OMEN
CLARKSON SUPPORTED Carter during the 1976 primary, he said, and "generally" has been satisfied with the president's performance.
"I'll be staying neutral for a while because of my position on the state committee." he said.
Midnight Movies
Directed by Francie Truffaut, with Jean-Pierre Leaud. This film continues the adventures of Antoine who is now married. Francispublishes.
Larry Bengston, state chairman from Junction City, said, "I'm very uncommitted. I think the state chairman should stay out of the primary."
Directed by George A. Romero, about a modern-day patient who can only tolerate cold and salty snacks. By the director who made NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD and DWALF OF HIS LIFE.
Wednesday shows also in Woodford at 3:30, 7:00, 12:16 and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted. 11:59 admission. No Refresh-bait.
The possible battle between Carter and Kennedy could cause trouble for the party, Bengston said.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission.
MARTIN
He supported Carter in the 1976 general election but favored Hubert Humphrey during the Democratic primary, he said.
"It will probably increase party interest."
Monday, October 29
Truffaut:
BED AND BOARD
(1971)
he said. "It will help to get a lot of people back into the political scene, but it could get very,very bloody."
GOV. JOHN CARLIN has indicated during the past months that he will continue to support Carter's renomination.
Clarkson agreed that the struggle between the two Democrats could split the party.
Bill Hech, Carlin's press secretary, said, "We all reserve the right to change our minds, but there is no reason now for it. We are not in his position. I don't expect that he will."
THE MONEY for the project would be used to hire counselors, clerical help, instructors and tutors. In addition, the funds would provide monthly stipends for students enrolled in the program. Williams said he made sure what amount the stipends would be.
Action for Carter by the state steering committee has been limited to phone calls and mailings.
Kennedy supporters from different parts of Kansas met last Saturday to coordinate their efforts.
Jule Craft, a Lawrence law student, was elected as the contact person for the 4th Congressional District. In about a week, she organized a soliciting funds for Kennedy's campaign.
Melvin Williams, affirmative action director at the Med Center, said he planned to send a proposal to Chancellor Archie R. Hogg, requesting $180,000 to fund the program.
McSwain said the fire was important because "we almost lost the lives of several firefighters."
Seven firefighters were standing on the third floor of the structure at 780 Massachusetts St. when the floor caved in. One firefighter, John Schrums, suffered a fractured shoulder in the incident. McMishawn would return to work within two weeks.
"We seem to have a problem with minority applications because they aren't as great as they could be," Williams said yesterday.
The buildings, which are owned by Design Builders Inc., will be renovated and converted to retail and office space, after an investment of $1 million, according to Robert Gould, the building manager.
"For minority students the thing that seems to get them out of school is financial worry," he said.
During the sessions, Kansas high school and college minor students interested in a medical career would take classes in English, mathematics and science.
Arson ...
From page one
Thirty-four minority students are enrolled in the Med School this year, compared with 73 enrolled in the 1979 Med School graduating class, he said.
The structure at 706 Massachusetts St. was purchased by Build Short before the fire. The firm also bought the fire and 710 Massachusetts St., since the fire.
A decrease in minority enrollment at the university of Kansas School of Medicine has been reported to the school's decision to propose a preparatory summer school session for minorities interested in a career.
Med Center to propose minority student program
Gould said his firm had been working with the city and expected to reopen the first floor of the building at 710 Massachusetts St. in Chelsea, where he will build probably will begin next spring.
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
WILLAMS SAID he hoped each session would be able to handle at least 40 students, who would be chosen from high schools and from high school at least an 8 percent university enrollment.
Staff Reporter
Williams' proposal would set up an eight-week summer school session on the Lawrence campus deserts to inform students about how they need to study to pass medical school courses.
"We hope the schools would contact us if interested students. Then we would look at their grade point average and ask if they were counselors before coming," he said.
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1982
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 96, No. 44
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Planning staff OKs rezoning
Thursday, October 25, 1979
See story page six
444
Pumpkin powered
Chris Waters, Topka sophomore, takes it slow and easy as he drives carefully checking the pump to make sure it does not fall off his mower. Waters was taking his pumpkin house yesterday.
Stephan warns KU to enforce law against drinking at games
By JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
Students at the University of Kansas can expect more stringent enforcement of state and University rules against liquor consumption during football games. The university will also vice-channel for student affairs, said yesterday.
Ambler held a meeting yesterday with administrators and about 20 representatives of student organizations and living groups in which he encouraged students to police themselves.
However, Ambler said, the University has received letters from Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan that urged the University to control incidents related to alcohol consumption in the
"We don't want to invite outside enforcement," the member said. We want to appeal to students to stop their behavior.
"I personally don't think that we have an extreme problem, but it doesn't take much to create problems."
AMBLER PRODUCED a letter from a student at
North Texas State University who attended the KU football game Sept. 29.
In the letter, the student complained of drunken behavior by KU students. The student also complained of excessive drinking.
Mullens, KU police captain, said the incident referred to in the letter involved two KU students and one KU graduate who stole pendants from two women.
"One woman who was about 50 was knocked down and a woman who was 35 years old had a pinstripe on her arm."
three were charged with disorderly conduct. Mulleners 84 percent of similar incidents involved adults.
The increased security will not violate individual rights. Ambler said.
"We won't be frisking people as they walk in," he
Mullens said KU police would wait for instructions from the University general counsel's office.
said, "People who are not obviously disruptive will be let alone.
"Making arrests gets complicated," Mullens said. "If the violator is a student or a Kansas resident, I can issue an order for them to appear in court to answer charges."
But if a violator is from out of state, he would have to be arrested because an order to appear in court is not made.
Amber and Mullens said the administration would examine the possibility of using students to learn through a blended approach.
Local gasoline prices stable for now, but observers wonder about the future
"If proper training is provided and the right students are selected, it could be very helpful," said Dr.
Penalties for alcohol consumption on state property range from fines of $5 to $100 and up to six months' jail.
By BRIAN VON BEVERN
Staff Renorter
Gasoline prices in the Lawrence area have stabilized after meteoric increases earlier this year, according to area oil officials and gasoline station owners.
According to Bob Utley, a spokesman for Amoco Oil Co. in Kansas City, Mo., the gas of price should remain constant unless foreign suppliers raise their prices.
Recent increases by minor oil-producing countries might cause a one or two cent increase, but consumers have yet to see the higher cost at the pump he said.
"Whether prices stay where they are depends on whether other countries follow their lead." i.e. cann, "OPEC has scheduled a meeting in December, and you know they're going to discuss prices."
However, Joe Fishbein, fat allocation officer for the Kansas Energy Office in Topeka, said it was too early to make a decision.
A check of 12 local gas station shows that regular gasoline averaged 65 cents a gallon and unleaded gasoline averaged 99 cents a gallon, an increase of about 32 cents over October 1978 prices.
Utley agreed. "Our inventories haven't improved that much," he said, "but as long as people continue to reduce their driving, there shouldn't be any shortages.
"Right now supplies look good," he said. "We've had no evidence of shortages right now."
"Some people are of the opinion that there is plenty of gas on hand, but if they start driving foolishly we could see a return of this summer's lines."
Dale Solwedt, owner of the Standard service station at 2rd and Louisiana streets, said that although gasoline prices were stable, he was unsure about future price increases.
"I don't know," he said. "Prices have risen more
less a lt thought they would. I suspect they
were wrong."
SOLTWEED CHARGES 95.9 cents a gallon for
regular and 99.9 cents a gallon for unleaded.
He said he had taken steps to cut overhead expenses, including closing on Sundays.
Steve Conner, manager of the Phillips 66 station
"We've got the same profit margin we had in 1973," he said. "Because of competition from the cult-rate stations, dealers in this area are not likely to take the full mark-up the government allows."
The prices at his station are 97.9 cents a gallon for regular and 104.9 cents a gallon for unleaded.
CORNER SAID he thought an increased need for heating in this winter might cause only a small increase.
at 25th and Iowa streets, said he thought gasoline prices would keep rising.
Bill Edmons, owner of the Molial station at 23rd and Ninshuth街, said he thought prices had
"The prices out there on my pumps haven't changed in two months," he said.
Senate decides upon last fund supplements
Those prices are 94.9 cents a gallon for regular and 98.9 cents a gallon for unleaded.
Staff Renorter
I don't think people were waiting gas before the bus. I won't wait for you. They're going on vacation because they're afraid of being kicked out. And they shouldn't be.
He said that he was getting the same allocation he had received last year and that business was good.
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
The Senate voted on requests last night from the 10 organizations it did not hear at last week's meeting.
The Student Senate wrapped up inappropriate funding or, not before organization has ratified a net, not before prolonged debate over budget requests by the KU Advertising Club and SOMOBEME, a group that opposes KU.
A total of $19,610.34 was allocated to student organizations. About $45,000 was available for supplementary funding, access to professional schools, Senate Budget committee chairman
The money not allocated to the student organizations will remain in the Senate's unallocated account.
The Senate denied four other student organization requests: Women in Law; Masters in Public Administration; Architecture and Urban Design Student
Council; and the Iranian Student Organization.
In other action, the Senate passed a resolution supporting the sale of 192 football tickets at KU student prices to Haskell Junior College students.
WOMEN IN LAW did not receive its acceptance for the budget committee, because group members did not appear before budget committee hearings or attend the Senate hearing.
See SENATE page nine
Masters in Public Administration's request of $200 for travel expenses to a conference was denied because Senate rules prohibit travel of travel to conferences and conventions.
The Senate also denied a 4734 request for the Architecture and Urban Design Student
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
Soviet author says he helped save icons
A visiting Russian novelist and poet, Vladimir Soloukhin, thinks two of his works helped save part of Russian medieval art.
Soloukhin said yesterday in an interview that his books, "Letters from the Russian Museum" helped and "Blackened Icons," helped the Soviet government work on the program to deform during Joseph Stalin's regime to a recognition of the value of icons.
ICONS ARE religious images painted on panels used in Russian Orthodox Churches from the Middle Ages until the 19th Century.
Solukhun is visiting the University of Kansas for the next two weeks as part of the Slavic languages and literatures his visiting Soviet writer program.
Gerald Mikkkelson, director of the department, said the Soviet policy concerning icons had changed radically. The new policy allowed to leave the Soviet Union, he said.
"The Soviet government now recognizes icons as a part of Russian culture." Mikkelson said.
"Enormous quantities of icons were destroyed," he said. "However, I said in my books that icones were valuable as a vital art of Russian medieval art."
He said he submitted the "Blackened icon" to two Soviet magazines who refused to publish it for fear of challenging government policy.
However, he said, a third magazine, Moscow, agreed to print the work.
"There are still some subjects that are taboo for *Soviet writers*.* he said. These subjects include Stalin's policies, the history of agriculture and Soviet Chinese relations.
SOLOUKHIN, who was born in 1924 in the village of Alepino, which is about 200 miles north of Moscow, became a
M. M. HADIDI
See SOLOUKHIN page nine
Vladimir Soloukhin
Psychoanalytical computer has its wires crossed
By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER
The student walked into a cramped room, pulled up a wheel and neonlights found the copier.
The counselor's answer was in electronic letters, strung across a video screen.
"I'm depressed," he said, "I feel like jumping out a window."
The counselor was ELIZA, a computer program designed to imitate a therapist—minus the counselor.
"What other problems do you have?" the counselor answered
ELIZA was sent to the University of Kansas two years ago from Honeywell Corporation, Minneapolis, Minn., and can be called up from the KU computer center, according to Bill Maxwell, assistant director
But for those expecting a computerized Freud, ELIZA, with her limited repertoire of responses, is a disappointment, according to professors and computer science students.
The brainchild of Joseph Weizenbaum, a computer
science professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass., ELIZA was an early experiment with the language-handling capacity of a computer—not a theanist.
Grammar is ELIZA's only linguistic accomplishment to be better than Kate K. McCauley, a professor of psychology who teaches a class on artificial intelligence. He said ELIZA could manipulate sentence structure, but not vocabulary.
THE COMPUTER is named after Eliza, a character who learns correct English in George Washington University.
"ELIZA has a handful of little tricks," said Bethek. He said ELIZA can identify words and verb and sentence structures, which are often found in ELIZA also picks on certain cues words, such as "mother," "father" and "dream," and plugs them into the context.
But ELLIZA's electronic wizardry does not masquerade as intelligence for long, according to Max Coe, a Lawrence graduate student in computer science.
"You may be amazed for two or three lines—if you're lucky," said Coe. "But suddenly you hit all the
"I am an only child," a student told ELIZA.
"How long have you been an only child?" asked ELIZA.
For example. ELIZA failed in genealogy.
IF ELIZA is dim-witted, at least she is diplomatic.
"There are only twenty-four hours to a day," a
"second student told ELIZA, complaining of
the lack of sleep."
"Did you think there might not be 24 hours in a day?" resplained FILZA.
Spending time with ELIZA can often invite frustration, according to Cullen Kitchen, Hutchinson
"I can't take it for more than ten minutes; it is very crunting. she said, explaining that ELIZA's job was to give
Kitchens' frustration was shared by a California computer, which once held a telephone counseling service.
The conversation with the California computer, a programmed schizophrenic, rapidly deteriorated, and died.
UNLIKE HUMANS, the California computer wasn't taken in by ELIZA's pre-packaged responding techniques. Annoyed, the paranoid schizophrenic hung up on ELIZA.
Kitchen said she thought real computer therapy was a long way off.
"Well, you saw EI.IZA." she said.
Computer programs can outstrip conventional therapy in several ways, said Kenneth Colby.
But ELIZA, a 1967 invention, has since been up-graded to more advanced developments in the field of artificial intelligences.
The computer program was 90 percent accurate, while the success rate of psychiatrists was 30 percent.
For example, a computer program in a University of Wisconsin experiment out-performed psychiatrists on suicide predictions following interviews of a number of troubled individuals.
COLBY, WHY is attempting to design a computer
program, said computers were objective,
computer science was the core.
And the price is right, according to Colby, who said compares charges $5 to $8 an hour when computer chips are sold.
But psychiatrists won't be priced out of the market, according to Bethke.
But according to Coe, a complete and satisfactory therapeutic computer program has yet to make a dent.
"I wouldn't want a computer to second-guess me," he said.
Today's researchers have scaled down the time expectations, but not the goals, according to Coe.
"People are a lot more reasonable about how much time it will take." he said.
2
Thursday, October 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Shah's gall bladder removed
NEW YORK- Surgeons removed the Shah of Istanbul's gall bladder yesterday and checked to see if his long-standing cancer of the lymph glands had worsened. A spokesman for the deposed ruler said recovery without complications was anticipated.
Outside the hospital, as Shah Mohammad Raza Pahliya was undergoing a surgery, a crowd of about 160 demonstrators changed "Death to the shah," and they were beaten. The police later said
Robert Aramo, the spokesman for Pahlavi, said the shah would be hospitalized for two to three weeks.
"He is far from breathing his last breath, but obviously, he is an ill man," he said.
The U.S. State Department cleared the shah for the trip here, but only for as long as he remained hospitalized.
Pahali was toppled from his throne last January by the revolutionary forces of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The shah has since been sentenced to death by a revolutionary court in Iran and a $135,000 price has been put on his head.
Kennedu to form committee
WASHINGTON - Sen. Edward M. Kendeny will announce the formation of an "exploratory" committee committee Monday, an aide said yesterday.
That will make the Massachusetts Democrat an official candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination. However, Kennedy is not expected to be a finalist.
Meanwhile, several leaders of the "draft Kennedy" movement said they expect to convert their operations immediately to campaign status.
The Federal Election Committee showed 68 draft committees had registered as of yesterday, but only 10 have filed financial report showing how much money they have spent.
Those 10 committees reported raising $25,900 by the end of September and spending $164,025, most in Florida where Democratic party causes oc-cursed.
Carter's campaign committee has protested the unofficial campaign organizing by charging that the effusive centrally orchestrated from there (as in the draft).
Explosion rocks Latham cafe
LATHAM, Kan. UPI- Two persons were killed and several others injured last night in a propane explosion that leveled a city block.
Authorities said the blast occurred only a few minutes after the cafe had closed for the night.
One of the victims was Carla Hodges, the manager of the Latham Cafe. The other victim was identified as Kate Binst, 30, of Latham.
Bing was identified as an employee of the cafe. She was thrown from the building during the blast and died about two hours later in a Wichita hospital.
A spokesman for the Butler County sheriff's office said five buildings were damaged or destroyed by the blast and a fire, including a building located at 301 W. 6th Street in Burlington.
The spokesman said at least five persons were injured, including two who were still hospitalized last night late. None of the injuries were thought to be
U.S. urges train suit dismissal
WASHINGTON—The Justice Department said yesterday that it would not oppose Amtrak's decision to shut down the National Limited line connecting New York and Kansas City, despite increased passengers during the recent gas shortage.
In papers filed in federal court, the Justice Department urged U.S. District Judge Lloyd Oberderoy to dismiss a lawsuit by step, Tony Hall, D-Ohio, and the Justice Department against him.
The National Limited, which provided the only rail service to Dayton, was terminated Oct. 1 under the Amtrak Reorganization Act of 1979.
outdated statistics in a city of bayport to court arguing Airtrak used data from the full capacity during the recent gas shortage and that Airtrak had been running at its full capacity.
Woman guilty of sex charges
HARTVILLE, Mo. A-72 year-old woman charged with rape under a new Missouri law has pleaded guilty to lesser charges.
A Wright County Circuit Court official said yesterday that Comnie Sapiennic of Mountain Grove had pleaded to two counts of misdemeanor assault on a deputy.
The original charges stemmed from her alleged sexual relations with two brothers, aged 13 and 14.
Also this month, a 21-year-old Moberly woman, Debra Lee Timmons, was charged with statutory rape of a 12-year-old boy and sexual assault in illegal possession of drugs.
The state attorney general's office said the two women were the first charged under a new criminal code that took effect Jan. 2.
Prior to the new code, the woman could have been charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, punishable by a maximum six-month jail term, or being denied entry into the country.
Under the new code the maximum sentence is 15 years for statutory rape and seven years on each count of sexual assault.
Fired epileptic teacher sues
TOPEA-K-An elementary school teacher has filed a civil suit against a parochial parochial school and the Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kan.
Cynthia E. Cain, 30, contends that she was unlawfully dismissed from her job in August on the day she was to start work as a second grade teacher at Assumption Parish School. School officers said a "medical problem requiring medication" was the reason for her dismissal.
The suit contends that the teacher's dismissal violates the U.S. Constitution and laws guaranteeing equal employment opportunity.
Accounting for our sick, the school nurse to comply with provisions promising that no student shall be denied admission or leave from school if she is in excess of $20,000 in actual damages for mental and physical injury. The teacher is seeking in excess of $20,000 in actual damages for mental and physical injury.
According to the suit, the school failed to comply with provisions prohibiting discrimination of the handcuffed in an aregist receive federal assistant.
AMA told to end restrictions
The FTC, in a decision to be appealed to the federal courts, said the AMA illegally restrained competition among its 200,000 members, a majority of AMA
WASHINGTON - The American Medical Association has kept doctors' bills high by campaigning against competition among physicians, the Federal Trade Commission said.
It ordered the AMA to end "ethical" restrictions on member doctors that rule out advertising and other ways of attracting patients through low fees.
An FTCP spokesman said it was impossible to say how much extra Americans support it, but we are convinced that the record of this case supports a finding of suspicion.
The FTC ordered the AMA to stop restraining its members from soliciting patients by advertising and other means. It also banned AMA action to interfere with doctor's ability to work for low-cost group health plans by branding the arrangement unethical.
Correction
A headline in yesterday's Kanana which read, "Bookstore closed for inventory" was incorrect. Only the textbook department of the bookstore is clear.
Weather
The KU weather service has predicted mostly sunny skies today with the high near 73. Tonight will be partly cloudy with the low near 44. There is a slight chance of showers early Friday morning and late afternoon with partly cloudy skies. The extended outlook for Saturday is warm with a chance of thunderstorms.
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter committed the United States government yesterday to providing $80 million in aid to children whose parents 'award' a "tragedy of genocidal proportion."
U.S. promises aid to Cambodia
The president's announcement and Kennedy's criticism followed approval by the House Foreign Affairs Committee of a bill authorizing the expenditure of $30 million to the Cambodians. Carter intervened to $30 million in the program he announced.
Carter's proposal came little more than an hour after Sen. Edward M. Kennedy criticized the administration for moving too quickly in millions of Camibianans who face starvation.
Carter, equating the famine in Cambodia with the World War II Holocaust, told reporters: "We now face once again the
prospect of avoidable death. We must acvailly to save the men, women and children who are our brothers and sisters in God's family."
Sens. James Sasser, D-Tenn, John Danforth, R-Mo, and Max Baucus, D-Mont, the first U.S. officials to visit the Cambodian capital since the communist government Foreign Minister Hun Sen of the plan to track 1,000 tons of aid into Cambodia daily.
**THREE U.S. senators sent Pinom Penth for 12 hours yesterday and they said no approval is needed to launch a mission that could save hundreds of thousands of lives.**
They said that he was appreciative, and that he told them it would be up to Cambodia's Communist Party Central Committee to approve the plan.
"We stated to them and we re-state for the world that the decision is now in their hands. We have been told from Danford not told a news conference. Everyone else has said yes. We are now waiting for the verdict."
THE SENATORS said their plan could be operational within days of Cambodia's approval.
They said Cambodia's officials admitted that thousands of people would die each day if enough aid is not received.
According to Cambodian and international estimates, from 2 to 3 million people, out of a population estimated at ground 4 million, could starve to death.
Sasser said the Cambodians guaranteed them security for the convoy, and said that 80 percent to 90 percent of the war-torn city would be reached without a security problem."
Guerrillaris of the ousted Pot Pol regime continue to battle the Vietnamese and the Heng Samrin government they have incited. A number of refugees barred fires from inside Cambodia landed inside a refuge camp and in a camp on the Thai coast to buy supplies from Thailand.
DANFORTH SAID the senators returned "optimistic" and planned to report to Carter.
Science Fiction Movie—
The senators said the aid would be distributed by international agencies already sending in limited aid by air in a $100 million international effort.
SILENT RUNNING
Under the senators' plan, truck workers deliver food and medicine from the THP to hospitals in Thailand. The 1,000-ton a day plan would equal estimates by Western aid groups of what needed to be delivered in one day.
partially funded by the Student Senate
Oct. 26 & 27
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WEEKEND BOWLING SPECIAL .50*/game
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KANSAS UNION
Place an ad. Tell the world.Call 864-4358
KANSAS UNION
We have positions to fill.
President Carter has called the fight for tomorrow's energy the "moral equivalent of war." The front-page industry that 'tackling the nation's greatest challenge needs superior graduates.
We can put your skills to work NOW. Kansas City Power & Light has choice career openings that place you now where your classmates will be in five years; at high levels of authority and responsibility with earnings and
Kansas City Power & Light Company is a billion-dollar utility and energy supplier to over a million people in a major commercial and industrial center encompassing 23 counties in two states. Because of growing energy demand, expansion, and promotions, we need engineers with leadership capabilities to take over in these key areas;
Fossil Plant Construction and Engineering
Two Mechanical Engineers, one Electrical Engineer and one Mechanical Engineer will review the work of and coordinate with Consulting Engineering firms involved in building plants. These engineers will also design modifications to existing buildings and will supervise contractors.
District Commercial Operations
We need two Service Engineers with degrees in Electrical or Mechanical Engineering (or Engineering Technology) to work for our company. Of our large customers and with Engineering and other departments of the Company. In addition to having good engineering skills, the graduates must have a demonstrated personable, articulate and poised under pressure. These positions require extra savvy.
System Planning
One Mechanical, Electrical or Industrial Engineer (or Engineering Technology) who has the capability to perform studies of the cost benefit trade-offs of designated projects involving generation capacity. Knowledge of the job requires training in Economics and the ability to program in it. Job opportunities in course are also important as this involves interface with other departments. Familiarity with aometric modeling is an asset.
Energy Management Services
We need two Engineers with degrees in Mechanical or Electrical Engineering (or the ability to explain electric heating, air conditioning, conservation techniques, and renewable sources of energy to customers, customers, and consulting engineers. This involves constant research to remain current with the use of Candidates must commute accurately and factually.
Generating Stations
Three Maintenance Engineers with leadership skills are needed for trouble-shooting, special studies, efficiency tests, repair and crew crews. This is a "fast-track" supervision and management. Graduating students who will have degrees in Mechanical or Electrical Engineering (or) are invited to discuss with us the following locations, some in congenial small town locales:
latan Station - live in
Kansas City
LaCyge Station — live in Louisburg or Paola, Kansas miles from Kansas City
Mentrose Station — live in Omaha, Kansas miles from Kansas City
60 miles from Kansas City
One Electrical Engineer who has taken power engineering courses in needed to design both overhead and underground distribution systems. Some field experience is required opportunities to promote into Construction and Maintenance or technical supervision.
Distribution Engineering
System Power Operations Staff
The Manager of Generating Stations is seeking an Engineering Engineer for top level staff. Electrical Engineers as well as Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Technology are considered. This person will assist in administration of the Preventative Maintenance and Efficiency Programs and the Systems Systems. Candidates must be good at planning and, due to the nature of the liaison work, have a strong interest in unique and very challenging opportunity requiring a sharp individual able to work with all levels of the Company. It is our responsibility to top management.
1
Our representatives will be interviewing on campus in the near future; and are placed at the placement office.
KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT
AnEqual Employment Opportunity Employer M/F/V/H
KCPL
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 25, 1979
3
Chamber of Commerce to push Kansas Relays
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce sports committee met with KU athletic officials yesterday to decide what the team will do to help revitalize the Kansas Relays.
Tom Christie, public relations director for the chamber, said the committee met with Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, and Phyllis Howlett, assistant director of basketball help assess the women's basketball program and the problems facing the relays.
"We mainly discussed the future of the Kansas Relys," Christie said, "because we would like to think they could be saved and we want to help."
The relays have been plagued by poor attendance, a lack of nationally known athletes and too many events, Christie said.
"In addition to the relays, we also discussed the possibility of helping the women's basketball program by starting an educational program," he said. "It
would inform people about KU's track team, which is one of the best in the country."
Howlett said that specific duties for the chamber to perform were not outlined at the meeting, but that they would be discussed at later meetings.
"We are very interested in getting the relays restored to what they were in the past," Howlett said. "The chamber obviously feels it is important to get them restored, and the relays repurposed through better attendance and increased participation."
Christie said that the chamber had not been heavily involved in the relays in the past, that it had mainly helped with selling tickets.
"The reason we are willing to help is that if we can get more people into Lawrence every year it not only helps us, but also Lawrence as a city." Christie said.
KU student convicted in shooting
By MARK SPENCER
Staff Reporter
David S. Stuckey, Topeka fine arts graduate student, was found guilty of aggravated battery yesterday by Douglas County District Judge Ralph King.
Stuckey, who waived a trial by jury, pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity Sept. 5.
During the trial Stuckey's attorney conceded that Stuckey had shot Mark Rafferty, Topoja kenia; on May 31 while his team was visiting Iowa. Plaza Gas and Mini-Mart, 3034 Iowa.
Jerry Donnelly, the defense attorney, accused him of lying to three psychiatrists who said Stuckey was not aware of his actions at the time of the incident and was not able to discern right from wrong.
King, in his verdict statement, said he had no doubt that Sucken had been aware of his actions and had been able to distinguish right from wrong.
County jail pending a pre-sentencing evaluation at Larned State Hospital.
Stuckey was committed to the Douglas
BECAUSE THE crime involved a gun that was used against another person, Sue Howe. She was shot by the Maleone, Douglas County district attorney,. Agrigated battery carries a gun in her hand.
The judge said the defendant had taken a loaded shotgun to the convenience store, aimed the gun and fired, which indicated he was aware of his actions.
A witness had testified earlier that he had met the defendant's face and eyes met the defendant's eyes. Suckey had momentarily lowered the king. King said this action indicated the defendant realized his responsibility.
Elias Cleckad, a Lawrence psychiatrist who interviewed Stuckey after he was arrested, testified that Stuckey had been wrongly convicted of killing a belief that the victim was an anti-Christ
The psychiatrist had diagnosed the defendant's condition as paranoid schizophrenia.
THE DEFENSE introduced written evidence from two other psychiatrists, Richard Childs of Kansas City, Mo., and Steve Shelton of Topeka. Shelton was by the prosecution. Both said Stuckey was insane at the time he shot Rafferty.
Chedik and Childs said Stuckey, who has been under psychiatric treatment since he was arrested, had made a miraculous difference. He no longer a danger to himself or society.
Donnelly, visibly shaken by the court's ruling, told King he would file a motion for a new trial and requested that his client remain free on bond.
King denied the request, saying he was surprised Stuckey had been freed on bond before the trial.
"To reach the decision he reached," Donnelly told the Kansan, "he had to totally disregard all expert testimony.
"In my 13 years of practicing law it is the grosset miscarriage of justice I have ever observed."
KING SAID the psychiatrists had not heard the testimony given in court that affected his decision.
Specifically, King referred to the testimony that Stuckey had lowered the gun momentarily, and testimony from the man who defended the defendant at the scene of the crime.
Randy. Brown. Topeka sophomore, testified that after he had grabbed Stuckey, the defendant had said, "What are you guys got?" He shot an anybody, I didn't do anything."
The judge said the statement indicated that Stuckey was aware of his actions.
King, at several times during the trial, asked witnesses questions about Stuckey's actions and what they may have meant, including questions about Stuckey lowering the blood pressure. The judge is apprehended and unnatural sexual acts he thought he had threatened with.
Sorority Rush 1980 Registration Meeting
After King asked Chediak several questions, Donnellly objected, saying he felt he was facing two prosecutors.
October 25 at 8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
KU
Come and pick up Rush registration packets.
Bring your questions!
Rush will be held January 9-14,1980.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editor staff. Signed column represents the views of the authors.
October 25.1979
Stephan hurts plan
Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan has announced that he will fight to bring down the walls of a newly developed community corrections program.
Stephan, who says he plans to the feeding with the 1981 Kansas Legislature now has KU law students analyzing alternatives to the program.
The problem with Stephan's battle plan, however, is that it seems to stem more from a long-standing dislike of community corrections programs than from the success or failure of the program.
THE NEW program was approved in 1978 after a long battle in the Legislature. But Stephan, who was cool to the idea during his 13 years at Sedgwick County district judge, already has deemed the program unworkable, and he plans to push for a minimum-security prison.
The fact is, however, that the program may work. The idea of community corrections is to release wrongdoers from a community to give them a better
chance of rehabilitation than in prisons, which often foster as much criminal behavior as they deter.
SO FAR, only Pawnee County has chosen to take part in the program. But state Corrections Secretary Patrick McManus said he saw it work in Minnesota, where he is from, and thinks the program should be given a chance here.
“When a state decides on something like community corrections, some people think you can legislate one day and implement the next,” McManus said. “You can't. It’s still too early to whether it will fail in this state.”
Corrections is perhaps the one area of our criminal justice process in which no one is an expert, an area in which our society has yet to find workable solutions. Putting nonviolent offenders back into their communities, instead of behind barbed wire, may be one of those solutions.
The state Legislature has committed itself to exploring alternatives. Perhaps Stephen ought to hold off his attempts to fight there is something to fight about.
Relations between America and mainland China, so delicately nurtured by the leaders of both countries, may be in jeopardy as a result of a melding U. District Court judge.
Judge threatens U.S.-Sino relations
In an unprecedented and foolhardy ruling, the judge, Olive Garcia, decided last week that the U.S. Constitution in announcing the termination of the U.S. mutual defence treaty with Taiwan last year. The termination of the agreement would build blocks in Sina-American relations.
Gassai said that any termination of the treaty must be approved by two-thirds of the Senate. The treaty was scheduled to die on Jan. 1, but Gassai tacked on an order to the ruler, prohibiting Secretary of State Rance from carrying out the termination.
GASCHS RULING came on a lawsuit against the law firm of 14 other conservative lawmakers, who had called Carter's termination of the Taiwan pact one of the "worst power grabs in Asia."
That "power grab" occurred late last year when Carter announced that the United States would seek a pact with the People's Republic of China. That normalization was based on an agreement reached by President Trump.
The decision to switch loyalties from Taiwan to China touched off a storm of criticism, with some verbal broadsides at the president, accusing him of abandoning a faithful ally for an
MANY LIBERALS were surprised by the call to action for any guarantees of a kurain's survival. Congressional leaders, meanwhile, were dismayed with what they called "a cavalier approach" in their response.
Kansas is used to being called a backward, water state back. It is learned to take the jokes and criticism in stride, because for one social activity or another.
Universities are usually the hobbies for women, but they are sure of enlightenment that supposedly irrevocable walls is attractive to people who support or oppose a cause that is not well thought out.
The University of Kansas is no disappointment. Through the years, its students have been involved in many a controversy.
Gay's direction confusing
ONE OF those controversies is gay rights. To some, that's a surprising issue for this part of the country.
The state's fame comes partly from a much-publicized struggle in Wichita over a gay rights ordinance. It was repealed shortly after a controversial gay rights referendum in Dade County, Fla., but it remains a publicable national attention. It was Kansas.
The University's fame in gay activism comes from its active gay and Lesbian student groups, some of which have existed for nearly nine years.
But now Kansas may be coming closer to that backwater stereotype than is comfortable, especially in the area of gay rights. A person who actively supports the Gay Rights League in Kansas suggest last week that a lack of leadership had made the group ineffective.
THIS IS inongroup with the recent National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights. At a time when homosexuality was becoming a taboo, we need awareness and understanding, as well as
COLUMNIST
melissa thompson
political power, why have Lawrence's gay people been so quiet?
'Is gay activism going the way of other social movements—toward a more passive, service role? Or has it just become unfashionable?'
the history of the homosexual rights movement at KU is crowded with incidents. The headlines of past years reflect the novelty that the press saw in the issue. They also show how disruption, as political science that政治科学 professors say is effective, at least to a degree.
IN 1971, the Gay Liberation Front began an ultimately unsuccessful, three-year legal battle to gain formal recognition from the government to open the way for seeking student funding.
The Front brought suit against then-Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers and several other officials because its petition for recognition had been denied. The suit began in federal district court, travelled through a circuit court of appeals in Denver and finally ended in a plea for consideration before the Court. The Court would not hear the case.
One of the attorneys involved in the case was William Kunster, a civil rights specialist. His previous clients include the Chicago Seven, Huey Newton and Bobby
IT'S HARD to lose with that kind of ammunition, but they did. However, the case
was more valuable than any win because it
would have allowed us to develop on campuses in Kansas and other states. That issue was how far a
Universities should go in supporting freedoms
It's interesting to note that while KU and the Front were arguing before a judge, the Board of Regents in Oklahoma was giving up on the same petition. Regents voted not to appeal a court ruling that said that homosexual students must be granted the same rights as heterosexual students.
COLUMNIST
In 1975, the headlines took on a different color. One read, "Area gay group no longer political." The shift of the group was toward service, not publicity.
There was a surge of activity again in 1977, when the Gay Services of Kansas, Inc. sponsored a "Wear Blue Jeans If You're Gay Day." The promotion was more a reflection of how people were forced to think of how they would react if others considered them gay.
In 1978, the surge continued as the GSKO participated in a realignment of the gov't's drug policy and was endorsed. And earlier this week members of the GSKO participated in an anti-discrimination rally on June 30.
The group is obviously not defunct yet, but the cryptic allusion by one of its supporters to ineffective leadership is disturbing.
Is poor leadership being confused with a lack of controversy? Effectiveness is not always measured in headlines.
Or is the gay rights movement—at least in Kansas—egress toward that placid, political calm that most social issues seem to be enduring?
"AND THANK YOU FOR TRAVELING ON AMTRAK.SIR!
WRIGHT
© 1994
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
important decision without consulting Congress.
10575069478 Published at the University of Kassan Daily August through May and Monday and Thursday
10575069478 Published at the University of Kassan Daily August through May and Monday and Thursday
10575069478 Published at the University of Kassan Daily August through May and Monday and Thursday
10575069478 Published at the University of Kassan Daily August through May and Monday and Thursday
10575069478 Published at the University of Kassan Daily August through May and Monday and Thursday
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas Lawrence, KS68045
Managing Editor
Nancy Dressler
If that appeal fails, Carter will have to appeal the decision to Congress. Even if Congress does approve the cancellation, it will mean postponing the resumption of normal relations with China.
Editor
Marv Hoenj
What effects this will have on Chinese- American relations is unclear. The Chinese have been silent so far and the Carter administration has said it will appeal the decision.
Editorial Editor Marv Ernst
Business Manager Cynthia Ray
Presidential authority in the area of treaties is sometimes vague, but Carter said that Gachs's ruling is an unjustified and inane case of judicial medingl of foreign affairs. Foreign policy-making should be decided by experts and not in the American courtroom.
John logan
General Manager Rick Mussel
Advertising Adviser Chuck Cbowina
The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be addressed to the university and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed in school records, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. Letters should also be sent to the right to edit for publication.
Letters Policy
However, despite the anger of Congress and the contensions of Goldwater and Gauch, Carter had a clear legal right to end a party's term, even if another party may terminate it one year after notice has been given the other party. Carter administration lawyers argued to Gauch that this gives the president the power to act alone—without consulting Congress.
There is also plenty of precedent on
their actions. A law passed in
down at least 11 treaties in 1815 without
congressional approval. There is also
absolutely no judge for a judge to veto a
collation.
EVEN ON a practical side, the treaty termination makes sense. The treaty is a relic of the Red Scar days of the 1900s and employs diplomatic efforts with mainland China and its nearly 980 million people. Freed from the numbersome entanglements, U.S. relations with China have little relation with China to a point where we now save more control than ever over the fate of Taiwan. Nonetheless, Gassch chose to rule in Goldwater and his conservative rew.
1980
RONALD REAGAN
Barton
MIDDAY
And we can make it live again!
Parking decisions exclude students
To the Editor
The University has acted to regulate the use of electronic equipment allowing for input from the student body. A notice of proposed rulemaking has never been issued to allow for comments before a final decision.
Paul A. Passman
Prairie Village graduate student
1 WOULD hope that the students would speak out and speak loudly to prevent any further regulations from taking effect without allowing for a reasonable period of time for comments from those persons who directly affected by the new regulations.
When a fine of $7.50 for backing into a parking stall is assessed to you, or a meter placed under your car, the amount time your vehicle has occupied a space, or when the cost of a permit park is raised again, or ... What happens next? When a fine of $7.50 will only get you by until the next time.
Many of you reading this will not be concerned until a fine is imposed on you. It'll probably be that you're trying to tight budget and find it necessary to shell out another $7.50 or more per violation. [see here, however, is not money, but creating regulations and enforcing them.]
BEGINNING THIS HILL, parking meters have grown like weeds which thrive on quarters, and they feed on the students who use them. The department authorized the installation of these parking meters? The Kanans, in a report earlier this semester, noted that the meters would cut Parking Service's operating costs by 40%. They were working at the entrance to the parking zones. The employees' salaries have been absorbed, but unemployment has risen as a result of this action. Doesn't the person who owns the coins from the receipts receive a salary?
Indeed he does, and he enjoys the convenience and comfort of a new vehicle in which he patrols the parking zones, searching out yet another unfortunate victim of car theft. He is also on the bureaucracy. The traffic program is designed to provide "Use of available parking space in the best interests of the total University." Don't the students drive? You must be university! The Parking Services seem to request the students only as a source of revenue.
Personalized system of instruction needed
To the Editor:
As students we are subjected to extreme pressures of achievement. Do you have a fear that you will fail? Do you race in a course? Does fear tear at your heart when you've failed a test you thought you knew? Or when the instructor moves on to new material and you hasn't mastered it?
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Maybe it's time we moved out of the dark ages of lecturing and into the new era of Personalized System of Instruction(PSI).
PSI divide the course into units of work that students complete in order. Students who have mastered Unit 1 can easily master Unit 2, which consists of 3, etc. Students do not move on to the next unit until they have mastered prior units. The instructor believes that students will learn more easily and more plausibly if they receive such new concept introduced in the course.
IF A STUDENT isn't satisfied with his test score at the end of a certain number of quizzes (chapters or units), he is free to try again, thus eliminating that gripping fear. The system can be adapted to any subject—such as math, language, or philosophy. Nothing is destined to be stuck in a lecture rut. The work is that of the student, and the instructor is the helper and organizer.
Aren't self-achievement and self-esteem worth some change in our University? Do you have any plans for paying teachers to teach you? You hold the voice of the students—speak out with correspondence. It's your future and your job. Can you imagine yourself—are you feeling the pressures?
Hutchinson junior
MECHA clarifies errors about rally
To the Editor
Members of the MCHA organization believe that clarification is necessary in regard to the article on the rally at Judy Woodburn on Dec. 27, 1978, written by Judy Woodburn on
The sentence "...marchers included Mexican-American organization" was very misleading. In the future, the Kansan should contact members of the organization to correct it.
MECHA did not endorse the rally, nor were any members present as representatives of the group. Only one member, on a statewide ballot, did not endorse and not members was stated in the article.
Ruben Murillo
Hutchinson senior
Steve Ramirez
Horton junior
KU MECHA
To the Editor
Goals of communists are not humanitarian
I noticed that the University Events committee approved an anti-recruitment strategy for a graduate Progressive Labor Party(PLP). Upon investigation of the PLP we find very similar characteristics.
The fall 1979 copy of the PLP magazine states:
"We, the revolutionary communi-
Progressive Labor Party, will march in
Harpes's Ferry and in Kansas to com-
memorate the historical example of John
Brown and his force violently fighting
and the unity that sustained that strugge-
"But we are marching for more than that. Racism is the blood that flows through the world, and it cannot be defeated without the other. As communists we recognize that capitalism will not be defeated unless racism is destroyed, and until racism is destroyed until capitalism is destroyed."
And we are supposed to believe that communists, who have murdered scores of civilians and humanitarians who are concerned about human rights, when in reality, their admitted goal is the destruction of democracy in our republic and our free enterprise system?
Communists, for years, are the ones who have been instigating and promoting strife between various factions abroad and in our own country, driving a wedge between men and women, and whites, parents and children—the "generation gap"—and men and women.
Rob Munyan Mission Hills graduate student
Kansan reader wants
Kansan reader wants no more black hands
I used to get black fingers every time we fingerprinted in kindergarten
To the Editor:
Later, I got black fingers when I sharpened pencils by rubbing them sideways on a piece of paper.
Now I get black fingers when I read the Kansan.
I don't want black fingers anymore
Please, do something. Bob Longmire Leawood senior
Leawood senior
Senator clarifies opinion on spending Deputy Killen
To the Editor
I feel that I must clarify a quote attributed to me in the Kansan on Thursday. Oct. 18.
The quote, "We have a fantastic amount of money, $45,000 . . . I think we give it to a worthwhile project, imply that we should be the Student Project and the Under Project $45,000. The fact is the Senate had this sum available to allocate to various campus organizations, and I believe we would use Usaiden Defense Program for $1,780 was not impossible or inappropriate. Claire McKinney
Lawrence senior
Thursday, October 25.1979
5
University Daily Kansan
Greater University Fund raises $1.3 million for'79
By ROBIN SMITH Staff Reporter
More than 24,000 alumni, students and businesses have contributed to the creation of the Greater University Fund from July 18th to June 1979, according to a recent report released by the university.
The Greater University Fund (GUP), a subsidiary of the University Association, is a 27-year-old program that annually encourages support for the University in areas where tax funds can not be made.
"Although GUF is only one of the largest funds at KU, it has the largest number of donors," Terry Anderson, new director of GUF, said last week.
Anderson, who works with KU alumni at the University said that GUP reached more potential contributors than other KU funds by phone, door to door soliciting and annual fundraising.
According to James Martin, vice president for private support programs, GUF is one of the oldest and most successful programs of its kind in the country.
"The Greater University Fund's primary function is to provide unrestricted resources for the benefit of the University, its students, faculty and staff," Martin said. Mutual aid from the university donated to the Endowment Association go to GUF. Only a small percent of the $1.3 million came through annual giving programs at KU."
Another feature of the Greater University Fund is that it applies no operation charges to donations.
"Virtually no other college across the nation may operate a GIF course." "GIF gifts, all the other gifts to the KU Endowment Assoc., have no administration apps applied."
According to Martin, GUF is "self-standing" for two reasons.
"One reason is a gift of 25,000 acres of land for the KU Watkins Hospital (donor of the KU Watkins Hospital) gave some fields in the southwest portion of the state. Our operation is partially funded by this donation."
"The second source of income is interest on short-term deposits held for the university. He said, 'Departmental funds are invested and not invested, Martin said, but placed in a savings account at the Endowment Association to collect the fees.' These accounts can help cover its operational costs."
According to Anderson, the unrestricted funds of GUF are important to the growth of the University because of special, sometimes insecure, expenses.
However, Martin said, "such Discussion functionally limits the approval of the Executive Committee of the Endowment Association, acting on the recommendations of the committee."
"Groups that are interested in funding the Chancellor's review of the Chancellor's review. The Chancellor then chooses the highest priority and asks the Executive Committee to consider
The Greater University Fund has contributed to such groups as Post-Baccalaureate Minority Students, Improvement of Instructors, the Department of English Fund, Graduate Student Travel, Scheme of Fine Art Tours and various scholarships. GUT does not provide money that the state should be providing, Martin said.
"The state supplies money for a good education," he said, "white GUF supplies money for a better education. All we do with
GUF is collect the money and say, 'Here it is KU—now you spend it.' "
Anderson said the large number of donors for GUF proved that people cared about improving the education at KU.
"We work closely with the Alumni and teachers to ensure that we order to know who to send our respects to," she said. "We enclose a donation envelope in each report and keep sending them until we receive it."
Martin said, "We send donation requests to a man in California for 24 years. He never gave until a few years ago. Then he gave $47,000.
"KU alumni can always expect to hear from the Greater University Fund," Martin said. "We find you wherever you are."
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WANTED:SENIORS
The 1980 Hope Award final vote is Thursday, October 25 and Friday, October 26.
Booths are at the Union, Summerfield and Wescoe from 9:00 am to 3:30 pm.
Finalists are:
Allan Cigler, Political Science
Frank Gurtler, Occupational Therapy
Allen Ford, Business Administration
William Balfour, Physiology and Cell Biology
20
Bezaleel Benjamin, Architecture and Architectural Engineering
HOPE AWARD 1980
JACK O'LANTERN
One Week Only Wed. 24-Wed.31
Mister Guy of Lawrence Announces Its 2nd Annual HALLOWEEN SALE!!!
Save Big On These Season Favorites Perfect for Homecoming Weekend!!!!
Sweaters ...including solids, stripes in v-neck,
crew neck, shawls etc. a large selection
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Thursday, October 25.1979
University Daily Kansan
Planners recommend rezoning
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission unanimously recommended last night to rezone a small section of the Oread neighborhood.
However, the rezoning plan recommended by the city-county planning staff, was not exactly what the Oread Neighborhood Association requested.
The section is a three-block area between Ninth and 10th streets and Missouri Street and Emerv Road.
The Oread association requested that the area be downzoned from RM-3 (multiple family) to RM-D (residential duplex).
The rezoning approved by the commission recommended that one block between Missouri and Arkansas streets be zoned residential duplex, that the block between Arkansas and Michigan streets be zoned residential duplex, that the block between Arkansas and that the third block remain RM-3.
RM-1 zoning requires more square footage per lot and per living unit than RM-2 zoning.
GARNER STOLL, a member of the planning staff, said the recommendation
was made after consultation with property owners in the area.
He also told the commissioners that building permits for multiple-uptown dwellings for three lots between Michigan Street and Emery Road had been issued last spring.
Tony Gleason, president of the Oread association, said the association wanted the residential duplex so it would be the same as the adjacent area of the cost that was required for a home.
In response to Gleason's remarks, Commissioner Kurt vonchon said a small group should not force its opinion about who enters into the individuals who own the property.
THE RECOMMENDATION for the rezoning will go before the Lawrence City Commission Nov. 13.
The commissioners also directed the planning staff to initiate procedures that would delete a paragraph from the city's
zoning ordinance. The paragraph states that once a building permit has been issued it cannot be negated by a change in zoning.
This action was requested by the city on December 23, 1978, for construction of an eight-unit apartment was begun before last week's city commission decision to downsize an area in the Oread district.
The planning commissioners also directed the planning staff to initiate downzoning of another section of the Oread neighborhood from multiple family to single family. This area is bounded approximately by 18th Street on the north, 17th Street on the west, and Vermont streets on the north and Massachusetts Street on the east.
Stall said the street boundaries were only approximate because the zoning change would be done specifically by property lines. In other business, the commission conducted hearing on the neighborhood plan for the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association.
Flamenco guitar performance sold out
A sell-out crowd will greet internationally known flamenco guitarist Carlos Montona when he performs in the University Theatre at 3:30 Sunday afternoon.
Montoya is considered by many music experts to be the world's best flamenco guitarist, Raymond Stilharn, chairman of the KU Concert Series committee, said.
yesterday. Montoya's performance, part of the regular KU Concert Series, is the result of five years of work, Stahl said.
Montaya, a native of Spain, began playing the guitar at 8 and dated at a flamenco guitarist when he was 14. Montaya is credited with introducing flamenco music to the world outside Spain. Stahl said, and has been a graduate of him made him a favorite international artist.
"This was a matter of luck. We've been trying for five years to get him and this year we just happened to have a schedule that fit his," Stubi said.
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Japanese Kyogen acting style to be represented in two plays
Slow, nimble movement characterizes the Japanese Kyogen acting style that is being used in the KU productions of "The Ink-Smeared Lady" and "Scapin," a professor of theatre and director of the International Theatre Studies Center at KU.
The plays will be performed at 8 tonight and night except Oct. 29, through Nov. 3, in the June Theatre in Mumbai Hall
Tasuki is directing "The Ink-Smeared
Dog" in his own English version, both with his
original caricature, Caroleyn Bettleheim, Pa., graduate student, is directing "The Ink-Smeared Dog" in his own English version, both with his original caricature, Caroleyn Bettleheim, Pa., graduate student, is directing "The Ink-Smeared Dog" in his own English version, both with his original caricature, Caroleyn Bettleheim, Pa., graduate student, is directing "The Ink-Smeared Dog" in his own English version, both with his original caricature, Caroleyn Bettleheim, Pa., graduate student, is directing "The Ink-Smeared Dog" in his own English version, both with his original caricature, Caroleyn Bettleheim, Pa., graduate student, is directing "The Ink-Smeared DOG
The Kyogen acting style, Tsushiaki, said dates back to the 14th century, but is still being used today in Japanese theatre, with the No and Kakuki acting styles.
Tsubaki said that Kyogen, like all Japanese theatre, was performed at a much slower pace because the emphasis on characters instead of dramatic action the characters instead of dramatic action
"Discipline and concentration are very inherent to Eastern theatre acting."
HE SAID that in Japan, Kyogen style plays usually were 20 to 40 minute satiric comedies that were performed between the ages of 16 and 30 cended to be more symbolic and tragic.
"Japanese theatre relates to storytelling," he said. "The pace is slow and things are less dramatically structured.
"The Kyogen style language is un-
destendable and the action is clear," Tusubaki said, "and the humor is there so it is particularly appealing to young people."
Tusabai said "The ink Smeared Lady," which will be staged with traditional Japanese set and costumes at KU, dealt with the battle of the sexes.
"A feudal lord is leasing for his home after a lengthy stay in the capital, where he has already established a relationship with a young woman." Tsuhaki said. "Upon hearing of his departure, the mistress asked him to leave and lord's clever servant funds a way to expose her false pretenses. Since neither man is a member of the court, plays with her chasing the two men."
HAYNES SAID she was experimenting in her production of "Scapin," by combining western costuming and a French costume acting and language of Kwoon style.
"My interest is with what stylized theatre forms have to offer naturalistic theatre of the West," Haynes said. "It's an attempt to isolate elements of a production from its context in geographical and cultural boundaries to churn our enjoyment the theatre."
She said the play was about two young men who overcame, with the help of a woman named Sarah, to objections to the girls they wanted to marry. In a case of mistaken identity, Sarah was asked to choose one.
lost daughter of the other young man's father.
THE SET, designed by Tamara Vardin Israel graduate student, is traditionally stark and functional and will be used for both productions. Tabaki said.
Chez Haehl, University Theatre costumer, designed costumes for the *Ink Smeared Lady*, and costumes for "The Ink Smeared Lady", Taubaaki said, were purchased in Japan for the University, except for the costume for Koken, which was made by Lily Y.
A Japanese Theatre Festival is being held tomorrow and Sunday in conjunction with the performances. Tsubaki said demonstrations and workshops in Kyogen and No theatre styles and in Buyo dance be presented during the two-third festival.
Master Akira Matsui, a professor, performer of the Kite School of Japan, will conduct a workshop in No theatre at 10:30 a.m. on Hall 42 and Hall 51. Hall, Sunday, a discussion of No and Kyogen act styles will be held at 10:30 a.m. in Room 241 in Murphy Hall. The event will feature a demonstration of Bury dance by Yuriko Kimura, an accomplished amateur dancer from Kansas City, will be performed at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital
Tickets for the Kyogen comedies and the workshop and demonstrations are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office.
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Local amnesty group to protest Czech's trial
A Lawrence group for international human rights plans to send a petition to the United Nations calling on Iran to protest the trial of a Czech dissident who was convicted Tuesday on charges of espionage.
Thursday, October 25.1979
Tom Burns, Overland Park graduate student and a member of Amnesty International, joined the petition forming the petition because foreign journalists and some other observers were arrested.
Amnesty International is a human rights movement that works to release individuals
held as prisoners because of their beliefs, ethnic origin, sex or religion, provided the prisoners have never advocated violence, Burns said.
Local Anonymous groups internationally "adopt" the cases of individual prisoners and campaign for their release. Burns said, "We've done it, and been working on Uhls case since August."
"Basicly what we try to do when we work on a case is to harass the government of the country where the person is imprisoned. We can hurt or reduce his sentence," Burns said.
THEIR PRIMARY tool for communication with other governments is through letter-writing campaigns, he said.
"When we get enough money, we sometimes try phone calls," he said.
Uhl signed Charter 77, the Czechoslovakian human rights manifesto, and was a member of V.O.N.S., the Committee for the Defense of the Unjustified War in Crimea, to monitor the cases of Charter 77 signers who are being prosecuted or imprisoned.
Burns said Uhl had been charged with acting in collusion with Western powers,
apparently because he telephoned in formation to West Germany.
Burns said the Lawrence group already had written several letters of protest to Czech authorities.
"But we're still not sure if he knows we're trying to help him yet," Burns said. "We're trying to establish contact with his wife, who is fighting against human rights movement in Czechoslovakia."
Burns said the Lawrence group had about 30 members, although only about 12 of them participated in the group's activities.
Researcher sees bright future in solar power
By TED LICKTEIG
Staff Renorter
A research laboratory is proving that solar energy can be mass produced and, according to its chief researcher, will be able to live in homes within the next 10 years.
John Otts, supervisor of solar experimental systems of Sunda Laboratories at the University of Hawaii, will present alternative energy conference in Learned Hall that by the early 1980s it would be possible to supply power from solar.
fields that could transfer electricity to consumers.
Otts said the 130-acre solar field in Barstow, Calif. cost about $120 million, Southern California Edison, a public utility, financed by the state. The government provided a $100 million grant.
Two thousand solar collectors were used in the project at a cost of $15,000 each.
McDonnell-Douglas Inc. and the Martin Marietta Corp. designed the collectors, which focus on the sun by use of a shadow tracking device, he said.
Topeka man acquitted of charges
A 19-year-old Topeka man was found not guilty of vehicular homicide yesterday in Douglas County District Court.
Another charge, having no valid driver's license, was dismissed against the man, Gregory Keener.
hitchhiker, to whom Keener had given a ride
July 27.
Morsette was killed when the truck Keener was driving spun out of control and overturned on a gravel road about five miles north of the town, according to a Douglas County sheriff's report.
However, Otts said, the cost of the system and the expenses of operating it needed to be reduced. In fact, he also produced of solar systems, like the one in Barsworth, could be built and compete with the traditional grid.
The solar powered irrigation system covers 10 acres and is on land that cannot be used for growing anything, although the ground around the pumping station is farer.
Sandia is exploring other solar energy systems, he said, and has one operating an irrigation system near Phoenix.
HE ESTIMATED that solar energy fields would become a competitive energy source by 1990.
including the pumps that brought water from wells and a river and the sprinklers in 0: field.
OTTS SAID A solar energy system near a campus where it is used. The collectors that absorbed 70 to 79 percent of the solar energy falling on them, giving the plant the ability to produce 80 percent of its electricity.
Sandia also had developed a photovoltaic solar energy system that converted 15 percent of the solar or heat energy from the light that fell on it into electrical energy, he said.
The percentage of conversion is unexpectedly high, he said, and because of that it is becoming a marketable system. The remaining obstacle is its cost.
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YOU ARE ONE DAY CLOSER TO THE END OF THE WORLD.
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A HARVEY BERNHARD MAACE NEUTELD PRODUCTION
DAVID WARNER, BILLIE WHITTE LAW
MACE NEUTELD
RICHARD DONNER
DAVID SELTZER
JERRY GOLDSMITH
Friday & Saturday, Oct. 26-27
7:00-Friday
3:30 & 9:30-Saturday
$1.50 Woodruff Aud.
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MONTOYA
The World Renowned Flamenco Guitarist
ASTONISHING VIRTUOSITY... A PHENOMENON!
TO MEET WITH SUCH CONSUMABLE ARTISTRY IS A RARE EXPERIENCE!
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HIS SUBTLE, AMAZING VIRTUOSITY IS SIMPLE USERLEVABLE!
A MATTERTYPE MODEL, A UNIQUE EXCITING STAR!
The University of Kansas Concert Series Presents
CARLOS MONTOYA, Classical Guitar
Sunday, OCTOBER 28, 1979 at 3:30 P.M.
UNIVERSITY THEATER
Tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office
All Seats Reserved
Lawrence Launderers and Dry Cleaners invite you to dip into the Pirate's Treasure Chest and
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Anyone can win and prosper like a pirate (without any thievery) just by registering. There's nothing to buy, just enter the "Pure Gold Sweepstakes" and you could win:
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Contest open to participants 18 years of age or older.
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YOU ARE ONE DAY CLOSER TO THE END OF THE WORLD.
THE OMEN
THIRTEENTH CINEMAS P.O. Box 2148
GREGORY PECK LEE REMICK
THE OMEN
A HARVEY BERNHARD MAACE NEUFELD PRODUCTION
David Warner Billie Whitelaw
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Richard Donner
Harvey Bernhard
Jerry Goldsmith
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University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
TODAY: INTERVIEWING at Summerfield Hall today will be Atlantic Richfield, Information Industries, & I R Black, Xerox and Atlantic Richfield, Brunswick Corp, Model Oil, CIA, Empire District Electric Co., Atlanta Grad APHROTOLOGY ASSOCIATION will meet for an informal talk by Akira Matsuoka in the Carnegie Center of the University of Arkansas. THE GRANDEMER CLUB will meet at 4:30 in 6065 Wescoe. KASIMHA SHINY RHU CLUB demonstration of classics Japanese sword art will be on the campus. STUDENTS will meet at noon in Cork II of the Union. Students interested in GERONONI ATTENDS STUDENTS from 11:30 a.m. in Cork I of the Union. AN ABORTION INFORMATION booth will be in booth 1 on the fourth floor of the Union all
TONIGHT: BAHA'T CLUB will meet at
7:30 in the Regional Room of the Union. 8:00 in the LEYBLEA MANAGERS' room in the GROUND FORMATION. NEW LIFE FORUM will sponsor a lecture on "A Scientific Case for Creation: DNA and the Fossil Record," at 7 in Weeville Hall. SCIENCE FOAMS will meet at 7 in Room 610 Worham Hall. GERV SERVICES of KANSAS general office will be at 7:30 in the Groread Room of the Union.
TOMORROW; ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS at Summerfield Hall will be Southwestern Bell, Consolidated Grain & Barge, Oakland Mall, Proctor & Gamble, Malott Hall will be Proctor & Gamble, Nashville Mall and Palmetto College. We are Learned Hall. KU POLK DANCE CLUB will meet in 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. We will meet in 8:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
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Thursday, Nov. 29-Film "The Hiding Place"
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Admission-$2.00
Jan.29, Feb.5, Feb.12 - film:
"How Should We Then Live?"
The Rise and Decline of Western Thought and Culture.
Dr. Francis Schaeffer
8
Thursday, October 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
FESTIVAL OF JAPANESE THEATRE
触 NO BUYO
MASUDA ARIANA MATSUAI a professional performer of the KAO School of NAWAL will accept a WORKSHOP IN NO. 2-040 at 4 M on Saturday, 17 in 279 Murphy Hall
Admission in HINDAW CHURCH ($19.00)
Awareness in WORKSHOP $2.00 (Keeled People)
will be invited by presenting a ticket to the dedication on payment of $19.00
Presented in conjunction with the KYOGEN production in the ING Theatre Oct 25 Nov 3 (including Oct 29)
He DEMONSTRATION OF **NO** performance will be at 2:30 M. on Tuesday, Oct. 28 in Swarthout Percut Hall, Murray Hall.
This session also presents MS. YURIKO KIMURA
an accomplished amateur dancer performing
classical Ballet dance
! CKC 15 are available in the MURPHY BOX OFFICE!
Telephone: 842-3982
They will be a *DISCUSSION* on NO and KDWK at 10:30 AM 11:45 A.M. on Sunday, Oct 29 in 341 Murghay Hall. Free admission. Open to the public.
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Families host foreign students
By HAROLD CAMPBELL Staff Reporter
Foreign students interested in the Homestay program have until tomorrow to sign up in the KU Foreign Students Office, 707 East Sixth Street, NW. The director of foreign students said recently.
Homestay, Weelief said, is an opportunity for foreign students to visit American families during Thanksgiving break and to learn about American culture can be learned through books or pictures.
Since 1853, Burns, a town of 300 about 10 miles from Eureka, has moved from eight to 10 foreign students each year as part of the KU Homestay program sponsored by the KUK Foreign Students Welfare Fund.
Last year, eight KU foreign students stayed in Burns during Thanksgiving and about 32 others with families in the city area. Lawrence and Topena, she said.
Families from a small town in south central Kansas have put up KU foreign students during Thanksgiving break for 26 years.
"Besides helping me understand foreign cultures better, I think the students have benefited from the program as well," she said.
She said the program gave students an opportunity to look at family and small-town life in America.
MRS. E.D. GRIMWOOD she said she started the program in Burns in 1953 because of her interest in international relations and foreign cultures.
"If a foreign student is looking for exciting night life," she said, "this isn't the place to go.
"But it can be a rewarding experience for a student wanting to learn something about
She said most of the students' activities bring the break we planned by their families, and they want to attend in Burmese to have a sucer social the night after Thanksgiving involving the students and teachers.
America not generally seen by foreign visitors."
"There is lots of food and the students have a chance to talk about where they are from and how they have enjoyed their stay," she said.
WOELFEL SAI students and families were matched according to questionnaires the families answered as to how many students they wanted to host during Thanksgiving and whether they wanted male or female students, smokers or non-smokers or students from a certain country. The final outcome would be matched in the next several weeks.
"Students can come from any of the 92 countries represented at KU," Woelfel said.
She said most of the students who participated in Homestay came from the Middle East, the Far East and Latin America.
RESPONSE FROM most students about the program has been good, Woelfel said.
Nasser Ziaiedootan, Tehran, Iran, sophomore who also participated last year, said the program helped him with his English skills, plus a little more.
Harayuki Tanaka, Tokyo sophomore who participated in the program last year, said the experience was valuable to him.
"I got to know the American people more from this program than I would have from just staying on campus," he said.
This semester, she said, there are 38 Middle Eastern students, 39 Far Eastern students, 27 Latin American students. Students at the University and students at 102 European students at KIU.
"I learned much about the American people from just those few days," he said.
Non-fluoridated water use rising
By TED LICKTEIG
Staff Reporter
Residential consumption of non-fluoridated water in Lawrence has increased slightly since its introduction in to usage records of the city water plant.
Lawrence residents may use nonfluoridated water by tapping a spigot inside the city water plant at Third and Indiana streets.
Fluoride is thought by some to be a carcinogen and is believed to have negative side-effects on some users of fluoridated water.
The spigot was installed in late April as a compromise between opponents and proponents of fluidized water.
Gene Vogt, Lawrence director of utilities, said, "It gives people a choice. This way no one can complain."
Approximately 800 gallons of the non-
floridated water have been used since May, city officials say. Slight increases in the summer months.
VOGT SAID the water from the spigot still contained small amounts of fluoride.
"The water from the spigot contains between 35 and 45 parts per million of fluoride and the treated water contains between 48 and 1.25 parts per million," he
Virginia Hadl, 820 Illinois St., said that headaches that she had had continually for more than 20 years and suns problems went awake after she began using the water.
"I was just despair," she said.
"Gradually the headaches started going away. Now we use about 12 or 14 gallons a week."
Bette Baker, 412 Rockefeller Place, said she used the non-fluoridated water with spring water that was delivered from Topeka.
Drink a QUART with TONY C!l!
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7:00-9:00 p.m.
Thursday, October 25
Cold Quartz of Coors Only 75° from 7:00-10:00 p.m.
The Harbour Lites will be selling tickets to Tony C's November 16 title bout with Joey Vincent. The fight is at 8:00 p.m.
Friday, November 16, in KC's
Friday, November 16, in RC's Municipal Auditorium. Tickets on sale at The Harbour October 25.
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"We may have a few people sneaking in," he said, "but I don't think it's enough to create a problem."
VOGT SAID the water from the spigot was free to any customer of the city water system.
"The non-fluorinated water is cheaper than the spring water, but the spring water is more tasty," Baker said.
Albert Burgathelan, professor of ethics at Yale University, has floridated water users had some demonstrably negative effect from using it, such as headaches, abdominal pains and dizziness.
However, David Parestyk, professor of microbiology, said, "It's great, it's beneficial. There is virtually no compound that is not harmful in large amounts."
David Frost scheduled to speak about his memorable interviews
The lecture is being coordinated by Brad Scafe, forums director for Student Union Activities, sponsored by the KU Foundation, and funded by various KU organizations.
British television journalist David Frist will speak on "Interviews I'll Never forget," at 8 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium,分享 moments of his interviews with personalities such as former Prime Minister Golda Meir, former Prime Minister Golda Meir, former Ugandan President Idi Amin and the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
Although a Frost speech in Massachusetts
“It’s just like any other contract,” said Katherine Giele, SUA staff member. “We can’t ever know what people will do.”
were canceled several weeks ago because of bad weather, KU coordinators said they weren't concerned about a cancellation here.
Jim Keeper, an agent with Frost's feature-managing firm, American Program Bureau, Inc., said the canceled lecture had been cancelled and was the first such incident this year.
"Mr. Freed is pretty cagely about which invitations he accepts. So if he accepts one, he does his best to hold to it," he said.
Admission to the lecture is free.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 25, 1979
9
Business dean resigns accepts job with Dillon's
Pochier Pichler, dean of the KU School of Business, yesterday announced his resignation effective July 1, 1980, to join the Board of Hutchinson, as executive vice president.
Pichler, 40, who has been dean of the School of Business since July 1974, said in his letter of resignation to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes that his past 15 years at the school had provided him an opportunity to grow as a teacher, scholar and administrator.
"The position with Dillon Companies will enable me to continue that professional development in the context of a firm that is focused on integrity and performance, the letter read.
Pichler was in Hutchinson yesterday and was unavailable for comment.
Before coming to KU, Pichler graduated magna com inaude in Business Administration at Notre Dame. He also earned a master's in business administration and a doctorate in business administration.
He came to KU in 1965 as an assistant professor. While here, he received the Performance Award from the U.S. Army during his service in the ministration in 1969. He was the first chairman of the State Mampover Services from 1970 to 1979 and served on the council from 1979 to 1979.
Both Dykes and Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, taught courses in business school, and the ranking of the graduate school in the top 25 percent of all schools accredited by the American Association of Schools of Medicine as examples of Piehler's accomplishments.
PETER D. MORGAN
Joseph Pichler
Christopherssen said, "Although we will regress the loss of Dean Pichler's leadership, we look forward to his having a close relationship with his new responsibilities with Dillen."
The Dillon Company is a Kansas-based firm that owns food and clothing stores in several midwestern, western and southern states.
STUDIO ONE
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While at KU, Pichler received an annual salary of $48,650.
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Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
Environment
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat 6 pm - 3 am
Sun 6 pm - 1 am
MINGLE TONIGHT!
GREEK NITE
842-7030
Ramada Inn 2222 W.6th
Senate
Council because its expenses could be covered by outside sources.
From nage one
During budget hearings conducted by the budget committee, the Iranian Student Institute was considered after the committee ruled that the ISO duplicated services provided by the institute.
DURING AN hour-long debate, student members of the U. A Advertising Club for the championship of funding for national membership dues, out-of-state travel and a special project to organize the event.
The budget committee previously had cut $1,420 from the club's request of $1,780.50. The group's final allocation was $465.50.
Martha Jane Weaver, KU Advertising Club treasurer, said last night the Senate should allocate money for national dues
However, Davis said he doubled the benefits received from the national membership would be worth the $700 request.
TRAVEL EXPENSES also were denied to the club. Weaver said the requested funds would have financed a trip to professional advertising agencies in the Kansas City area. The trip was important to the club, she said. The agency was not available in Lawrence.
The $700 figure was based on $10 national dues for each club member, according to Weaver.
because other groups received such funding.
"They ought to pay for it themselves," he said.
In a separate funding bill for SCoRMEBE.
a larger number of students because companies contacted by the group for contributions had decided to come to KU to interview students, when previously they
LAST MIGHT, the Senate allocated a total of $3,875.49 to nine organizations that have not received funding for the fiscal year 1980. The organization funded last night and their allocations are
the Senate approved $2,825, but voted down an additional request for $2,500 in travel expenses.
SCoRMEBE's request was separate because it was carried over from last spring's budget hearings.
The loss of the $2,500 funding would hurt the organization's primary purposes. Leon Brady, resident adviser for the program, said
The Senate funded 12 organizations at last week's meeting, allocating $15,734.85 to groups that have received funding for fiscal year 1980.
THE MONEY would have been used to travel to companies and ask them for contributions to SCoREBE's scholarship group and to a group group received about $55,000 in contributions.
Tae Kwo Do Club, $120; KU Accounting Club, $290.80; Microbiology Society, $180.45; Women's Field Hockey, $728.50.
Brady said SCoRMEBE's trips benefited
Organization of Black and Minority Archi-
culural Student Association; $100; KU Folk Dance Club, $40; Chancery Club,
$292; and the KU Service. $232, 8.
Soloukhin
From nave one
became a "proven" writer before World War II. Mikkelson said.
Soloukhin said he did not choose to become a writer, writing chose him.
--government thinks are exceptional. Mikkelson said.
"Some people, such as doctors and lawyers, choose their professions," he said. "But writing chose me. I felt called to write."
After the war, Soloukhin was admitted to the Soviet Literary Institute in Moscow, which accepts only writers the Soviet
Solukhua said only 100 students attended the institute when he was there. "Blackened Icons" and "Letters from India" were published about 10 years later.
Soloukhin said that except for Soviet art historians, he was the only writer to support saving icons.
"I was the only writer to write about the need to save icons on a level that the common person could understand," he said. He
said most art historians had written for intellectuals.
Solukhin has published several prose works, including "Vladimir Country Roads," translated into English as "A War of Ruralism, a Rural Russia," and "A Dane of Dice."
Herb's
FINE POSTRAITURE
He has also written several books of poetry.
He is planning to write a novel about his life as a soldier in Moscow during World War II.
WHILE AT KU, Soloukhin will lecture to Russian classes on contemporary Soviet literature.
FINE PORTRAITURE
23F Malls Shoping Center
842-8822
711 W. 23rd
He said his greatest thrill was getting complimentary letters from other writers.
His only writing award is from Bulgaria for translating literature from Bulgarian to Russian and for supporting cultural ties between the two countries.
Foreign & Domestic Parts
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
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PREPARE YOUR COSTUMES
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FRIGHT NIGHT
AT THE HAWK
MONDAY,
OCT. 29
The visiting Soviet writer program, which is six years old, has featured a Soviet author for the fall and spring semesters of the last three years, Mikkelsen said.
Now you have a chance to build a fraternity!
Alpha Epsilon Pi is reorganizing on the KU Campus by pledging men as brothers of the Kappa Upson Chapter, AEII, a predominately Jewish fraternity, gives you the opportunity of building a strong bond of brotherhood. We want to offer you a life-time experience, AEII will be holding meetings October 30, 31 and November 1. Alpha Epsilon Pi provides an opportunity to join a national fraternity with chapters throughout the United States. We are a member of the National Interfraternity Conference. Founded on November 7, 1913.
EVENTS:
Tuesday, October 30, Pine Room, Kansas Union, Orientation,
7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, October 31, Pine Room, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 1, Parlor C, Kansas Union, Pledging, 7:30 p.m.
For more information 843-9737
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sua films Presents
"It IS A JOY!
An enchanting excursion
into the joy of living."
— Judith Crist, New York Magazine
POUVÉE
They met at the funeral of a perfect stranger. From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stranger.
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENT
HAROLD and MAUDE
RUTH GORDON
BUD COR1
Costairing Vince Pitches, Cyril Cullot, Charles Tayler, Ellen Gaer Produced by Colin Higgins and Charles B Mubelhill Executive Producer Mildred Lewis, Written by Colin Higgins Directed by Hal Ashby
GP₂ INDUSTRIAL GENERAL INSTITUTE
in Agra District
This two year general institute which
has no 20 bus station and has negligible
expenses.
With Songs by Cat Stevens
THE PARKS
MOTORWAY
October 26 & 27
Friday - 3:30 & 9:30
Saturday - 7:00
$1.50 Woodruff Aud.
—No refreshments allowed—
10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 25, 1979
Injuries force coach to cancel intrasquad
KU gymnastics coach Ken Snow was forced to cancel the men's intrasquad meet that was scheduled for tomorrow because of injuries.
"You have to at least one squad to have an intrasquad meet." Snow said. "Right now I don't have enough guys to have three on each event."
Injuries have plaged the 10-man squad the last two weeks. Four of the gymnasts are unable to work out, Marshall Kelley and Brad Foore are out with mononucleosis. Snow said Foore was well enough to strain his strains shoulder muscles when he does.
Tim Sabina dislocated his elbow early in the season and is recovering slowly.
Tuesday in practice Larry Kaplan hurt his knee. There is a chance he might have to have surgery, Snow said.
"We went five weeks without any injuries and all of a sudden in the last two weeks, everything went wrong," he said.
The women's squad also has injury problems. Snow said one of the five women on the team was limited in workouts by some aliment.
Helen Ehrig is just getting over monuchenecia, Kathy Ross sprained an ankle and Mary Kay Anglea stretched both of her ankles. Cindy Bardham has a back problem that is giving but trouble and Jamie Danbe also has a sore back, Snow said.
"We're just hurting, Snow said. "I've never had this happen this big in their years." She added that she'd meet with the University of Minnesota because we don't have enough people right now to handle it.
KU CAMPUS VETERANS
The effect of the "Deer Hunter" and "Coming Home" will be emphasized in the film
"THE DELAYED STRESS SYNDROME."
Wednesday, October 24 at10 a.m. & 3:30 p.m.
Thursday, October 25 at 1 p.m. & 3 p.m. Room 3 Old Green Hall.
Sponsored by Campus Veterans and Disabled American Veterans
lemon tree
11w 9th behind weavers
low-calorie
nutritious natural frozen dessert untou
dessert yogurt
One nut or fruit topping with the purchase of any size dish
offer good oct.24 to oct. 26
no coupons accepted with this offer
Make your reservations soon for your homecoming dinner at The Eldridge House. Our homecoming special is
V
The Eldridge House
Surf & Turf
for only $11.95
wine complement
Corvo Rouge, Corvo Bianco.
Fine Sicilian Wines
would you like to go
to a nice, quiet place
The Eldridge House
where you can speak across the table, listen to good jazz and enjoy a fine meal?
The Eldridge House has been newly redecorated to provide you with a casual atmosphere where you can enjoy their new exciting menu (prices start at $2.95 and up).
They have a complete wine list to accommodate your every taste.
memberships available anytime for only $10
(10 day waiting period after application)
Listen for Eldridge House News Daily on KLRZ at 11:35 the distinctive difference in good times
701 Massachusetts Street Lawrence, Kansas 841-4666
Ross pulls hamstring
Sports
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU's men's basketball squad has been practicing less than two weeks, but nagging injuries are already cropping up.
Freshman guard Ricky Rose pulsed a hamstring muscle in his left leg earlier this week and is expected to miss about 10 days of practice because of the injury.
"Right now I'm just icing him." Ross said yesterday. "I had a weak ankle in high school but I've never been bothered with a hamstring pull."
"Unfortunately, we've had some ham-
hurt and groin problems." Owens said.
"That really bites me because we're
not going to amount of time before practice stretching.
KU Coach Ted Owens said Ross wasn't the only player slowed with an injury.
"I'm not sure whether the stretching exercises aren't working, or that our players aren't doing what they're supposed to. But I'm very disturbed about it because
we can't afford for someone to miss any practice time."
Aside from the injuries incurred in the first weeks of practice, Owen said he was pleased with the progress his club had made.
"I think we're making some progress," Owens said. "We've had an excellent attitude which is the first ingredient that you need if you're going to have a fine team.
"We've tried to stay with our fundamental system. We haven't scrimmaged as yet and probably won't for a few days. We're trying to get our full-court press offense going and getting the transition game going, and then we'll start breaking it down into more fundamentals.
"The veterans have improved, which is a good sign. I think the young people are very eager to improve, so I think all in all we've had very good practices."
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Fiberglass: Use inside or out offices, kitchens, rec rooms, etc...
Barnboard
Don Rose
offices, kitchen, rec rooms, etc...
PERMA SIDE BUILDERS
843-1467
Fiberglass: Use inside or out
Box 80 110 Michigan Lawrence, Kans. 66044
843-1467
sua films
Midnight Movies
George A. Romero's MARTIN
By the director of "NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD" and "DAWN OF THE DEAD."
12:00 Midnight $1.50
Friday & Saturday, October 26 & 27
Woodruff Auditorium
—No refreshments allowed—
Ghost
photo by Clay Kappleman
Fun and Games
1002 Massachusetts
Inside the new One
"I'll be mad if you don't come to Fun and Games for your Halloween masks, hats and greasapaints!"
1002 Massachusetts 841-4450
hallowen Hours
10-8 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sun.
KANSAS
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Lawrence, Ks. 66044
• Dick Hamilton
• Eva Schroff
• Joe Drake
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(913) 841-7667
For Appointments
R
Ski the Summit
SUMMIT
TRAVEL, FC
JAN. 7-12,1980
- 6 days/5 nights in luxurious condos
w/in kitchen/windows and fireplace
* 3 days lift tickets
* 3 days ski rental
* Free ski party
* Copper Mountain
ONLY $149 - Broveridge
optional Charter Bus $99
( )
Aspen/Snowmass
For More Information Call:
'erry Madden or Brad Herman
841-8157 841-0070
- 6 days/5 nights in a snowmass Condo w/kitchen and fireplace
**Mitsubishi Cosmob**
Wi-Fi kitchen and fireplace
* 3 days ski lift and skis rented at Aspen Highlands
* Discounted additional lifts and rentals
* Free ski park and mountain picnic ONL
* Optional charter Bus 865
EXPERIENCE THE WORLD AS YOUR CAMPUS
Semester at Sea
INSTITUTION FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
Sail from Los Angeles, February 3, 1980, and from Seattle, September 3, 1980, to the Oriental, Southeast Asia, India, Egypt (Suez Canal) and the Mediterranean. Apply now.
Late for a summer course of credit by the University of Colorado, students who have completed 20 credits are reduced colleges and universities. Semester at Salton students maintain full college status.
More than 80 university courses—both in pool and vantage research facilities. Faculty are from hosting universities. Visiting after experience provides a chance to learn more about the University of Colorado, Boulder 80906. Telephone cell tree (800) 748-2315. Email uc.edu/college@uc.edu. (303) 952-5572 Gonzalez. The S.U. campus is located at 1600 West 11th Street, Denver, CO 80201.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 25, 1979
11
Harriers ready for Big 8
KU's men's and women's cross country teams take to the road in Eagle Conference championships. The men's meet will be held in Stillwater, Ocala, or the women will be held in Davenport.
Colorado has won three straight big Eight titles and is the favorite to repeat in the men's division, according to a poll of college coaches. The teams were picked for second and Iowa State third.
The KU women finished fourth last year behind Iowa State, Colorado and Kansas State. The same finish is expected for this year's meet.
Men's coach Bob Timmons named his
Spikers start tournament today
seven-man squad after yesterday's practice: Bruce Doolmith, Jim Calderon, Tim Gundy, Paul Schultz, Kendall Smith, Brent Hawkins, and Tim Tavaz will represent the Jayhaws.
Brown, Finnholm, Phillips and Wong account for most of KU's scoring in all of the team's meetings thus far.
in its final match before the Big Tigers championships, the KU velley team beat Wichita State University last night in south's gymnastium 17-5, 18-4 and 15-4.
Women's coach Tert Terl Anderson also waited until yesterday to determine who she would take to the meet. The Jayhawks are led by senior Michelle Brown. The rest of the team includes Dennis Fidnholt, Susan Phillips, Tracey Wong, Deb Hertogt, Tami Guinn and Dick Simpson.
KU Coach Bob Lockwood said he thought the Jayhawks played well despite an injury to setter Shelly Fox.
"We played our best match of the year," Lockwood said. "The team set well. As a matter of fact, we did everything well and then served their serve better than we have all year."
"We showed a lot tonight and we're looking forward to the tournament."
The Big Eight tournament starts today in Stillwater, Oka. The team's first-round opponent is Kansas State University, to which Kansas lost a close match to earlier this month.
"I hope the team can hang in there. We are doing everything well right now, and I think we are as ready as we will ever be," Lockwood said.
KU is ranked fourth in the tournament behind Oklahoma, K-State and No.1 seeded Nebraska.
Lockwood was about June Koleber, Kelly Ratliff and Karen Georgeson were also nursing injuries, they would play in the tournament along with Fox.
Marian Washington, KU's women's head basketball coach, didn't dugge when asked to give an evaluation of how her young team would do this season.
"If the new players make the transition to college ball we could be strong. If they take a year, we'll be respectable."
Washington optimistic about 'Hawks' season
The Jayhawks will be a young team but they do have a solid corps of returning lettermen. The squad will consist of eight freshman, seven sophomore and two junior college transfers.
The KU coach said the games she was looking forward to most were against perennial power Wayland Baptist and national champion Old Dominion.
KU's schedule won't make the transition to college ball any easier for the new players. Last year KU had the 16th win and this year a slate looks even stronger.
"Old Dominion will probably be the top-ranked team again this year. I want us to play well against them. We could have played better, and I wouldn't be satisfied," she said.
95
Washington said she had no doubts that KU would be in the top 15 this year.
Double defense
Lynette Woodward (left) and Katty Stevens (middle) pressured Robbin Smith in a full-court defensive drill designed double
team the ball handler. KU Coach Marian is confident that she squad of eight newcomers and eight returning letterkers will be a strong force in the game.
The University Dailv
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten ten
10 words or fewer $1.00 $2.50 $2.90 $3.60 $4.60 $4.80 $4.80
Each additional word $1.00
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 9 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 9 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 9 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the UMN business office at 841438
selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. 1f
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Hole-in-the-Wall, sailing fresh fruits and vegetables. Also roasted, and raw peanuts in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, rice, pasta, pepaon, honey, and sorghum are used in the soup.
Watch for truck parked at 9th & Illinois, Home Depot and Walmart stores in the basement - selling fresh fruits and vegetables in the shell. Twelve variety of dry beans, the everyday Sesame, the almonds, Alfalfa, etc., the everyday Sunflower. Alfalfa, Alfalfa,
J
The Manager's Meeting
For additional information call 864-3546. Recreation Services.
Intramural Volleyball (Men's and Women's)
Thursday, October 25th
at 7:00 p.m.
in 205 Robinson.
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% nationally.
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% nationally.
BOOKLENDER ALL of our 50,000 paperbacks are
price+have been and will always be
price+have been and will always be
4644.
4644.
SCIENCE FICTION MOVIE: SILENT RUNNING
-DYCHE AUD. Fri., Oct. 26 and 27
7:30 p.m. $1.25, Ecological Disaster Class 10-26
For home rente child and pie come to Walkin-
ford on Monday from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m.
to 2 o.p. pm, and 4 o.p. pm to 7 o.p. pm. Oct.
28 from 4 o.p. pm to 7 o.p. pm. At Walkin-
ford Hall, Halle 101, Leiden Lake 10-26
$200.
ENTERTAINMENT
The Harbour Mitten Hotel has gone crazy! I£3 come with a bottle of wine and two ice chests. From 7-14 p.m. you can get cold quarters of Coffee for only £6. They all, they’re $1. You can get a bag of coffee and drink it like the hotel. Come to the Harbour Mitte, the best place in the city!
DISCO TO GO! offer quality and reliability not only for customers but also for Power crown. power be inspired. Alice speakers, channelled lighting, and experienced deck jackets with custom branding. (City rentals include delivery, set-up, rental. Rental rates include delivery, set-up, rental.) Karen 60444 with over 3 years experience and of qualified clients will be offered. **18:00**
FRIDAY NIGHT
continuous recording artist
JOE SUN
If you notice this upbeat and coming country star
you are in 'out of your mind'
Door open at
8:00 show at 9:00
Advance registration
available
Opera house
Call for concerto info 842 6930
Tradition begins at 3 p.m., Friday, Oct. 26 on Jayhawk Blvd. Stay on the hill. See the first Homecoming Parade. 10-26
FOR RENT
TIMBER LEAGUE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
114 West 39th Street on a bedrock, 2-metre rented floor on a bedroom, 2-metre rented floor on a bedroom, 2-metre two hundred feet, large walk-in closets, small laundry room, large kitchen, large POGL. For appointment call 401-876-4944 or see www.timberleaguestore.com.
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union.
Phone 843-9579. ff
FOR SALE
1-3 bedroom apartments, home businesses, mobile homes,
businesses, house reduction for less loan:
Call 814-6542 or 842-6065.
All Frontier Ride Apts. 1 month rent free. $50
security on all roofs.
if monthly rent is less than security on all 1 bedrooms.
If security on at least 2 bedrooms.
FIRST MONTH FREE! Want female to share furnished house $100 + 1/3 utilities. 842-6526 - 105
Naineshith Bai has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both have office and at $45-859 may time of the day.
Must sublease 2 bedroom apt., Avalon Apt.
8240 room + electricity. Gas heat. Please call
841-5117. 10-25
Sublease, efficiency apt. Five min. from Union.
Shared bath, partly furnished, all utilities paid.
Monthly protection for bugs: $130/month. 841-
6733, after 6:00. 10-26
1 bdm. apt. All utilities paid except electricity.
Close to campus. Call 842-3252 between 2:30-5:30
M-F. Aurora Apartments.
3 bedroom house, close to KU bus line. No pets.
Prefer 3 students or couple. 862-667, event.com
WATERBED MATTESNESS, $59.99 3 year guild, $89.99 Western Civilization Notes, New to Bake Make *Western Civilization Notes, New to Bake Make*
SunSpaces—Sun glasses are our spectacy. non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5700. TF
FOR SALE
Lease 5 bdmr. older house. North MN.
month, avail. Nov. Ist. Call 843-0570, 843-6011.
10-31
1 room furnished apartment, private entrance,
private bath, all utilities paid, close to campus
843-5014 after 5. 16-21
For suburban. One bedroom apt, at Park 25, $215-
month + gas and electricity. On bus route. Call
482-3885. Keep trying. 10-31
Nikor F.2, with 85mm Nikkor Portail Lenge,
Nikkor Nikor Wide-Length Angle Lens, 80mm Bushnell
Telephone along with travel case and some mice.
equipment, $600, cal. Kevin at kai16.10-297
We've got brand new room size carat remnants
6565 between 8 and 5.
6565 between 8 and 5.
10-26
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-809-3000, 390 w. df., 10h.
TROPHY ELECTRIC, 843-809-3000, 390 w. df., 10h.
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Pouch. Moped.
Rick's Bill Shop, 1035 Vermont 841-6642
Michelin Tire Sale: 20, 25, and 30% discount at Ray Stoneback's downtown. The appliance store -10% discount tire dept. 10-30
1975 CB750F Super Sport Honda motorcycle
cooler shape, price to sell: 842-2927. 10-24
**MOTORCYCLE FACTS**
**MADE IN U.S.A.**
Brighten up your Sundays by bringing the Sun.
In an apartment, 841-707-3952 is delivered to your home.
10-30
198 W. New paint and interior, unmirror, umf-cam
caustic, fog lights, 25 lamps, 833 mg-9737. Rob. 10-28
Electric Portable Typewriter. Rarely been used.
Must still be during Talking. Call 843-6220
V-W Rabbit—76–50,000 miles with 2 snow-tees
$2600 843-5187 10-31
AKC registered toy poodles Very small. Call
887-6498 or 1-232-4549 10-30
1925 CB750F Super Sport Honda motorcycle
exercise shape, price to sell. 842-2927 10-26
Must sell before Thursday Call Carol 432-4922
during day 10-25
1975 Fiat 131S, LC. 5-speed, 480,000 miles, must
increase immediately, $1850, call 841-1432.
1710 Camara—very nice, 350 auto, mag wheels.
stereo; reasonably price, AT, PS, AB. 843-908-634.
Wait, is it "843" or "843-908"? It looks like "843".
Let's look at the word "AB". It's not a part of the sentence.
It's just a separate word.
The word "843-908-634" is also separated from the rest of the text.
So it's:
1710 Camara—very nice, 350 auto, mag wheels.
stereo; reasonably price, AT, PS, AB. 843-908-634.
United Airlines 50% coupon, any bid over 30 dollars Call evenings 842-3242. 10-26
A real home for $16,000, central air, Danish
furniture, a large living room, kitchen with
laundry using, winged roof, entry house, type
kitchen, patio, outdoor deck, 4' x 4' paneling, 14' x 8' mobile home two
sided, 2' x 3' walk-in closet, winnertzerized, Containable positive Logic Reckitt
winnertzerized, Containable positive Logic Reckitt
69 Ala Rome GTV, 5 speed, good stereo. Micron car will appreciate in value. 843-8411. 10-26
HOLMES, 200 watt guitar amplifier, solidstate head with a 4 $10^{th}$ speaker box; b42-8501 ask for Pedro. 10-33
73 Capri, 96, 4 sp. kd, dk red, tan int!, sprint ex-
haust, super tee, nice shoe, size 61-76 10-56
2 bedrooms, ranch style home in Euroda. Villa contract for dessert. Easy utility costs, great location for students. Fenced yard and dog run. Cate Jane. 13721 or Reagan Realors, 16900-1295
CORNET: Cleveland Superior brand with beginner's music, $5. Charlie 843-5524. 10-26
Furs, old clothes, wool shirts dolles, lace. Try Brenda's at Quarrill's Flea Market. 10-26
FOUND
Black-white English Setter rear 10th and Vernorst, Rhode Island, 82% 73%, 10.9%
Cross pen in front of Carruth-O'Leary Call 864-2326 to identify.
Gray and brown Tiger Stripe kitten found Fri.
(May 10) at 14H and Louisiana at
16-28
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS JOB--SUMMER to round, Europe.
S. A. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All funds $500-
monthly, expenses paid, free space.
Free space: JC, JCB 12-3A-KA, Curacao Del
CA 92625.
HELP WANTED
**MEN:** WOMEN | JOBS | SCHEDULES | PACIFIC
442-798-3200 p. 122 and Saturday; p. 523
MEN: **WOMEN:** JOBS | SCHEDULES | PACIFIC
442-798-3200 p. 122 and Saturday; p. 523
**MEN:** **WOMEN:** JOBS | SCHEDULES | PACIFIC
442-798-3200 p. 122 and Saturday; p. 523
Language Project Preschool, University of Child Education and data collection and analysis. Must have completed 6 years of data collection and data analysis, and training observers, salary, and data management. Position offered to 1318 Louisiana Application deadline: Oct 9. An equal Opportunity Affirmation Action position requires a bachelor's degree in religion, race, religion, sex, disability or race recognition of
Civil Engineering Department of the University of Missouri. Civil engineering as assistant professor of civil engineering and teaching both undergraduate and graduate courses in the area of civil engineering computer software and software development for civil engineering applications. Applicants must have B.S. and Ph.D. in civil engineering and dynamic finite element methods. Send resume to Dr. Stanley T. Hollo Department of Civil Engineering, Kansas State University, Kansas, LA 66041. An affidavit of
This University of Kansas Office of University Affairs has an Executive Director, Temporary position. Position will involve providing support for university activities, including curriculum development and yearly review of 399. Amplification closing date M Oct 05. University of Kansas Lakeside Campus, University of Kansas Lakeside Campus,
Waitresses and waiters, full or part time positions available. Apply in person, Country Kitchen, 1503 W. 22rd. 10-30
Wanted-Part-time. Acrobat Gymnastic Instructor, Tues and Thurs, eve. Reynoldsville area perience preferred. $80.00; call Carol. Birdy 287-3594. 10-25
Part-time maintenance person needed. Hartman, pay $35.00 Must be available 8 a.m.-11 p.m. Mon-Fri. Mechanical ability necessary Apply in Foods, Tops! Mass. 8-5 p.m.-Fri. 10-20
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. Nursing Availability male and female, Startling旱聘 ABOVE MON-OPENings on all staffs. Apply at Chery, Inc. Office 6130, Center 92-109, 12th Street, Phone 842-723-8192.
Part-time task service personnel need: Must be available in 11-MWF. MVP: 8+ hr. +19pm. Apply in person Schumm Foods, 719% Mass. 8-5 Mon-Fri.. 10-25
Live-in babysitter for 5 year old in exchange for room and board. Call Alan 841-9652 10-25
Immediate opening for talented singers. Must be
Need watertreats, 21 years of age. Full and
point positions available. Knowledge of drinks
preferred. Must be eat and like people. Call for
appt. after 11 a.m., 834-903-80. 10-31
Immediate opening for talented singers. Must be uninhibited. Call 841-8515. 10-29
Barmaid needed, 21 years of age. Experience preferred, but not necessary. Part-time help available. Call for appointment after 11 a.m. 843-940. 10-31
New hiring delivery drivers-full and part-time.
Apply in person at Gabriela, 2494 Iowa, Holiday
10-30.
Part-time student clinical worker to answer
wife write repair orders and do other related
tasks. Please complete application to Heli-
louza Housing Dept. Maintenance Suite 8644.
Please bring brief学堂 schedule. Open
Opportunity Affirmative
LOST
large male cat, beige and white tibia, red collar with wife tag, lost near 19th and Term—such loved friend, call before 9 or after 6 at 13-43-855.
Oct. 19, black $^2$ ) Lab, white nose, brown collar.
Oct. 864-3011 for Greg, before 5 p.m. 10-29
MISCELLANEOUS
THESIS INDING COPYING—The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for thesis binds and copying in Lawyers. Let us at 858 Male or phone 463-760. Then call 858 Male or phone 463-760.
NOTICE
Paper due soon? WIll provide personalized bibliographies.
If no paper is due, call MIL 862-3000 or MIL MAIL 862-3001.
In order to test this art we are offering the following LCD displays: 8-bit liquid crystal & walt watch list, list $35 with us; 16-bit liquid crystal & walt watch list, list $40 with us; compass design, carved wood, 3-inch map; compass design, carved wood, 2-inch map; Iron & Reel, including lores and sinks, incarnate in stainless steel
For the Haver's home gym made, make a day of it!
The gym is just minutes away from our house. We feature the Haver's home gym on our website and deliver you right to the Station. If you have any questions, please contact the Haver's home gym your daughter will love. The Haver's home gym is located at 207 Lafayette Street in New York City.
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 816-504.
FOSS HILL SURGERY CLINIC-arises up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling, Tubal Ligation. For appointment call (312) 654-3800, 1401 St. Island, Overland Park, KS.
If you’re looking for a bar with chewed beef good enough to be grilled, check out the Harbour Lafayette. A crazy people you’ll like. The Harbour Lafayette is a great day and Friday afternoons for TUF! Nowhere else in New Orleans can get your ship together at the Harbour Lafayette Get your ship together at the Harbour Lafayette.
Hey, Seniors! It's your last chance. Thursday,
you have VOPE Award at Sumnerfield. We
congratulate you.
GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through Headquarter, 814-235 and KU info, 864-256.思
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every occasion. Birthday Anniversary, Get Well, Secret Admiral, 841-8515, 11-6
Come to the all new **MAD HATTER** Happy Hour
4-9 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Open 7 nights a week.
10-31
After the Homecoming Parade at 13 p.m. Friday, the family is joined by a fireman, born here and told to Paul Laye, and the Gaultlight Gong with Claude "Fldler" Williams and born at 9 p.m. in the satellite Both. On Sunday, it will be the
Emilie. Roses are red, but you're twice as nice,
to look ahead, you might be able to sacrifice
Gary. 10-28
Stay on the hill Friday, 26.3, p. 13. See the first KU Homemade Parade of fooths, ballads, yellow leaders, Jyhawks. Student organization jyhawks. Jyhawks. J
Don't drive, walk to Xome10 left behind the Union Friday, Oct. 26 and see all the Homecoming boats in one spot. Food and drink available. Entertainment, too. Save Gas. 10-30
If your toes don't live cold bare winter frogs,
Give hot towel you Carel our lovepee your toes and
your pocketknife too. Now carpet only $2.00
.yall. Call 811-6556 between 8 and 5. 10-30
HOPE Award: Honor for Outstanding progressive Educator Seniors! Final voting Thursday. Friday. Oct. 25-26. 10-26
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid--864-354-664.
If
PERSONAL
Veterans for employment assistance contact Campus Veterans - 118 B. Kansas Union, 640-1478
TONY CHAVIERAN one of the timing songs
Tony Chavieran 103 MUSE from k-9 on Thursday,
TONY CHAVIERAN 103 MUSE from k-9 on Thursday,
TONY CUI cold quartz of Coon's tape The From
tony to November '18 with篮 band with Jay
tony to November '18 with篮 band with Jay
Bryce. Joe don't run after the barber shop, TL off in the middle this time. Strawberry Fields Forever—C.C. Fryed, P.S. Nice Vest. 10-28
Ski the West-West Steamboat Spring Break!
Z277 Contact SUA Limited space up sign now.
FOR SIGMA NIU-Conceived females present to the 1979 "Lil' Abor Look-AliKeet, kIL" only campus-wide content in search of new friends who would graduate them. In themselves.
10-25
Wanted pool party. Have baptism will travel GDJ 10-26
Wait, the word "party" is capitalized.
The word "pool" is also capitalized.
Let's check the first line again.
Wanted pool party. Have baptism will travel GDJ 10-26
METT gives you the chance to build a fraternity.
Don't miss your chance! 10.21
For an example of Classic Greek history,
Oct Penthousis: Frat. Rat Insurgent, GDI
1326.
time. Get Prayed! Love, Mom. 10:52
PAIMIST HAS MOVED. 716 N. 4th St. 813-4290.
Charles Hamilton. 10-26
Meet-There's drinking to be done and we're the
cheers. (OUGH) Me!
Little Daughter: Only 38 days, ill bone-rattling
time. Get Purchased, Love Mom.
Meg- Pam. Drives to be done and were the 10-25
to OCUCH Mo.
P-I will try your best and I am yu lak!
P-Pam. Loves you.
Lots of love, Donna.
10-25
For C F : I surprised that you didn't take last week's down—like you gave everything.
DEADWRIEST AND OGONE RANGERS, wish like bell I could be there, I miss you all extremely. Say hello to Mr. and Mrs. Berka Love from S. D. Scott. 10-26
SERVICES OFFERED
CHARTS AND GRAPHS
EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 600-102 call 8757
5873. MATH 1150-741 call 8757. STATISTICS
8757. MATH 855-006 call 8757. CIS. 190-600 call 8757.
5215. MATH 1020-600 call 8757.
SPANISH MATH 143-7077 if
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Akira at the House of Ubei Quick Copy Center.
Akira is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday
Friday, 9 AM to 1 AM on Satursday at 88 Mass.
CHARTS AND GRAPHS
For your thesis, slides, journal article, book.
$5/hr. 843-2344
ə/nr. 843-234
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! GRADE $10.00 for your
book. Tuition includes BASED BOOK 209X, Los Angeles,
CA. Send book to BOOK 209X, Los Angeles, CA.
BUYING LIFE INSURANCE Check our rates and values first. Call Wayne, 843-604-8222, 842-202-9651
CREATIVE ILLUSTRATIONS—Artwork and
illustrations for advertising, logos, personal use,
and cartoons. 841-7250 or 841-7258 10-29
We hire and iron pants, shirts, coats, dresses.
Call 842-2161, for "hitto."
10-26
Canada's largest research Service. Send now for later listing. Thousands of term papers on all subjects. Reward $500 to retail value or exchange. Ontario Canada MMR120. (486) 356-1095. Ontario Canada MMR120. (486) 356-1095.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF
TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-490-7999, TF
Typist Editor, IBM IPM EpiFile, Quality
resume, resamble rates. These, dissuasions welcome;
calling Edit. Call 842-321-7999.
TF
Expertised typhl-Quality work, reasonable
rates. Call Beverly at 843-5910.
TF
Experiment 4 Trial=form papers, theses, misc,
et al. IBM Subletic Proofreading spelling
corrected. 843-9534 Mrs. Wright.
TP
Journalism typographer, 20 years typing (typing-
sense experience. 4 years academic typing;
thics, distractions for 10 universities. Latest
Satellite equipment. 82-484). TP
Reports, dissentations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selcetrine Call Elion or Jeannah, 841-2172. 11-5
Experienced trust-thessis, dissertations, term
tails, mose, IBM correcting selective. Barb
861-3138, evenings 82-2310.
If
Nose need training doesn't Quality work, how rates
Contact Clnty at 813-8644. 10 p.m.
MASTERWINNES professional typing. Fax. accu-
sibility. Spelling. Grammar corrected Ctrl-
813-2387
Experienced trust. Quality work. IBM Corrective-
S-Electric. References available. Sandy. 864-4904. Evenings. 748-9818. 15
Quality training at competitive prices—no jobs to big or small, 842-2756, 10-30
I do "shirred" glitch typing. Under 50pp only
call Ruth, 843-643-888, after 3 p.m. 11:17
ROOMMATES. Nainshil Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact
WANTED
Housemate for 4-bedroom house. Very close to
Houston. $7.50 per month. 1.5 utilizes. Phone
842-4423 6 p.m.
10-26
PSCHATTERIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVIC
PACHTERIST STATE Hospital
applied to Payne Harrison, Hickory
512 W. 4th, Topkapi, KS Phone: (1) 293-1680
applied to Payne Harrison, Hickory
512 W. 4th, Topkapi, KS Phone: (1) 293-1680
applied to Payne Harrison, Hickory
512 W. 4th, Topkapi, KS Phone: (1) 293-1680
People who have Executioner, Penetrator, Death Merchant, or Matt Helm books—call David 864-2833
EDITOR for Graduate Newspaper. Requirements:
• student, graduate degree in education or experience. Deadline: 04/13.
24. Send letter and resume to Graduate Student
*Programs of Study*, Kansas Union, Lawrence, Kansas 684-841-994
Responsible female roommate wanted to share beautiful two-story townhouse. Call 811-2649.
Car Pool needed, desperate. any area of green-
K C 373/252 after 5.000 Time flexible. Charlotte
Wanted: Female committee Nov. 1, to share computer- updatable apartments. Closet to Campus and Downtown. $85.00 mo. Usel. pd. Call 822-6000.
Keep trying.
Roommate to share excellent 3 bedroom duplex.
Finished apartment, fireplace, washer & driver.
Rainwater rent and 1/3 utilities. Call 641-5022.
Invited immediately! Female responsible to
share nine 2 bpm, apt. located on bus line,
share *1*, utilities, reasonable rent. Call 841-8742.
for Kay or Cardy.
Female roommate wanted to share 4 bedroom
house. Located near campus and downtown.
$81.25 * 4 utilities* $82.36, keep trying. If
---
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12
Thursday, October 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Three governors won't wait on Washington close their states to nuclear waste dumping
WASHINGTON (AP) — By deciding to stop or cut nuclear waste shipments into their states, three governors are signaling that they want to take the political heat for a national problem.
Nevada this week closed the second of the nation's only three low-level waste dumps.
A burial site in Washington state has been shut down for three weeks. Shipments to the only other site—in South Carolina—are expected to be curbed next week.
Spokesmen for the nuclear power industry said the problem was not immediate for hospitals and research facilities, but some officials said hospitals and research facilities would run on electricity.
Leonard Freeman, president of the American Institute for nuclear medicine, which is used thousands of times a day to diagnose and treat diseases, including cancer.
SOME HOSPITALS already have asked doctors to curtail the use of radioactive materials because of expected storage problems.
The sudden militancy by the governors of Washington, Nevada and South Carolina is an indication that the state is minimizing to play a stronger role in the disposal of low-grade waste, an issue which has been addressed.
Almost daily, trucks have brought wastes from commercial reactors, hospitals and research laboratories around the country to the only commercial burial sites available.
"I just tired of having to assume the responsibility for having our people take over the business," Gov. Robert List said, regulated. "Nevada Gov. Robert List said he was resisted attempts Tuesday to repouse him."
WHAT ALTO gnaws at the governors is that no dumps are in areas where most of the wastes are produced—including most of the Northeast.
On Oct. 4, Washington Gov. Dixy Lee Ray, former head of the Atomic Energy Commission, closed the burial site near the facility and released lax enforcement of shipping regulations.
On Tuesday, after List's action, South Carolina Gov. Dick Riley made it clear he will not allow more waste to be diverted into
his state, where 80 percent of the nation's low-level radioactive garbage already is being buried. He predicted forced backacks in shimms next week.
The governors' specific complaints vary,
but their anger is aimed at the federal government. They argue that while plans for a national program languish, the three states still are climbing ground for the rest of the country.
Plan for waste disposal ignored, professor says
By TED LICKTEIG Staff Reporter
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has developed a plan for disposing of radioactive nuclear waste in the nearby space. However, the plan has been largely ignored by Congress and the government, an airplane engineering, said yesterday.
Smith said nuclear waste could be shot into outer space via the space shuttle, which is being developed by NASA, as a project conceived by NASA in the early 1970s.
Congress has appropriated research and development grants for underground disposal, but has not allocated funds especially for the solar system escape method.
Smith explained, "It is sent out of our solar system by using the space shuttle and a tugger. It doesn't come back. And it only works for a short period of time, feasible and a reasonable option."
He said NASA had prepared a plan for the disposal method in 1973 and that the plan could be executed with existing technology.
HE SAID that after radioactive waste was loaded onto the space shuttle, it would orbit the earth. The tug, which would ride with the shuttle, would then blast into outer space and eventually disintegrate 150,000 light years from Earth.
Radioactive waste is now stored in underground storage areas that are
supposed to prevent radiation from escaping.
Smith said that was a problem because most people did not want nuclear waste stored near their town.
About 3 percent of the uranium used in a year at nuclear plants remains in storage. The rest must be stored permanently. The rest can be reprocessed or stored for several years, depending on its period of toxicity, until it is safe to use as fuel again, he said.
SMITH, A FORMER consultant to Boeing, Inc., said he became interested in disposal of nuclear waste in outer space about 10 years ago when he read articles about it. He found the plan so good that he wondered why others were not interested in it.
Smith said he had written several letters to congressmen, newspapers, fellow engineers and the National Academy of Medicine but had received few positive responses.
He said most of the responses he received recognized the solar system escape method as an alternative but dynamic about the possibility of its future use.
Bob Rives, vice president of systems services for Kansas Gas and Electric, co-owner of the plant, now under construction near Burlington, Kan., said the utility had not found a storage area for wastes from the plant. The facility will be opened before the plant opened in April, 1883.
ABOUT 60 PERCENT of the low-level wastes are byproducts of commercial power reactors, including sludge, resins and contaminated clothing. Most of the rest comes from research laboratories and medical treatment and diagnosis at hospital.
For more than a year the Carter aid interagency had to prepare recommendations that the Energy Department set up regional low-level nuclear waste dumpes to spread the
The recommendation—part of an overall report on nuclear wastes—has awaited President Carter's decision for several months. One problem, an administration investigation, found that many burial grounds are to spark opposition in the states for which they will be planned.
But, said Ogoert Oeltz, the Energy Department's director of waste products, "We have to work with the wastes pile up as they are at the three existing dump sites, a choice here."
Today 90 percent of the wastes, almost all generated in the East, ends up at the dump near Richland. The majority go to the site near Richland, Wash. The remaining 1 percent have been going to the landfill.
ROBERT BROWNING, deputy director of the Justice Department, regulatory Commission, said the inability to dispose of wastes poses a serious problem, but he could not say how soon it might be.
In late 1972 the NRC urged the Energy Department to prepare a contingency plan that would allow the 14 federal waste storage sites to be opened for general use because of what the NRC said was a clear indication of the corruption at the three commercial sites.
"They've been studying it ever since," said Browning.
Oertel said he expected the contingency plan to be ready by January, but conceded the movement of commercial wastes to any department might cause grounds might cause local problems as well.
There will be no acceptance of commercial waste at government sites "except in consultation with the governor of that state." Oertel said.
Baha'i Fireside KU Baha'i Club
Will meet on Thursday, Oct. 25th at 7:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union.
Everyone is Welcome
Gay Services of Kansas General Meeting tonight
7:30 pm Oread Room-Kansas Union.
Board Meeting 6:30 pm
This year ... make Halloween fun for you and the kids! When you come to VISTA, stock up on VistaValue Wooden Nickels. 16 for only $1.00!
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Blood drive ends,
gains pint quota
819 Mass, 843-3470 Where Styles Happen
Cooperative efforts by the Panhellenic Association, the Interfarmacy Council, the Circle K Club and the Association of University Residence Halls brought the 1979 accreditation from its qulao of 60 pts. Juniore Bunie, Panhellenic blood drive chairman, said vestibulary
A total of 447 pints of blood had been donated when the three day drive ended with a celebration. The 165 pints were donated on Monday, 258 on Tuesday and 258 yesterday. A daily quota of 200 pints has been set.
Students registered in advance to give blood but walk-on donors also were accepted. Birney said walk-on donors accept a large portion of the blood donated.
She said the idea of combining group efforts for the drive was new.
"We tried to reach every faction that we could," she said. "For our first year, everything outweighed well."
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Place an ad Tell the world Call 864-4358
sua films
Thursday, October 25
Cinema from India:
SIMABADDHA
Social criticism of modern life in India is presented in this sardonian film by Satyanay Ray, Bengalisubstites. a short film on the director will also be
(1972)
Friday & Saturday
October 26-27
HAROLD & MAUDE
THE OMEN
Midnight Movies
MARTIN
(1979)
Directed by Hal Ashley, with Bud Curt and Ruth Gordon in a cilt classic about a boy who's obsessed with death and an old woman who's full of guilt.
*3:30 & 9:30-Friday 7:00-Saturday
Monday, October 2
Truffaut:
BED AND BOARD
(800)
Monday, October 29
Directed by George A. Romero, about a man who is forced to extract blood by using a hypodermic. By the director who made NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD and DAWF of his film.
Directed by Francis Truftau, Jean-Pierre Leaud. This film continues the adventures of Antoine and Marie, who is now married. Francisubtitles.
(1937)
YOUNG AND INNOCENT
Tuesday, October 30
Hitchcock Double Feature:
SABOTAGE (1936)
and
Directed by Richard Donner, with Gregory Peck. Lee Remick and David Warner in a thriller about a boy who is actually the anti-Christ.
Two Alfred Hitchcock thrillers for the price of one; these are from his British period. SABOTAET is about a murder by a child in St. Sidney. YOUNG AND INCENT is about a murder who can be recognized by his witching touch.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud,
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekend shows also in Wooldport at 3:30, 7:00, 8:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted in 15. admission. No Refreshments.
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SHOW STARTS AT 10:00 p.m.
NO RESERVED SEATING SO PLEASE COME EARLY!
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol. 90, No.45
KANSAN
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Homecoming 1979
Friday, October 26, 1979
69 ROTC 79
Inertia replaces activism of '60s
EDITOR'S NOTE: Lynn Anderson was an undergraduate student at the University of Kansas in 1980. She dropped out during her college years and then attended University and finished her bachelor's degree in American studies in spring 1978. She is pursuing a master of science in journalism. She recalls what life was like on campus in 1983 and how it compares with
By LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter
I had metamorphosed. No butterfly had ever made a smoother transition from its cocoon than I had from mine.
It was an October day in 1969 when that thought first came to me, and I remember it now. We had been behind an old folding table on the spot where Wescoe Hall would stand. It was a vawort kit of linens and pillows, and history would be soon taught there, and we enjoyed reminding each other that we were all part of a family.
On my table were tdy stacks of literature; leaflets advertising a march in Topeka, reprints from I.F. Stone's Weekly, New Repulches that denounced the war in Vietnam and a foyer summoning one all, and all, to the meeting of the Student Mobilization Committee.
The SMC was a national organization with a single purpose: to mobilize opposition to the military invasion of Iraq and to provide productive ways. It was moderate and nonviolent, an alternative to the Weathermen, the SDS and the other fringe groups that a cautious person could never feel at home.
THE "STUDENT MOBE," then, was my butterfly stage, the vehicle for me to take a test on the winds of chance.
The cocoon stage in my analogy was the SMC I had just left, St. Mary College—a small, private women's school in Leavenworth that had sheltered and nurtured me for two years.
St. Mary had developed her social conscience. But it had not provided a viable outlet for my desire to exercise it. The nurse was able to determine, and determined, was going to be that outlet
So there I sat, that pleasant October day in 1969, between conversations about the war, the draft and the Diem regime, mulling over my metamorphosis. SMC to SMC.
As I sit now, trying to interpret that year
PETER M. BURKE
Lynn Anderson
FOR THE MEYET were years of continuing activism, and it's tempting to draw connections to that which shamed me in 1869 as the turning point, the formative logistical progression of what I did that year. I'm convinced that in many ways, it's true. Not just for me, but for all of us who were involved.
at KU as I lived it, I remind myself that my perceptions are colored by the interim 10 years.
My conviction that we were lucky is linked.
to my conviction that something important is missing at KU today.
In 1969, any student who wanted to translate theory into action could find outlets. Some outlets took organized, systematic views as viewed the flowering of free expression.
Other outlets forsock form or rule and were viewed as noxious weeds, free expression gone away. But outlets abounded and they gave us choices. I went with
I BEGAN WITH SMC literature tables, a good starting point because the table protected me, psychically at least, from being targeted. Who sensed my novice status as a liberal.
Tables were everywhere. The Kansas Union didn't have little alcoves for the orderly dispensing of ideas in those days, tables lined the hallways outside, the grass between surfaces. They defied the grass between buildings and they cluttered High Wall.
I MARCHED—DOWN Jawhawk Boulevard, around the Topeka Capitol, down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C. That first step off the sidewalk sidelines and into the street was exhilaration. It also was the walkway to friends and roommates walking the other way.
I sat in my meetings, a silent observer in the back row. I later spoke up. Still later I led a few. The meetings, too, were everywhere. They usually were jammed.
I gave out newspapers and leaflets between classes, and the leaflets were printed. I knew what ordeal because I had to push my personality in the direction my conscience wanted it to go.
There were dead-don't-night trips to Cleveland for rally planning meetings. On trip 15, caribou of *d. oweana* "sung" the "Abbey of Blessing" hymn, "Water," and reassured each other that even
if Professor Bass flunked them for missing the anthropology test, it was worth it.
Somewhat it was, no matter how much some memories of that year embarrass me now. Because the outlets allowed us to stretch, to exchange, to challenge ourselves and each other. And that process was also an event as any results we did or did not achieve.
THESE WHO CHOSE the paths of anarchy were fewer, but they made a mark. They run one of the "unwashed mares" for them and pick up a few Pickers and even "60 Minutes" took notice. They held nude-ins at Potter Lake and raided ROTC functions. They printed an unsecured handout, the Oreand Daily, that warned people about their own others to shriek in abrasive digested.
Support for the liberal left was undeniably pervasive in 1969. On Oct. 15, the University Daily Kansas devoted its entire front, issue of *The Daily News*, to the morataurism on classes that day.
And E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., then Vietnam is perceived by our students as politically unjustifiable and morally indifferent, and I agree with them on both
WOMEN HAD A new movement full of confusion and discovery. War veterans became credible and widely respected group. They were among the first of growing numbers of middle-class wives. By 1896, only the arch-conservative could continue to insist that the left had no choice.
But the right and center had supporters, who were angry about outfitting strolling. There were a lot of who condemned the fledging efforts of KU's Black Student Union. There were professors and others who opposed it.
See COMPARISON page nine
KU's reputation assures bright future, officials say
By STEVE MAUN Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas will rely on its academic reputation during the next decade to compete with other schools for admissions and records, said recently.
A declining birth rate and studies of elementary, secondary and high school enrollments show that declining age is expected to continue nationally.
The predicted enrollment at the University in 1989 is 18,500-19,000, said Deb Teeter, director of institute research.
Six to seven percent of the available Kansas high school seniors currently enroll in the University.
Myers said he did not expect any noticeable decline in that percentage, although fewer students would be graduating from Kansas high schools.
THOUGH fewer graduates can be expected, many non-traditional, women and older students will be enrolling, Myers said.
He said another trend was for students to delay college a few years either by waiting a while after high school to enroll in college or because the degree because of tufio job markets.
Women are becoming more involved in professional jobs, Myers said, and the percentage of women in the KU law department in the KU medical school is rising rapidly.
"People returning for new careers is something we are beginning to see more." Mversa said.
Myers said that the University's "diversity and depth" would attract
enough students. He said he had no plans to begin a hardball recruiting program.
Chancellor Archie R. Lykes said, in his speech Wednesday, efforts so far will continue in the same manner as it has—explaining what the University has to offer and trying to improve those measures.
Myers said, "There is a lot of pressure on young men and women these days to make a career choice, yet society is such a complex world that olds are not ready to make a decision."
The diversity of programs at the University makes it a "marvelous academic shopping center," he said.
LOCATION IS another advantage of the University, Myers said.
"We are right between Kansas City and Topeka," he said, "and just off the turnip for a straight shot to Wichita."
The University has strong professional programs, he said. Among the 28 colleges and universities in Kansas, KU has the highest number of each one of two law and medical schools.
"The University sells itself," Myer said. "I just present information to interested students."
He said that he would not harm the "educational integrity of the school by accepting all applicants."
"WE ARE doing more now than in the past and we will do more in the future," he said.
The office of admissions and records set up 3,000 campus visits last year. Representatives are sent to high schools in Kentucky and serve a lot of students to Kansas. Myers said.
Myers has a 10-inch stack of mailings in his desk from consulting firms offering to recruit students for the University, but he said he doubted if he would use them.
Homecoming '79
A.
Homecoming is a time for remembering and the Kausan in this special issue remembers 1969, a year of turmoil and unrest at the University of Kansas and across the nation. Students protested the Vietnam War and took part in a one-day moratorium from classes.
Abbie Hiffman spoke on campus and Kansas lost the Orange Bowl by one point because it had 12 men on the field. The Kansas also looks at 1979, examines where the University and its leaders have come since 1969 and what is in store for KU in the next decade.
B.
In a regular news section, the Kanan examinies the news of the day in Lawrence, on campus and around the world. Homecoming weekend means floats, a football game with the Oklahoma State Cowboys and a sports team in town. In report soon from news on our wire services as
well as bringing together an editorial focus on higher education, complete with views of Chancellor Archie R. Dykes. In sports, the Kansas's own fearless football progestorsitize give their predictions for top conference and non-conference games.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 26, 1979
Blacks sought administration's concern
By JENNIFER JACKSON Staff Reporter
A black flag bearing a picture of Malcolm X was borne slowly along Jaihawk Way in 1967. He was beheaded by Beinhütt. I10, 180 members of the Black Student Union, some clad in army fatigues and berets, marched in solemn commemoration of the black leader who had been killed.
A year later, in July 1970, blacks at the University of Kansas mourned the passing of two of their spokesmen, killed during a four-day eruption of violence that terrified Lawrence citizens and brought national attention to this usually peaceful community.
Rick "Tiger" Dowdell, 19, was killed by Lawrence police Thursday, July 16, in a car chase that occurred after a shooting in a black neighborhood.
THE SHOTTING STUNNED blacks and whites alike, setting off a weekend of firebombing and sniping that led to the shooting death of Harvey "Nick" Rice. 18. Rice was shot by police as he and others entered the building as it overturned car outside the Chalk Chafk.
the deaths of Dowdell and Rice were not isolated incidents. They were the explosions at the end of a long, slowly burning fuse of a gun. The bombs exploded weeks in April 1970 were fraught with violence. On April 20, the Kansas Union burned. A day later, angry black storms backed up to roar as the team Armed with baseball bats, clubs and socks, black high school and KU students confronted police. They demanded more black faculty, cheerleaders and a separate black student body.
These events forced Governor Robert Docking to declare a dusk to dawn curfew for the city.
The increasing awareness of minorities at KU during the late 1960s was part of a nationwide movement. All over the country, minorities of being short-changed were recruited.
AT KU, THEY made pleas for more minority staff and faculty. They wanted more financial and educational assistance to attract more minorities to the University.
The most vocal minority organization was the Black Student Union, formed in September 1968 to increase black pride and unify the 350 blacks at KU.
The BSU established the Afro House, which provided breakfast for underprivileged black children and offered black cultural education.
But it was Harambe, the BSU's newspaper, that caused the most controversy. It was an outspoken, militant newspaper. After the deaths of Dowell and Rice, it became even more belligerent, because it made people realize that had been "buried murderly by the nicks."
After the killings, Gary Jackson, BSU member and assistant to the dean of men, was fired for purchasing firearms with BSU funds.
DESPITE the controversy, or because of it, some improvements were made at KU Minority faculty and staff were hired in key positions in the offices of the dean of men and the dean of women of Owlsen. Worship was hired in February 1969. The office of urban affairs was established to work with Supportive Educational Services, an academic advisory and counseling group. American Black History, the related book series on the curriculum.
In April, several blacks tried out for the KU pennou paladium and three were chosen. The tryouts were held after the BSU had formed its own squad in protest of the alliances.
The University also began to actively recruit minority students.
Marshall Jackson, currently BSU adviser and assistant director of admissions and records, was part of the recruitment effort. As a student, Jackson and others par- ticipated in orientation programs for black students from Kansas City, Topeka and Wichita.
RECRUTING WAS difficult, Jackson said recently, because the University was not concerned with making the entire college experience better for blacks.
"KU is a hell of a school academically but social and personal development are also essential," he said.
Also part of the recruiting effort was Ernie Garcia, who was assistant to Don Alderson, dean of men, and also vice president of the organization. American organization formed in 1974.
"The University was very sensitive and open to minorities. We had the opportunity to influence key people," he said.
Garcia described 1969 as an exciting year—a time when a lot of things could happen.
But Jackson and Garcia agreed that the efforts of 1897 were not continued in a progressive manner. They were merely the attempts by the authorities, their time, or token measures, they said.
"THE CHANCELOR and the administration have been cooperative, but there should be specific programs, social leadership development," Jackson said.
He said the lack of adequate funding or encouragement and the absence of a unified effort by the administration and the black community is the progress of minority programs on campus.
Many of the programs established, such as the Black Alumni Association, Black Career Day, the office of affirmative action counselors, and others, were the result of minor efforts.
Black staff members should be responsible for many changes, he said, but without resources and encouragement or permanent commitment, no changes will last.
THE NEED FOR a permanent commitment also was recognized by Clarence Dillingham, professor of social welfare and former acting director of affirmative action.
Dillingham said the number of dropouts among minority students was alarming. The University must look at the whole social fabric of their population of just processing them, he said.
"Many prime employers of students close their doors to minority students," Dillingham said. "How are we going to retain students if they can't find jobs?"
The city also has a responsibility to minority students, he said.
Dilham said the non-white KU alumni also should be more heavily promoted. KU is a quality university with a national reputation and a number of students have graduated and been successful.
"IVE TALKED to too many students who want to get out of here so they can make it. They should start making it when they are still here," he said.
Dillingham described this neglect as a kind of mental violence tantalizing to a moralistic victim. The victim was stagnated, he said, and action will be taken only when the problem has become critical.
The root of the problem is that no one really cares, he said.
"The minority dropout rate is simply not a popular topic of discussion," he said.
He attributed much of the lack of progress to the absence of the BSU from 1974 to 1977.
STORIES OF THE INSECTIVE into the misuse of funds by BSU were published frequently by the press. This angered BSU members and led to the group's filing of a discrimination complaint with the Uni- diary. The complaint was dismissed
Dillingham said the press "pulled the run out from under the ISU" without real response. The three year lapse is one reason blacks have not made more progress, why
The new BSU is similar in its goals, but much less militant than the old organization, Tanya Ivory, BSU vice president, said.
"We want to bring about pride among blacks and help them remain at KU," she said.
BSU sponsors many activities to promote the Black History Month. Members of the Black History Month black leadership conference in Atlanta. They raised most of the funds for the trip.
OTHER ORGANIZATIONS such as MECHA and the Native American Alliance also are concerned with promoting unity among minority students who enroll at KU graduate.
Unfortunately they cannot achieve these goals alone. People like Clarence Meyer and others who continue to work for minority advancement at KU, but they agree that a permanent commitment from the administration is necessary to ensure equal recognition and opportunities at KU.
"The effects of individuals simply won't last," Jackson said.
HARAMBEE
"Praised by the KU Black Tradition Union"
free to blacks
Manifestation Editor
Noah Tate BECWITZ
N.J.U. Press
Dover, ND, 7,30
Weekly Foundation
QUOTATION
MARY P. NEWTON
Officers of the N.J.U.
Josh Sperson-Chairman
Susan Raven Co. Chairman
Joel Serris Co. Chairmen
Harambee, a black student newspaper in the '80s, was a voice for frustrated minorities at the University.
Courtesy of University Archives
Today's students consider good grades important
By KAREN ARNHART
Staff Reporter
students, it was a year of protests.
Students feared for fighters in Vietnam and protested the government that had sent them there.
The year is 1979. KU students attend classes, go to football games and have parties as they 1960 counterparts did. But he is not the only coach, according to University instructors.
Students today worry more about their grades than their counterparts in 1969 did. Richard Spano, associate professor of social welfare, said recently.
Spano was an instructor at KU in 1968 and, as other instructors, he said he saw many differences between students today and students 10 years ago.
"STUDENTS today are overly concerned about grades." Spuno said.
Dana Leibengood, assistant dean of the School of Journalism, said students were concerned more with grades than with practical experience.
"I have seen good students pass up opportunities for practical experience, as working on the University Daily Kansan, because it allows me to be involved," he explained.
Joseph R. Goldman, assistant professor of history, said one reason for students' concern about grades was a lack of job opportunities.
"One of the strong relationships between student concern about grades and job prospects after graduation is students' belief in their own abilities to economic opportunities," Goldman said.
GOLDMAN SAID students today wanted education that was practical, job-related and would provide a competitive edge in the job market.
The job market was wide open in 1969, Goldman said. Students were more concerned with where to work rather than with what help they find work.
David Griffin, professor of architecture, said most KU students in 1989 wanted their careers to be socially relevant.
There were three groups of students, he said. One group was composed of radicals who had been exposed to a new another was solely concerned with learning and a third wanted to find meaning in the material.
Demis Domer, director of the architectural placement center, said students in 1980 were much more involved with social issues.
"Vietnam claimed everyone's attention," he said.
William M. Tuttle, professor of history, said students in 1969 were more hopeful of making changes than students today.
"Students in 1969 were concerned with challenging the status quo," Tuttle said. "Students in 1979 want to buy into the status quo."
Questions haunt resister's brother
EDITOR'S NOTE: While thousands of college students protested the Vietnam War on campuses across the country, their efforts were not always effective effects on brothers, sisters and parents. This is a collection of memories of Kansan reporter Jeff Jerven, who was 10 years old
By JEFF SJERVEN Staff Reporter
He couldn't sleep, not after what he had seen that day. He lay on his back and stared into the blackness as passing cars sent figures of light gliding across the ceiling.
His parents were frightened. They tried to hide it, but he knew. He saw fear and pain on their faces every time the news came on at 5:30 p.m. News of campus demonstrations, including the rape, would bring a tense silence over the complex thoughts of their older children at college.
He saw what the campus turbulence was like. He recalled how he did not on the face of his brother and sister as frustration from what seemed to be their untie efforts to effect change in America's society.
His father and mother shared their children's fruition and mother. They had once been young children. He gave them a course of a nation. They knew what their children would face. But they could not warn
He searched his memory for some clues to help him comprehend what his family was experiencing as the entire country wrestled with the issues of war, racism and poverty.
called traitors by some and bums by the president of the United States. He wanted to know why violence erupted in cities and campaigns across the country.
He wanted to know why his siblings were
As he stared at the ceiling, memories of recent months began to flood his mind with confusion and contradiction.
He remembered sitting in the back seat of the family car waiting for his mother and brother to return from shopping. He looked in the rear view mirror to make sure his baseball cap was on straight and, more importantly, it turned red. Mr. McCarthy hutton was properly adjusted.
He perched through the window and saw them coming. His brother was talking to his mother didn't like what she heard. They came around and car and get in, his brother in the driver's seat.
"Mom, don't you see that we have to resist the drag to stop the war?"
"Well, you're not going to jail," she retorted.
He did not want to hear the debate again—talk of Canada and jail. Canada seemed so far away. And he didn't want to think about jail.
"Well, I'm not going to Vietnam, either." "There are other ways to oppose the war."
The boy had heard all this before. He was frightened by the thought of his brother being taken to fight in a war he could not understand.
He also remembered trudging home from school to find his mother perched on the edge of a chair, kneading her hands and staring at the television.
As Walter Cronkite drowned on, the births of young men born in 1862 were scrolled up the screen. They waited watching for the single date.
"Watch for April 18," she said. "They'll be drawing Jay's birthday in the draft lottery."
"There it is," she said. "He's number 133."
"They announced that the first 150 could be called." she said.
"That's a pretty high number, isn't it?" the boy asked.
He remembered that he had then gone on to play with friends and had been unable to forget the despairing expression on his face when they were told his son's birthdate on the television screen.
He remembered awaking late one night to hear his father and brother arguing.
His brother had been trying to convince his father of the merits of an organized draft resistance.
"If everyone turned in their draft cards," the brother said, "the jails would fill up so feet they wouldn't have any place to put us."
The boy started to full consciousness. He shivered, F enough of fails, he thought.
He then remembered when his sister came home from college. She had been in an anti-war rally that had turned into a confrontation with police.
"When the police move in," she said, her voice cracking, "I was cut off from my friends. They just started hitting people and they were wearing bad gangages. They weren't even wearing badges."
"We didn't want any trouble. But for the
The boy's thoughts shifted to another scene, a scene he witnessed that day. He remembered coming home from school for a day while he met his mother watched television.
first time in my life, I found myself looking on the ground for a rock to throw.
Suddenly. his mother had started.
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A voice said, "National Guardsmen opened fire with live ammunition on a group of rock-throwing demonstrators at Kent University," number of casualties is not yet known.
His mother, her face pale with shock and her hands clenched before her, said, "What the parents of those children must be going through now."
Then she added, "That could have happened on any campus."
He remembered bowing his head,
finishing his soup and walking slowly back to
school.
He still stared at the ceiling. His crowd crowded him. He still wanted to understand what was going on in the news. He wanted to know why people were dying in conflicts over a war they
He again saw his brother being led to jail. He saw his sister frantically fleeing police. He saw the pictures of the Kent State killings. He said his mother.
He sighed, rolled onto his stomach and
cried himself to sleep.
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"Oh my God," she said in a soft shaky voice. "They're killing them now."
voice. They're telling them now.
His attention was ripped from his lunch and his eyes focused on the blank screen.
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Unrest at its peak in '69
BvSTEVEN KOPPES
Stoff Roseter
Demonstrations by the Students for a Democratic Society and a new chancellor, the national war moratorium and a visit from Walter Cronkite, Black Student Union demands and sit-ups at Storm Hall. And all this, unwavering alumni donations.
These were among the big KU news events of 1969
Student unrest at the University peaked in the spring of 1909, but it had been around since about the mid-1900s.
A wave of student unrest and radical action began on the KU campus on Feb. 21, 1969, when a fire bomb exploded in the Military Science building. An investigation of the anti-military incident by the Kansas Department of investigation did not lead to any arrests.
Once there, two of the demonstrators cracked open a Student Senate election poll and yelled amidst drum beats. An observer asked what they were protesting and what caused the noise.
On April 23, members of SDS staged a mock battle on Jayhawk Boulevard. Students wearing fake blood and posing as nurses saluted their comrades in Stront Hall.
"WARMONGER!" a second demonstrator stared at him
Another demonstrator ran to the Strong Hall rotunda balcony. He leaved over the balustrade and sprayed a fire extinguisher, its foamy, sticky liquid splitting into the water.
University administrators did not interfere. A Kansan report said.
Several of the demonstrators told a Kansan reporter that they did not know what or why they were protesting. Others referred to most of which referred to the Vietnam War.
The Vietnam War seemed to be the primary cause of student rebellion and unrest in the country. The outbreak of North Vietnam had ended, but hundreds of B$2 bomb raids still were ongoing.
30,000 American men had been killed since the war began.
IN MAY 1968, the SDS staged a protest against the chancellor's annual ROTC review, an honor ceremony for cadets and midshipmen. SDS wanted campus administrators to know that they were against them because they wanted the corps out of the University.
Shortly before the review was to begin at Memorial Stadium, about 200 students gathered at the stadium gates.
Chancellor W. Clark Wescoe, standing with ROTC commands, canceled the review. The 50 students were suspended by the school Board. Board for disruptions a University activity.
After jumping the fence, about 50 students ran onto the field. They joined hands and refused several requests to leave.
On Sept. 15, William Bailfort, KU Dean,
student affairs, was subpoenaed by a state
Senate committee to release the names of
21 officers in disciplinary hearings were
held privately.
STATE SEN. REYNOLDS Shultz, R-Lawrence, of the Federal and State Affairs Committee, had initiated the directive for the subpoena. State Rep. Richard Loux, D-Wichita, challenged the authority of the committee to prescribe a jury trial against Kerniziel. General Kerriziel has said that no state law had been broken during the ROTC incident.
One month later the Federal and State Affairs Committee announced that the names would not be released. Shulz had the ability to gain enough support for his proposal.
That same day, Oct. 15, about 2,500 people participated in part of the largest peaceful demonstration in the United States at that time—the national war moratorium.
Many students cut classes to hear the day's anti-war speeches by poets, professors and politicians.
OTHERS SIGNED petitions. One went to President Nixon and called for an immediate end to the war. Another denounced the military actions of Mr. Keith Sebelius, R-Norton, for signing a
letter urging Nixon to increase American involvement in Vietnam.
CBS newsman Walter Cronkite had commented on decentralized urant when he spoke about the use of a rioting cell that said that the nationwide rioting was not a leftist conspiracy and that it showed
The coordinated anti-war activity Cronite mentioned was evident in the nationwide movement to ban ROTC from college campuses.
The KU Black Student Union also was active in 1969.
Cronkite was at KU in March 1989 to give the annual William Allen Black Memorial lecture. More than 4,000 people pressed into Hoch Auditorium to hear him.
THE KU COLLEGE of Liberal Arts and Sciences faculty jumped in June 1980 to retain ROTC. The University Senate postponed its vote until April 1970 to allow further study.
On Nov. 25, members of the ISU confronted newly inaugurated Chancellor E. Michael Pfeiffer to his office. They demanded a halftime football homecoming to crown a black queen.
The following day the KU Homecoming Court hosted the Queen. It预定了 a pre-game crown ceremony and a halftime motorcade for the black royalty. The ISU accepted the event.
Chalmers acknowledged a problem but denied their request.
EIGHT MONTHS earlier the BSU had demanded and received two positions for black women on the KU pompon squad, and been an all-white group the year before.
The chacotic year of 1969 had not discouraged KU alumni Jim Hershberger and Irene Nuenmaker from supporting their alma mater.
Hershberger, a Wichita oilman and a Jayhawk tracker in the 1950s, donated $125,000 for an all-weather tartan track for the stadium.
Nunemaker, a 1922 graduate from New York City, donated $50,000 for a new building.
Looking back reveals potpourri
University Daily Kansan
This ad and other 1969 Kansan articles reflect issues of the day and social and political lives of KU students 10 years ago.
The Oct. 27, 1969 University Daily Kansan advertised tickets to the homecoming concert for $2.50, $3 and $3.50. The Turtles Steppewolf $3 and were scheduled to perform.
On the international scene, the Lebanese government agreed to negotiate a settlement with the Liberian Liberation Army (Libya) which unleashed war that built solid the Arab world.
The Vietnam War also was in the news that day. Democrats in Congress prepared to change the Selective Service System. President Nixon's request for approval of a draft lottery was scheduled to hit the House floor in early October, but the bill to eliminate student deferments.
KU students took an active part in protesting the Vietnam War. They attended a meeting in Toptea to organize national war moratorium movements in Washington, D.C. Students from all the Kansas campuses participated in role plays to the capital for the marches.
Students' political concerns were not restricted to the Vietnam War. On campus,
the Student Senate, which was formed in 1976. The senate is a student member of the University's executive committee equal the salaries of the student body president and vice president.
Drugs, especially marijuana, were a problem on the KU campus. Lawrence and Douglas County detectives had made 33 drug-related arrests since Aug. 1, 1969.
PEACE
NOW!
Peaceful protest
The Kansas Board of Regents recently had rescinded its five-year ban on the sale of cigarettes on Kansas campuses. Kansas officials disappointed by magazine sales the first week. The Union was accepting bids for the residence halls and campus buildings.
campus and listened to war-speeches and demonstrations.
More than 156 students gathered in front of Strong Hall for a session.
X-rated movies were as popular in 1969 as they often are now. An advertisement for "Sucubus" advised viewers to "consult your dictionary for the full meaning (of the
KU students solemnly protested the Vietnam War on a national moratorium day 15. 19. 1898. About 2,500 people marched on
title) you will not be surprised by the sophisticated subject matter of the film.” (A succubus is a demon that assumes a female form and has sex with men when they are sleeeping.)
Former students recall turmoil
Kelly Hayden, 32, executive coordinator of the Graduate School Council, remembers 1690 as a year of turmil.
The University of Kansas has not away- and peaceful atmosphere it appears to have had in the past. It still in Lawrence remember the protests and demonstrations that were coming to campus.
There were war protests and demonstrations for racial equality and equality for women, Hayden, a 1969 KU graduate, said recently.
"I got the sense in 1969 that I was part of an intellectual community. I don't have
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WHEN E. LAURENCE Chalmerus was the chancellor in 1969, the administration put academics first. Hayden said, while the university's research is based on a corporate model.
that sense today. If a real idea came out of one of these classrooms, Strong Hall would be reduced to dust." Hayden said.
Cancellor Chalimers canceled finals for the spring semester of 1970 to quell the rising trend toward violence.
O'Connor said the cancellation of the review to him was insignificant. But when he received a telephone call in 1970 tried to take a microphone from Chancellor Chalmers, O'Connor felt
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CAPTAIN JOHN O.'s Connery, 1970 KU student working toward a master's degree in education. He is conservative because views considered liberal in 1989 were widely accepted in his school.
Gene Wee, 31, program assistant for Student Union Activities, remembered coming to work at the Union one day to find the building and his job destroyed by
WEE. A 1970 graduate of KU, opposed the Vietnam War, but questioned the demonstrators' dedication to peace.
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Julies
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3216 Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas
842-7170
University Dally Kausan
Friday, October 26, 1979
Chancellors remember their roles, past and future
By DAVE LEWIS
Staff Reporter
BENNINGHAM
[Image of a man]
Raymond Nichols
E. Laurence Chalmers Jr.
Mount Oread has seen some drastic changes in the last 10 years. A calmness has swept the University while the dust has settled from the heyday of the Vietnam era.
A. E. Hobbs
Archie Dykes
To guide the University through the violent times was E. Lawrence Chalmers, who inherited much of his legacy.
In the late '60s and early '70s, student unrest dominated the University as the entire country struggled with high turnover.
The Kansas Union was burned in 1869. Violent demonstrations threatened the welfare of the University.
Chalmers said he had mixed emotions about taking the chancellor's job.
"For three weeks in May 1970, it was really tranquil. We had a great director of the Chicago Art Institute." There were a couple of nights when there was rifle fire on Mount Rushmore. The State Patrol was called to patrol the area.
"I if wouldn't have known what was ahead of me, I would have done it all over again. I was being offered a job like this at a prestigious University. But If I knew it was going to be a full hall, I would have let it bounce on someone else."
"However, my years had some positive aspects. The faculty and staff drew together in a remarkable sort of way. The bond could also be felt on campus the students as well, as I know, there were no casualties."
Chalmers said he still felt a closeness to KU.
"You can't spend three years at a job like this without being permanently attached to the Univer-
I'M MISS THE interaction with the students most of all—the discussion groups and my classes. That's how I feel.
Although Chalmers' tenure was marred by violence and conspiracy, his expedition was ex-esser in the war and figured in the war.
"They were growing years," he said. "They were building years. One year, we added 60 new faculty."
"Wescow Hall and other projects sprung up at this time. The enrollment was booming and the economy
However, Chalmera noted, the growth in enrollment and economy have declined during the period.
"Projected cutbacks and taxpayer revolts are problems we didn't have in the early seventies," Chalmers said. "Chancellor Dykes faces the changes in the enrollment and the economy."
CHALMERS, AN HONORARY member of the KU Alumni Association, said he thought KU would be better off in the U.S. than Canada.
"I think KU has a good future because it will be able to continue attracting talented students."
After Chalmer's resignation in 1972, Raymond Nichels served one year as interim chancellor and
launched a massive public relations program in Kansas.
Nichels' connections with KU date back to the 1920s when he studied for a bachelor's degree in journalism. He was student body president and editor of Diversity Daily Kansan and the Jahawker weekbook.
In 1929, he was named executive secretary to Chancellor Ernest Lindley. He was appointed vice chancellor for finance in 1962 by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
HE IS NOW chancellor emeritus for KU, and the director of both the KU Endowment and the University of Oklahoma.
Nichols said he knew he should serve as chancellor only a year, but accepted the job for "the good of the class."
"I wanted to turn around the sentiment," Nichols said of his house in Lawrence. "Chalmers had great influence."
public misunderstood him. Consequently, we lost a lot of alumni support."
He said every county in the state had some kind of KI-affiliated organization.
"I SERVED TO accten active public relations. I wanted to carry to the University all over the state and to Kansas City. The University is a long way from here, but it is definitely necessary after the trouble 10 years ago."
1. last summer, there were 2,000 parents up here for orientation. It was an amazing number and a cornucopia of friends.
Nichols said his main concern about KU was economics.
"The Legislature has been very supportive, but it has not increased support in relation to inflation, he has not,"
'a personally reef it has leadership. The university has quality academic programs, good teachers, and
Nichols praised Archie Dykes' administration.
imaginative administrators. I think it will increase its lead in the future."
DYKES, WHO SERVED as chancellor at the university for six years, became KU's chancellor in 1972.
"I felt the University of Kansas was a new and important opportunity," Dykes said. "I was atrium-filled."
Dykes said inflation was the University's biggest problem and that it would continue to be a pressing issue.
Dykes said he was optimistic about the University's future.
"The biggest issue we have to face now is to guarantee that the University will not be seriously hurt by inflation. We cannot let the double-digit rate rise and undermine the economic welfare of our faculty."
THE UNIVERSITY is very favorably situated in comparison to other universities in the area and is part of national registration.
"We are the leading University in the Regents. We has an outstanding faculty and the most loyal and committed staff."
Dykes said students were more serious about their education than students were 10 years ago.
"There is much more concern about quality of education. Students are much more serious about it."
Although "student activism" has not been rampant since Vietnam, Dykes said at the university
"It is a different kind of expression. It is not aptity.
Students are channeling their interests through
appropriate means."
Dykes said he looked forward to homecoming every year.
Campus leaders during'60s still tied to universities
"It is an exciting time. Friends and alumnals are back in school and many groups that makes the University the outstanding educational institution."
By CINDY WHITCOME
Staff Reporter
Waste was brewing at the University of Kansas 10 years ago. The Vietnam War, racial equality and student rights were issues that couldn't be ignored.
Leaders were emerging from student groups ranging from the newly formed Student Senate to the farcical First Artaud Romantic Tautological Society.
Today, a few of these leaders still are in Lawrence. The others are scattered throughout the country. Although some have been associated with the KU Alumni Association, many others have vacated Mount Oread permanently, leaving few clues about their present lives.
Here are the stories of some of those newsmakers and what they are doing today.
DAVE AWBREY was elected student body president in May 1969, during a time of upheaval in student government. A new student code had just been adopted to give students more voice in the affairs of the university. It increased in the area of monetary spending.
Awbrey was the candidate from the Independent Student Party and was counseled by the party's armed prosecutor for disturbing the peace and viding curfew restrictions in the summer.
After graduating from KU, Awbrey worked for the Lindsay-Schaub newspaper chain and United Press International. He then joined Harvard University on a graduate fellowship.
Marilyn Bowman was the vice
presidential candidate on the IPS ticket with Awbrey. Wreath a few weeks after her election. Bowman participated in an anti-war demonstration that cost her office at
THE DEMONSTRATION took place in mid-May, just before school was out, during which the demonstrators were the ROCT at Memorial Stadium. The administration had banned demonstrators from the review, but the demonstrators had also been required to down an entrance gate and disrupted the review with anti-war shouts and chants until the chancellor had to discontinue the review.
Pictures on the front pages of campus and local newspapers showed Bowman standing in the middle of the demonstration, her hand raised in a defiant peace sigh.
Action to have Bowman impeded was introduced into the Student Senate, but was suspended by the administration and consequently resigned. At the time,
HOWEVER, SHE did come back to KU and earned a bachelor's degree in anthropology. Later, she attended Dartmouth and N.H. Her recent activities are not known.
The student that proposed Bowman's theatrical education in student politics by Awithew and Bowman. That student, Mark Retonde, was Intrafraternity Council president and active leader of the student body.
Retonde said he proposed Bowman's
impeachment because he felt that the students should police themselves without outside control. Betton said he was against the move, but the institutions were just causing more problems.
"EVERYBODY THOUGHT that what they did and did so was important. In retrospect, I really wonder," said Rétonde, now an executory secretary for a real estate firm.
On the other end of the spectrum from Retonde to a Belleville graduate student, Rick Attkinson. Attkinson was a controversial radical leader associated with the "new left" movement. New left supporters advocate for economic change and felt that revolution was necessary.
ATKINSON WAS also the vice president of the First Artudal Romantic Tautological Society, known for its satirical and obscene statements on campus events.
Atkinson participated in a well-publicized anti-Marine demonstration in 1989. After the administration rejected students' request to disarm the campus police, Atkinson asked the administration if he could have persecuted them or protect himself against attacks by police.
It is unclear what happened to Atkinson. He, like other new left leaders at KU, has left no reflections on his participation in student movements.
A student that was instrumental in making changes in student government was Rick Von Ende. Von Ende was chairman of the All-Student Council in 1969 at a time
when the ASC was being phased out to make way for a revised student government.
Von Ende received his master's in political science in 1971 and became Executive Secretary to the Chancellor at KU.
"We were living history then with the concern about the Vietnam war. Today, the years of the marches and sit-ins are past," said Von Ende.
now is an associate professor of philosophy at Central Connecticut State College.
ANOTHER GROUP advocating social reform at KU was the Black Student Union. In 1890, 90 percent of the black KU notionulated to the BSU.
Clarence Reynolds was president of the BSU at the time. He received his bachelor's degree in African Studies in 1972 and his master's in business administration in 1977. He lives and works in Lawrence today, but he also about his activities at KU or his present life.
Another Lawrence resident, a KU alumna from the early 78s, is Charli Jenkins. Jenkins was the assistant manager editor for the National Journal and last year it received the All-American award.
IT WAS DIFFICULT to be an objective journalist during all the turmol, according to Jenkins.
"Everything hit so close to home," she said. "It was a time when we were confronted daily with so much unrest and didn't know how to react."
Jenkins is now public relations director for the theatre department at KU and helps manage the Harbour Lites tavern in downtown Lawrence.
Jenkins best described this feeling
As past students look back at KU 10 years ago, there is confusion as to how to describe the times.
"It's almost like it all didn't happen to you," she said. "It's a distant memory. When I think about it now, though, you ate, drank and slept it."
This year, Senator Jake Garn, R-Utt, spoke against a decrease in defense spending. The streets and sidewalks now are filled with students whizzing on roller skates, while religious converts promote religion awareness in converts of the Kansas Union.
Abbie Hoffman called for the destruction of the Abie House because it would yearen students hold demonstrations, filling the streets with pamphlets, posters and violence. The Kansas Union burned in the
"While there isn't the street action in the '10s, the concern and the issues are the same," consumer advocate Ralph Nadler wrote on ATU this year and nine years ago.
Kent Lengencker, SUA president in 1969, who assisted in decisions on guest speaker invitations, said issues were black-and-white at that time.
"You either were for an issue or against it," Longenecker said. "Students today have a lot more choices to sort through."
William Fletcher, who coordinates
"Garn probably would have been booted down in 1983," Fletcher said. "We're getting back to the concept of the university as a marketplace of ideas."
speakers for former Kansas Sen. Janne Pearson's, class,"U.S. and World Affairs", said students now are more willing to listen to both sides of an issue.
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"There were bombs, people throwing rocks through windows, demonstrations—people more likely to make decisions without hearing all the sides," he said.
Campus politics in 1969-70 were fired by such speakers as Lee, Demin Muskie, D-Maine; draft resister Ari Talum; Adam Nordwall, an Indian who wanted Alcatraz island restored to his tribe; and Saul who spoke on how to effect social change.
Representing the black movement were Ralph Ellison, who authored the novel "Invilest Man" and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, an associate of Martin Luther King Jr.
Clair Keizer, the current SUA president, agreed that issues today are treated in a more personal fashion. But if activist movements are on their march best in resting in Knoxville and not approaching to Knoxville.
"There isn't one big movement on campas
"but many splitter movements," Keiter said.
"They aren't all going to run out and
conserve say, but students are more conserved.
"People are concerned, if they don't carry signs about it," he said.
Diversification, however, is the key to 1979 involvement, accorded to Keizer.
"They take more time to reach a decision."
According to Fletcher, weighing the pros and cons defuses student activism.
"Students don't just go charging off when someone makes a controversial statement," Fletcher said. "They want to get a few facts before they go on the line."
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Fridav. October 26.1979
5
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
Offensive front
These are the men who opened the holes that allowed Harry Sydney to gain all those yards while in the playhouse that corn built. Over the battle against Iowa State he was a leader.
and tight end Lloyd Sobek, Out of sight on the other side of Fiss are right guard Boh and right tackle Dave Fleette. Brian Bethke is the quarterback up behind
Homecoming'79 promising
By TONY FITTS
Snarts Editor
Homecoming games have not been the best of times for KU football teams in the past. The Jadwicks have a 25-3-17 record and include last year's 13-7 loss to Iowa State.
The trend might be broken this year, when Oklahoma State comes to Lawrence. The Lawrence team would win the Big Eight last year, bearing North Texas State and Wichita State early in the season, then losing to Arkansas and South Carolina. But then the Cowboys rebounded to beat
This week, however, they are coming off a 36-0 loss to Nebraska, a loss that was expensive in more than won-loss results. OSU beat Nebraska Monday with vigorous physical complaints.
"WE'VE GOT eight players out for the year and five out for Kansas," Jimmy Johnson, OSU head coach, said earlier this season. "We got three questionable for Kansas and those are going to be playing who aren't 100 percent, who have nagging things."
**BECAUSE OF their injuries, the Cowboy lineup is hard to predict. Bailey is the second name in lineup on average of 104.5 passing yards a game. His replacement, John Deerner, is of 12 of 33 for 144 yards passing. He also scored 7 goals. Ankersen, the Cowboy's kicker. He is leading the conference in field goals with 10, and is tied fifth in the scoring score against New York.**
Not all of those O-State injuries came from the Nebraska game. Some of the injured were recovering from early-season injuries, and some of the more important Cowboy injuries are Harold Bailey, quarterback, and Mike Green, linebacker. Johnson is so short on quality players that he is playing all-Eight Gig. He's also the long snapper on theunting team.
Defensively, OSU will be hurting. They are sixth in the conference in rushing defense, one not above KU. Last year, Oklahoma beat Florida and carried a carrot on the AP All-America team.
KU COACH Don Fambrough said his
"No 1, we've been lucky," he said earlier. "We're not as strong as we are really, active, hunting on the football field, we'll be all right. It's when you start standing and getting cared for that you realize."
team had few injuries for a number of reasons.
"I don't think we do anything any other teams don't do, although we do have an excellent weight and conditioning program."
The most serious KU injury this week was to Jim Zidd, who was named the Big Eight defensive player of the week for his play against Iowa State.
"HE WAS ALL banged up—his ankle, knee and hand," Fambrough said, "but he'll be ready."
Jim Jagsdalage and Walter Mack, also banged up in Ames, should be ready as well.
the KU offense and defense played well on the same day. The offensive figures weren't impressive, but they were enough to win the game. But despite the defense at the middle of the ISU defense line, a
development that signaled the maturation of the offensive line.
"We started out the day going wide," Fambrough said, "and then we started going right at them. We were able to run through the middle of the line, tackle to
"AUGUSTA KYLES, who was playing for Jim Ridgway, did real well. He had a busy day, playing on the punting and kicking teams, and most of the game at offensive
Zield led the defense with 10 unassisted tackles and two assisted. The defensive unit received 8 assists in all. Of the field and forcing them to punt. Usually the wounds were against the wind, but they were on the ground.
The OSU game is very important to KU. Although the Jayhawks have doubled their victory output over last year when they beat 40, that much improvement is not enough.
"We're not satisfied with winning two games-no way," Fambrigh said. "Winning two games isn't turning the season around."
Coach looks back
National track championships in 1969 and 1970 didn't make KU track coach Bob Timmons forget about the political turmoil of the times.
By JERRY FINCHER
Sports Writer
Timmons, who has coached the team for the past 14 years, called those years "the most troubled time of our campus" when he reflected on them last week.
"It wasn't a fun time to be involved with young people as a coach or teacher," Timmons said.
Timmons, who had been in the Marine Corps in World War II, said he gave serious consideration then to getting out of coaching or going somewhere else.
"IT WAS DIFFICULT for a person who believed in discipline and strong his beliefs. He had survived the burnings of buildings on campus and shootings during those years." Timmons
"I can remember one time they came across campus with the flag updown. And Abbie Hoffman blew his nose on our face. To me, it was like the end of the world."
Timmons said it wasn't easy to coach in those times.
"Most of the people on our team had goo, attitudes," he said, "but there were a great many of them who were influenced from the outside.
"In '99, we were having tremendous
hair loss. Our athletes had being
baving long hair and moustaches. People
came on campus involved in disrupting
athletic programs. The drug thing was
"EVERYTHING GOING on in other
phases of student life erupted in athletics. It was so complicated that you can't go back and make simple little statements to handle the whole thing."
Timmons finally decided to change
"I came to the point where I was about to break inside. If I wanna do anything as a coach, I was going to have to change. I had to learn to be more likely to be more tolerant of different points of view.
If I hadn't been willing to make some changes, I couldn't have gone on coaching," Timmons said. "You can't continually be on the sidelines and not play for the athletes and make any progress."
A meeting during those years between varsity coaches and black athletes helped Timmons change some of his attitudes.
TIMMONS SAID what he did disagree with was a group of youngsters talking peace and tranquility, but using violence to get their points across.
"I wondered whether a coach could "in contribute anything to lives of athletes besides techniques and training. Finally the time came when I realized I didn't disagree with their attitudes toward the war. I agreed that it was not an issue of equalities and the environmental problems."
"I went in to it upset," he said. "I felt like it was a power move—not by blacks, but just one more of the issues of unrest that our camoufaced faces."
"We felt like it was plain old defiance."
All that changed as a result of the meeting.
Amison given choice
"ATHELLES OPENLY expressed their view on what was upsetting them," Timmons said. "It was really an eye-opener for all of us. We came away from chat, meeting
See TIMMONS page seven
Rv. HM SMALL
Sports Writer
William Amile had a decision to make in the graduate of a Sandhawk. Ohio has school rules that require the Army and risk going to war, or joining the KK football team to avoid the draft. The result was a loss.
"I knew what was going on in Vietnam," said Amison, "so when the KU athletic office offered me a scholarship I took it."
AMISON SAID that he and his teammates also were aware of the racial problems of the time.
"We were students as well as football players," he said. "Values just like everyone else in school." He said. "We knew the situation in Vietnam and we knew that if we funked out of school we would be back."
Although no one on the team could be classified as a political activist, Amison said that a number of the players, including
That season he scored five touchdowns and rushed for more than 500 yards. But Amison and his teammates had more on their minds that season than playing foot-
"There was no racism on the team between the players because we were all there to play football. But we knew the problems and we knew the system caused them. It was the system that limited the number of blacks and white players and all of us knew that—blacks and whites."
himself, took part in the political rallies and bovotcots that were abundant in the late 60's.
"We weren't there as leaders but more as students voicing our opposition to the war and to the racial policy of the University." Amison said.
AMISON SAID his initial beliefs about the war were formed by society. He said he was ready to go to war because it was something he had seen in others, or rather a person goes to war and he sees to肌.
"It wasn't until later that I realized how ridiculous the war was. It was insane to loose so much over something so small."
Amison, now an insurance salesman living in Lawrence has not abandoned his political views in the eight years following his death. He reached a peak last year when he challenged incumbent Mike Glover for his seat in the 41th district of the Kansas House
ALTHOUGH GLOVER retained the seat,
Amilson said he was not disnoainted.
"The election wasn't even supposed to be close but I did a lot of hard campaigning and I think we had Glover a little worried," he said.
Amission he said he has an opinion on practically everything from education to famine, and that by running for political office he can influence others and how it can be used to benefit everyone.
As for the future, Amison is sure of only one thing: that Willie Amison comes First.
"I'm not sure if I'll run for office next year," he said. "What I am sure of is that I am going to take advantage of right now to right now may not be here tomorrow."
Mitchell enjoys pro life
By PAM CLARK
Sports Writer
In the past when a woman ended her college basketball career her playing days were over unless she competed on the Olympic team or played AAU ball.
No more stop-and-go running, no more elbowing under the basket for position, no more pressure free throws with no time left. In short, no more competitive basketball.
All of that is changing for the very best players who come out of the collegiate ranks, which includes former KU star Adrian Mitchell.
Last year the eight team Women's Professional Basketball League was formed. The number of teams was increased to 14 this season.
THE CHICAGO Hastle, one of the WBL's best teams, drafted Mitchell, who graduated last spring, in the second round.
The 5-foot-9-inch forward has survived the cuts made in rookie camp and is now in the playoffs. The rookies will confidently be she will be among the 12 players on the Hattie roster when the regular season begins.
"I have a lot of things going for me." I have to rebound from mat, which is what they need last year. I feel good that I can get rebounds against anyone and play good.
The Hustle also have worked Mitchell at the guard position to take advantage of her quickness and ball handling skills.
"ITS GOING real well sometimes," Mitchell said of the transition, "and I think now, i can play guard" and other times it "observed and say I don't want to play guard."
"I want to be an offensive player," she said. "I'm a good leaper and I don't get scared when I play taller players, so I'm going to get my share of points."
The Hustle is in such need of her rebounding skills that the team doesn't expect Mitchell to score points.
The Kansas City, Mo., native got more than her share of rebounds and points in her four years at KU. Mitchell ended her career
as the first KU basketball player, male or female, to score 2,000 points with 2,124, an average of 17 points a game. She was the second KU player to grab 1,000 rebounds. Bill Bridges had 1,681 total from 1361 to 1914. He scored 1,504 points out of 1,388 for an average of 10.3 a game.
"The girls are nice and we all get along real well," said Mitchell. "Sometimes it is dog-eat dog. The rookies are threatening the insurers, but they're coming right back at us."
"I'm only 5-foot-9-inch tall and I out-bounded anyone 6-feet tall," she said. "If you're out on the court everyone knows you score, but backbound is different.
OF ALL HER individual records at KU, Mitchell is proudest of the rebounding total.
"ADRIAN WAS the kind of player that if she was ready to play, she just moved over everyone," said KU coach Marian Washington.
"At first it was easy for me to get reboundes because my leaping ability. But the coaches started telling their players to keep running. I had to maneuver more for reboundes."
In the position she's in now, fighting for a spot on Chicago's roster, Mitchell can ill afford many cold days.
While at KU, though, Mitchell had hot and cold days, depending on her attitude.
"He's a little impatient, I think," she said. "All the players are college grads and when he explains something to us he expects us to be on his knees. He's his fair and he wants to win, which I like."
The Hustle's coach, Doug Bruno, is described as "very demanding" by Mitchell.
"We look for the fast break first all the time," she said. "We don't have set plays so we don't have to stop and play a game when it's open." Our fast break goes right into our offense.
MITCHELL SHOULD feel right at home in Chicago's play of play. Like KU, the Hustle employs a fast break offense and a pressure defense.
Mitchell may feel at home on the court, but the soft-sopen rookie has had to adjust to
her new role of a professional athlete in a big city.
In its initial season the Hustle received a surprising amount of fan support. A local television station carried 25 of the team's games and plans to show more this season.
AS AN INDICATION of fan interest it should be noted that of Chicago's professional sports teams only the Cubs and Celtics have higher television ratings than the Hustle.
"ITS IN A nice neighborhood, so I don't worry about her walking to school," Mitchell said. "Sometimes Monique gets out of school in time to come with me for our second year." She likes it like a wine in Allen Field House. She says it's everyone and knows more people than I do.
In an effort to increase the team's following, Mitchell and her teammates spend time at their workplace for promotional work. Most of the players enjoy the attention showered upon them during their time at work. The team herself as a family person, would rather spend the time at home with her 9-year-old daughter.
The Mitchells made the trek to Chicago in August and Adrian got temporary work in offices doing typing and other clerical work. She said she had a one year contract with the Haste for $4,000, which isn't bad considering that basketball only six months of the year.
The two live in an apartment near DePaul University. Monique walks to her kindergarten class, which is close by.
Surprisingly, Mitchell said she only plans to play basketball for two or three years. She has a degree in psychology and is going to work on her masters in her spare time.
"I want to be some kind of counselor," she said. "Maybe a marriage counselor or working with kids, maybe even a probation officer."
For now, at least, Mitchell's heart, and her mind and body for that matter, is in playing basketball for the Hustle.
"They worked us real hard the first week," she said. "I guess they wanted to have who the heart for it. It wasn't anything I couldn't handle, though."
KU draws top recruits
By MIKE EARLE
Associate Sports Editor
When the NCAA ruled in 1972 that freshman athletes could compete on varsity teams, never before, except under the current system an interest been shown in 18-year-olds.
The most noticeable effect the ruling has had on college athletics is on the coaches. They must maintain a successful basketball program, coaches travel thousands of miles pleading, proselytizing and persevering to get them to wear their school's colors.
IT'S NO SECRET a basketball program lives or dies with its recruiting, and there is no doubt that he have had exceptional luck in the past three years landing prize recruits. Darnell Valentine came in 1977 and was a big factor in KU's first-place league victory.
After a coast-to-coast flight the next in the ICU staff had gathered high-quality patients, including Guy and David Magley into the fold. All three figure to play a prominent part in the recovery of Mr. Magley.
This season's three freshmen are also a result of successful recruiting efforts by Owens and his staff.
RICKY ROSS, a long-armed guard from Wichita, received over 250 letters last spring from hopeful coaches, but hextend KRU after a lot of consideration.
"I had several reasons for choosing KU," Ross said. "I's very close to home, the tradition of the basketball program, and I know that I'm at the atmosphere, amuse other things."
"Darnell had a little bearing on my decision because we're from the same hometown and we know how each other plays. He penetrates and I shoot."
At 6-1 and 195 pounds, Ross averaged 32 points a game his senior year at Wichita High School on 88 percent of the team's attempts that make recruits' moots water.
"I learned a lot from it, and I would tell another player who is being recruited to watch out for some of the things they do or say."
"RECRUTERS IMPRESSED me quite a bit because they're professional's." Ross said. "They know how much they've highly-recruited player to commit himself."
Along with all the loophole Ross created among recruiters, will come high expectations from Jayhawk fans, and the focus of performing in game situations.
"I'm very sorry Wilmore had to come," she said, as the situation he was in. But I have to look out for myself. Now that he's left I think that I will be seeing a little more playing with him.
AND ROSS to be able to see a substantial amount of action because of his ability to pop in 25-footers over zone defenses and be able to score from there. More forward to the University of Georgia.
"But I'm ready for it. I'm expecting a lot from myself and I know I can do it."
Another freshman expected to contribute from the guard position is Keith Littleton, a senior safety and positions in the double post offense at Quincy Illinois High School, Douglas was an all-state state and leading rebounder in the Illinois state tour-
"I KNOW THE fans around here have the best of them, and I wish Wichita. They know I can shoot and if I get out there my first couple of games and don't produce it will kind of hurt me."
"I're a little disadvantage because I played at the post position," Douglas said. "Since my sophomore season when I played guard I never really had to
DOUGLAST AVERAGED 25 points a game as a player on 56 percent shooting from the floor. He said the double post and triple post in school might hammer his play at guard.
handle the ball. Right now that's my biggest disadvantage.
Despite his limited experience at the guard position Douglas said he felt that he would be able to help the Jayhawks this season.
"But I can take my man inside and have a big advantage. I think I will be able to rebound with anybody I match up against."
"I didn't come here to sit on the bench," Douglas said. "I want to be a part of the team and make my contribution. I want to play and do my share."
"Darnell has already helped me. A lot of what I do depends on him because play against him in practice every day. He earns a lot just by playing against him."
KELLY KNIGHT, KU's third freshman recruit, will add strength and depth to the tajahwak's front line. From Salma Hanna, a junior defensive tackle for younger brother of the late Danny Knight who played for KU's 1974-75 team that earned an NCAA final four tournament
"I've known Coach Owens through Danny for quite a while," Knight said. "That had to let to do with my decision to join the University of Notre Dame Norwood was an instant friend."
At 8-6 225 pounds, played very few centers his own height in high school. But in a holiday tournament, matched against 9-6 Antone Carr who signed with Indiana State University, knight outscored him 18-4 and outscored him 16-8.
In KU's offensive scheme this season, Knight will probably be trained to play at the forward position rather than center.
"WHEN I PLAYED against Antoine that was the first time I played anybody my height or taller," Knight said. "But up here I'm playing people that big every time we play against bigger opponents. I don't think I have much of a problem."
See RECRUITS page seven
6
Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Future may hold new indoor facility for Kansas athletes
By BRIAN LEVINSON Sports Writer
A decade ago, basketball at KU was a dirty business
Played on an elevated court, 2% feet above a clay base, basketball games filled Allen Field House with both fans and dust.
"The base of the court and the surrounding track was solid clay," Floyd Temple, coach of the team, said. "The track had to be watered every morning and again at night if there was a basketball game. When you walked into any of the courts, you were also a film of dust cover the peaks."
But the days of two points and a cloud of are gone. The clay case for both the home court has been replaced. Even last year's Tartan basketball court has been covered with a net.
MORE EXPANSION is planned for the
next decade, Bob Marcum, athletic director and recently the main authiter of the league building, which could end the three-running sports that goes on daily in Allen.
During the winter months, the basketball, track and baseball teams are in the Field House.
"Right now Allen is the only indoor arena we have for our athletes to practice in," she said. She was rained out of practice after Oct. 15 when the basketball season starts we have even more games.
MARCUM SAID that money for the practice building would have to come from the school. But she discovered how much support there was for the project before it was seriously contested.
"Within three or four months we will know
Architectural drawings of the proposed building have been completed. Marcum said he would show those drawings to alumni for their reactions.
whether such a facility can be a reality," Marcum said. "The amount of money we need to raise is feasible, if we have the alumni support."
THE PROPOSED building will have a 60-yd Aerostrad infield with a six-knee track around it. There will also be an area for the volleyball practice, and nets that can be lowered from the ceiling for batting practice. There also will be space for the volleyball team to practice at one end of the field and another end of the space, which, Marcum said, is needed best.
According to Marcum, the building would be for varsity athletes only, with preference given to certain teams.
"FOOTBALL WOULD have top priority, "
Marcum said. "But there is enough space so that we won't have a problem with some teams not getting to use the facility."
With an indoor sports building, KU would become only the fourth big Eight school to have one. Nebraska and Missouri have such schools. Oklahoma will have one in the spring of 1980.
“Missouri has our the nicest indoor facilities,” Marcum said. “It has roll-away turf, which gives them a great deal of flexibility in using it.”
KU will have more flexibility with its recreation services by May 1860, Thomas Wilkerson, recreation services director, and the rest of the staff added to Robinson Gymnastium, another in a series of expansions since the first old Fraser Hall in 1852, the basement of old Fraser Hall in 1849.
"I'M VERY excited about the addition."
Wilkerson said. "It will give us the opportunity to offer many more services."
These future and present changes in KU athletic facilities follow other projects.
Included in the new addition are four gyms, 12 raucquetball courts, an eight-lane, 25-meter pool, a new weight room and a physiology exercise laboratory. It will also have an area for golf and archery, a conference room for judo and karate and new classrooms.
To make more room inside the Field, a building was constructed. Center was built in 1899. Parnow rented house various athletic offices and a dressing room and weight room, which were added to the building.
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Friday, October 26,1979
7
Swimmers of 1969 were best in Big 8
By DAVID BURNS Sports Writer
The men's swimming team has won the Big Eight title 10 of the last 12 years, but Dick Reamon's 1969 squad is conquered to be one of the top teams in KU history.
In the 1969 season, the Hawks went 10-8 in dual teams and the Big Eight 12-7. They had won NCAA national meet and, although they didn't place, they broke a number of records.
"We'd gone eight straight meets without a loss that year before we lost a close one to SMU, a power in the south," Reasonam said recently. "We also went 10 years without losing in the Big Eight, and we really helped our recruiting efforts."
"Every time we won, I felt I could recruit a hundred in every direction."
Reamon took over as coach in 1982 from Jay Markley, who later went to Oklahoma. At the time, the team lacked not only top-quality swimmers, but also a top-quality pool. Swimming took place in Waco Gym, where Wescoe Hall now stands.
"WHEN I TOOK over, all we had to with were two wets and an over-sized bucket. We couldn't even get four swimmers in the pool at the same time for the butterfly."
"I'd say swimming at KU really began when I was a kid," the Gym was in 1992, he said. "I was a great place to swim because it gaw our swimmers at least two-and-a-half feet to the pool."
Reamon is also responsible for developing a number of All-American and All-Big Eight swimmers and all-Alt American relay team to the NCAS.
"Success breeds success," Reamon said. "A lot of people called us a Midwest team." He added that it would be hard to lot to do with it, but mostly I'd give the credit to the mine. We worked much harder than our neighbors did.
NO FULL scholarships were available for swimmers while Reamon was coaching.
"At first we had to recruit mainly in
the state," he said. "But when we started winning, it made me feel I could comfortably go outside to Oklahoma to see the sun." Kempf and his brother Gary (women's swimming coach) out there in the park, and they were valuable additions.*
"Probably the one main reason we were a Midwest power was because we put in a hell of a lot of work. The sport would have been tough, but should stay active year-round." he said.
REAMON SAID that during his tenure swimmers in the West could be depended upon to beat any Midwest team.
"Swimming out there was more fun," Reasonan said. "I lost a lot of good swimmers because they didn't want to swim out here and we could offer them a swim lesson." Swimmers wewrmed did get came here because KU was a fine institution in those days.
"NOT TOO many swimmers back then came to KU just to swim. Those that did quickly became very dissatisfied colleague, and soon all the very glamorous sport to begin with. It mundane, boring. There's no real reward involved, so the only motivation was self-impulsion."
Reamon said the swim team had a different breed of athlete because swimming required total dedication to a painstaking sport.
"They liked the sport and were willing to pay the price for success," Reasonam said. "It was tough, they were doing the same thing ever over and again, day by day, but they would never have beaten the Big Eight title without the effort."
So far, every record but one set by the team has broken his record. The record that remains to be broken is the number of Jayhawks to compete in the NCAA
"We were good back then, but we weren't quite there yet," Reason said. We sent nine swimmers to the Naults, but didn't place any out of the 80 team there. Yet we did break five team records in the nine events we entered.
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with a much better point of view on the situation related to racial problems."
Timmons
"I came to the meeting apprehensive," he said, "but left with a great feeling about our kids and their approach to some very difficult problems they were going through.
Timmons said the meeting had been very revealing and had pointed out how little he understood about the time.
From page five
"I thought they were very, very fair and their approach was direct. That was really something really special, important to me and them."
"We became a lot more aware of where athletes were coming from and did a much better job because of it," he said.
As Timmons looks back, he says ne is pleased he didn't leave during those times of violence and social change.
"WE MADE SOME adjustments to thinking and approaches to some things. It
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helped us all. We became more understanding.
"It's still going on, all the things we're going through. In some ways, we're closer, but we've got a long way to go to get rid of policies unfair to athletes."
"I like the forward a lot better than center,"钉勋 said. "What I feel I have over other forwards is that I can shoot the ball. I like to go outside with it."
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Knight said the switch could be advantageous.
OWENS, WHO BEGINS his 16th season as head coach, said even though there is an adjustment from college to college basketball, that he agreed with the 1972 NCAA ruling, and that he wasn't reluctant to play freshmen if they canable.
From nave five
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"I try not to put a freshman in until I feel there is a reasonable chance they can be successful. If a freshman hits a lot in early days, that can stay with him for the balance of his career. He knows of lot of students who are a highly recruited athlete and they're anxious to see him play. They wonder why the doctor doesn't stick him in right away."
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8
Friday, October 26.1979
Universitv Dailv Kansan
Orange Bowl's 12th man recalls '69 loss
By GENE MYERS
Sports Writer
Rick Abernethy had every right to laugh
Rick Ackernby had every right to laugh. Undefeated and No. 1 ranked Penn State thought it was a small step from the national championship. Alabama had just shaken a few years ago, and then second-ranked Crimson. Tide's 147-197 sugar Bowl lead was in line.
It should have been a first and national championship for Penn State. But it wasn't. He got the job after the crime. Penn State had too many men on the field. Their sentence: Alabama first down
Rick Abernethy couldn't control himself as visions of Jan. 1, 1983, raced by. Exactly 10 years before the Penn State penalty, Rick Abernethy lost to UCLA 15-14. Orange Bowl loss to Penn State.
His presence gave the Nittany Lions a second chance at a two-point-conversion. And with 15 seconds left in the game, the Nittany Lions scored the left side for the points and the victory.
"Penn State's 12th man in 1979 wasn't as偶然ly successful," Abernethy said. Her team played just a few games and play scaled their doom. When Penn State finally got the ball back it was late for the game. "They lost."
"I thought it was funny. I have a lot of "I respect for their coach, Joe Paterno, and in one way for him to win the national title," he said with a nice voice. In another, it was my sweet revenge."
Abernethy, now the strength coach for the NFL, Kansas City Chiefs, won't laugh just because of the gridiron he. Counts against him are not many at him as several coaching clinics in the mid-
'70s. Their first post-Orange Bowl meeting came in 1972, a few days before Abernethy's marriage.
"My father had met Penn State's defensive coordinator and told him I was getting married," he said. "Ward must have gotten around because I got this telegraph from my coach, who happily for you as you made Jan. 1, 1968 Sincerely yours, Joe Paterno."
"I really appreciated that and thought it was funny. We've met several times since and have had good laughs about the past, like the Sugar Bowl. I can laugh a little more."
KU had the '89 Orange Bowl all but clinched when Penn State partially deflected Bill Bell's punt. With 1:16 left, the Penn State yards to midfield where the Lions took over.
KANSAS
To prevent the long bomb, head coach Pepper Rodgers sent in the prevent defense, which included Abernethy as a fourth linebacker. But on the very next play Rodgers had to be matched and captured with Campbell on a 6-yard pass to his defender Bukky Hunt lost in the lights.
1
With the ball now on the 3, the successful prevent team was ordered off the field. But Abernethy, oblivious to the sub-fault, annotated. He recalled the final frigate minute:
"After the long pass, the goal line defense came in, but we had never practiced going from the prevent to a goal line. You figure going to all the 80-yard bomb off your prevent."
"I didn't actually see if we had sent anyone in and no one tapped me or called my name, the way we're supposed to on substitutions.
Photo courtesy of KU Sports Information
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Penn State called a timeout after the touchdown, which made the score 14-13. They decided to try for a two-point conversion and a victory.
pushed out-of-bounds, but the officials called it a touchdown. To this day, there's still doubt whether he scored."
"Burkart rolled right look to tight end Ted Walkich, and I was in front diving for the ball and we broke it up," Aberneth recounted.
"Penn State went with a quick huddle and sent their 'backfill Tom Cherry' up the wall. You might remember it as clear as night and day. They up the middle with the backfill again from the bottom."
"On the third play, the quarterback bobbed the ball for a split second and it looked like an off-tackle play. I stepped up in front of him to see where the ball was and sprinted to the left corner. I saw him set
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"Then I saw the flag. Emery Hicks and I were the first to reach the official, and I didn't have any idea what was wrong.
"All the ref said was 'too many on the necte for Kansas.' That all he had to say. It hit me. I wasn't supposed to be on the goal line. It was supposed to be that walking was off the field digged."
Today Abernethy, who said he had never seen the game film, takes a more philosophical outlook of the accident.
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"I was the 12th man for four plays so the officers blew it, too," he said with a chuckle. "One of the officials just happened to count during the timeout. But really it is not fault. It wasn't a coaching error, a defensive injury or my fault. It just happened."
"I know nobody called my name or tapped me, but I always said that I would have rather been the 12th man on the field and been the 18th man on the bench and lost."
As the famous 12th man, Abernethy is assured a place in KU's athletic history. But the rest of his football career was anything but noteworthy.
Recruited in 1994 out of Kansas City, Mo. former head coach Jack Mitchell, he was named a first-year back during his sophomore year, injuries off the offensive backfield so he was not available.
Hou
"The only reason I was switched was injuries and my quick feet," he said. Salma Shanklin, a sophomore who two years later would be the Orange Bowl MVP with a 46-pound punt return, swiped his position. Back up was Jordan Davis, who saw spal dot duty because of a torn shoulder.
Under new head coach Rodgers, he was the starting monster man in spring ball only to rejuvenate his shoulder, forcing him to sit down and be careful not to injure only to find himself all but forrested.
"That spring I was on the sixth team," he said. "I was so low that the Xerox machine hardly printed my name, it was so close to the bottom of the page.
"Through another calamity of injuries and other events, I was moved to inside linebacker because we were down to three linebackers.
"I never had any illusions about my
ability, though. You know you're in trouble
when you're 5-10, 192 pounds on game day and you're to break five seconds in the 40-yard dash. But I was on the special teams team to prevent defenses all the way to Miami."
After earning the 12th man label, Abernethy set out to use his journalism degree. A year later, he was back at KU seeking an education degree.
"I started coaching in Kansas City after that degree and I fell into the trap," he said. "I needed a coach, but it was unquenchable. But I was coaching for myself. I wanted to win so that I could pat him on the back."
"I had to learn there was no time for that personal basis. There are so many players and so few coaches. And the name of the game is winning, not the old rah, rah, rah. The kids in it all a part of growing up. I made up my life on only way to change it was to get back in."
"By that time my disillusionment with sports at the major college level was gone," he said. "It started to get to me with all my injuries—shoulder, foot, rib, shoulder again—my junior jacket. There was no time for humanistic quality on the college or pro-level.
He went back to KU again, this time in guidance and counseling.
Abernethy jumped from Southwest to Center to Ruskin high schools in Kansas City, Mo., trying to spread his "6-3-0" game. He took his job with the Clubs of March. He built his job with the Clubs of March.
But wherever he goes, his 12th man tag follows.
"I've never worried what the $0,000 Orange Bowlwors or the KU fans or the LSU fans are about," Ms. O'Brien says. "The people that mattered most were my teammates and coaches and letting them know how important they are to the oldest man on the team, the only fifth-year senior, and then to make a mistake."
Yet Aberneth is hardly a martyr. Despite the cruelties football has slapped on him, he is optimistic about the future and wants a place in the game.
"I'm more of a people's coach now and I like to hear him, he said, 'I'm going with kids with kicks, but the coaching are only 2.48 and I'm only 34.' That's all right for now, but returning to the high schools is still important," she said.
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Friday. October 26.1979
University Daily Kansan
9
Living groups shunned
By DIANE SWANSON
Staff Reporter
One night in 1970, Jeffrey Goudea a 1972 KU graduate, listened to a news report of the United States bombing Cambodia in an escalation of the Vietnam War.
She went downstairs to breakfast the next morning to discuss the latest event of the war with her sorority sisters.
"They weren't even aware it had happened," Goudie recalls today. "I realized the security I lived in limited my personal resources, and from the values the sorsory represented."
She decided to move out of the sorority house and into an apartment.
Gudie's decision to leave the organized atmosphere of the sorority house in favor of a more private environment through apartments living was typical of the attitude toward organized on-campus housing in the late 60s and early 70s, Friend's residence of residential programs, said recently.
A SEARCH FOR independence seemed the primary motivation behind the students' desire to shuun housing groups, McEhlene said.
But today, that attitude has changed, as more and more students seek openings in residence and scholarship halls and fraternities and sororities, he said.
In February 1969, one out of every five residence hall rooms was empty. Today, in residence hall rooms are occupied. In 1970, nine units were approximately 89 percent full, but by 1972 they were only 80 percent full. To obtain statistics from the office of housing
In 1989, a 450 of a total 728 spaces in eight residence halls were filled. In 1973, this figure fell to 3,173. Today, the figure has risen to 4,674.
ALL 400 living spaces in the space
scholarship halls were filled in 1989. This figure rose to 433 in 1973 and is now down to 400 again.
Sororites housed 652 members in 1964, but in 1999 they housed 654. Today they hold 838 women. Fraternities housed 1,436 men in 1976, only 1,287 in 1974 and 1,439.
McElhenie said he thought the breaking away from organized living units was one immediate way in which students could learn to live independently and institutions established long ago.
"There was a new sense of privatism in the late '60s," he said. "Students' rights were stressed on, and there was this prevailing belief that you could trust I own over 30."
McElienw was an associate in the dean of men's office in 1969.
ALTHOUGH MOVING out of a residence hall or fraternity house may not have been as significant as the burning of the Military Academy, but it was the Vietnam War or the staging of siblings at Strong Hall in rejection of authority, fear and dissatisfaction with the way things were.
Cindy Murray, a KU student in the late
cobs and early '70s, lived in a residence hall
at the University of Missouri in
1968. She said she thought she had more
"traditional attitudes than many students
"I wanted a homier atmosphere and a sorority was more conducive to studying," she said. "I also had more in common with them. I am still friends with many of them."
Another sorority member of the late 1985' Lydia Balet, a Tannahille adviser, said she enjoyed sorority life because it allowed her to be in group while still maintaining her individuality.
"IT DID NOT make me feel conformed," she said.
Jim Bloom, 1978 Interfraternity Council president, he thought many of the time accused fraternities of conforming too much to the establishment.
"Fraaternies were just so traditional." Bloom said. "Men had back slack shoes and women had knee socks, for example. The men began to question why they couldn't wear paid dress slacks and shoes."
Many students who enjoyed on-campus living consider themselves unconferenced in conferred to an idea they themselves were accused of being. D Anderson, dean of student services, said, "They are just students."
"They all wore blue jeans and had long hair," he said. "They conferred with their peers rather than with the older established society."
BY THE MID 1970s, KU students and students nationwide began to recover from the turbulent, often radical, days of student unrest and revolt. Statistics showed more students returning to organized housing campus. That trend continues today.
Bob Schuster, a Kappa Sigma fraternity member, said, "There is always someone to do something with."
Celeste Migliazzo, an Alpha Chi Omega member, said "There are always people who care about you."
she enjoyed the residence halls because they taught her to cooperate with different types of people.
And Cathleen Shull, who has lived in three residence halls in the past three years, said
But to attract this new wave of students, organized living groups on campus had to make several changes, some of which were demanded adamantly by the student. The new Student Senate, for example, lobbied for all the residence and scholarship halls.
IN ADDITION, new programs were launched to aid individual development, and staff training on appropriate housing government. The University Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct was passed. As inflation rose, it became more economical to live on campus.
Today, residence halls have more students than they can properly house at the beginning of each semester. Scholarship halls receive more applicants from inbound students than they can make room for in the halls. Fraternities and sororites are filled to capacity.
McElhene attributs the change to 'students who are more career- and goal-oriented than others, who can mosphere with others who have similar interests so that they can draw upon them' (12).
education for "a mess of pottage" called student rights. And there were students who their minds on their driving and their ability to pay for the term risks to jeopardize their long-term goals.
PRECISELY BECAUSE the left of 1969 had a complement of right and center, the year was one of challenge. Of decision. Of effort. Of importance, and that's why we wartake it.
If any single image of 1969 persists, it is that of confrontation. When my classmates today ask about that year, it's the conflict they ask about.
I think it's important to remember that large-scale confrontation wasn't the rule when we were there. We burnt Union burning and the student body voting to cancel the semester, it looked as if things were going to come to a halt.
Those confrontations were frightening. They were the heart of the news, and they are what today's 39-year-old know about.
BUT MOST confrontations were the small, private, daily ones, and they left a lasting legacy. It was almost impossible without being confronted by a leaflet, a literature tale in one's path, the chance to embarrass or harass a speaker, a rally or a march.
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Those confrontations brought choices. They brought soul-searching, if only to entertain a possibility and then reject it.
In October of 1979, however, it is all too easy to avoid confrontation—and hence, decisions—and hence, soul-searching. They are active people on this campus. But they are slimming down, like a prize more mushroom secretly growing beneath a pile of leaves and moss.
KU 198 INN had a vibrant atmosphere. He was a great teacher of mathematics, but they also engaged in discourse, and that had a direct bearing on what was going on outside the campus walls. That was an important part of his life.
Explanations for the change are fairly simple. We looked outward in 1989 because we were afraid. The draft was an immediate threat to our future. In contrast, the complex ties that bind, to most women
It united people who might otherwise have had little cause to join hands.
When the draft and the war faded, so did the visibility of many activists.
There are issues of equal magnitude today, nuclear power among them, but they are also of great importance or close to home. No one is using the compulsive attention as they might have 10 years ago. And when it does emerge, 1979 would be a great day for predictable nature. It lacks spontaneity.
Then, if a student wants a metamorphosis as part of his KU experience, there'll be plenty of raw material for spinning the cocoon.
I am not making a case for constant insult and tumul. I am making a case for my opponent's case in the movements of the 1880s may be. It's a case for enough confrontation to join us back
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Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
U
THE KANSAS UNION
THE KANSAS UNION
The Times Have Changed And WE Have Too!
Homecoming 1979
KANSAS UNION
The Kansas Memorial Union first opened its doors in 1927 to serve a student and faculty population of about 4,000. As the University grew we did too.
Today there are two locations, The Main Union and the new Satellite Union, providing service for students, faculty and alumni.
So whatever your plans include whether dining, studying, seeing a movie, hearing a speaker buying or browsing in one of the bookstores, be sure to include the Kansas Union.
We're here to serve you!
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 45
10 cents off campus
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KU professor sculpts Moses
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Friday, October 26, 1979
See stery page 11
PARKING FOR STUDENTS
BILL FRAKES/Kansan stat
Fair-weather friends
Dismal weather early in the week forced many students inside, but the return of pleasant fall temperatures brought people back out onto campus walkways. Enjoying the autumn
at are Tamarelle Dellert, Eldorado junior; Andy Physele, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Jim Pinnitzro, Dervell, III school; Giann Gallo Scott, Fairbanks, Alaska, sister; Kathy Webb
Escort service opening delayed
By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
The date for the introduction of a proposed campus escrort service has been extended to allow time to find more volunteers, Sally Duncan said. She steeredering committee said last night.
The service, which would provide excuses for students who walk home after dark, had been scheduled to begin operation Oct. 29. Committee has not set another starting date.
But members of the steering committee say they are rapidly overcoming the obstacles delaying introduction of the service on campus.
The committee has obtained bases of operation at Corbin and Marvin hills, Dan
Schenkein, committee member, said The group also has been offered space at Hashinger Hall.
Schenkan said that although the com-
munity has been offered applications from students who wanted to act as volunteer escorts, about 100 more volunteers would be necessary for the community to accept.
THE GROUP IS planning to canvass scholarship halls, residence halls and Greek living groups in search of additional volunteers.
Committee member Todd Zwaal said volunteers would be required to provide three local character references on appraisals and to attend screening interviews.
Schenkein said volunteers would be given cards with the Campus Safety Services Logo and the volunteer's name on them.
"When volunteers go to a building to escort someone," Schenken said, "they will introduce themselves and present the cards for identification."
The escort service, which would operate between the hours of 6 p.m. and 8 a.m. every day, would serve only the KU campus and camping living groups at first. It would expand its services later if it proved successful, members of the committee have said.
TURNER SAID the group had yet to resolve the problem of funding for the service.
"But we don't think it will be any problem once we get organized," she said.
She said the Campus Safety Services group to get recognition as a student group from organizations and activities. Recognition would make the group eligible for Student Recognition.
A committee for education and male awareness of rape has also been set up under the umbrella of Campus Safety Services.
Jo Lee Clusey, a member of the education committee, said the committee was planning educational programs for campus living groups and neighborhood groups, such as the Oread Neighborhood group. The programs probably would begin next semester.
Park purchase a long process
By TONI WOOD
Staff Reporter
If Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan, pushes his proposed Tallgrass Prairie National Park bill through Congress, it could be decades long. A government could buy the proposed 374,000 acres.
County extension agents in Waukee, Butler, Cowley, Lyon, Chase and Chanqua counties said yesterday that the grassland farmers were reluctant to sell their land.
Winn introduced a bill Oct. 15 that would establish a national park in Kansas
grassland areas, including parts of Chautauqua, Cowley, Wauasee, Chase, Butler, Greenwood and Lyon counties.
"This is a very long-range plan. "Winn said yesterday in a phone interview. "It may take 100 years to buy that much land, but we are not trying to take on the whole state."
Winn has been working toward establishing a tallgrass park for about 10 years and has introduced several park services. He also co-founded the Secretary of Interior to buy grassland as
Immiment domain would allow the government to acquire the land by declaring it to be in the public's interest and paying the landowner a fair market price.
it came on the market, rather than acquiring it by imminent domain.
PAT MALYE, county extension agent in
Gilbert, said the couple come up for sale very often. Much of them was passed on from the family and has been owned by the same rancher for a long time.
He said the land was selling for a minimum of about $300 per acre.
Winn's bill would allow the Secretary of Interior to spend $10 million a year to buy grasslands.
Darrol Marlow, county extension agent in Wabasau County, said land there was sold for $50 to $1,000 per acre. The more acres were sold, the larger the saleage where crops can be grown, he said.
Mike Holder, county extension agent in Chase County, said, "Not near as much land is sold here as in other parts of the country or other parts of Kansas."
Floats, bands to lead off homecoming parade
See PRAIRIE page six
By BOB PITTMAN
Staff Reporters
The University of Kanaa's first host institution is scheduled today and will include 13 floats, two convertibles and a firetruck. Clair Klein, Student Union Activities president, said
Mrs. Arche D.R. Kylex, wife of the chancellor, and KU football Coach Don Farmar, president of the college convertible and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and his family will ride in the bus.
The KU football team, the Marching Jayhawks, the Spirit Squad and the Lawrence High School Marching Lions also will march in the parade.
The floats, which will represent the homecoming theme of "Kansas-The Real Wild West," will be displayed after the parade during the in-Xane event in Dallas by *deAfayis*.
The floats are the joint effort of KU's
See map back page
societies and fraternities, with one entry the combined work of James R. Pearson Hall and Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall
THE PARADE RULE will begin behind Carruth O'Leary follow Jaywhite Boulevard through campus, turn north on Mississippi Street and end at the X-one parking lot.
Starting about 2:40 p.m., West Campus Road south of University Drive will be temporarily blocked, as will Crest Road east of Naismith Drive and Jayhawk Boulevard from the Chi Omega fountain to the Sunflower Road and Jawhawk Drive.
Some streets near the parade route will be blocked off during the parade, said Capt. John Mullens, head of the KU Police Department.
AFTER THE PARADE, the floats will be displayed during a pep rally in the X-one parking lot, and winners will be named. Appearances by Chancellor Dykes, Fam-
brough, and the football team are expected.
Floats will be judged by an eight-member panel from the University faculty, the city government and the school faculty, judged in two categories. Floats with three-dimensional moving parts and floats with two-dimensional moving parts will not be judged.
The first and second place floats will be displayed during pre-game festivities of the KU-Oklahoma State football game, and the two division winners will be shown at
ALL OF THE FLOATS will remain at the X-zone灯 until late time. Drivers can either enter the lot and drive through a gate, or just walk to the cara and see the floats on the Mall. said Ms.
A17 It tonight, television personality David Frost will give a free public lecture in Hoch Auditorium titled "Interviews I'll Never Foreet."
A homecoming party and dance will begin at 9 inight on the Satellite Union with music from Paul Gray's Gaslift Gang, Claude 'Fiddler' Williams and Ra Erheart.
VARIOUS SCHOOLS and departments will have receptions on campus tomorrow and will host a reception at the Canyon Room of the Kansas Union University KU Business School alumna can attend a post-game reception in the Haskell Room of
The School of Journalism alumni reception will be held from 10 to 11:30 a.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. An open house in Greenfield is on Monday, April 26, to 10 a.m.
Fred Ellsworth Medallions will be presented during an 11:15 a.m. All-University luncheon in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
KU ALUMNI BAND members will participate in a golf game this afternoon and a pre-game party and pre-game show tomorrow.
An SUA-sponsored concert planned for 8 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium has been cancelled.
Formula funding draws criticism
By JEFF SJERVEN Staff Renorter
One provision in the current Regents formula funding proposal that worries some KU faculty members is good enrollment quotas in University schools, T.P. Srivaman, associate chair president of the麻省理工学院,Associate Chair of University Professors,said yesterday.
"I don't think formula fundings lacks the training he said. We should emphasize the positive aspects of happening is that the value of the principles behind the proposal seem to get lost in the process."
Srinivasan said some faculty members thought one weakness in the proposal was the statistical breakdown of education costs in different schools.
Because funding under the new formula takes different education costs into consideration, the University will receive more than 70% of the students enroll in high-cost fields, he said.
Two high-cost programs include those offered by the School of Fine Arts and the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
THE REGENTS FORMULA funding proposal was formulated by a special task team composed of representatives from Reigate and the University of Regents in August, the task force said funding requests would be directly tied to student credit hours and to comprehensive requirements.
Because of cost differences between schools, the report said, shifts in enrollment could have an effect on total funding.
"If an institution experiences an enrollment decrease that is spread proportionately across all disciplines and levels, the proposed approach will require a major rethink of the curriculum topromptly equal to that required by the previous system," the report reads.
'BUT, FOR EXAMPLE, if enrollment is low in-cost instructional areas and decreases in the same amount in high-cost instructional areas, the proposed
approach will require a reduction in resources."
Universities in New York have used a similar discipline compared with several years ago. Answl, assistant vice chancellor for finance and business at the State University of North Carolina, served as interim director.
However, Ralph Christoffersen, KU's vice chancellor for academic affairs, said there was no basis for concern.
"THAT HAS NEVER been talked about, nor is it a good form of education," he said. "The idea behind identifying fund needs by analyzing the needs of students exactly what it costs to educate students.
Srinivasan said that although the AAPP disagreed with some details of the funding proposal, it agreed with five main principles of formula funding:
"There is a danger of a qoqat system under the formula." Anwar said yesterday that the committee has corroded about that. The concern is valid to some extent in undergraduate programs at universities.
"Under current funding procedures, a shift in enrollment from liberal arts to the School of Fine Arts would increase costs, but allocations from the state would remain the same. This is because current funding is only on full-time equivalent enrollment."
- Appropriations for higher education should be based on past data, instead of enrollment predictions.
- FUNDING PROCEDURES should have a built-in lead time of a year or two so that employees who are to be released can be notified.
- Appropriations should be based not on headcount, but on program cost and quality of programs. For example, shift allocated funds between programs in the most efficient way with appropriate budgets.
- The appropriations procedure should ensure quality and efficient year-round use of resources and should not encourage competition among Regents institutions.
Staff Renorter
Rv ANN LANGENFELD
Schumm has been working with city officials and representatives of taverns in Lawrence since July to improve the city's ceral malt beverage licensing ordinance.
Beer drinkers won't be able to stand outside a tavern holding a can of beer if a proposed revision version is approved by the commissioner. Bochum said yesterday.
The revision proposed by Schumm will be considered at Tuesday's city commission meeting.
Revisions proposed in liquor ordinance
He said one of the major changes in the ordinance would be a section prohibiting people from standing outside taverns or parking in park lots with open beer containers.
He said the changes were made in
response to complaints about crowds gathering outside of taverns and about litter caused by the crowds.
Other complaints were received about tavern patrons throwing beers can at passing motorists and urinating in public.
HE SAID THAT the problems were particularly bad in the spring and summer, and that the ordinance was old and needed updating.
"There are many more taverns and private clubs in town since the ordinance was originally' he said, "With more bags there are more problems."
Under the old ordinance, police officers could do nothing about persons holding drinks outside a tavern when they actually were seen consuming the beer.
dinance should help free police See BEER page 12
Crown
Tony C
MIKE WILLIAMS/Kansan staff
Boxer Tony Chiaverini takes a turn behind the bar during his visit at the Harbour Lites tavern last night.
2
Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Research and Writing Symposium.
Nuclear explosion suspected
WASHINGTON—U.S. intelligence has evidence indicating that South Africa might have exploded a nuclear device in the atmosphere September 22, government officials said.
Intelligence officials said the indicators, picked up by a U.S. reconnaissance intelitee, were not conduitive enough to make a firm judgment and it was竹难 be made that they were.
However, the officials, who asked not to be named, said the prevailing opinion was that an explosion had occurred in the atmosphere.
U. S. officials are checking other sources of information, including various sources they have contacted U.S. allies in Western Europe to determine what their intelligence was about.
KC firefighters agree on hours
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Kansas City firefighters narrowly approved an agreement yesterday for a 48-hour work week as part of a new contract
Earlier this week, the city council accepted the agreement, which was reached Monday after seven months of negotiations.
The two sides still must negotiate other provisions of the new contract, including wages and grievance provisions.
John Kinnam, president of the 939-member Local 42 of the International Association of Firefighters, said firefighters were sharply divided over whether to approve the 48-hour work week. He described the vote as "very, very close." Germann did not release the exact vote totals.
Shah to stay for treatment
NEW YORK—The deposed sham of Iran's cancer is spreading rapidly, and the nurses said yesterday, and he should stay in the United States for treatment for two years.
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who marks his 60th birthday today, has cancer of the lymph glands, which has spread throughout his lymphatic system but does not spread to his brain.
Hibbard Williams, a physician, said the shah was making an excellent recovery after undergoing gallbladder surgery. The disease will be gone within 6 months.
Stephan appeals Amtrak order
TOPEKA-Kansas Attorney General Robert Wetland has asked U.S. Attorney Benjamin Browne to hold his order that failed Amtrak trains, saying that Amtrak had withheld employment in those trains.
A hearing on the tail case is set for today in the U.S. appeals court in Denver. Stephan, lead counsel for the plaintiffs that are bringing suit, is charging that the Department of Transportation violated two federal laws in eliminating the three Amtrak routes, one of which went through Kansas.
Tom Green, assistant Kansas attorney general, released copies yesterday of a motion for reconsideration that was mailed to White Tie.
Green contended that Amtrak knowingly failed to give White the findings of U.S. District Judge Frain Thetis that the plaintiffs—the states of Kansas and Minnesota and the city of Nashville, Tenn.—would suffer immediate and irreparable harm if rail service were discontinued.
Carter demands windfall tax
WASHINGTON—President Carter said yesterday he may pursue proposals to the oil industry if Congress fails to produce a satisfactory windfall profit to it.
Carter said the figures " vividly demonstrate the need for a major portion of earned profits from the oil companies to go into the general service industry."
Carter made the remarks to the National Citizens' Coalition for the Windfall Profits Tax.
The tax that Carter proposed last spring would be applied to the oil industry's premeved revenue, stemming from his decision to phase out crude-oil price increases.
The tax approved by the Senate committee would produce $142 billion from the taxpayer in 2019 in Carter's original proposal and $273 billion in the House-passed bill.
Emergency fuel aid bill passed
The House approved 290-105 yesteday a $1.35 billion emergency fuel assistance package people pay this winter's heating bill. The measure then was sent to the Senate.
From the Kansas delegation Repens. Dan Glickman, Democrat, and Robert Whitaker, Republican, voted for the bill while Repens. Jim Jeffries and Keith Sebelius, both Republicans, voted against it. Rep. Larry Winn, Republican, did not vote.
Byrd endorses SALT treaty
WASHINGTON—Calling on the Senate to "help make the world a more secure and safer place," Majority Leader Robert Byrd endorsed the SALT II
At a news conference, Byrd said, "I have concluded that SALT II is in our national interests. I believe that the treaty should be approved by the Senate, and that it should be implemented."
Hyrd, whose support is crucial to approval of the pact, said the Senate should adopt language providing guidance for a prospective SALT III treaty in advance. "We want to work with our states to meet this," Hyrd said.
Byrd's counterpart, Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker, played an important role in the ratification of the Panama Canal treaties, but said he was "overly concerned" by the issue.
Cincinnati professors strike
CINCINNATI - Professors at the University of Cincinnati went on strike for higher salaries yesterday, emptying many classrooms at downtown and suburban campuses and delaying midterm exams for some of the 38,000 students at Ohio's second largest school.
The American Association of University Professors, which represents the 2,000 professors and assistant professors at the university, called the strike "an unfortunate event."
U.S. to ask for nuclear dumps
Union leaders said they hoped as many as 900 professors would join the strike. University officials said the planned to keep the state-supported school open as usual.
WASHINGTON—With two of the country's low-level nuclear waste dumps closed, the government is planning to ask governors to provide temporary storage sites for radioactive waste produced in their own states, officials said yesterday.
That could mean establishment of temporary storage sites in at least a dozen states in which nearly 70 percent of the country's low-level nuclear waste is
The third site, in South Carolina, is still open, but officials said none of the locations can go to New Orleans or Washington could be there there. Low-level radios might be used.
Weather
Today will be sunny and warmer with a high near 77, according to the KU Wenther Service. Winds will be gusty and from the south at 10.20 mph
A very slight chance for a hundershow exists tonight, but skies tonight will be partly cloudy with a low near 48.
Tomorrow should be mostly sunny with a high near 71. Winds will shift to the northwest in the morning.
The extended outlook for Sunday calls for sunny skies and slightly warmer temperatures.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 26, 1978
3
Labor concessions to Chrysler may keep automaker in business
HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. (AP) — Chrysler Corp. and the United Auto Workers union reached tentative agreement on a new contract yesterday that will give the company $480 million in concessions over the past five years to keep the struggling 3 No. 1 automaker out.
The pact gives the union two-long-sought-for funds, and the governmentvestment policy for part of the pension fund, and the right to recommend investment sanctions against some firms it may have engaged in.
The $403 million consists of $203 million in
deferred wages and benefits and a previously announced $200 million in a one-year deferral of this year's payments to the pension fund.
Chrysler has asked for $73 million in loan funds from the bank. The union's concessions will be an important selling point for the company in arguing in Congress that the company is making money.
Union members will receive no paid days off other than vacation in the first year of the contract, compared with eight days for GM and Ford workers. In the second year,
they will get nine days and in the third year they will get 11 paid days off, which is two more than workers get at GM and Ford.
During the next two years, Chrysler will increase its percent of the increased schedules for GM and Ford retires, in the third year Chrysler workers will catch up to their peers.
Fraser said Chrysler workers would return to parity with their counterparts at General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. in the third year of the agreement.
The union already has reached agreements with Ford and GM.
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WANTED:SENIORS
The 1980 Hope Award final vote is Thursday, October 25 and Friday, October 26.
Booths are at the Union, Summerfield and Wescoe from 9:00 am to 3:30 pm.
Finalists are:
Allan Cigler, Political Science Frank Gurtler, Occupational Therapy Allen Ford, Business Administration William Balfour, Physiology and Cell Biology
Bezaleel Benjamin, Architecture and Architectural Engineering
HOPE AWARD 1980
GRADUATING ENGINEERS
Have you considered these factors in determining where you will work?
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5. Big start salaries are nice — but what is the salary growth and promotion potential in the job?
6. Can you afford the cost-of living in the area?
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Arrange through your placement office to interview with our representative[s]
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorslals
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan sediment. Stated columns represent the views of only the writers.
October 26,1979
'60s elusive, haunting
George Gallup told the American public in 1969 that 72 percent of the nation's 6.7 million college students had not participated in a demonstration. That meant nearly 1.9 million had.
It was a wild year on college campuses. Fortune magazine said 12.8 percent of those 6.7 million were "norally" or "radically dissident."
It was a troublesome year in a troublesome decade and it followed on the heels of the year in which seeming seemed to have gone wrong.
COLLEGE ADMINISTRATORS at San Francisco State, Harvard and dozens of other universities were forced to close down, leave their posts or just sit out the protests in cities like New York. We hope that the troubles would all end soon.
They didn't. College campuses didn't calm down for a couple of years, until the Union at this University had burned, until four students lay dead on the campus at Kent State University in Ohio, when students saw some hope for peace and progress in a world that seemed to move too slowly.
Compounding the problem was the surge in baby boom children entering the college ranks and an equal surge in the number of those who were
becoming part of the youth subculture and choosing alternative lifestyles.
IT WAS A confusing time, a time when youth seemed more in control of their lives than ever before, yet so unable to control the forces that were woven into their world, the time of both despair and a time of anxious hope for a better tomorrow.
Primarily, it was a period—just 19 years ago—that we don't understand very well. We don't understand because most of us have not been exposed to the realities of death, hatred and destruction that filled the lives of college students in 1969.
THE END OF the Vietnam War has left a legacy to the students of 1979. The anger of that war has been replaced by a restless fear of what the next war may bring. We try to convince ourselves that the fear is unfounded, that we have learned the lessons of those who came before us.
But the legacy remains. Indeed, whatever 1969 may have meant is perhaps an easier question than the one asked by face our successors 10 years from now.
One observation seems likely, however. That that is students of 1979 were primarily a complacent and secure group, who fell lucky that they achieved the time when that goal was not overshadowed by the problems of the day.
Lights dim, music slows as disco fades away
Discomania Discofever Discoflon
The rhythmic, pulating beat of disco, a music phenomenon that has been hanging around entirely too long, appears to have been released in the last few months. Street Journal report, the disco craze is dying out in all areas of the country and in most of the business of area that it has operated.
The entire disco scene appears to be plummeting from the top of the charts and from the top of the fashion scene like some polyester, flashing Skylab gone
THE REASONS for such a decline are many. The disco industry that has been created primarily over the past seven or eight decades of its history, industry. It has been as superficial as the lifesite it perpetuates. Although people of all ages can be involved in an attempt to step into the disco scene, they have not, for the most part, stayed long enough to give the lifestyle any shape.
The transient nature of disco music is the most telling sign of disco demi-ence. While there has been a huge increase over the past few years producing disco records, the business of doing so has not changed much.
Many singers who turn out one big-selling
music show have a special place in the
music is too close to be repetited. The
disc dancers can spend a night on the
plastic, flashing floor and never know who is
in the audience.
AND WHILE he thinks he is enjoying the songs, the dancer is in no way eager to run out and buy the album. Therein lies the problem for record companies.
Recording companies rely on artists who can invariably produce an album that the public will buy. There have been few, if any, exceptions to this rule. Donna Sumner has had some success at selling albums. Other groups have had fewer successes, and they have been飞 by-bight nights that have put sexy lyrics with a throbbing beat to productions attempts to produce widely accepted music.
People just aren't buying their albums.
"We developed a lot of hit disc records," said Stephen Meyer, an executive with Capital Records, "but very few disco hit artists with stairing power."
SUCH A MALI is not the only one facing the disco music industry. People have spent so much to accentuate their discography that they have not had the money to spend
david COLUMNIST preston
on disc records. Disc clothes, disc dates,
memberships to disc clubs and so on have
been a hallmark of the music consumer.
He will go out to his favorite club
and listen to the music and dance rather
than to the record store.
Disco is, of course, a group activity. The music is lacking in no many respects that it doesn't make sense to sit at home and listen to it on the stereo.
The record business executives who have watched the growth of disco create a new generation of disc jockeys, who watched it blow up in their faces. They have since stopped making money on them, and they are leaving.
DAVID LIEBERMAN, chairman of Lieberman Enterprises, one of the country's largest mass merchandising record companies, has set new records, even at discus's peak, to make up for its drain on disposable spending. Dice becomes a great sponge that soaked up everything.
The fad is, mercifully, going away. Radio Rations that changed to an all-disco format have been abandoned and unable to maintain a steady market. Attendance at disco clubs has dropped and attendance at club parties has varied in variety of music, incorporating rock and rhythm-and-blues sets into their eighty-seventh.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Even the hit disco records are losing some tracks, and the discos' record lists has dropped from 20 percent to a percent over the past three months. Ever summer has included rock songs on her list.
SO DISCO is going into a long-overdue swoop. All that the fad has given us as a superficial way to relieve sexual anxiety by publicly participating in dances as the "Sperm" and the "Dog." It has given us a sense of selfless clothes.
We may only guess what a new trend in music will bring us. Hopeably it will be something more sensible, something more legitimate.
But it is comforting to note that even though the question "Boobie ooie ooie, won't you get down?" is still being asked, country's response is now "No. thank you."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannon, First Hall, The University of Kannon, Lawrence, KS8049
Editor Mary Hoenk
US$50,000 (USD48,000) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and December and Thursday and Sunday. Please call 212-696-3200 for details. Mail or email resume to US$50,000 (USD48,000). Resumes should be mailed by mail or are receipt on or next to a monthly or $75 per month in Deducted County and/or $50 per month in Not Deducted County for the dates specified. For additional information, visit us@usks.edu.
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Managing Editor
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General Manage Rick Musser
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While soaking up beer and sunshine in front of a local tavern some days ago, a friend, who is a campus minister, men's club member, told me before the Kwaiis Chath that night.
Students of 1960s. today are unique
The Kiwanis Club had asked him to talk about college students today—their ideas and goals.
He hadn't decided what to tell them yet, so he asked me.
The sunshine and beer had loosed my tongue. I libly said, "Tell them we'd like to think that we are unique, but really we're not."
It will be a popular question, given the events of ten years ago and given our current view of the anniversary of the burning of the Kansas Union approaches. On April 20, 1860, the event was attended by over 100,000.
lynn COLUMNIST byczynski
**GOT THE laugh I was fishing for, and the conversation moved on to other things. One question stuck in my mind. Why did the Kivanna Club want to know about to
which was the high point of unrest, anti-war activism and anti-establishment feeling in Kansas.
The pages of this paper contain our staff's attempts to handle history. It's ironic that the writers—and a good number of Kansan readers—were bafles of seven, eight nine and eleven.
MANY OF YOU may think that such dissection is wasted effort. Why should we do it? We should avoid violence on campus? Why should we study the immediate past? It can hardly be called a lesson.
We study. I suppose, for many reasons,
we are curious, bored and uncertain.
Perhaps the events of the past hold us
impatiently, unremittingly, and unending,
never-progressing, fights against
inflation, recession, poor leadership and energy shortages.
Or maybe we think an answer lies in the past. People are always saying history repeats itself.
We do scrurtize the 1960s, looking for failures so we can point them out and say, 'See, we are not so radical because we don't want to fail?' or are we just lazy, selfish and insuree, planning for our futures, or old ladies who are afraid to take risks?
Maybe people are looking to the 1960s activism in the hope that the same protest-by-disruption tactics will work in the fight against nuclear power.
PERHAPS ALL this speculation is pure bunk. We study the 1960s' turbulence because we are uncertain about unrest now.
The answer most likely depends on one's age.
I wonder how we students can be so different from our elders of 40 years ago. I remember when I was a freshman that I have only felt once in my five years of school, and in Rahim's speech a year we disrupted by him.
In many ways, we are probably more of an anomaly than were those who preceded us. At least our surface complicity must be acknowledged by the army of problems staring in the face.
ECONOMICS IS a popular explanation for
So does everybody else. The students of the late 1980s thought they were like no other group that ever was or ever would be. And they were. So are we, in a different way.
It could be that the biggest difference is that our risks are more private, our tests of strength more personal. We'd like to think we are unique.
the difference between then and now, but
that only dissolves part of the mystery.
There really can be a valid comparison. The turbulence of that society has evolved into a fitfulness that is no longer to deal with. It makes worse a crime than is a nuclear reactor.
So, Kiwanis Club, what was it you wanted to know?
EDUCATED
WAIT
WANTAS
MARIO 1979
The Daily Kansan
Harvard success stories never vary
N. Y. Times Special Feature
Bv JOSEPH F. DIMENTO
ARN ARBOR, Mich.—I recently received in the mail, first class, special delivery, a copy of the "Tenth Anniversary Report" of the Harvard and Radcliffe Class of 1948, written by me, not know, for the information in the document was not news.
I read the large red volume, 310 pages of graphs and biographical descriptions of some of the more self-important people on the planet, with some eagerness. But that emotion quickly waned. At first I couldn't explain why I wasn't excited or uplifted by the countless success stories they presented. After all, my roommates were all reportedly doing very well, and people whom I knew casually but whose creativity and ideas I had respected appeared to be propping.
TRUE, SEVEN Harvard men had passed away in 19 years since we all walked out of Harvard Yard together, and that seems terribly unfair. But that did not explain all my feelings. What affected me most was the similarity of the report to so many other red books that the president and vice president of Harvard College have copyrighted over the years.
The occupation by my classmates of University Hall in the spring of 1969, concern then with Harvard's relationship
introduction to grass and grass-roots movements such as the Students for a Democratic Society and experiments in agriculture, which would have been given to those not naive enough to believe in the 'greading' of books who left the established Eastern universities 10 years ago might be a bit different. They would pursue careers a bit unconventional; they would create a few new social institutions and give them training from those that their people had taken for so many years.
CLEARLY THE statistics in the Harvard Report do not totally describe this group of men and women but, they do provide a general overview of the graduates, which read like competitive curricula vitae, not leave no much room for greening time - spent on work or study.
These people are busy "serving on subcommittees of the police department," and "working with some of the top people in the field," "establishing private practice in the area," "building management consult firms" and "appearing on local television."
Sixity-one percent of the responding members of the class are doctors, bankers or lawyers; 98 percent left college to work in industry.
and 61 percent of these are fathers—only 2 percent divorced; 41 percent live in the major urban centers on the East and West Coasts. The teachers and librarians appear to be looking for new careers (more lawyers?).
THE SECRETARY OF the class of 1980, in his introduction to the report, summarized matter-of-factly: "Our biographies of five years ago stressed alternative lifestyles in alternative places. This report seems to show new occupations and interests which are far closer to the main themes of jobs we had previously and often strenuously rejected."
My former roommates are a good sample: two doctors, three lawyers, two bankers, a psychologist, an investment consultant.
The results must be read as good news to most of the graduates and to many who hire them. They suggest a stability in American institutions and a continuity in our society.
The report made me a bit sad. I disappointed, I guess. Perhaps my wife's observation at a recent alumni gathering was just too much for her. She looked around and insisted that one of the former class officers 'wearing his father's three-piece, pinned-tie dress' was wearing his father's three-piece, pinned-tie dress.'
Joseph F. D. DiMeio is visiting associate professor of urban and regional planning at the University of Michigan.
Sorority rejection disheartening
To the Editor:
It becomes a subject of great concern to when students attending the same university meet in style that they refuse to let others enter their way of life, no matter how deep the water.
I am referring to the dishartening article in the Kansan, Oct. 19, concerning the negative attitudes of those residents of KI residence halls who so strongly object to the housing of Almiron Omiren Pi security officer of the campares residence halls next year.
I can understand that some students not affiliated with Greek membership do not take classes offered at our university, those who are members of fraternities and sororites and I can appreciate their wishes to attend.
KANSAN letters
please. But when contracting to live in residence halls, it is not realistic to think that everyone occupying space in the halls are going to be ideal living associates.
ALONG THESE LINE, if a group of women belonging to the same sorority need to live temporarily in a campus residence hall, it see no reason for them to be rejected.
I realize it may be difficult for two living
How can促要问 the AOPi's, who are Greek openly and are now beeted by other campus groups. And what this says for KU student unity is not something to be
Julie Neal
Overland Park iunior
groups to share living quarters. But not only is it necessary, it also would be beneficial to student relations.
I hope that the opponents of the AOP's move into residence halls will reconsider the possibility of welcoming AOPi back to the KU campus and wish them the best of luck in their endeavor.
I AM relieved to know that, because of prior arrangements made by residence hall representatives, the AOPI pledges will be representative, and this will enhance it. It is just my hope that they will benefit of a healthy, happy and comfortable living atmosphere because of unpleasant conditions.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kanzen welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typwritten, double-spaced and include the student's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is afraid to include the writer's name, address and should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanzen reserves the right to edit letters delivered personally or mailed to the Kanzen newsroom, 112 Flint Hall. Because of space limitations, the right to edit letters for publication.
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. October 26.1979
5
Classics department carries on Socrates' tradition
Bv BEN JONES
By BEN JONES Staff Reporter
"The tempura, o mores," mooned Cipero, the great Roman orator, to his fellow senators Nov. 8, 43 B.C. His famous words "Oh the times and the ways these days."
more than 20 centuries later, Cisco's lamentations have been published in a department which is trying to preserve traditional educational values during a time when universities are changing.
"This is not Ouread Technical School and we will resist any effort to make
it so," said Oliver Phillips, chairman of the department of classics.
Phillips said KU and other universities had relegated education to the back burner, while they modeled themselves after large business firms, "such as General Motors."
He also said universities had patterned themselves after a high-pressure bureaucracy, such as the Department of Justice and Welfare, with tons of paper work."
ELEMENTARY LATIN 105, a course offered by the department, is taught "very much the same as Latin in the Middle Ages was taught," he said.
Elizabeth Banks, assistant professor of classes, said students came to college with less preparation in classics, so the departement did more to be remedial work than 20 years ago.
However, Banks said, there has been an recent uprise of interest in classical music, and the amount of classical might have been pressured into pursuing a more practical curriculum, she said, but now businesses are looking for students with a basic education in humanities.
PHILLIPS AGREED, saying that students majoring in classics did not have problems getting jobs.
"You don't have to be in a Salvation Army soup line if you've got a degree in classics," he said.
Phillips also said there was no longer a shortage of jobs in education.
"If you talk to people in education, you'll find that's just not so any longer," he said.
Many potential teachers are dissuaded from entering the field because of "too much blackboard jungle propaganda," he said.
Stanley Lomborde, an professor of classes, said that from one-third to one-half of classics majors did graduate work in the department after they received degrees and
the remainder entered law or business school.
Lombardo lared the study of ancient languages and ideas enabled students enriched professional fields to construct broad knowledge and deal successfully in everyday business.
REX JONES, 23, Ackleh sophomore, is planning to major in classes and said he hoped to get a job after graduation doing a clinical work for a "rich corporation."
were working toward job-placement programs, he was not concerned about getting a job.
Jones said that although other students
He said he would teach if he could not find an archaeology job.
James Ludwig, 21, Oakley senior, said he toadped to teach, although he said that if his goals changed he wouldn't be "thrown to the lions."
"Classical studies is one of the best prerequisites to any field," he said. "A classical education was, after all, the original idea of education."
1
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For spinal related conditions feel free to contact
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suede jackets exclusively from Mister Guy of Lawrence . . . . the jacket on the left is a lambsuede baseball jacket . . . shown with a tartan plaid button down shirt in 100% cotton . . . slacks are 100% wool serge by beefeater—the jacket on the right is lambsuede with hood and a 100% melton wool lining . . . shown with a pleated khaki pant and a tartan plaid western shirt . . .
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---
Fridav. October 26.1979
University Daily Kansan
Energy safety aim of KU study
By TED LICKTEIG Staff Reporter
High-temperature experiments being conducted in Malott Hall with materials used in generating electricity in nuclear and hydroelectric plants someday may improve the capacity of energy production, Charles Gilles, professor of chemistry, said yesterday.
"Someone might combine the results of our experiments with other research and develop safer means of producing energy," he said.
Gilles said he used material similar to
that used to contain fuel rods in nuclear plants and to house generators at both nuclear and hydroelectric plants.
He said his research also could apply to other forms of generating electricity, such as solar systems or oil-powered generators.
He said that he could produce temperatures of 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit using a spectrometer, a furnace-like machine equipped with gauges.
Gilles said that by observing the chemical make-up of the materials, mainly steel alloys, he could determine their strength and endurance under those conditions.
"There are problems in all energy conversion devices," he said. "We are observing simple chemical systems of the alloys. That may give insight to major difficulties."
He said the main difficulties were the release of sulfur dioxide in coal-powered plants, cracking of ceramics, containment of nuclear fuel cells, solar panels used in the production of solar energy and problems associated with magnets at hydroelectric plants.
--government more than 100 years to buy the land, he said, but the park service would not wait for the land to come onto the market place.
He explained that to test a material, he took a sample, heated it and then observed the chemical structure of the material and the vapors released from it.
"THE RANCH families have been grazing the land and making a living off of it for many generations."
TAKE THEM SOMEPLACE FUN FOR A CHANGE!
In Butler County, grassland is selling for about $400 an acre, according to Vigil Bibby, county agricultural agent. He said land usually had no reason to sell.
Perhaps the toughest opposition Winn will face concerning the bill will be from Rep. Robert Whitaker, R-Kan., a member of the House Interior Committee.
Gilles said he had received $25,000 this year from the Solar Research Institute, an agency of the Department of Energy, and a smaller amount from the University.
Gilles said the experiments were done with a retrieval program that computers and readout screen.
FOR A CHANGE!
Much of the land proposed for the park is in Whittaker's 5th Congressional District, and has said the land should be left in the ranchers' care.
Steve Lotterer, Whittaker's press secretary, said that during the past 10 years, 700,000 acres of land in Kansas had been returned to grazing.
From page one
IN THE PAST 50 years, about 3.1 million acres have been returned to grazing, he said.
Lotterer said that more than 80 percent of those polled in the 5th District showed "overwhelming opposition" to the proposed tallgrass park.
A "checkboard effect" would result, he said, meaning the government would buy patches of land and then acquire land in between through imminent domain.
NO RESERVED SEATING SO PLEASE COME EARLY!
---
Winn's bill states that the purpose of the park would be "to protect the tallgrass prairie ecosystem and natural prairie landscapes."
Prairie...
"If people fly over or drive along the main roads, they can see that the land has been turned over and cultivated." Winn sai.'
LIVE MUSIC IS BACK
HOWEVER, Bibly said, "I've been in this area for seven years and I've seen very little land being plowed under. Most of the crops that area is borderline for crop production."
Under Winn's bill, it would take the
AT BULLWINKLE'S
Maley agreed that most grassland was not suitable for growing crops.
WITH THE MOFFET-BEERS BAND
SHOW STARTS AT 10:00 p.m.
For example, land that was designated as park area would be protected from "intrusions" such as high-rises or manufactures that might be constructed in the future.
Maley said farmers and ranchers were protecting the grasslands now.
"Ranchers are experts in agriculture," he said. "Most of the landowners in this county are trained college graduates in aerospace."
"The native grassland areas are not conducive to moving because they are very shallow and rocks are within two to six inches" he said. "The only crop is native erase."
Much of Wim's bill was drafted by Larry Wagner, a lawyer from Kansas City, Kan. He said the purpose of the bill was to protect the land from 'long-range intrusions."
"The informed, the unknowing people who may be experts in their own areas but are not agronomists—they're the ones who think a park is essential."
Use Kansan Classifieds
All county agents contacted said most of the land was used for zrinze.
The Story of Crayons
"The land is in good hands now."
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WESTLAKE
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ELEPHANT
West Bond
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Quickly heats water for coffee,
soup, tea and other beverages and
foods. Heat for 2 to 6 cups. Perfect
for kitchen, office and dormitory use.
Reg 12.95 Sale 8.88
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Rival Can Opener with knife Sharpener with loaster Proof Container Dry Iron Reg. 18.95
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SALE 23.88
WESTLAKE ACE HARDWARE
Your Everything Hardware Store 711 W.23rd in the Malls Shopping Center
Hours Mon-Sat 8 am - 9 pm Sunday 10 am-4 pm
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 26, 1979
7
COORS asks the question:
WHAT IF...?
Great events in history are just a matter of inches.
-- Richard III, Henry III,
Affirmed in the II.
HAT IF...?
SACRÉE VACHE!
Coors
Banquet
BREWED WITH PURE
ROCKY MOUNTAIN SPRING WATER
Taste the
High Country
What if Napoleon had been 62"? Imagine how the course of history might have changed if that extra height had meant extra ability, more power to be victorious!
But luckily for beer lovers,it's not. It's Coors.And you can Taste the High Country. Vive le Coors!
The capital of the U.S. might be New Orleans. You might be flunking English instead of French. Eating frog's legs at a Burger Roi. And growing up to learn about English perfume, English postcards and English kisses.
What's that got to do with Coors Beer? Not much. But think about this—what if Coors Beer weren't brewed up in the high country? Then it wouldn't be the only beer brewed with pure Rocky Mountain spring water and special high country barley. It would be city beer like all the others.
SACRÉE VACHE!
Had Napoleon been a foot taller, his chest would have been 12 inches higher. Then his most famous pose might have undershot the mark and gone down in history as an obscene gesture.
Even if he had still lost at Waterloo, Wellington might have figured that Elba was too small for Napoleon, put him on Sicily and then, instead of the kiss of death, the Mafia might have been handing out French kisses.
SACRÉE VACHE!
Coors
Banque!
Taste the High Country.
Coors
Banquet
¢1979 ADOLPH COORS COMPANY, GOLDEN, COLO
---
8
Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Park Hill Plaza Studio
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"With rapid growth comes opportunity and that's just what I'm looking for. Not long ago Delco Electronics was a minor electronics supplier. Now we're bursting with new products continually expanding. We have over 11,000 people here in Kokomo alone
Robert J. Brockman Supervisor,
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Engineering
and over 21/2 million square feet of manu facturing space.
do the job will require thousands of engineers to perfect technologies not yet fully developed. At Delco Electronics we have an unparalleled opportunity for growth. . We have the know how to solve problems and the resources of General Motors to back up our operations with the technology and size to move mountains. Come to Kokomo and we'll prove it."
Microelectronic technology is the key to the future of the automotive industry. To
We will be on campus next week to meet Electrical Engineers, Chemical Engineers, Mechanical Engineers and Industrial Engineers.
Delco Electronics
COE GM
An Equal Opportunity Employer
The future is ... Delco Electronics
Delco Electronics -Division of General Motors:700 E. Firmin Street
Kokomo, Indiana 46901
Engineering Opportunities are also available in our Milwaukee,
Wisconsin and Santa Barbara, California Facilities
FacEx to discuss pay problem
By DAVE LEWIS Staff Reporter
The Faculty executive committee will discuss today a report that urges the state and University to change a state policy on deductions for faculty retirement funds.
According to a report released Monday by the Faculty Rights' Privileges Commission, checks held for check delays have resulted in 13 interest losses on the retirement funds of many tenureees.
The FRP recommended that the University and state "remedy" the state policy that requires the University to submit all of its retirement deductions to
the state before any of the payments can be credited to the appropriate funds.
The report said that the majority of faculty members were risking losses although only about 50 paychecks were late each month.
Each time a paycheck is late, the University must hold the rest of the deductions for the state division account and records does not receive the deductions before the 28th day of the month, a paycheck cannot be credited the appropriate fund.
Gaylord Richardson, chairman of the FRPR, said in the report. "However, cumulative losses occurring to employees are considerable over long time spans."
"The loss per faculty member per month is in the range of 50 cents to $5 depending upon salary and voluntary deductions."
Some retirement programs require the deductions by the first of the month, the report said, and participants in these programs lose interest regardless of whether the deductions arrive at the account of accounts and records by the 26th.
William Wachs, head of the state's accounting control and services section, said the problem centered on the University's hardiness in sending to the deduction list.
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Smash Racism Build Multi-Racial Unity!
11
164 154
John Brown's body lies a-mouldering in the grave, but WE go marching on...
Celebrate the 120th Anniversary of John Brown's Raid Against Slavery
RALLY AT NOON TOMORROW IN FRONT OF WATSON LIBRARY
1:30 p.m. March to Lawrence Opera House
5 p.m. Benquist
For more info, call (816) 921-5777 or 753-7436
BAYPORT RACING UMBRA CONPANY
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or in Lawrence 842-6344
Saturday, Oct. 27, 1979
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Friday, October 26, 1979
9
University Daily Kansan
Slimnastics class offers exercise, friendship to Lawrence women
By STEVEN KOPPES
Staff Reporter
From the noise, one might have thought that several hundred fans were stomping on the bleachers during a KU-KState basketball game.
But it wasn't *Allen Field House*-it was at the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
And there on the waxed, basketball ball floor were 80 women running one
Most of the women were in their 20s, but some were 65 and 70. They are all part of a women's exercise class called slim-fit aerobics at the Parks and Recreation Department.
"Exercising is very boring," said Katie Pole, program supervisor of the department's exercise center. "People don't people don't to exercise on their own. There's more incentive with a large number
THE CLASS HAS 78 week sections, one that meets from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. and another from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., another from 8:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday. For the secu
Contrary to what might be expected, most
of the women don't take the class to lose weight.
"It's not a diet thing," Fode said. "I don't have real heavy or obese women in the class. There are a lot of thin women who want to stay that way."
"It's good therapy." she said.
A baby sitter is available for the early class. Fode said, to give the housewives a chance to be away from their children for a while.
IN THE MORE crowded evening class the of slimmafts stretch from one end to another. Although there was no display of military discipline, most of the class responded to Foley's instructions.
Fode led her class through sit-
variations, leg-rises and jogging, among
other exercises to the electronic rock 'n'
vision of Boethoven's Fifth Symphony.
She said the class could be helpful even to pregnant women, who often attend. Some doctors have recommended physical activity for their pregnant patients.
IN THE 11 YEARS that Fode has led the class, it has steadily gained popularity.
About 140 women regularly are attending this fall's classes.
"A lot come session after session, year after year," she said. "I've got women that have been coming for 10 years."
Norma Baxter, 222 Providence Road, is one of those women.
"It's the only way I can force myself to do the exercise," said Baster. "Originally it was just for the exercises. We have coffee every day, we develop some really good friendships."
CALVIN KLEIN
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As more of the women began getting jobs—along with a recent national trend—some have changed to the evening class.
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ANNE MURELL DIANE CLARE JOHN CARSON
COLOUR BY DALAN
This fall's program is already half over, but a spring program will begin Jan. 12. Those interested should contact the Parks Department for enrollment information.
ZOMBiES
Make your reservations soon for your
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memberships available anontime for only $10
memberships available anytime for only $10
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Listen for Eldridge House News Daily on KLR2 at 11:35 the distinctive difference in good times
701 Massachusetts Street
Lawrence, Kansas 841-4666
You'll find your favorite fashions at Bostwicks 23rd & Iowa
I will not give you the answer if I do not know it.
TGIF
at
THE HAWK
October 26-27
Friday & Saturday,
HAROLD & MAUDE
sua films
Directed by Hal Ashley, with Burt Cotton and Ruth Gordon in a cull classic about a boy who's obsessed with death and an old woman who's full of guilt.
*3:30 & 9:30-Friday 7:00-Saturday
THE OMFN
Directed by Richard Donner, with Gregory Peck, Lee Remick and David Warner in a thriller about a boy who is actually the anti-Christ.
(1972)
MARTIN
(1979)
Directed by George A. Romero, about a man who is forced to extract blood by using a hypodermic. By the director who made NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD and DAWF OF THE MOVIE.
Monday, October 29
Truffaut:
BED AND BOARD
1071
Directed by Francis Truffaut, with Jean-Pierre Leaud. This film continues the adventures of Antoine and Isabel, who is now married. Francisuibelles.
Tuesday, October 30
Hitchcock Double Feature:
SABOTAGE (1936)
YOUNG AND INNOCENT
(1937)
sua films
Two Alfred Hitchcock thrillers for the price of one; these are from his movie *The Birds* and terrorist bomber in London, starring Sylvia Yildiz, YOUNG AND INNOCENT is about a murderer who can only be recognized by his witching spell.
wednesday October 31
THE THREE PENNY
OPERA
Directed by G.W. Papst. This curious musical piece mixes and cues in sex with the Solomon Brothers, which was based on the play by Bertel Brecht. Music by Kurt Wieler, Gerald Biernacki.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
Weekend shows also in Woodfort at 3:30, 7:00, 8:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise precluded in 1:50 admission. No Refreshments.
Paramount Pictures Presents HAROLD and MAUDE
RUTH GORDON
October 26 & 27
Presents
"IT IS A JOY!
"It IS A JOY! An enchanting excursion into the joy of living." - Judith Crist, New York Magazine
POLICE
They met at the funeral of a perfect stranger.
From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stranger.
GP. PERFORMANCE GROUP SOLUTIONS
It is necessary to sign up for the GP.
This form must be submitted by no later than
the next business day in accordance with the
regulations.
BUDCORT
—No refreshments allowed—
Co-starring Vickie Pearson, Cyril Cusack, Charles Tyneser, Ellen Geer
Produced by Colin Higgins and Charles B. Mulvillhine
Executive Producer Mildred Lewis, Written by Colin Higgins
Directed by Hilaria
With Sonas by Carl Stevens
**color** by Color Technique **A Perpetual Partner**
Saturdav - 7:00
Friday - 3:30 & 9:30
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WEDGEWOOD
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Jayhawker's YOU DO have a Homecoming Concert
KLZR 106 night: $1.06 admission. $1.06 Pitchers of Ice Cold
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Lawrence
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642 Mass St. Lawrence Ks. (913)842-6930
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Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
TV writer shares success story
Staff Reporter
By KATE POUND
Lean scripts and good dialogue are the marks of good television writing, E. Arthur Kean, television writer and director, told 30 authors' Wednesday night in Jolliffe Hall.
Kean, in the second of a six-litre workshop on film writing and directing, told his audience to practice its craft by writing frequently.
"The best thing I can say to you is to sit down and write and have some courage. If you want to do it, stick with it." Kean said.
The workshop, part of the department of the University of Richard Keton Memorial Seminar series, was served by the University Theatre and the Museum's exhibition - session and film. Director's Guild Award recipient Kean is a member, also provided funds for the workshop. The workshop, which lasts until December 2015.
THE KELTON Series series was created this year in honor of Richard Kelton, a RU graduate. Kelton, an actor, is the subject of the series "Centennial" in Colorado.
Kean, a former KU instructor of lighting design, has been writing and directing television shows for 16 years.
"I just left KU." Kean said. "I had $2,000 in the bank and I just had to get out and try to make it."
After two "wonderful" years of starvation in California, Kean said, he wrote a script
for the television series "Dirk. Kidsr."
From there, he has gone on to write for such shows as "Police Story," "Judgie for the Defense," and "Hawaii Five-O."
REAN RECENTLY finished the scripts for two episodes of the new television series, "Kate Loves a Mystery" and is on the screenplays on the two television movies.
Kean said he began to drive a few years ago when the company producing the series "Police Story," needed him to write a script.
"I refused to write unless they would let me direct," he said. "They needed the script badly, so I got to direct. Now I rarely write a script unless I get to direct it."
During the workshop Wednesday night, he showed a tape of one of his scripts. An actress dressed as a girl in a Christmas story about an elderly man who robbed banks by buy Christmas presents for her children.
Dressed as a Santa Claus, the character led the police officers on a confusing and merry chase, while providing food and necessities for the aged.
THE SHOW was fun to write, Kean said,
because its lovable hero poked gentle fun at
police officers while doing good deeds.
"The fun of it was creating a character who was impossible to arrest. He was just too lovable," Kean said.
Television writers should create characters that react in realistic, simple ways, Kean said. The over-dramatic should
"Have fun with people and characters. Make them real and they will tell your story." Kean said.
be avoided. Writers can also use humor to carry their messages, he said.
Writers must write to attract their audiences, Kean said. Television writers must use tense, intelligible scripts that have emotion and relevance.
'REMEMBER, THE audience wants to watch that tube. It wants to drink a beer or play with toys. You have to join them from the back. You have to keep them from turning the 'Kay.' Me said.
The message of the "POLICE Woman" episode, Kean said, was a serious one the plight of elderly people living on small, fixed homes. However, instead of presenting the message in a depressing, dull manner, Kean told the Santa Claus thief to make his statement
"What the show was saying is 'Don't put old people on the shelf. They're smarter than you are.' " he said.
Writers should begin with simple ideas, such as the Santa Claus, Kean said, and let the idea grow. Using human interest and humor is a good way to start a story, he said.
humer is a good way to start a story, he says. The workshop participants, Kean said, there is no way to actually teach someone to write the ability must come from within the writer.
"You never know how you do what you are doing when you write. The wonderful thing is that you do it and do it well." Kean said.
TED MAYER
Script scribe
E. Arthur Kean, television and motion picture writer and director, describes a television episode of "Police Man" that he
EARB KINNEY/Kansan staf
wrote and directed, Kean, a former KU instructor of lighting design, is in Lawrence for two weeks of workshops on "The
Spare Time
Museums
HELEN FORESMAN SPENCER
MUSEUMOF ART
Prints of Anders Zorn, through Nov. 18.
Second View: A Rephotographic Survey,
toward tomorward Dec. 9. Photograph as
Artifice, toward tomorward Dec. 9. Open
3:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through
Saturday. Museum MUNYMuseum
MUNYMUNYMUSEUM
WATKINS COMMUNITY MUSEUM
1047 Massachussetts St.
On the Banks of the Kaw, The History of Lawrence, Part IV, through Nov. 18.
Open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 1:30 to 4:00 a.m. Sunday.
Music
FACULTY RECITAL SERIES Swarthout Roofed Hall
Swarthout Recital Hall
Richard Angeletti, piano, 8 tonight. FALL CONCERT
University Theatre
University Singers, 8 p.m. Wednesday.
KU CONCERT SERIES
Carlos Montoya, guitar, 3:30 p.m.
Sunday.
LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE 642 Massachusetts St
MEMORIAL CAMPANILE
Joe Sun, tonight. Treat, tomorrow
Friday Pat's Blue Ridder Band and Four
Friday Hammond and Wednesday
Hammond and Pat's Blue Ridder Band,
Thursday night. Doors open at 8, music
Albert Gerken, University carillonneur, 3 p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Wednesday.
OFF-THE-WALL-HALL 737 New Hampshire St.
Diamond Jim, tonight and tomorrow night. The Fifth Annual Halloween Worm Burn, Tuesday night. The Hallowen
Jam, Wednesday night. Doors open at 8, music begins at 9.
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Massachusetts St
Claude "Fiddler" Williams and the Gaslite Gang, tomorow night. Doors open at 8, music begins at 9.
PENTIMENTO COFFEEHOUSE AND CAFE
611 Vermont St.
Elliot Golden, 8 tonight; J. Denny Moore and J.W. Lee Podzro, 10 tonight; Son Santos, midnight tonight; Brooks and Terry Cornell, 10 night; niel 10, p.m. tomorrow; John Andrews, midnight tomorrow. Mike Randle, 8 p.m. Sunday; Paul Reeneu, 10 p.m. Sunday
Paul Gray and the Gasile Gang with Claude "Fiddler" Williams and Ray Earhart, 9 p.m. tomorrow.
STUDENT RECITAL SERIES Swarthout Recital Hall
Fine Arts Honor Recital, 8 p.m. Monday.
Theatre
HASKELL INDIAN JUNIOR COLLEGE
THEATRE SERIES
Pontiue Theatre
"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," 8 tonight and tomorrow night, 2 p.m. Sunday.
INGE THEATRE SERIES
Murray Hall
"The Ink Smeared Lady-Scapin," 8 tonight through Sunday and Tuesday through Nov. 3.
JAPANESE THEATRE FESTIVAL Swarthout Recital Hall
Demonstration of Buyo dance by
Yuriko Kimura and "No" theatre by
Akira Matsui, 2:30 p.m. tomorrow.
STANLEY MURRAY
OFF THE WALL HALL PRESENTS
DIAMOND JIM
By RHONDA HOLMAN Entertainment Editor
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"The Ink-Smearled Lady," directed by Andrew T. Tsukubi, professor of theater, and Scapin, directed by Carolyn Haynes, presented by the IGIE Theatre 8, p.m. Oct. 25 through 28, Oct. 30, and Nov. 1. Presented in the William IGIE Theatre in Murray Hill.
Cast, script weaknesses mar theater productions
DIAMOND JIM This Friday and Saturday night nine till midnight "GOOD TIME ROCK AND ROLL" from Warrensburg, Missouri
KU's production of "The Ink-Smeared Lady" and "Seapin," two Japanese Kogen-style comedies, are delightfully original in concept. And both could be just as delightful in performance if not for the obvious reasons, because the casts and in "Seapin's" case of the script.
Both plays are staged on an elevated platform of beautiful blonde wood, designed by Grace and throughout both, the actors keep their arms posed at their sides and their legs splayed in a relaxed manner, appropriately stylized. But that is where the similarity of the plays in Kyogen-style
"The Ink-Smeared Lady," presented in an effectively simple translation from Tasukai, is an original Japanese comedy about a man whose voice is expressively well-played by John Swain, Oneta, N.Y., graduate student, and his friend, Hassel-Frederick, with less consistency by less Helfey. Benjamin
The mistress feigns her anugour to the impending loss of the lord, dabbing first water on her cheeks to take tears and then removing them, she humors humorously played by Kevin Cloepei.
But Rich and most of the cast seem uncomfortable in the Kyogen acting style, thereby defeating Haynes' purpose and the enjoyment of the audience.
JAMIE RICH, Kansas City, M. junior, is creditably commical as Scapin, the clever servant who overcomes two miserly fathers and helps to their sons love for two young women.
In general, "Scapin's" use of the exaggerated action and enunciation of the name of the character creates the intimacy of the Ingle Theatre. Line delivery is sometimes so crisp as to spray the audience with a splash of characterization of Sylvester by Tere Woolard Lake, Oklahoma city senior, also named Woolard.
Haynes' adaptation of Moulère's "Les Fourteries de Scapin" lacks consistency in the use of the French term, but it has applied it to the most numerous lines in her drastically cut translation of the French farce. But the rest of the time we are given a same kind of delivery with the same slow Koya process.
Shawnee sophomore, discovers her deception.
THE WIDE RANGE in facial expressions and vocal intonation by both Swain and Chipman, whose roles once the audience overcomes the initial confusion of whether to laugh at or with their slow, exaggerated character, has become more formalized. The fine styled crying, seems to be fighting the Eastern vocal style, taking away from the tone of a normal, otherwise excellent stance and costuming.
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Photographs reflect topography, illusion
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Staff Renorter
The shows differ in content but are similar in concept, Thomas Southall, curator of photobrhyb, said.
Two photography exhibitions, "Second Life," a photographic surrealist. "The Photographer Museum," open tomorrow in the Kress gallery of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
By AMY HOLLOWELL
The early photographs were taken by government survey photographers Othmarus Timothy Ovian and John K. Hilliers, of the post-Civil War American War.
"These original photographs were done not only for scientific documentation, but also as publicity projects for the landscape of the old West." Southwall
"They both raise the question of what physical structures really are," he said.
The rephotographic survey matches 19th-century landscape photographs with recent photographs of the same scenes.
The task of duplicating the original images required finding the exact variation in each image taken, determining the exact light—which means identical time of day and year—and implementing the same technique that the originalographers use.
THESE WORKS interested five grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and from the Polaroid Corp., began to photograph the vintage sites.
JACKSON KEPT a diary of his travels but the contemporary artists followed, too. They were included in it. The photographers in 1977 therefore had to determine the location of their photographs.
"There is only one vantage point of a picture." Southall said. "That's what is
exciting about this show, that makes it kind of eerie to see exact duplications 100 years later."
A 1971 photograph depicts two women standing at the same scene in different positions, each at a different point. The photographer, Bark Parker, created the picture by super-imposing the photographs.
Among the artists included in the show are Jackson and O'Sullivan, Ansel Adams, Robert Cummings, Felix Bonfils and several anonymous artists.
"This is a visual explanation of what erosion and time are." Southall said.
As in the photographic show, the works in this show deal with structures and how they can be manipulated to create optical illusions.
In 1983, in the second year, identical 100 years later. Buildings, roads, trees, and erosion altered the appearance of the landscapes.
For example, the tip of a stone formation at one photograph's site had a camera mounted on it by the photographers returned to the location in 1977. A resident of the area told the photographers that he could faintly recall some people chasing it away for use as a coffee table. Some rocks in the area, where the photographer evidently because of natural causes.
A 1940 photograph first looks like three submarines at sea, but a closer look reveals that they are actually miniatures on a Hollowwood set.
SOUTHALL SAID this exhibition is the only national scheduling of the show.
"What I like about this show is that it includes the full range of photographic history," Southall said.
The other show opening, "The Photograph as Artifice," deals with photographs and illusions and deceptions. The show will be represented in the 80-piece show.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 26, 1979
11
DONALD C. CHAPMAN
Elden Tefft
By AMY HOLLOWELL
Even at KU, Moses must wander
Staff Reporter
Locked in a closet in a basement foundry, the 12-year-old, 10-foot tail squawling figure of a faithful Moes awaits completion.
His mammmh hands come together on his chest, meeting below his full beard.
He rests, kneeling on an enormous bronze-colored foot and knee, eyes staring blankly ahead from his expressionless face.
Started in 1967 by Elden Tefft, professor of art, the wax structure will eventually be rebuilt by a mesh of bronze.
Originally funded by the Christian Church in Kansas, the $100,000 project has cost more and taken longer to complete than Tefft initially expected.
Two men strain themselves when pushing the immense sculpture from its closet home onto its rolling pedestal.
"The total cost has risen, in part, because of an escalation of prices," he said. "The cost of wax and bronze is up. Also, the demand needed to be larger than they envisioned."
The final sculpture will sit in front of Smith Hall" "burning bush" stained-glass window.
He began his work in the Bailey Hall annex, moved to the no-longer existent engineering building and then to Learned Hall. Finally, the sculpture was moved to the newly completed foundry in the setting of the visual arts building last fall
ANOTHER PROBLEM that Tefft has encountered in the process has been finding a building where he could keep the sculpture.
"Moses has been wandering around campus for 12 years, just like he did in the desert." Tefft said.
"Each part is a separate challenge," he said. "That's what keeps my interest after all these years."
Because the work is so large, each step is "like doing a different sculpture," Tefft said.
The sculpture is at a turning point now, as
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610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
913-841-4376
--on November 16. If you are interested in being a contestant or M.C., please fill out the form below and place it In folder on the BSU's office door. (1138-Union).
THE BLACK STUDENT UNION is sponsoring "THE DATING GAME"
Entry fee $1.00 for contestants when accepted.
Name:
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Contestant ___ M.C.
Sex: MALE FEMALE
Deadline for sign up Nov.1.
BSU IS A NON-DISCRIMINATORY ORGANIZATION
Funded by Student Activity Fee.
国中在吃
Guo Zhong Zai Chi
Literally, these characters mean "eat in China." People have to agree Chinese food is the most delicate food in the world. So, if you eat, the best place to go is China. Yet, China is so far away. It is beyond the reach of most people. You can go to the restaurant, the most distinctive Chinese restaurant in town. Cathay offers the best Chinese food as you can get anywhere.
The Cathay Restaurant
Holiday Plaza—2500 Iowa 842-4976
Weekdays: Lunch 11-2; Dinner 4:30-10
Sat & Sun: Dinner 11-10
Closed Tuesdays
Teft and his volunteer student workers will soon begin building a clay mesh around the wax base, the final step before bronzing.
Tefft and nearly 150 volunteers have worked through the past decade from a miniature of the sculpture, created by Tefft in 2010. He will work for his work on the university of Kansas as well.
"THIS IS CRUCIAL." he said. "We don't really know what the idea will look like out."
A drawing of Moses kneeling before the burning bush is in the center of the seal.
“Centuries” ago, he redesigned the seal, making minor changes, such as giving the kneeling Moses more hair and different clothing.
When plans for Smith Hall's construction began and the idea to physically represent the University seal on the building's front
Bronze was selected as the material for the sculpture, according to Tefft, primarily because he had worked extensively with bronze before.
"MY SCULPTURE AND the stained-glass window represent the same elements and spirit of the seal," he said.
lawn was conceived, Teftt was the natural choice to do the sculpture.
Bronze also is conducive to the hollow nature of the sculpture, he said, but at the same time, the openness of the cage-like wakes presents the problem of inner superspace.
In an aviation, he said that he thought the combination of a bronzed well and that while many other materials were not capable of enduring the weather, bronze aged well and stone aged well were better.
"In a large, solid piece, you could have a support structure inside, but with an open one, you can't." Tefft said. Supports with a support can be cast into the casting of the bronze is completed.
ALTHOUGH TEFFT HAS DONE sculptures with open interiors before, he has never done one as large as Moses. He said that the framework must sure how the framework would react.
"We're finished with the demanding, time-consuming portion of the project," he said. "The next step will hopefully not be as difficult as it was working with both forms and structures."
Teft expects the sculpture to be finished within the year, but could not say definitely when.
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
This question is the opening word of the 2nd Psalm. It is asked and answered by God Almighty. The heathen are that which receive the seven commandments, and his Ten Commandments. Not only do the heathen reason, resist, and ask to get rid of God's law, but also they reask their reason, and have been taken from heaven to deliver man from the "estate of alien and milky." He came down and was born of the Virgin Mary. He came down and was baptized again, substituted Himself for fallen man and kept God's Commandment, perfectly, right now. He again sent him and upon him the same and curse of God's judgment upon rebellion and the punishment of his death days He arose from the grave. "The Mighty Conqueror," of death He appeared to His disciples and believing followers, and sent them to the world if they would repent of their sin. They were rejected and accepted Him as their substitute, and bring forth fruitworth of repentance they would be reconciled to God, and receive
This is the Gospel, this is the Good Knew of the grace of God to God through Jesus CHRIST; then there is the 'worth of GOD'
in recent years the Protestant Nations have foraken Gods Commandment regarding The Sabbath Day. Even in recent years, there was a call to forbidding the eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil," it is the implication of the 4th Commandment — all things are forbidden. In another case, Sinai mutilated later in time. This implication appears in the 2nd chapter of Genesis, verses 3 and 3 "And God blessed them all with grace." It is also from all his work which God created and made: "God sanctified that do whatsoever he please? Jesus答" (16:58). So the reason why the Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath was made for man to float on water by working. All these reasons have given rise to forbidding the eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil."
What would be the answer of the true "Lord of The Sabbath. The Lord Jesus Christ? Doubtless it would be something else." And the answer is sure to turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing my pleasure on My holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honorable, and shall honor Him, not doing anything wrong with him. But I will thank those lownine words; then shalt thou delight yourself in the Lord; and will cause you to ride upon the high places of the Earth, as did your ancestors for FOR THE MOUTH OF THE LORD HATH SPOSEN IT."
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Fridav. October 26.1979
University Daily Kansan
Saturday Only Claude "Fiddler" Williams
Claude "Fiddler" Williams
Don't miss the legendary 71 year old jazz violinist who has played with Count Basie, Nat King Cole, and many others.
$7 cover includes free soft drinks, BEER, popcorn & peanuts.
THIS AD WORTH $2 OFF
RING TABOON
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass. (upstairs) 843-2644
THE NEW YORKER italian sandwiches & PIZZA
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Friday & Saturday, Oct. 26-27
7:00-Friday
3:30 & 9:30-Saturday
$1.50 Woodruff Aud.
—No refreshments allowed—
'Skunk Lady' traps for $10 each; smell removed at no extra charge
Staff Reporter
By STEVE MAUN
Shella Newland wants to work in a zoo, so she traps skunks to gain experience in handling wild animals.
"I like them," she said. "I don't want to go to graduate school and there just are not that many other ways to get experience handling animals."
Newland, a KU graduate in biology,
charges $10 for each skunk she traps.
Newland said she had always had a way with animals. "An animal can tell you like it or not. It's just like a kid," she said.
She began trapping skunks three years ago while helping George Korch, a KU graduate biology student, on a research project.
Newland works as a secretary at the KU comproller's office in Carrubr-O'Leary during the day and traps skunks at night.
The police department, the county extension office, the fish and game department. KU information and some private sources can help to anyone who complains about skunks.
Newland received the nickname "Skunk Lady" when a woman introduced Newland that way to her daughter.
Patty Miller, 1623 E. 18th Terrace, said he got her new landed number from the police when she complained to them about a snunk on her lawn and grub for grubs in her yard and flower garden.
NEWLAND SAID, "Skunks are usually under a cement slab because it is nice and soft there and they build their den."
Miller decided to get rid of the skunk one night after her dog chased the skunk out of the yard and it scented.
When she gets a complaint, she sets a trap at dusk and often has a skunk by morning.
The police gave Newland seven traps that were 2%-foot-long wire cages. To catch a skunk, the doors are set open. A footpad inside the door releases the cutter, shutting the windows on the pad. Newland bats the traps with food and covers the cage with canvas.
SHE TELLS THE home owner to check the traps every day because other animals often get caught. "I have caught lots of cats and dogs," she says. Sometimes dogs now the caw of the caravans."
After catching the skunks, she releases them five or six miles out in the country.
She said about one out of every 10 skunks scent when she picks it up. "They don't
HARRY ROSS
For those of you who like to reflect back during Homecoming, we offer a tradition of fashion leadership, good taste, quality and thoughtful service to our customers that has been a part of KU since 1950. We appreciate your help in keeping that tradition burning brightly . . . Thank you . . .
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usually scent in the car. It's usually when I pick up the trap."
Bruce Guy, who lives 1½ miles northwest of town, said Newland trapped six baby skunks under his porch.
"Two of them scented in the cage when she picked it up and one scented on the way to the car," Gu said.
NEWLAND SAID THE odor did not really bother her. "It goes away. I just air out my clothes on the clothingline in the backyard."
Newland said she had heard of taking a bath in tomato juice as a way to get rid of skunk odor, but had never tried it.
"The place I really have trouble is in my hair," she said. "The odor lingers longer there like in animal fur."
She insisted that it only took one through washing to eliminate the odor.
NEWLAND HAS never been bitten by a skunk, but she does take preventive rabies shots. Skunks have one of the highest percentages of rabies any animal, she said.
NEWLAND SAID when she arrived the opossum was so cold it ran into the trap. She had trouble getting it to leave.
Until two weeks ago, she had been getting a call a day. "Since March I have had twice as much business as before."
She has had success catching skunks this year. She caught 30 but set about five traps and did not catch anything, she said.
She is not sure whether the increase in business is a result of an increased skunk population or whether she is just becoming better known.
Since official records on complaints about skunks are not kept by any city department, it's difficult to determine whether there has been an increase in the skunk population.
The ordinance also would forbid gambling in a tavern.
THE ORDINANCE also would help wallem
often contested by people who often
conversed on ultrasite wallem they had purchased somewhere else. With the insurgency police could force those to leap
Another revision would not allow anyone to be in a lattice between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m., he said. If the owner or manager planned to be there during those hours he would first have to tell the chief of police. He also would need to be prepared for police police why he was planning to be there.
Schumm said this was done to prevent small parties that tend to form after a tavern closes.
The revised ordinance also provides for a license suspension system, he said. The ordinance requires that the system, only a provision for revoking licenses, which he said was difficult to comply with.
Scolmum said he expected some opposition to the ordinance proposal from the Senate. He didn't. However, he said he had worked with Jim Runsley, an attorney representing 14 cereal malt beverage license holders, and Rumsley thought the revisions were "basically
If a license was suspended, the holder would be able to appeal the action before the city commission. If the license holder was not pleased with the commission's decision he could then appeal to the district court. An appeal is also possible in an appealed system if a license was revoked.
On the third suspension the license could be revoked.
officers' time to attend to more important crimes rather than breaking up crowds outside taverns, he said.
Education never ends for Kansas doctors
Physicians' licenses must be renewed every year, Meek said, but the credit hours do not have to be distributed as 50 hours a year.
Beer...
Staff Reporter
MEEK SAID the University developed a continuing education program in 1949 that
"It's almost like going back to school. We have to keep updating and refreshing the skills already learned," Meek said yesterday.
"In the state of Kansas, all physicians when they renew their licenses must show they have taken 150 credit hours of continuing education every three years."
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
In all a student has spent 11 years studying before he sets up practice. But in Kansas, the study will never be ever.
For the past three years Kansas physicians, as well as nurses and other health professionals, have been required by the school to obtain medical knowledge, according to Joseph Meek, associate director of continuing education at the University of Kansas.
KANAS CITY, Kan.-To become a doctor of medicine, a student must go through four years of college and four years of medical school. After earning an M.D. degree, a one-year internship is required, with the maximum of two years in a residence program.
From page one
offered post-graduate classes for rural physicians.
"The University of Kansas has always been a worldwide leader in continuing medical education," he said.
It wasn't until 1976 that all Kansas physicians were required to attend post-graduate classes, he said.
Physicians can earn credit by either attending programs at the Med Center or by practicing in rural areas of the state.
"We put on several courses here, like palearnary disease courses or burn treatment courses, for example," Meek said. "I was a patient and come to the Med Center to attend these."
"OR THEY CAN choose to take the circuit course where we take them out of the home base and put them in rural areas."
Meek said that during the circuit course doctors spent four days at four sites. Two courses are in eastern Kansas and two are in the western part of the state.
For one four-day course, a physician can earn 24 credit hours.
The fee for one course is $75, which the physician pays. Meek said.
"Almost any profession updates skills, but physicians are most aware of this. When they get their degree they realize education doesn't stop.
"The need for continuing education doesn't have to be defended."
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3:00 p.m. Parade
4:00 p.m. Pep Rally
7:00 p.m. David Frost
9:00 p.m. Paul Gray
1979 HOMECOMING WEEKEND
1979 HOMECOMING WEEKEND THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
13
Swimmers open with intrasquad
The 30 members of the KU women's swimming team will test their competitive skills in an intrasquad meet tonight at 7 in Robinson natatorium.
"It gives me an indication of where we are and what we need to do." Coach Gary Kempel said. "It tells me if we we're doing is successful and if we're prepared to start
In addition to taking one-hour weightlifting sessions Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and flexibility exercises five
Sports
times a week, the swimmers have been working out in the pool twice a day for about two hours.
When Kempi called the meet a "Fur way to start the year," he also said it would help him decide where each swimmer fit on the team.
The divers also have been honing their skills under the direction of first-year Coach Ron Walker, accorring to Kennf
"The divers have been doing real well," he said. "We have a good diving program, with three talented girls and one more that's started to dive for us."
Barbara Brainaird, Godfrey, Ill., freshman, recently joined the diving squad She is also on the KU women's team.
There are 12 freshmen on the team. One new member is a sophomore.
"I've never been more pleased with our freshman class." Kermp said. "They've really had a lot of good attitudes, they adapt very well to the work load we've done and the things they do."
Tonight's intrasquad meet will precede the season opponent against Oklahoma and Arkansas. Nov 3 at 7 p.m. in Robinsor natatorium.
Kansan predictions
Game Davis Dressler Earle Fitts Frakes
Houston at Arkansas Arkansas 21-14 Arkansas 31-7 Arkansas 18-10 Arkansas 14-10 Arkansas 28-14
Colorado at Nebraska Nebraka 51-7 Nebraka 48-10 Nebraka 45-0 Nebraka 42-0 Nebraka 45-7
Iowa State at Oklahoma Oklahoma 31-10 Oklahoma 36-6 Oklahoma 28-7 Oklahoma 35-0 Oklahoma 31-10
Oklahoma State at Kansas Kansas 28-14 Kansas 21-20 Kansas 21-19 Kansas 21-20 Kansas 14-10
Kansas State at Missouri Missouri 21-6 Missouri 18-14 Missouri 14-3 Missouri 12-10 Missouri 21-16
Texas at SMU Texas 24-17 Texas 42-7 Texas 28-10 Texas 28-10 Texas 35-7
Michigan State at Ohio Ohio State 17-14 Ohio State 35-12 Ohio State 27-13 Ohio State 17-10 Ohio State 21-14
Navy at Pittsburgh Pittsburgh 24-14 Pittsburgh 28-30 Pittsburgh 31-21 Pittsburgh 24-10 Pittsburgh 17-12
Season Totals 40-16 38-18 38-18 38-20 34-22
Last week correct Kansan predictions resulted in a 780 average. Predictions are made by Tony Fits, sports editor. Mike Earle,
associate sports editor; Nancy Dressler, managing editor; Bill Prake, assistant manager and Ken Davis, KU sports editor.
Probable starters for tomorrow's game
KAWAIS OFFENSES:
LN LE
LT LT
LG LG
HG HG
BG BG
FT FT
RJ RJ
RT RT
IBJ IBJ
IBJ IBJ
TB TB
TR TR
FV FV
WV WV
WV WV
ONL SE DEFENSE
NG1 Baldwin
NG2 Garcia
NLG 6 Carrillo
NLG 8 Steve Reiffenbacher
NLG 9 Dan Menterley
LFC1 Dexter Menterley
LFC1 Jodger Custer
LFC3 Greg Hill
LCB1 Grigg Hill
FS4 Greg Johnson
FS5 Greg Johnson
JCAb John Ackman
KANSAS DEFENSE
LR KAMS KAMS
NG 60 Charles Gailey
NG 60 Charles Gailey
NL 60 Christopher Hittman
HL 82 Kyrie Johnson
LL 13 Kyrie Johnson
DL 13 Davin Miller
DW 13 Davin Miller
S 47 Leroy Fergus
S 47 Leroy Fergus
T 47 Tampa Bay
T 47 Tampa Bay
OKLA ST OFFENFE
SB 72 James Cowns
SF 84 Tom Harper
LG 67 Drew Hetaler
G7 69 Kew Bennet
RB 70 Roy Haskett
TQ 80 Joe Warren
QB 5 John Doerner
FB 32 Terry Young
FB 21 Chad
FL 86 纽恩ram
BM 18 Bill
PREPARE YOUR
COSTUMES
FRIGHT NIGHT
AT THE HAWK
MONDAY,
OCT. 29
FESTIVAL OF JAPANESE THEATRE
触
触 NO KYOGEN BUYO
MASAKI RASHI MATSU1 a professional performer of the AKA NO.1 School of JAWL will attend a WORKSHOP in NO. 2 DEC 4 M or on Saturday 27 in 29 Majors Hall
Admission is $0 MONTHS/DAY, $2.75
Admission to WORKSHOP is $0 (C) Not Required
will be admitted by presenting a ticket to the demonstration of paying $10.00
TICKETS are available in the MURPHY BOX OFFICE
Telephone: 842-3982
Presented in conjunction with the KYOGEN production in the NUcla Theatre Oct. 25 Nov. 3 (cluded Oct. 29)
No. D(M)NORMALIZATION OF NO performance will be at 2:30 P.M. on Sunday, Oct. 28 in Swarthout Retail Hall Mall. Nursing Hall
This session area presents MS YUKIND KUNURA
an accomplished amateur dancer performing
cusurial ballet dance.
There will be a *INCLUSION* session on AN and KVGSO at 10:17 A.M. on Sunday, 26 Jan. 34H. Mall Hall. Free admission. Open to the public.
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M
Soccer club's streak on the line Sunday
CHAINS
Necklaces
Bracelets
Earrings
"Central Missouri State isn't too bad," player-coach Tom Boocher said. "The record now is 2-21 and they are a club team like us. I imagine we will beat them."
CHAINS
KU's soccer club has a stare to preserve Sunday when it meets the Muses of Central Missouri State in a 1:30 p.m. match at Memorial Stadium.
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Booher said his team had been bothered with a number of injuries.
"Iexperience is our one major weakness. We lose a lot of players because they can't go to some of our road games. It's reflected in our rosters and road where we have been outscored 10-4."
"We are playing with a lot of key players hurt," he said. "Our goal, for instance, was hurt in the Benedictine game last week. He hurt his knee but he is ready to play on it.
The Hawks are 5-3-1 in fall competition.
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Onecoupon per pizza, please.
Last week!
Consult your Placement Office for degree and field of study requirements
UNITED TECHNOLOGIES
$1.50 OFF
C
will be ON CAMPUS
to interview candidates for attractive opportunities in HIGH TECHNOLOGY
NOVEMBER 9,1979
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
RQ
STEP BACK INTO OUR 19TH CENTURY SALOON
NEVER A COVER CHARGE FOR MEMBERS AND THEIR GUESTS. BRING YOUR DATE AND SPEND FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WITH US!
SGT. PRESTON'S
OF THE NORTH
BAR & RESTAURANT
815 NEW HAMPSHIRE
NEXT TO QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100
14
Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Spook us into giving you a car stereo system. On Halloween night, Nelson's Team Electronics will be giving away a car stereo system of your choice, and install it absolutely free. All you have to do to win is stop by and show us your costume. The most original costume wins!
M
spo
come
into giving you a car stereo Halloween night, Nelson's electronics will be giving away a system of your choice, and absolutely free. All you have to stop by and show us your most original costume.
Mike Schmidt of KLZR-106 will be at Nelson's TEAM on Saturday broadcasting haunting melodies and spooktacular bargains. Tune in and come by Nelson's TEAM for more surprises.
O
HALLOWEEN STEREO SPOOKTACULAR
CAR STEREO
IndASH A & UNDERDASH
price
Audios ID-4000 Indash AM/FM
travel, list price $129.95
Audios ID-6000 Indash AM/FM
cassette, list price $129.95
Audios ID-6050 Indash AM/FM
cassette, compared case,
list price $199.95
Audios ID-8100 Indash AM/FM
cassette, bookcase and
rewind, List price $199.95
Audios ID-725 Indesh Indash
am/fm tuning, List price $199.95
Marvum M-5000 Indash AM/FM
cassette, List price $199.95
Marvum M-8400 Indash AM/FM
cassette, List price $199.95
Pioneer KP-9005 Indash
AM/FM cassette, List price
$129.95
Pioneer GX-40AO Indash AM/FM
cassette, List price $174.95
Safety FT-478 Indash AM/FM
compacted car, List price $129.95
Safety FT-478 Indash AM/FM
cassette, List price $129.95
Safety FT-478 Indash AM/FM
cassette, lookup, List price $149.95
Safety FT-489 Indash AM/FM
cassette, lookup, List price $169.95
Safety FT-498 Indash AM/FM
cassette, forward and
rewind, auto-rewind and pushbutton
tuning, list price $24
AMPLIFIERS & BOOSTERS
channel booster with bypass switch;
list price $69.95
$39.95
per channel
booster with bass and treble
controls, list price $79.95
$39⁹
Concept PB 6000 30 white booster with bass and treble controls, list price $72.99...
Speakerprice,
purchaser
Concept EQ807 105 watts per channel
boost with avened band graphic
lite price $149.95
$69.95
TacreTE 70,70 Limited, 30 watts
with avened band graphic equalizer, 2 power meters
lite price $149.95
$69.95
CAR STEREO SPEAKERS
PRICED IN PAIRS
Concept CP-8121 '1%', dilution
speaker, list price $149.95
$19.95
Concept CP-8165 '8%',
dilution speaker, list price $149.95
$29.95
Concept CP-8165 '8%',
dilution speaker, list price $149.95
$29.95
Planner T5-668 component series
speaker, list price $129.95
$59.95
Planner T5-668 component series
speaker, list price $129.95
$19.95
Cruig T-140 full range, 6/8
speaker, list price $149.95
$74.95
Clark S10 1924 D1-3 way
speaker system, list price $149.95
$50% Off
All Jensen Series One Speakers,
different models.
Al Santo Ce Speakers,
different models.
Al Santo Ce Speakers,
different models.
Al Pascarimo Ce Speakers,
choose from four
HOME COMPONENT SPEAKERS
SPEAKERS
PRICED IN PAIRS
Sow SSU170 102*1' 2-way
foot standing speaker system,
floor standing speaker system.
JVC KR-1000s 12' 3-way
foot standing speaker system with
midrange and wetter control,
$2999$
All Fiber MS* and "FS" Series Speakers
Choose from nine
models at $79.99 each
50% Off
All Synergycape Speaker System. Choose
from four models at
$89.99 each
50% Off
RECEIVERS, AMPLIFIERS AND TUNERS
Sanuai TA-300 AM/MF rack
mountable receiver with 30 watts
per channel, D.C. Amplifier,
late price $399.95 $199⁹⁵
Samsu TA-900 AMF rack mountable
Samsu TA-900 AMF rack mountable D. C.
Amplifier, list price $499.95
$299.
Samsu AU317 50 watts per channel,
integrated tower with mount
rack mountable,
list price $499.95
$199.95
Samsu TU17 110 Deluxe AMF integrated
tower with mount
rack mountable,
list price $499.95
$149.95
Samsu TU147 AMF integrated
tower with mount
rack mountable,
list price $499.95
$149.95
JVC JA-S11G 30 watts per channel,
integrated amplifier,
list price $499.95
$129.95
JVC JT-V11 G AMF component
list price $499.95
$99.95
JVC S22A 40 watts per channel,
integrated amplifier,
list price $499.95
$189.95
JRC JA-544 45 watts per channel
integrated D. ampilier,
list price $349.95
$249.95
JRC JV-22 G AMF component
list price $349.95
$149.95
JVC JT-V25 G AMF component
list price $349.95
$159.95
Savoy R-201L 30 watts per channel,
integrated receiver,
list price $299.95
$149.95
Savoy 201L 16 watts per channel,
integrated receiver,
list price $299.95
$149.95
Fisher RB-2007 75 watts per channel,
integrated Hand graphic
Receiver,
list price $299.95
$349.95
TURNTARLES
All Units have base and dust cover.
B.S.R. Quanta 500, semi-automatic bell drive turntable with strobe list price $149.95
JVCL A1-11, semi-automatic bell drive turntable with strobe list price $149.95
JVCL A1-11, semi-automatic bell drive turntable with strobe and pitch $149.95
Fisher MT 6310, semi-automatic bell drive turntable with strobe and pitch $149.95
Fisher MT 6320, direct drive semi-automatic bell drive turntable with strobe and pitch $149.95
JVCL A2-12, direct drive, quartz lock, semi-automatic bell drive turntable with strobe and pitch $149.95
JBCL F4-14, direct drive, quartz lock, fully automatic bell drive turntable with strobe and pitch $149.95
SON PS T1, direct drive, semi-automatic bell drive turntable with strobe and pitch $119.95
ALL AUDIO-TECHNICA CARTRIDGES
ARE 50% OFF. CHOOSE FROM SIX
DIFFERENT MODELS INCLUDING
THE NEW MOVING COIL AT-30.
ALL STYLUS REPLACEMENTS ARE 50% OFF. WITH THE PURCHASE OF JAMES BURGER LIONSWILL ALIGN AND BALANCE YOUR TURNABLE FREE.
TAPE DECKS Spooktacular series
Fisher CR-4013 front load cassette
Dolyo LED and Ready
deck with Dollyo LED and Ready
deck with Dollyo LED
list price $189.95
JVC KD-4A2 Front load cassette deck
list price $149.95
solomoid head, bed
JVC KD-2B 2-Front load cassette deck
list price $199.95
solomoid head, bed
JVC KD-2B 2-Front load cassette deck
list price $199.95
list price $229.95
JVC KD-6F Front load cassette deck
list price $299.95
JVC KD-6F Front load cassette deck
list price $449.95
JVC KD-8F Front load cassette deck
list price $349.95
solomoid transport and 2 motors,
solomoid transport and 2 motors,
Sanyo RD-5035 Front load cassette
RSD RO5035 Front load cassette
capacity, lift price $129.95
$179.95
RSD RO8020 A Front load B track
recover deck with last forward
pivot $99.95
$99.95
Sony TCK Deluxe front load cassette
capacity, lift price $129.95
$249.95
and memory, lift price $49.95
HOME AND CAR ACCESSORIES
Audurove LED-80 in under dash
list price $29.95
list prices $19.95
Audurove FM-1C Convertys your AM
list price $29.95
list prices $19.95
8-band and cassette carrying
list price $19.95
VIC RC-320 IV converter AM/FM with 4 short
list price $19.95
in speakers list price $199.95
Choose from seven different
prices
Pioneer Centric Radio/Tape Player
Choose from four different
prices
20% Off
20% Off
Knox Tech 21 Series Headphone,
list price $99.95
Pioneer SD1000
Shure Headphone,
list price $100.00
Pioneer Monitor 10 Stereo
Headphone, list price $80.00
Munix XC-25
25 foot cold esterilized
headphone extension,
list price $7.99
Fidelite Record Cleaning System
list price $14.99
Maxell Record Tape
25% Off
O'Sullivan Audio Furniture
Choose from Eleven
different models ... 50% Off
COMPACT MUSIC SYSTEMS
LEMIS
Hitachi SD-SP8 10 H AFM+ receiver with integrated B-mixer and two full range speakers, list price $299.95
Hitachi SD-SR8 10 H AFM+ receiver with integrated B-mixer and two full range speakers, list price $299.95
Hitachi SD-SR8 10 H AFM+ receiver with integrated B-mixer and two full range speakers, list price $299.95
Fisher MC-4010
B-mixer receiver with separate speaker and two full range speakers, list price $349.95
Fisher MC-6027 AFM+ receiver with integrated B-mixer and two full range speakers, list price $349.95
Fisher MC-6027 AFM+ receiver with integrated B-mixer and two full range speakers, list price $299.95
Klarke
CUSTOM INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AT TEAM
CUSTOM INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AT TEA
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 10-8
Sat. 10-6
Sun. 12-5
2319 LOUISIANA
master charge
the inspirations and
LAYAWAY FINANCING AVAILABLE
841-3775
VOLTAGE CONTROL UNIT
Jtf
MP3 PLAYER
TEAM ELECTRONICS
16
Friday, October 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
TODAY: COMPANIES INTERVIEWING on campus in the School of Business will be Southwestern Bell, Consolidated Grain & Fabric Service. In the School of Engineering will be Atlantic Richfield, CIA, KPI., Hewlett-Packard department of chemistry will be Procter & Gamble, BLACK ALUMNI CAREER DAY department of chemistry will be Procter & Gamble, BLACK ALUMNI CAREER DAY at the Kansas UNIVERSITY MUSIC FILM SERIES will be "Koesler on Creativity" and "Leonardo D Vinci" at 8:9 a.m. in the Resource Center JOB CLUB will meet at 1 p.m. at 13th and Oral streets. Beginning at 1 p.m. at the Lawrence Center HOMECOMING PARADIE will begin at 3 p.m. at the Chi Omega fountain. At 4 p.m. at the Lawrence Center HOMECOMING PARADIE will begin at 3 p.m. at the chi Omega fountain. At 4 p.m. at the Lawrence Center HOMECOMING PARADIE will begin at 3 p.m. at the south end of X zone parking.
ORGANIZATION with Gary Bachman, director of Headquarters, will speak on the progress of CLUB at 3:30 p.m. in the Regional Room11 at the CLUB club will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room2 ECOLOGY CLUB business meeting will begin at 4:30 p.m. in Alove E of the Kansas
TONIGHT: A HOMECOMING LECTURE
at Dwight and David Frost will begin at 7 p.m. in Hoech
Auditorium. OBSERVATORY OPEN
FROM 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Lindley Hall, MELL'S GYMNASICS AND
Lindley Hall, MELL'S GYMNASICS AND
WOMEN'S SWIMMING MEETS will begin at 7 p.m. at Robinson. KULF DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robbie A FACULTY RECITAL by Richard Angeliet, pianist, will begin at 8 p.m. in 174 Paul Gray's HOMECOMING DANCE with Paul Gray's Gaslight Band will begin at 9 p.m. at the Satellite Union.
TOMORROW: PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT will open at 9:30 a.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art. LAW SOCIETY MEETS JOURNALIST SOCIETY JOURNALISM SOCIETY RECEPTION will begin at 10 a.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Room of Art. GALLERY TAKEN with Thomas Southall, curator of photography, to present the work in the Spencer Museum of Art. ALL-UNIVERSITY HOMECOMING LUNCHON will begin at 11:34 a.m. in the Union Building. NATURAL HISTORY EXHIBIT opening on "Ghosts, Gods and Guises:Masks."
SUNDAY; CHESS CLUB will meet at 1 p.m. in Parior C of the Union, THE MUSEUM OF SPORT, and the Valley Dance Theatre and a lecture by Sam Keen, the theologian and author, will begin at 2 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art. A lecture by Steve Lundberg will begin at 3 p.m. QUARTERBACK CLUB will present highlights of Saturday's game between the southeast lounge of the Satellite Union.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
Paraphernalia
842-3059 15 W. 9th St.
Foreign & Domestic Parts
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
-Part Store
1209 East 23rd
841-2200
Science Fiction Movie—
SILENT RUNNING
Oct. 26 & 27
Dyche Auditorium
7:30 pm — $1.25
annually funded by the Student Senate
WEEKEND BOWLING SPECIAL
.50°/game
Now thru Oct. 28
Open Sat. and Sun.
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Now you have a chance to build a fraternity!
2:00 pm—Close
Alpha Epsilon Pi is reorganizing on the KU Campus by pledging men as brothers of the Kappa Upsilon Chapter, AEII, a predominately Jewish fraternity, gives you the opportunity of building a strong bond of brotherhood. We want to offer you a life-time experience. AEII will be holding meetings October 30, 31 and November 1. Alpha Epsilon Pi provides an opportunity to join a national fraternity with chapters throughout the United States. We are a member of the National Interfraternity Conference. Founded on November 7, 1913.
Tuesday, October 30, Pine Room, Kansas Union, Orientation,
7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, October 31, Pine Room, 7:30 p.m.
EVENTS:
Thursday, November 1, Parlor C, Kansas Union, Pledging, 7:30 p.m.
For more information 843-9737
lemon tree
11w 9th behind weavers
low-calorie nutritious natural frozen dessert yogurt
One nut or fruit tapping with the purchase of any size dish
offer good oct.24 to oct.26
KANSAN Police Beat
no coupons accepted with this offer
A theft was reported to the Lawrence police yesterday and the KU police responded to a report of strong fumes in Lindley Hail.
U. CURRENCE AND SILVER COINS
valued at $2,000 by the owner, were taken
Tuesday from a pickup truck parked in
parking lot of Wheels of Fun skating rink,
3210 Iowa St., according to a police
charge, price value the coins was
$2,250, police said.
The owner of the coins told police she had retrieved the keys to the truck from a skating rink employee after it was announced that a key ring had been found.
THE KU POLICE RESPONDED to a call Tuesday about strong fumes in Lindley Hall, according to a police report.
When she was leaving the rink, she noticed that the passenger-side door of the track was unlocked and that the coins, which were in three bottles, were missing.
COPIES 4c
no minimum
KINKO'S
904 Vermont 833-8019
When the police arrived, the report said, they discovered that a chute in the basement was being sealed with epoxy resin.
The police contacted Facilities and Operations personnel, the report said, who activated the building's ventilation system.
NASHVILLE
COMPLETE RED
A
WYTERS
OFFICE
MISSISSippi ST.
14th St.
KANSAS HOMECOMING
HERBS
FINE FOTRAITURE
FINE FOTRAITURE
711 W. 29th
Mall Shopping Center
842-8822
PARADE ROUTE 1979
STUDIO ONE
HAIR DESIGNERS
Today's Hair Care Center
Student discount
with KU ID
843-2229
2323 Ridge Court
REDKEN
MONTOYA
MONTOYA
The World Renowned
Flamenco Guitarist
"ASTONISHING VIRTUOSITY... A PHENOMENON"
"TO MEET WITH SUCH CONSUMATE MARTIAL ARTS IS A RARE EXPERIENCE"
"HOW WILL AMBRECE TO THUNDERINO AND LABEL"
"HIS SUBLIT, AMAZING VIRTUOSITY IS SIMPLE UNRELEVABLE!"
"A MASTER PERFORMER, A UNIQUE EXCITING START"
— Het Pancol Amsterdam
— Afonbaade, Stockholm
— New York, London
— Frankfort Algemeine
— N.Y. Harold Tribune
The University of Kansas Concert Series presents CARLOS MONTOYA, Classic Guitar Sunday, OCTOBER 28, 1979 at 3:30 P.M. UPCONFIRMING THEUENISTER THEATER
All Seats Reserved
Tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office
sua films
The first snow is on its way, so get ready to ski now. All the new merchandise is in. Come see us.
Midnight Movies
Woodruff Auditorium
first serve
—No refreshments allowed—
Friday & Saturday, October 26 & 2
12:00 Midnight $1.50
Woodruff Auditorium
first serve
SKI & SPORTS SHOPPE
2120 West 25th
Lawrence HOLIDAY PLAZA 841-0811
MARTIN
George A. Romero's
Put yourself in our boots.
NORDICA
kanson
FRANCIS FORD CORPORA
PRESENTS
Apocalypse
Now
By the director of "NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD"
and "DAWN OF THE DEAD."
MARION BRANDHUEL RODDLE DUELL MARTIN SHEEN ACADEMY NEW FREDERIC FORSTER ALBERT HALL SW BOMTIM LYRING FISHBURINE HOPPER
Presented by FRANCIS CORPOLA
from MARION MILLS TRAINER MARTIN HEWRY
FROM TROLL ROOS TRANSFORMATION MARTIN HERRY
FROM JEFF KOLES TRANSFORMATION MARTIN HERRY
ATTITTO STORIA SPACE DEAN INVOLUNERS RICHARD MARS
WATER MURPHY CARRIE CORPOLA UNITED ARTS
**DOLLY STRING** AN OMNI JOE JEFFERSON PRODUCTION **United Artists**
© 2016 COPYRIGHT ©1979-2016 All rights reserved.
STARTS FRIDAY NOV. 2
Granada
TEXTUAL REALITY
100% of your savings dollars are re-invested in this community when you save at LSA!
money market interest rate:
12. 65%
Member F.S.L.C
Equal Opportunity
Employer Lender
$10,000 minimum. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal
1. 50%, paid on Pessbook accounts, no minimum interest compounded daily
LAWRENCE SAVINGS ASSOCIATION
NVIDIA & VERSION SMARTS
PARTY SUPPLIES
ZERCHER
PHOTO
ZERCHER PHOTO
We Handle Everything Photographic
CARDS
&
GIFTS
OUR FRIEND IS YOUR FRIEND
Sunny Dog
We have someone for you to meet. He's soft, plush, and a very good listener. Come into the Zercher Photo nearest you and get acquainted.
We're sure you'll want to take at least one of our friends home with you. After all, talk is cheap, but a good listener is hard to find.
DOWNTOWN
GREETING CARDS
HILLCREST
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out final messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good. Tick, bad.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNeair, Mr.原谅 emerentus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDNT HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the U.S."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the full effect of the market crash did not hit the financial markets.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said, and except for Chicago, there was no need to worry.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1929 Christmas sales rushed that any one else would notice."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begin Sept. 1. The New York Times carried an article about a group of shopping declines was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported a surge in investing investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1928 HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market because they were less aware of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were much more dependent on capital, Glabrath, Growing industries needed more capita!
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and financial experts agreed that it would not accord to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the crisis were backed on bad credit.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embutezzels, knowing that speculation flee made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experienced speculator knew the crash was coming,
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and George J. Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stock Crises in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billion$” Stockholders will pay up to $1 billion if the stock at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fury was infectious, Galbraith said. More than 750,000 people lost less money was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 15, the headlines were more dramatic. The team announced, and conditions were sound. But the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured the crowd that things would be well.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies were eager to learn how to prepare themselves trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few were able to accomplish that.
Wall Street stood silent. a massive, hushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling
the ticker tape machines stopped, downshift run according to the Tunes. By the time the ticker tape machines sign off with
their traditional good night sleep, $70,000 of stock
was in hand and the machines were ready.
"NONE OF the experts foresee how bad it would get," McCoa said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factory-made and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobless, Galbrash wrote in 1994. Prices dropped, but even at a low no one was willing to pay.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the plantation, overproduction has caused HASH bursitis.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Vol. 90. No.46
10 cents off campus
Mondav. October 29. 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
FAMILY
KCCR to investigate clubs
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior against his other clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCR had to complete an investigation and begin its investigation could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenanigans, 801 Mississippi St., and Cincinnati, 763 Temple St.
Several former members of the KU pomp squam ride alope at Homecoming food during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty people dressed in masks attended the event.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory attributing membership application forms.
Still kicking
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
BARB
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some novi
to the field at hatchline of the Homecoming footb
all game.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's,
and Chuck Shannon.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU director of fences and head debate coach,
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
he said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver
and an exdebatetorek 10 file
drawers. The file drawers are filled with information
on subjects taken from magazines, books or
theses.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going paper naper."
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Zac Grant, Joplin, M. , sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
'My debate teacher told outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also was because of the diapragmus as one of the programs.
Parson also said KU has good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The teams are selected their performance in the deb The debate season lasts through March.
"IT WOULDN'T WORK if we compete against quality it." We need the competition teams to get ready for the tournament.
The top 60 debate teams
teams from U.S. colleges are
chosen for the national c
联赛 throughout the United States
This year's national chance at the University of Arizona was limited, his names, he said KU's debt looked encouraged because people involved in the fight was not a financial support.
"I think our reputation attracts detracters," he said need additional funding for the tournaments to come to compete in "tournaments."
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at a tournament costs at a 1975 level.
SPORTS BULLETIN
THE MILLER GUIDE TO INTERCOLLEGIATE SPORTS/FALL 1979
Science Enters the Locker Room page 3
A Benchwarmer's Saga page 10
If You Were Coach page 15
Zany Moments in College Football page 21
Big Eight Edition
Great Rivalries/5 A Hero's Lite/7,
Student Sealing/17, The Art of Scheduling/19
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, McRair professor of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the town."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the Maryland crash did not hit the Midwest until the midle of 1987.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said and, except for Chicago, there was no impact.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 129th Christmas sales run that it worked."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun Sept. 1. The New York Times carried an article describing how the Wall Street decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the mid of October, the Times reported that investors had投资 investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
THE 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market, and they were willing as little as 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into the bank.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, and the new manufacturing industry, Galbrath, Growing industries needed more capita'
TO THE CASIAL market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and investors are optimistic that the bank will according to Galtrabhit. Credit is too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the crisis were in transit at the time.
Even President Herbert Hower knew, McCoy said, "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Emherrzels, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, solid phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experienced speculator knew the crash was coming,
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Gianni, president of the Bank of America and Bernard Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Months" and warned that stockholders had punished and dumped stock onto the market at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear among the infected, Gailbraith said. More than 494,530 people lost less was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The stock were steadily up and conditions were good. But the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured the crowd of their disappointment.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16, 383,700 shares had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get." McCov said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factor 12, which was the reason for credit and credit were tight. By 1952, more than 19 million employable Americans were jobless, Galbraith wrote in *Invesco* dropped, but even at new low ones I could see a recovery.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
Vol. 90. No.46
free on campus
Mondav. October 29.1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KU
Still kickina
Several former members of the KU pompon squad ride a stop at Homecoming float during Friday afternoon parade. Thirty men and women participated in the parade.
KCCR to investigate clubs
the director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCRI had to complete an investigation into the shootings and could begin its investigation of the clubs, Sheenangyi 90 North Williams St., and Shengqiang 90 North Williams St.
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some nee to the field at hullmeadow in the Homecoming football game, are being reunited.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the club's membership policies.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory practices in distributing membership application forms.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior by local discus club would be "politically shocking."
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELI
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU president and head debate coach, said last week.
"The 1790 have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate," Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said debate team kept 10 file copies of his notes. The file the drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or movies.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an 'on-going term paper.'
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kapas.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Zac Grant, Joplin, Mo, sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
Johnson said the KU graduate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
This year's national chair at the University of Arizona has made a series of nations, he said KU's deaf looked encouraged because people being involved in academic work not so financial support.
The teams are selected their performance in the debt The season lasts through March.
"My debate teacher told outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also a KU because of the d answer as one of the programs.
"I think our reputation attractulates detractors," he said. He added additional funding for the trip to compete in tournaments.
Parson also said KU h good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
"IT WOULDN'T WORK in a compete against quality we "We need the competition teams to get ready for the challenge."
The top 60 debate teams
teams from U.S. colleges
are chosen for the national
a committee of debate
He said the team receive
Senate to use for transport
two meals a day at tauem
court in the summer and
be cast at 19% level.
Miller High Life®
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Grand Slam
©1979 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
XOXOXO
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12 PACK
TWELVE 12 OZ BOTTLES
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HIGH LIFE.
The Champagne of Beers.
NORTH, TEX. MILWAUKEE, WIS. FULTON, N.Y.
Grand Slam
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2020. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Denession.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State defeated Florida in this game.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, McNair professor of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about
that was only for the rich in the
East. McNeal said.
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the full effect of the market crash did not hit the
money supply.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, M.CoY said and, except for Chicago, there was no further impact.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1922 Christmas sales rush that any of them really cared."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun Sept. 1. The New York Times carried an article in which a new report said decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times published investment proposals and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1928 HAD been born years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market in the early 1930s and less than a decade of it allowed the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrials were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economy bomb had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who had been focused on labor and graibraht. Growing industry needed more capita!
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and bankers have been criticized for 2012 according to Gabbathr. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the recession were not worth buying.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embezzlers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experienced speculator knew the crash was coming.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said,
"Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and Robert Martin, president of Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions.” Stockholders are feeling the pressure at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and Gauw was infectious, Galbraith said. More than half the stock market losses that year was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been attened, the Time of Day change had occurred and the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured that things would be fine.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, hushed ruin
Tuesday morning, Oct. 19, was different. Selling because break, the ticker ran up and down. It run according to the Times. By the time the ticket tape machines signed off with the company, the total loss had been sold. Total loss were more than $10 billion.
"NONE OF the experts forsaw how bad it would get," McCov said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factories and credit were tight. By 1932, more than 18 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbraith wrote in 1945. Prices dropped, but even at a low noone in 1945.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
10 cents off campus
Vol. 90, No. 46
Yankees fire Billy Martin
free on campus
KU
See story page six
Monday, October 29, 1979
Still kickina
Several former members of the KU pompon squad ride alpacar
a homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty
members of the KU pompon team were there.
pon girl reunion. About of the women, some move to the field halfway at the Homecoming football game. A few go home.
BARB K
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU. He studies compassion and heat debathe coach, said last week.
"The 1970 have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate," Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1978, and KU teams had been first in 1970, 1973, 1977 and last year. KU teams were also fifth finalist. KU teams were also fifth
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons. Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said debater kept 10 file copies of his research. The file the drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or journals.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
Zac Grant, Joopin, Lom, sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Johnson said the KU debate program had "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
'My debate teacher told r outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also as KU because of the de fference as one of the programs.
at the university of Arizona. Despite increasing complements, he said KU's deft-looking encouraged because people involved with it was not as financial support.
Parson also said KU had good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
IT WOULDN'T WORK IS
compete against quality
we need the competition
teams to get ready for the
The top 60 debate teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national college debate tournament throughout the United States.
This year's national charm at the University of Arizona.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory practices in club clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
KCCR to investigate clubs
The teams are selected of their performance in the delt. The debate season lasts through March.
"I think our reputation attracts debaters," he said need additional funding if the team is to compete in tournaments."
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation of Mr. Reilly and could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenangans, *Mississippi St.*, and *New Orleans*.
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at a theatre costs at a 197.0 level.
The seven-member commission voted
immediately. Thursday night to conduct the
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
He said the commission's decision *we* based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory distributing membership application forms.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Corneau, manager of Bullwinkle's.
WHAT MAKES THE GREAT ONES GREAT?
BY MARK F. WEBER
SPORTS science hasn't exactly put a biomanic on the college football field. But you can tell what it takes—physically and psychologically—to be a football success. And it may not be long before the place for hopefuls to be disciplined—the practice field but the laboration.
A sport like football requires different body types for different, specialized tasks. In its simplest form, players tie the big guys on the line and the fast guys in the backfield. But laboratory findings are helping pinpoint more precisely what body types need to work best for a particular slot.
Some of the pioneering work in this area is being done at the University of Denver, where he attends the University of Denver. Dr Marvin J. Clein, chairman of the university's physical education department, has allied computers with his expertise in kinesiology, the study of the force applied to muscles, helping to unravel the riddle of why one athlete might be stronger, than another.
SHORT UPPER ARM
HAND RELEASE
BOWED LEGS
LOW CENTER
OF GRANITY
STRONG KNEES
FAST TWITCH MUSCLE
FREEBY + STEPTH
AND QUICKNESS
Clinen's research, for example, shows that bowed legs are an asset for a running back. they provide a low center of gravity, giving a lower ability to "carry" (which would lead one to believe that Walt Garison, of Oklahoma State and later the Dallas Cowboys, did not harm his runnig game with his foot on the broncos on the rodecus).
Scientists, psychologists and sophisticated machines are helping coaches find players with that All-American edge.
Desirable traits in a quarterback, Clem find, include some that are obvious - a nall thrower can see the ball and pass it. He is clever, and some that are fairly subtle.
A quarterback with a long arm is apt to pass for greater distances, because his throwing motion will be more powerful than in theory, then, the ideal quarterback to deliver the long bomb would have an arm so long his knuckles are slicked. The artificial turf On the other hand (or arm), a signal-caller with
a short upper arm also has an aid; he is likely to have a "quick release" the better to launch the projectile before being sacked.
Desirable trains for blockers and taddlers include a low center of gravity for agility and lateralrange; a long upper body, resulting in better leverage a heavy bone structure and musculature, the better to support movement.
and short upper legs, for explosiveness off the snap.
Less-distinct physical traits are also being analyzed by some coaches and teammates to match up of players to positions. One too many college and pro athletes have been trying Cybex. It is a kind of electric-cordograph for the muscles that give them control.
flexibility, and endurance of arm and leg muscle groups as they're put through various exercises. Conveniently designed to correct specific weaknesses that have turned up or a player can be shifted to a position
One controversial test involving the Cybex is called "muscle-fiber typing." Muscle strength is analyzed
- 19.05.13 - All Corporate Agents, all agents required by position of Specialist The Master Degree in Information Science that may be reproduced with written consent of 13.05.20 Corporation are obligated to provide the necessary training and to pass written examination of 13.05.20 Corporation as described in this Procedure. Licensee is
SPORTS BULLETIN 3
---
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
Staff Reporter
By KATE POUND
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out the final messages for Oct. 19, 2015. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Ouachita, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State lost its bid for the national title.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruhe McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the country."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the full effect of the market crash did not hit the banks.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said, and except for Chicago, there was no impact.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1928 Christmas sales rush that any consumer could go about buying."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually come from a relatively small amount daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that the investment projects and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, that is, on a system that often paying as much as they would on an investment
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were now more engaged with each other, Gabrath; Growing industries needed more capital*
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and investment bankers have agreed according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the crisis were illiquid.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emberzels, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, said phony stocks or stocks they didn’t own. The speculator known the crash was coming, Glarath said.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to tie the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market enteres, the fall of 1928. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giammig, president of the Bank of America and Morgan not many times. According to McCooy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions” Stockholders were shocked that their stocks had fallen at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than a million people were upset. The money was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more announced, and conditions were announced, and conditions were announced, but the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, hushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling new tapes, then surged into a frank, unstoppable, downside. The time the ticker tape machine signed with on Monday had been less than $1 billion. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
"NONE OF THE experts forewax how bad it would get." McCoy said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Facility upgrades and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1984. Prices dropped, but even at new lows one no longer wanted.
the plight of Midwestern farmers added to the morbous woes. At the beginning, overproduction
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Vol. 90, No. 46
Mondav. October 29.1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KO
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCIR had to complete an investigation and begin a plan to could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenamacans, 901 Missouri St., and New Orleans.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCCR investigation of alleged discriminatory practices in public clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory practices in distributing membership applications.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously. Thursday night, the committee
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's.
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pompier squad ride atop a Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty men in suits and trousers compete for the headlight.
post girl reunion. About 26 of the women, some now in the field at half-time of the Homecoming football game, were from Iowa.
Debate team claims fan in national tournament
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU director of forests and head debate coach,
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973. KU teams also were also first in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Dennis, one senior said each debater kept them quiet. The file the drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or videos.
he said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kanpaas.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
Zac Grant, Jolin, Mohr, sophomore, research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
"My debate teacher told me outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also萨KU because of the deference as one of the programs.
**WITOLD TWORK IS**
to presuppose
competence in
combat.
"We need the competition
teams to get ready for the
battle."
at the University of Arizona. Despite increasing commitments, he said KU's data looked encouraged because he had always been careful. But he said he was not so financial support.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national college championship throughout the United States
Parson also said KU has good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The teams are selected of their performance in the deb. The debate season lasts through March.
This year's national chain
"I think our reputation attackers defenders," he said. He needed additional funding if he wanted to come to conference tournaments."
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at a tour shop costs at a 1973 level.
in exercises done at various speeds to determine whether the muscle are predominantly 'slow-twitch' or 'fast-twitch' (for strength and quickness). This information can then be applied to training positions. I mentioned, for example, are better served by a high percentage of explosive power at the snatch.
Using the Cybes in conjunction with aids and cardiovascular传感 coaches can "screen" entire players. The profile player profile shows which team
positions are weak and which players need special conditioning or new slots.
A related benefit of screening up the chance to forestall likely injuries. The Cbex tests indicate muscle weaknesses, and coaches and playmasters are in position to build strength in the weak areas before they overtested.
S PORTS science research indicates that the most important factor in an athlete's success is the body that achieves
According to Ogilvie's findings, football players are generally more
ical traits can also affect performance.
Dr. Bruce Ogilive, a pioneer in clinical sports psychology at San Jose State University, says top professionals share common personal traits. trade skills and sports psychology field since 1954. Ogilive has conducted extensive research with football programs at Stanford University, the U.S. Air Force Academy, and San Diego University as pro teams and Olympic teams.
STEP RIGHT UP! TEST YOUR STRENGTH!
HAVE YOU GOT WHAT IT TAKES!
BY TIM SMIGHT
It was the first day of football practice, and the coach stood surveying the crop of candidates for the ninth-grade team.
"You're too skinny, son," he said when he spotted me standing among the quarkbacks and relied on his strength to have basketball or cross-country."
He was right, of course. I weighed about 130 pounds then. But I was eager for the status and glory of the gridiron.
35
"I can throw and catch," I said.
"Can't I give it a try?"
Smight tests his leg strength on the Hydra-Gym
"Okay, son," said the coach. "let's see how you take him." He talked of whom were busy bucking each other down, without any
"I want to hear bites crunching over their" telsley the coach told us. "I know you are in menem over and looked at me." "Which way are those basket-holders?"
A dozen years have gone by since then, and the only giordan frisson Ive tasted has come in my room. He's a football games on the beach. But Ive always wondered if, given an intensive body-building program, I might at last have been able to play in the Rose Bowl. Perhaps the refined and sophisticated physical screening done by teams today would reveal hidden potentions, as a coach's glance couldn't spot.
and suitability for different positions.
Dr. Donald Mitchell, an orthopedic surgeon and medical direc-tors of the Sports Treatment and Pain Fort Sanders Hospital in Knoxville, Tennessee, has devised such screening programs for several sports organizations, varying variations of which are used by many college and pro teams, involves a series of tests and exercises, minimizes player's strengths, wears equipment.
to see what this process is like and to learn my football skill, I had the ball screening at the STAR Center. The session took about two hours, beginning with height and weight measurements was evaluated, and my percentage of body fat was calculated on skin measurements of the skin.
Several grunting tests on the XC2 II machine followed. As went through several leg exercise tests on the XC2, electronically graphed the muscles of my legs and ankles; the data would also determine my muscle-liberal type. After this I was tested for gross upper limb strength with a Hydra-Gym, a kind of hydraulic machine. Arm-leg, and ankle-flexibility tests were next, all involving stretching exercises, and my grip strength was measured as a special gripping instrument.
Next came an agility and coordination test, similar to the tire drums used by football teams (exercise tires) and basketball hoops (screened holes). The screening ended
4 SPORTS BULLETIN
with a cardiovascular endurance test, which consisted of running up and down steps for three minutes. The pulse rate measure afterwards.
The next morning, Dr. Mitchell evaluated the results and gave me a report. My height and weight were rated excellent for my age build. Percentage of body fat (15 percent) was also rated excellent, cardiovascular condition and physical ability was good everywhere but my himstails and heel cords. My endurance was good, and I had a predominantly *slow-wait* endurance during my himstails endurance over strength.
The bad news was in the area of strength. My maximum bench-power from a raised-arm position was only 125 lbs. from a lowered-arm position. Both were low compared to the average football player's, as was my leg and ankle strength except when strong due to burnin
"What sports would be best for me?" I asked the physical therapist who had screened me.
“Well, things like running and basketball,” she said. I was enraged by feelings of déjà vu. But Mr. Hammond acknowledged at the bottom of the report.
"Not a good football prospect because of body build and strength," Dr. Michelle's report "Primarily to endurance-type activities."
"Recommendation of football safety, wide receiver, or quarterback in a team sport," the report was a program of weight lifting and flexibility exercises.
Let's see. I've still got four years of college football eligibility left. If I start the weight program I should be about 30 pounds by September.
Tim Smight is a staff writer for 13-30 Corporation.
emotionally stable, extroverted,
nonverbal, and tolerant pain
than the plumping male popular
model who wants to set high
goals and be leaders.
The higher the abilities of the players Qoligive tested, the more dramatically these traits showed. For example, in a group of NLI-AllPros – the elite of the elite “Players of high ability showed an extraor-action and a need to use their skills to contest reality.” Qoligive says.
howlers, flankers and placeholders, perhaps the games'most entertaining, were less likely to show up with players at other positions. Ogilvie found them to somewhat overlap with skillet's "more like an artist" I said. Ogilvie termed with the act, the skill exceptional catch, the long field goal.
Quarterbacks and defense backs were found to have high abilities to communicate, to offensive and defensive signals, change game situations, and so on.
O
GILVIE noted that outstanding players often have a quality for which
even a profession of terms like psychology has a simple label—tough-minded. "The outstanding athlete," he says, "are able to self-delight and depression. I love them but a burner — it makes them bang."
Two of the most important traits for a football player are "a positive self-esteem" and an ability to understress. Ogilvie says. Dr. Murk's research, involving tests of athletes' endurance, and athletes at the Denver lab, also emphasizes the importance of handling stress as a crucial characteristic of athletes.
"The common attribute (taming top athletics)—regardless of person—was the ability to function in team play. In 2013, Coyle says. In essence, a star has the ability to kick a 45-yard goal not only in practice, but also with the ball in the Rose Bowl. Clen has hit 75 times in the athletics (including Olympic gold medal winner Dorothy Hamil) through "desensitization" training, the athlete to ignore crowd presence and concentrate on the task at hand.
Cleil, Ogniv, and other sports scientists aren't trying to create the baseball field they may help coaches and players in. They're searching for that extra competitive edge.
Mark F. Weber a long-distance runner and an reporter photographer for The Morning Call in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
1. A) 30%
B) 40%
C) 50%
D) 60%
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
Bv KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Ouverture, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, buried from class on May 16. After a flood in 1929, 1928 revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State responded.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about
them," Was that only valid for the rich in the
East. "McNavarro."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the full effect of the market crash did not hit the stock market.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said, and except for Chicago, there was no difference.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales rushes that any real worry came to mind."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been followed by a slow decline almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that the biggest investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1926 HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin that is, on a system of credit, often paying as a percentage.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were increasingly dependent on labor. Galbraith. Growing industries needed more capita!
THE CASIAN stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and business analysts have been according to Galibath. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the recession were unissued.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willightly deposited their savings into banks.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Embezzlers, knowing that speculation flee made people reckless, said phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculator calculated the crash was coming, Gathrush said.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pill-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Bernstein, the Bank of America and partners of J.P. Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Bills." Stockholders were shocked when at once, Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than a quarter of all the stockless loss was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more announced. The building was then sounded up. But the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured they were back.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a franchise, until the stock began to drop. The time the ticket tape machine signed off with had been sold. Total loss was more than $1 billion.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, hushed ruin
"NONE OF the experts foresaw how bad it would get," McCoy said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Facilities and credit were tight. By 1922, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobless, Galbrath wrote in 1934. Prices dropped, but even at a lower no one was paying.
See CRASH back page
AUTUMN
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Vol. 90. No.46
10 cents off campus
Mondav. October 29.1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
FAMILY TIME
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory distributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
mould
specialist would
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation and begin a plan to begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenanigans, 901 Mississippi St. and,
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior in private clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's,
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pompon squad ride alape at Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty percent of attendees participated in the event.
BARB KIP
member commission voted
pum girl romination. About 20 of the warmers, some now at the field at halftime of the Homecoming football game, said they were upset.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the best programs in the nation, Donn Parson, DK director science and beat debate coach, University of Kansas.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1972, and 1973. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
"The 1780s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
He also said 37 RU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver
draws and uses dead letter keep 10 file
drawers. The file drawers are filled with information
on subjects taken from magazines, books or
journals.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Zac Grant, Joplin, M., soophmore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of an question intellectively."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
'My debate teacher told me outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also as KJ because of the deprivation as one of the programs.
IT WOULD TORK WORK for
compete against quality
*we Need the competition
teams to get ready for the
squad.*
Parson also said KU had good reputation in debate against witter opponents.
he increased in income and coun-
nements, he said KU's Debe
people became involved
but he said he was not so
aware.
I think our repudiation
attracts矩阵. he saus
need additional funding if I
can compete to compre-
tionnées.
The top 60 debate teams
teams from U.S. colleges are
selected to represent the
committee of debate
throughout the United States
The teams are selected of their performance in the deb The debate comes less
This year's national chair at the University of Arizona
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at a tournament costs at a 1794 level.
Although the game unfolds in Texas, it's as neutral as if it were held in the red River. Dallas is halfway Austin, Texas, and Norman, Oklahoma. Both schools receive the team's home uniforms when their teams wear home uniforms alternately.
FTS, Saturday morning in Dallas, the day of the Game. Texas vs. Oklahoma at the Cotton Bowl football game between two teams who happen to be among the best teams in the nation, Texas-Oklahoma.
For on this October weekend, the game - as important as any the team plays - isn't always the main attraction of the school's children to see the Texas State Fair, which is considered one of the country's finest. Thousands bring the festivities to campus and party they do. Most of the festivities begin Friday afternoon, as the Oklahoma students roll in for the games and the Texans from the south.
Because Oklahoma and Texas are top-match football teams, the game usually has national implications. It also affects the employment of a couple of coaches, "Both
coaches' jobs rolled on for 10 years,
says long-time Texas publicist
Jones Ramsey.
DID YOU KNOW THAT THE HORSE WAS USED TO ROLL A WAGON FOR SAILING?
The most notable victim was Blanky Cherry, who resigned under pressure after the 2013 season. Texas team to a number two national ranking. His crime: Losing an international championship, 14-13. The team was enough for Longhorn fans; the OU trailing 13-7 and too muchOU. trailing 13-7 and blocked a punt when Texas had only 10 players on the field. The team was blown by Cherry and was on his way out.
Texas leads the series 43-27. There have been three ties, including that between Texas and Oklahoma. That was the final OT Texas game for Texas coach Darrell Dartray, a former All-American quarterback a winner in 1985. ILLUSTRATIONS BY HUGH GRANT
ILLUSTRATIONS BY HUGH ARMSTRONG
The Big Eight's GREAT RIVALRIES
These are the heart-stopping, go-for-broke anything-can-happen contests. And if you lose, there's always next year.
BY PETE GOERING
Royal, the winnings coach of Longmont history, was probably the player who finished his final. His Tex teams, after 15 of 18, had to oklahoma in a game.
Streak are commonplace in this clash, which dates back to 1900 in Oklahoma City. Los Angeles took place in Oklahoma history, lost last six games against Texas but won only two. Oklahoma has only 29 wins during his 17 years. Oklahoma eight of those defeats were on the way.
One of the most unusual was a 94-80 back in 1992. OU's touchdown for Romine Flecher, a former hockey doctor, to Dorian Rentzel, who to Dalis. It was the high-point career for Flecher, who joined the team after a Sooner coach was hit by an N.C. he threw hot dots in the stands.
Rentzel developed into an outstanding receiver for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football team that afternoon he was in Dallas that afternoon. He had hitchhiked from Norman, and Eight Conference had a limitation on the number of players who could travel with the team, but no one knew how many could play. So Rentzel told him to sit up, and caught a touchdown.
The following year OU carried its number-one ranking into Dallas, but Texas led by Outland Trophy coach Bryan Heyward, crushed the Sooners 2-1. The team took over the number-one spot in the polls and eventually claimed national championship coaching over, went into politics.
Nebraska vs.
Oklahoma
Jeff Kinney never went into politics, but in 1971 the people of Lincoln. Nebraska, would have elected him to any office he wanted. But Jeff Kinney merely campaigned for Alabaster. He saved his best performance for 63.85 fanswear is the best football games they've ever seen.
The game was a classic. Walt Disney couldn't have dreamed up a better script. Here was Nebraska, 9-0, ranked number one in the nation, against Oklahoma, 9-0, ranked number one in the country. But there wasn't enough to best the defensive team in college football, limiting opponents to 172
HARVEY & JOHN
The hoopla was incredible. "It's gotten as much publicity as any game in the last 10 years," said
yards and 4-6 points a game. A game
was the best offseason teama
arguing 65 points, ranging
yards and 45 points a game.
Irresponsible. Force against the
middles.
Colorado athletic director Eddie Crowder.
The game also was incredible. IPS probably the greatest victory of my career, and it wasn't Dresenay after the contest ended with Nebraska on top. 35-17.
Jeff Kinney received his All-America honors, and did eight other plays on the field at afternoon. But he was a strong performer - 31 carries for 173 yards and four touchdowns, included a winner with only 1:38 remaining.
It had been billed as the game of the decade. It had been played like the game of the century. "This game should be put in a time frame," said Joe Katz, former executive director of the Sugar Bowl.
The two heavyweights have stood toe-to-toe and slugged it out for 58 years, the victor, more often than preceded to the top of the college basketball sebastian clawed over OU to claim a back-to-back national titles in 1970 and 1971. Oklahoma returned the fearless a few later, hosting its first Big Red to the pinnacle of college football in 1974 and 1975.
The Sooners were one fumble away from another national championship in 1978. Running back he was to have been stopped at Nebraska later in the game. Using the form which a few months later would him the Hesham Trophy, Sims started a seven-second effort. As he sprinted ever, a Nebraska defensive back jarred the ball loose. Another red-letter defender recovered for the Hokies, preserving their 17-14 victory.
Iowa State vs. Iowa
For 43 years, Nebraska served as Iowa State's big game, but only house the University of Iowa football team and the "farm school" in Ames. The division was granted in 1934 when Iowa, faunting its membership in the big game, terminated a 10-year contract with Nebraska in all sports. The feud was on.
Eventually, with assistance from the state legislature, athletic directors Forest Eswaksha of Iowa and Clay Staples of Iowa State out a two-year contract to reschedule his competition in 1977. The two men agreed verbally on a four-year extension to the contract.
In Iowa City, the decision was greeted without enthusiasm. In Iowa City, he left the Hawkeyes tired to nullify an arrangement. An arbitrator was
SPORTS BULLETIN 5
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick, Tick, Tick. The ticker machine mapped out the mail messages for Oct. 29, 1929. T tick, good, poor.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about
the fast cash. That was only for the rich in
the Fast Cash Market."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the full effect of the maneuvers did not hit the Midwest. He said.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said, and except for Chicago, there was little change in the company's stock.
"Some people became nervous, but it was until well after the 1920 Christmas sales rush that any of us stopped trying."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually come earlier than the peak, almost daily account of slurping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that many investing investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, and more than $7 trillion in percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation had faded. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of single producers, making it easier to produce. Galbraith. Growing industries needed more capital?
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money but economists and bankers were reluctant to lend it according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the year went to banks.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emebelzers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, said phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The emebelzers calculator knew the crash was coming, Galbrath said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and James M. Morgan not several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billion$. Stockholders are likely to have lost $100 billion at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infections, Galbraith said. More than 8 million people had lost loss was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been stemmed, the Times reported. A dozen of the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, hushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Signed became brisk, then surged into a frank, unstinted scream. And it was the time the ticker tape manager signed off with the team. The loss had been sold. Total loss was more than $1 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get. McVacon said."
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factories had been shut down to fight it. By 1952, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobless, Galibrath wrote in 1943. Prices dropped, but even at a low no one was buying them.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Vol. 90, No. 46
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KUU
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCCR investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior in private clubs would be "relatively short."
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation of a school that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Sheenigans, 901 Mississippi St., and St. John's, 801 Montreal St.
The seven-member commission voted
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision ww based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory practices in distributing membership appl
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed on or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's.
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pompom squad ride alon-
Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty-
Five members of the pompom squad ride on the float.
BARB KI
pon girl reunion. About 28 of the women, some now to the field at the homefront of the football team, attended the reunion.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation. Donn Parson, KU president and head debate coach, said last week.
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been first in 1970, 1971, 1973, 1974, and 1975. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons. Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said each debater kept 10 file copies of his notes. The file the drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or newspapers.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Zac Grant, Jooptim, Lopin, sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school,
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
"My debate teacher told me outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also sat KU because of the deli being one of the programs.
IT WOULD LOW TWORK for a prestigious tournament team. "We need the competition teams to get ready for the
Parson also said KU had good reputation in debate against weaker opponents.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national ch a committee of debate
I think our reputation, I think our reputation, he said. He added additional funding to come to compete in tournaments.
Despite increasing companions, he said KK'd leave when he left. People becoming involved I. But he said he was not to be taken seriously.
Hurricane
He said the team receivers
Senate to use for transports
two meals a day at tournam-
ents costs at a 1975 level.
and costs at a 1975 level.
The teams are selected of their performance in the debt. The debate season lasts through March.
This year's national chant at the University of Arizona
Missouri vs. Kansas
summoned, visited both campuses, and ruled tema was mournful as a memorial. When the schools finally played in 1972, Iowa upped the game to 6-4.
Missouri and Kansas engage in another heated rivalry. The two coaches who remained at Missouri the longest, Dion Faurant and Dawn Faurant, both played for Kansas. Faurant won 13, lost four, tied two. Devine won nine, lost two, tied two. When Faurant retired, the Tiger stadium was named in his honor. Devine left to play in the NFL and at Notre Dame.
Al Ognifo was 10 to fortune. He was forced out after the 1972 season because he missed Missouri team had lost six of seven games to KI
Tiger students these days get more excited about the Nebraska and Oklahoma games (those two teams draw the biggest crowds). Then a few fans rather whip Kansas than anyone else. The rivalry is the oldest west of the Mississippi River. It also one of the closest. Missouri leads 40-8, with nine ties. In 87 games, the Nebraska team had a fewer memorable moments.
It's 1969. Jayhawk fans feel Devine is running up the score. KU
1. The birds are playing with each other.
coach Pepper Rodgers later recalled, "I gave him the peace sign from the sideline, and he gave half of it back." Mruzon won 69-21.
In 1956 Faurier retired with a 15-3 victory over KU, a game that led to Chuck Mather's downfall as the league took KU. The Kill had the game in the lame game at 13-13. The Jayhawks ran a deep reeve too deep (Matter) later he was confused about the loss and he was forced to play Bobbin Robinson, was tackled in the end zone by Missouri's Chuck Mether for a safety. Faurier "You win some, you lose some; every time one wakes up on the beach"
Nine years earlier, 1960. MKII, ranked number one in the nation by his performance, nine-man front to stop the Tigers' famed student-body left and right for the Jayshacks eventually had to forfeit it. The Hallack Bert Ccam was declared inelegible. The forfeit cost KU the team's first win against Orange Ball, but defeat cost Missouri its first unbeaten, united season and the national champion.
Kansas vs.
Kansas State
Mother's popularity had slipped
Lawrence even before that mismatch,
and she had been crushed for the second
straight year by Kansas State.
Now, if there is a team Jayhawk
from Missouri, more than Missouri,
its K-State.
6 SPORTS BULLETIN
Likewise, K-State's season is in shape, and boys have been rare. In 1955 K-State won 40-6, and 20-year later the world discovered just how the team can do well.
Credi Andy Stewart, a little-used KS state guard. Watching films of the Jahvahns the week of the film's release, the halfback was tipping off plays by the way he lined up. The runner ran through, passing a pass, another on a pass.
On Saturday, K-State knew every play the lajhayhs called. The result was KU's worst defeat ever to its cross-state rival.
Few coaches were suffered in Kansas State's Dong Weaver did during his seven years卸去KU. teams didn't score in the first round.
In 1966, Weaver's team not only scored a field goal) but also took the ball and a first down, as well as the 30 lead with 1.20 left in the game. But after another 8 bounds, which stopped the clock, K-State quarterback Bill Nickel
In came Thermus Butler, with only eight seconds left, to attempt a 38-yard field goal. Butler wasn't KU's normal kicker; he hadn't instructed kicking a field goal since his school. His kick was perfect
"I suppose I've felt worse, but I don't remember when." Wauser wished a KState ended his mursery with a wife replacing him with Vince Gibson.
Oklahoma vs.
Oklahoma State
Another Big Fire cross-crosses
is Oklahoma-Oklahoma
Mountain, which is making
manding 51-12 edge over the Cow-
tonia of Oklahoma State. Six of
the fire's crews were on the job.
But Oklahoma State has had it but. Perhaps the Aggests "most exciting victory over their southern rivals," said Crawford, Cronge's regina at O-State Cronge struggled through six midseason (his best test was 4-5-1), but he survived because defeated the Nets in two rows in a row. Both games were in Durke's 35-yard field with 14l left made the difference in O-STATE 17-16 win in 1965. Then came a 15i-4ity victory in 1969 when the team lost to Oklahoma in a two-point conversion attempt with 90 seconds left in the game.
The Cowboys have won against
CORONET
the Snoonas only twice since 1966, but the last victory was sweet. In 2013, the team won a back-back Fermer Miltz, O'Meara-Snons the 31-24 defeat. The victory helped the winners gain a Big Eight title, their first ever.
Colorado vs.
Colorado State
There's no doubt who rules the state of Colorado, although little is known about it. Point out that it won the last football meeting against the University CU, however, won the 14-2 margin when the rivalry was dropped in 1958. It may be only a slight difference. Dallas resigned that year after season-end losses to CSU in the state title game, the Air Force Academy.
Colorado's geographical location probabilly natural. Big Eight twirls. But it is not sure that the Buffalo Bills have any chance, anyone else, if no other reason than Nebraska's 14-game winning streak (16 of 17) against CU. Nebraska has scored more than five in a game six times in the course of the season.
If they ever forget the importance of winning The Game, the fans will be sure to remind them.
The Big Eight rivalries, as good and as exciting as they've been, will continue in future. Six of the current head coaches participated in the game of the season, most notably Kelsey Clause classic in 1971. K-State Cowley, Colorado's Chuck Fairbanks, Oklahoma State's Jimmy Switter and Texas Switter were on the Sooner side that affectioned Nebraska Tom Powers and Minnesota Powers helped coach the Huskies
Pete Goering is a sportswriter for the Topeka Daily Capital.
---
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker machine mapped out their final messages for Oct 29, 1929. Tick, good, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Hallway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on Wall Street. Street, hurried from classes. In 1928, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in America."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
a full effect of the market crash did not hit the
market.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said and, except for Chicago, there was little damage.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1292 sales wars ruck that any of these changes made any difference."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun in March. The storms carried enormous daily account of slumping stores, the decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the mid of October, the Times published an aggressive investment and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, that is, on a system of dividends paying as much as the stock price.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, and that meant a redefinition of the capitalist Gaulbrath. Growing industries needed more capital!
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and bankers also believe that according to Galbraith, credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the Great Depression were not available.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embezzlers, knowing that spectacle fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experiment of spectacle knew the crash was coming.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pill-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Fazio, the Bank of America and partners of J.P. Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions." Stockholders are now worried that the stock market at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than a million shares were lost, and the loss was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more ominous. The team then stumbled upon a new condition and conditions but, But the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange from here they went away assuredly. It was fairly Irradiated.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 18, 833, 700 shares of billowing total loss was more than $10 billion. Wall Street
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get." McCov said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Facilities were destroyed and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbraith wrote in 1984 that even dropped, but even at all low no one was employed.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
free on campus
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Vol. 90, No. 46
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
Monday, October 29, 1979
SCHULS
KCCR to investigate clubs
He said the commission's decision wnas
based on information obtained from news
media reports of alleged discriminatory
distributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
"But we de have subpoena power if it is needed " he said
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
would a civil rights agency pilot would
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory membership policies at two local disc club clubs was conducted.
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCU had to complete an investigation and could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenanigans, 901. Missouri St., and Omaha, Neb.
The seven-member commission voted
Still kickina
BARB KE
Several former members of the KU pompom squad ride stop a Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty people were evacuated from the building.
pon girl reunion. About 29 of the women, some now to the field at ballet of the homecoming football game.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU and University heads and head debate coach, said last week.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973. The team also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver
numer, said each debater kept 10 file
sheets. The papers are filed with the
file the drawers are filled with information
on subjects taken from magazines, books or
magazines.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
Zac Grant, Jolin, Mo., sophenae, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems, he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
"My teacher taught me outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also said KU because of the defense as one of the programs.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
"I think our reputation is attacker detractors," he said need additional funding from the league to compete tournaments.
"WT WOLLDON WORK IS
to compete against you"
compete against you
"We need the competition
teams to get ready for the
Parson also said KU had good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
This year's national celebration at the University of Arizona is called UA's Scholarships for Nurturing Narratives, he said KU's debt looked encouraged because people becoming involved I was not so a lot of financial support.
The top 60 debate teams are teams from U.S. colleges or are chosen for the national ch a committee of debate throughout the United States. The teams are selected by the college in the deba. The debate session lasts through March.
He said the team receives Senate to use for transport two meals a day at tournaments and he team leaves 16 costs at a 179 cost.
19
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man who each Saturday in the fall is showed in promouncement as the four senior age groups. Anomorytism is no loiterer at the 6-foot, 170-pound junior from Macomb Illinois can joyfully. His team has pitched for 1,780 yards, led the big
---
NATIONAL STUDENT SPORTS OPINION POLL
UDBS a pencil and glue part in a national poll of college students. Just check one answer for each card and mail in the card. Results will be announced in late fax.
School
1. Do you think the Associated Press and link
1. Do you turn the Associated Press and United Press International football polls are a fair way to determine the national college football champions?
2. Which of the national college football champion be determined by a national playoff instead of by the podium?
___ y99 ___ no
3. The Inlines of some bowl games are determined by contracts with conferences (the flush Bowtie for the Oklahoma State vs. Texas A&M game). These are played as a two-player game and try to win the two highest-ranked teams available. Which method of selection, in our case, will result in the best outcome?
___ contracts ___ open ___ combination of both
4. ___ contracts ___ open ___ combination of both
4. Who do you think will win this year's Heisman Trophy?
Charles White (USC)
Mark Hermann (Purdue)
Alexander Rodriguez
Matt Kupiec (North Carolina)
Phi梁晓英 (Missouri)
John Goulden (UCF)
Baby Sina (Oklahoma)
Baby Sina (Oklahoma)
Bill Hurley (Syracuse)
Darren Nelson (Standard)
Jamie Lainton (Texas)
James Lainton (Texas)
Other
Under current rules, if a college basketball game is at the end of regulation time, the game enters an interruption. If a team loses or wins, it must play until it has played sufficient time to determine a winner and a loser in games. Do you agree or disagree with the rule?
not with one of Mizzou's coeds.
"I've got a girlfriend at home,"
quarterback.
BY MIKE DeARMOND
explains. "We write letters and : the telephone when she can't down for a weekend."
Local watering holes do not ant on the all-star quarterback a customer.
"I don't drink and I don't smoke,
aday says. And besides, I'm
ly2. You not supposed to be in
six kinds of places.
"Once in a blue moon you
and me at Dea VaTu Columbia
night spot), but not very often.
I can't just at most my conti-
ness."
Bradley's main diversion is watching television, which demands no more than the energy of a video game. But that, however, is held to a minimum. I ensure time is short for young man who plays football in e-fall, baseball in the spring, and golf in grade-point-average in business.
"I hate school," Bradley says. "If you gonna go to college you might as well do the best you can. It will help me down the road I am going to build this, but I'm doing all right." 26 academic hours last year."
Summers back in Macomb, Illi-
nia, offers a nice break. Brooklyn
niss, offer no relief. Bradley works
a farm all morning, spends a
short hours at home, then
College League, a circuit
promising baseball players run
h the help of major league base
but if he resests the demands on time, Bradley doesn't show it. I need to make time for all the things it's all so, it is all a matter of making be for other things even if you seize to squeeze you into a shorter space.
"But if you really put an eye on now is the time to work at what you're doing, but he really wants to do a肌大 in bigger other professional football team," she said. "I hat I want to accomplish. I'll see time for the other things."
Bradley's decision to his dream is caused some problem. Stringing's view him as self-centered. Old Man Cody's request that him unwanted special treatment
SPORTS BULLETIN 7
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out the messages for October 19, 1929. Tick good, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Hallway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oreal, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State officials said they knew of the assault.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the market. That was only for the rich in the End." -M.M.
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the full effect of the market crash did not hit the stock market.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said, and except for Chicago, there was no harm.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales rush that any other retailer could sell them."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually stopped weeks before. "We did a daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that we were investing investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, that is, when the stock price was below the percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1923, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who would eventually be more likely to grind Glabrath. Growing industries needed more capita'
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, will willingly deposit their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economics and finance are not as easy as according to Galibert. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the period were not issued.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emebelzers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they did not own. The speculator recumbent knew the crash was coming, Grallhard said.
Even President Herbert Hower knew, McCoy said, "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Coppola, the Bank of America and partners of J.P. Morgan several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions." Stockholders were forced to take a hard line at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear that was infections, Galbraith said. More than 404,350 and 69,850 customers was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been stemmed, the Times reported, by a series of cars formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured customers.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, bushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic moment as the company announced the time the ticker tape machines sign off with had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
"NONE OF the experts foresaw how bad it would
get," McCoy said.
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factors including lower pay and credit were tight. By 1922, more than 18 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1954. Prices dropped, but even at a low no one was going to work.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 90, No. 46
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KU
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior against club clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation that would allow it to begin its investigation of the clubs. Sheamigans, 101 Mississippi St., and Lamar, 114 Mississippi St., both were found in the city.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision wa-
based on information obtained from na-
sia media reports of allegedly discriminatory
media promoters distributing member application
information.
The seven-member commission voted
Earlier this fall, local and area media,
including the University Daily Kansan,
conducted inquiries into consistencies in
the clubs' membership policies.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Campbell manager of Bullwinkle's
Still kicking
BARB K
Several former members of the KU pomp squon ride ala-
Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty
six people attended the event.
pam girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some to the field at halftime of the football home game, were on hand.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Pennier, KU director of officers and head coach, competes.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1972, and 1973. KU teams also were fifth in 1974, 1977 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons. Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver University, said each debater 10 file documents that he read. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, that he, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Zac Grant, Joedin, Mohr, sophomore, research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
'My debate teacher told a outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also is because of the deference as one of the programs.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school,
Parson also said KU had good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
"I WOULDN'T WORK to less prestigious tourname competence against quality test. We need the competition to improve for the partnerships.
The top defender teams from all U.S. countries are chosen for the national or a committee of debate through the United States. We hope their performance in the debase the season lasts through March.
Despite increasing competences, he said diplomats become better people being involved in it. But he said he was not so surprised.
"I think our request is attract debates," he said additional funding fixes to compete for tournament's.
He said the team receives Senate use to for transport for the tournaments take $20,000 for the team to
SATURDAY'S
and the adve c e o f
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stages - the college football ball field on that stage he has alternately danced and knelt in that place the ball has altered life itself for the shy young man who each Saturday in the fall throws the ball to the quarterback of the Missouri Tigers. Anomaly is no longer a state of the 6-foot, 100-pound小象 from New York in sophomore season in which he placed for 1,780 yards. led the Bie
NO POSTAGE
NECESSARY
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---
Eight in 1 yards, and completion (60.2 perc
e
Bradley college for Bend, Bir At Colun ances have and stud about.
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He has loner. "To he says.
On crisp spring eyes are g bluces ow River, wh town. If there be'
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not with one of Mizzou's coeds "I've got a girlfriend at home."
---
quarterback.
DeARMOND
"We write letters and
phone when she can't
water holes or
rating holes do not
the all-star quarterback
drink and don't smoke,
says "And besides, I
not was supposed to be in
id's of places.
in a blue moon you'll
be, or in a columbus spot,
but in a columbus spot,
not just at my most confi-
tious places like that."
Breathing into
television, which deks
no more than the energy of
the universe, that, however, is held to a
num. Leisure time is short for
a num.
all, baseball in the spring, and still carries a 2.55 grade-point average in business.
"I hate school," Bradley says. "But if you gonna go to college might as well as do the best you can do." I can't, I won't ever make the dearest list, but I'm doing all right. I paced 32 academic hours last year.
Summers back in Macomb, Illi
relief. Bradley works
i morning, spends a
ours at home, then
it in the Central Illin-
son baseball players run
of major-league base
wents the demands on
adley doesn't show it.
I make time for all
things. I make a
matter of making
or things even if you
come into shorter
time.
i really put an eye on a time to work at what you want to wantly wants to do is make er professional football "I did it, accomplish it," he said, for the other things.
s devotion to his dream
some problems, Strang-
im as self-centered. Old
friend goes to him.
him unwanted special treat-
SPORTS BULLETIN 7
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2020. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oured, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State lost it.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T have enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the country."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
he was the first to crush a crash did not hit the
Midwest until the mid-1900s.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said and, except for Chicago, there was no significant spill.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1923 Christmas sales rushing that any change in their behaviour occurred."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been delayed because of the almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that the biggest investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market. Mining prices fell by 10 percent to 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were increasingly dependent on labor. Galbraith. Growing industries needed more capital.
TO THE CASALI stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. but economists and investors have long been alarmed according to Galtraburh. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the period were liquidated.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, will willingly deposit their savings into
Fortunes were being made of paper, Emberzebras knowing that speculation flee made people reckless, said phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculation科能 knew the crash was coming, Galbrath said.
Ever President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Gianni, president of the Bank of America and Richard Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billion$" Stockholders are now having to deal with liquidation at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than a quarter of the world's stocks were more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been stemmed, the Times reported. But crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange building. They went away assured
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the tape ticket machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16,383,700 shares of more than $1 billion. Wall Street stood silent.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get."
McCay said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic loss. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factories began to close; warehouses in 1932, 1933, and 1934. In 1932, more than 18 million employable Americans were jobless, Gallabrath wrote in 1945. Prices dropped, but even at new lows one
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 46
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KU
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory membership policies at two local clubs disco
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCR had to complete an investigation and determine why it could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenqiangans, 901 Mississippi St., and Taipei, 843 Guangxi St.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory practices in distributing membership applause.
Earlier this fall, local and area media,
including the University Daily Kansan,
conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in
the clubs' membership policies.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Still kickina
Several former members of the KU pounpong square ride atop a Homecoming floor during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty people, many from Brooklyn and Queens, made the trip.
pon girl reunion. About 28 of the women, now to the field halfway at the Homecoming football game, will be reunited in
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU and Dana Schuster and head debate coach, said last week.
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate," Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said each debater 16 file his papers in order to be selected. The file the drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or research materials.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
KEVIN WILSON, Audit, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-gong term paper."
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, that, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among ku's outside Kansas.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Zac Grant, Jolin, Pho, sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better nanners for classes.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
"My debate teacher told in outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided I Johnson said. Grant also said KU because of the die of one as one of the proarrams.
IT WOULDN'T WORK in a prestigious tournaments team. "We need the competition teams to get ready for the
Parson also said KU ha good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The top 60 debate teams
teams from U.S. colleges
are chosen for the national ch
ollege competition throughout the United States
This year's national charge at the University of Arizona is that he has made naments, he said KU's debacle looked encouraged because people becoming involved I was not so good at financial support.
The teams are selected of their performance in the debate The debate季lasts through March.
"I think our reputation attackers debatt," he said need additional funding for tournaments to compete tournaments."
The team receive
Senate to use for transport
two meals a day at a tour
costs it at 1975 level.
9
I was a day of change, a time caught between the hot breath of a
SATURDAY'S HERO
breath of a Missouri August and September's day, fresh snap. In the shadow of Jesse Hall, the main admenstry of the University of Missouri's Campus. Phi Bradley walked among those dressed during those first few days of 1977.
Mose of the new students would remain an old woman, known only to a special girl, a special boy, or both. But not Phil Bradley.
Bradley would soon acrobatics on one of America's most avid watched college football field OLBs. He has alternately danced and knelt in mental torment. Foot-alted lieutenant altered life itself for him.
man who each Saturday in the fall is shoved into prominence as the quarterback of the Missouri Tigers.
Anonymity is no longer a hazard. 6-foot, 120-pound junior from Iowa and 5-foot, 140-pound from Sophomore season, in which he pursued for 1,780 yards, led the big East by 399 yards, and set a single-season completion benchmark at Missouri.
Bradley' name is known in such college football hatchings as South Bend, Birmingham, and Norman. At Columbia, Bradley' performers have given the Missouri fans and students something to brag about
Despite such successes, Bradley is uncomfortable by big Man on Campus. "I'm a different type of person," he says, "I would be incapable to participate in athletics. I am very hardheaded. I don't make friends easily."
"I've got a girlfriend at home."
He has been described as a social loner. "To a certain extent, I am," he says.
On crisp fall days and warm spring evenings, thousands of couch-side walks to walking along the bluffs over the river to Surouri River, which flows by just west town. If you find Phil Bradley, you most likely be alone, not with other people.
1984 N.F.L. season
15
His freshman season was too much too soon. Now Phil Bradley has matured into an All-American quarterback.
RY MIKE DeARMOND
Local watering holes do not count on the all-star quarterback as a customer.
he explains. "We write letters and use the telephone when she can't come down for a weekend."
"I don't drink and I don't smack."
Bradley says. "And besides, I am only 20. I'm not supposed to be in those kinds of places."
"Once in a blue moon you'll
me and Ida Va tu Faumia
mur apart, but not very often.
We'll go in my own confident
going into play again."
Bradley's main diversion is watching television, which demands that the energy needed to turn the wheel be even that. However, is held to a minimum. Lesser time is short for man playing who plays football in the field in the spring, and still carries a 255 grade-point average in business.
"I hate school," Bradley says. "If you gonna go to college you might as well do the best you can, and will help me down the road. I won’t help me down the road, but I'm doing all right for 32 academic hours last year."
Summers back in Macomb, Illinois, offer no relief. Bradley works on a farm all morning, spends a short hours at home, then plays in the Central Illinois Collegiate League, a circuit for promosing baseball players run with the help of major league baseball.
he resents the demands on his time. Bradley doesn't show it. "I need to work for all that," he explains. "And that's all it's a matter of making other things even if you have to squeeze them into shorter periods of time.
"But if you really put an eye on it, now is the time to work at what you want to do." Bradley says. "We are big real wants to do is make it more professional football or baseball." "I'll do that, accomplish what I want to accomplish," I have time for the other things later."
Bradley's devotion to his dream brudely added some problems. Strangers who live as self-centered. Old friends go to the hospital but he unspecialized a treatment to him.
SPORTS BULLETIN
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out the final messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good, kio.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Ouand, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1928, the University of Iowa, 1928, received a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of law, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the city."
According to McCoy, professor of history,
a full effect of the market crash did not hit the
company.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crush, McCoy said, and except for Chicago, there was no shortage.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 129th Christmas sales rush that they realized it was true."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun a year earlier. The Times carried an equally daily account of slumping investment markets. The decline was at first best, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times revealed that billions of investing investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market. In the early 1980s, as little as 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1925, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, but that is not the case today. Graibarth, Growing industry needed more capita'
THE CASUAL $1 stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and investors have been increasingly according to Grabham. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the period were insignificant.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Emebelzers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The explorer explainer calculator knew the crash was coming, Gaibraad said.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said, "Hower was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1928. When the market slumped in September, Mr. Mitchell was forced to efforts to combat it, Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Mulligan, executive vice-president, and partners of J.P. Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the collapse.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Turmoil and punched and dumped stock onto the market all at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear among new infectious, Gaithrab said. More than 484,350,390 cases of COVID-19 loss was more than $4 billion, according to the Times."
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more automatic. The crash had been stemmed by the heavy rain that crowded the roads and butthed the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured drivers on Monday.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent a massive hushed ruin
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged, and increased by 18 percent on Tuesday. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with the company, all of the tickets had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
"NONE OF the experts foresaw how bad it would get," McCoys said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Facilities and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 13 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbraith wrote in 1984. Prices dropped, but at even a low no one was willing to work.
See CRASH back page
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
Vol. 90, No.46
free on campus
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
KCCR to investigate clubs
See story page six
ku
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior by club members disclubs would be "relatively short".
the director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation and begin its investigation that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shoenanguang 901 Mississippi St., and Brennan 865 South Carolina St.
member commission voted
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory practices in distributing membership applications.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kassan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Still kickina
BARB K
Several former members of the KU pompom squad ride a shop at Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty boys, aged 12 to 18, compete in the jumping competition.
pun girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some now to the field at halftime of the homecoming football game.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Renorter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU director of forests and head debate coach.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate, "Parson said."
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been best in 1970 in 1971, 1973, 1977 and last year. KU teams also were fifth in 1974.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said each debater 10 file requests to the court. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or journals.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make accounts more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Zac Grant, Joopin, Loom, sophomore, research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
"My debate teacher told a outstanding academic and a reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also was KU because of the dept's role as one of the programs."
IT WOULDN'T WORK to it
the prestigious tournaments
"We need the competition
teams to get ready for the
Parson also said KU has good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The teams are selected
their performance in the deba
The debate season lasts
through March.
at the University of Arizona at Despite increasingcompanions,he said KU'sdeal lookedencouraged because peoplebeing involved in it was not soonfinancial support.
"I think our reputation is attacker debates," he said need additional funding for the team to compete in tournaments.
He said the team receives Senate to use for transport two meals a day at fourteen a.m. and two meals a day at 6o costs at a 175 rate.
This year's national chap
at the University of Arizona
.
The debate season lasts through March.
The top 60 debate teams
teams from U.S. colleges
are chosen for the national ch
联赛. They are headquartered
brought forth the United States
THE DEATH OF BERNARD J. ROGERS
HALLEY BASE
"One of the toughest things I have to cope with is coming home and some of my friends, they kind of put me on a pedestal," she liked more any more wildly than they are or am no better than anybody else.
It's the same on campus
"A lot of times people in my classes don't even come up to me. Bradley said, "I hear them say, 'Oh, that him.'"
At times it almost seems that his classmates are apprehensive at the idea of facing the young men they have abandoned on Saturday afternoons.
"I don't want to necessarily secure people away." Bradley says, "I just that the would rather be known as Phil Bradley of Philadelphia." The athlete.
"As soon as it's brought up in a discussion who I am, some people just want to talk about football." Bradley says. "I don't really mind it, but kind of gets on my nerves and I always forget what about I do as nervous."
"What I'm trying to say is, I'm not different from them. I am different from the situations, all the things that I am, that they are. I want to make them."
Bradley's summers consist of playing baseball and working on a farm, unloading hats (left) and wearing fences (right).
Bradley, thrust into what many freshmen would have viewed as a dream situation, knew that he wasn't ready. And, as the season began in 2015 and out of the lineup so much more, Bradley up startings on
If Phil Bradley seems not to fit the usual image of the sock, perhaps it's because he has experienced a switch in football spectrum. Bradley has known the success of the 1978-74 season, with its Liberty Bowl victory over Louisiana State. He has also seen his squad battling freshman season in 1972.
Missouri had a quarterback, and a pretty good one, in Pete Woods, who worked with the Kansas City Chiefs, but quicker than Missouri fans down to injury in the first half of the Tigers' 1977 season-opener a
8 SPORTS BULLETIN
games, that trepidation blossomed into a nightmare.
"I'd have sent for just playing very sparsely," Brady recalls. "That's why I came here. I knew she wouldn't have to, here so we shouldn't have to."
It still seems an odd statement to make. But then Phil Bradley wasn't ill, and isn't concerned about any sort of damage. He is being home. He wasn't ready.
The Tigers picked a son Baja Eight contestor before Wacky's injury. The Tigers led the league's leadership, the season was a major disappointment as an abyssal moment.
B
(42 of 94). Missouri, they said,
would finish 4-7 against, or worse.
Brady Stadium at quarterback in
1978.
Even Bradley was shaken. "I kinda got to do a little bit, he says, 'he thinks that maybe, well, I wasn't cracked up to play with all of these guys. But after a pretty good camp, the doubts left."
The doubts may have left Bradley's mind at that point, but it wasn't Missouri 45-14 victory over Mississippi in the third game people began realizing that they might just be maybe, this kid was for real.
Bradley could have thumbed his nose all the way to the victory party after a 14-of-19 passing that produced two touchdowns. He had also run for 14 yards and total outoff score of 212 yards.
"Aw," he said instead, "let the game speak for itself. Some people might say, 'I told you so,' but I'm not going to."
in the sweetness and light for Phil Bradley. The pain of 1977 failure, the pain of 2013 media to that failure, had medial tissue. Bradley, who had masked his pain for so long, began wearing his heart on his sleeve and a chip on his left shoulder at the 78 season, suddenly damped by a well-whining, if frankly snooked, press. Bradley wilted into himself. When he did go beyond the wateriness that baited them for poured forth.
"I told you last August I knew
I would do it. Bradley said
during Liberty Bowl week." "People were going by what they saw in them."
By what they wanted to see?
"Yea! Right!" Bradley sat out.
"Phil Bradley's mad at people.
I still don't feel I've been treated right by some people."
Similarly, however, the bitterness began to late. Later, Bradley would have thought I was better. I thought I even played better, at time than I thought I was.
Bradley wound up as a second-cam All-Bight eight pick at quarterback and was called back to signal-scaler for the Orange Bowl champions, the Oklahoma Sooners. In addition, he was picked by the Associated Press on the All-American.
Now Bradley, sure to
sure thing for All-Big Fight first in队,
is 1979 being touted as a
possible future Heisman Trophy.
candidate. "Which is going a little bit too far," Bradley says with a grin.
Bradley did a lot more grinning following the close of last year's football season, although this time he had to do with success on the gridiron.
When he first signed a football letter of intent with Missouri, Bradley was given a letter by the football coach Al O'Neufro that the could try out for baseball in his spring of the spring with his sophomore team.
Bradley not only tried out, he claimed the regular right-field job. She took her team from RBI, RBI five home runs, and a teamwide five triples at Mizuho Irina.
Baseball proved a release from the pressure cooker of the football (for "the first time in two years," "in something I intended to do long before I signed a scholarship to come to this school. I didn't start ball until it was a freshman in high school around baseball ever since I could walk." Bradley's name is on file as a future major-league baseball player among others, the Philadelphia Bullies and the Kansas City Royals.
The football coaches, of course, would rather have had Bradley on the field than not. But, to the credit of Coach Warner Pena and his staff, Bradley was skilled at passing two sports, even when early in the baseball season, he suffered a brow injury.
Others weren't as closemouthed about the apparent conflict of sports and politics, says like -What if missing spring football huts? Bridgeman performers are not.
"You can't tell now," said Brady. "Sure. 'If you have a good year they're going to back point to the fact that I played baseball. If you played football season, they'll probably play basketball. They'll matter that I even played basketball."
That battle — if there is to be a battle, will he退治 after graduation? Walmart won't worry about it. Neither he be drawn into projecting a choice, two years from now, from being a football and professional baseball player.
"I just hope I have two choices," he says.
"There's a right way and a wrong way to handle all this, you know." Briley adds. "As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it. As much as I can I do it.
Mike DeArmond is a sportswriter for the Kansas City Times and Star.
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick, Tick, Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out the messages for Oct. 19, 2012. T tick, good. T tick, bad.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried from classes at Iowa State University, 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football court that KU paid its players. Iowa State officials said they were not present.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the ceremony had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the business McMaan."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the full effect of the market crash did not hit the
money market.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the McCajon, McCajon and, except for Chicago, the crash was a bit worse.
Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas rash that any of us would recall.
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been driven by a strong interest in almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that investors investing investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, that is, on a system of credit, often paying as interest.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, and it had led to a massacre of American food. Galbrath. Growing industries needed more capital!
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy access to the markets, but Burkholder saw early as 122 according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the crisis were not available.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embezzlers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculator calculator knew the crash was coming, Grabath said.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said, "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the fall of 1928. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Gannini, president of the Bank of America and William Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billion$” Stockholders were left shocked when a speculation at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than $1 billion of those who lost less was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic, with reports of improvement and conditions were sound. But the crowds formed early Friday outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured they would be back soon.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the tape ticket machines signed off with an ordinary good night, 18, 383, 700 shares of stock were on the market. Wall Street stood silent, a massive, hushed rubin
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get." McCov said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factors such as poor management and credit were tight. By 1922, more than 19 million employable Americans were jobless, Galbraith wrote in 1924. Prices dropped, but even at lower lows one year later.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Vol. 90. No.46
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory practices in club disc clubs would be "politically abortive."
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCRU had to complete an investigation that would begin to determine how could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shemangury, Mississippi St., and Bakersfield, California.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory practices in distributing membership app-
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the global membership policies.
Still kicking
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Several former members of the KU pompon squaw ride a台eHomecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty boys were among those killed in the attack.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
pon girl reunion. About 60 of the women, now to the field at hatchline of the Homecoming football team, will be reunited.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELI
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, Director of forces and head debate coach,
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate. "Parson said."
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974. KU teams were also fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1975.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said case debris kept in his library is "massive." The file the drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Zac Grant, Joplin, M., soophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
'My debate teacher told a outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also said KU because of the debate as one of the programs.
Parson also said KU hac good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The top 60 debate teams of teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national chariot race throughout the United States.
The teams are selected of their performance in the debate The debate season lasts through March.
IT WOULDNT WORK to
presidentig tournan
team we need
"we need the competition
teams to get ready for the
This year's national chap at the University of Arizona.
at the University of Arizona or
at the despite increasing compa-
nements, he said KU's debate
looked encouraged because people
becoming involved in the
business was not so a financial support.
"I think our reputation is attacker retreats," he said need additional funding treasury to compete in tournaments."
He said the team receives
Senate to use for transport
two meals a day at tourme
ness costs. He teams
costs at a 175% rate.
Miller High Life
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Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped
mails messages for Oct. 19, 2023. Tick, good.
Tick, bad.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State responded.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about
that. Was that only for the rich in the
East." Mr.Neal said.
According to Donald McCoy, professor history, the full effect of his attack did not hit the city.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, M-Coop said, and even for Chicago, there was no benefit.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales ruck that any truth was found."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begin Sept. 14. The Times carried an article accusing Apple's slapping decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times carried optimistic articles, encouraging investments in Apple.
The 1926 HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market in the 1930s as well as lending as little as the actual value of the stock.
By 1925, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were more likely to produce. Galbraith. Growing industries needed more capita'
TO THE CASALI stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money for economists and financial analysts. According to SEC, 224 according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the recession were also available.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into the bank.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Emberzies, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experience speculator knew the crash was coming, the stock market was crashing.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and partners of J.P. Morgan met several times. Afterward, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billion$” Stockholders were scrambling to find ways to survive at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and foe; was infections, Gabrath said. More than a quarter of those who had less was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been determined, the Timon group was there to help and the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured that things would be fine.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16,383,700 shares had been sold. Total loss was more than $1 billion.
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get." McCoy said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes of West Michigan, overproduction
**CRASH ALERT**
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factors such as new technology and credit were tight. By 1832, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobless, Joblath wrote in 1943. Frokes dropped, but even at low ones a few years later.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 90, No. 46
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Yankees fire Billy Martin
Monday, October 29, 1979
See story page six
RUIZ COUNTY JUNIOR LEAGUE
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pompon squad ride alape at Homecoming festival during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty people were there.
pam girl reunion. About 60 of the women, some now to the field at ballet of the Homecoming football game in Brooklyn.
BARB KI
Debate team claims far in national tournament
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Denn Parson, KU president, investigates and head debate coach, week.
Staff Reporter
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Paron said KU had won the national championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1973, 1977 and last year. KU teams also were fifth in 1978.
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate," Parson said.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970. Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver
Junner, said each debater kept 10 file
discs and the documents were filed with
the file drawers are filled with information
on subjects taken from magazines, books or
magazines.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
Bv HAROLD CAMPBELL
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among KU's outside Kansas.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Zac Grant, Joplin, M. sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
'My debate teacher told me in outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also was because of the de reputation as one of the programs.
KCCR to investigate clubs
IT WOULDN'T WORK in
compete against quality队
*we need the competition
teams to get ready for the
Parson also said KU had good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The top 60 debate teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national college debate throughout the United States.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory practices by clubs and disc clubs would begin, "relatively shortly."
at the University of Arizona & despite increasing compensation, he said KU's debt burden is not as large as people become involved in. But he said he was not so of a financial support.
the teams are selected
of their performance in the deba
the debate season lasts
through March.
This year's national champ at the University of Arizona
"I think our reputation is attack debaters," he said. He needs additional funding for trips to compete tournaments."
the director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation of Mr. Grace and could begin its investigation of the clubs, Steenmaniag 601, Mississippi St., and Nassau St. to ensure safety.
He said the commission's decision *was* based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory practices in distributing membership application forms.
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at a taurine cost at a costs of 1975 level.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the club membership policies.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
needed." he said. The investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
THE BENCHWARMER
After three years of frustration, John Scully finally is going to get his chance.
BY JOEL BIERIG
"It was a real rude awakening I guess it's just the same old story. You get a bunch of freshmen who were stars—more or less shots—they're at all the times of a sudden they're right in the middle of a ladder when they walk in the door."
John Scully
HEN be arrived at
Note Dame dame this
three years ago for
information, dear-
The 1978 Notre Dame squad. Scully (57) is in third row, sixth from left.
ment was advised to order a separate file cabinet for his press clipping. He was big and strong and talented, the kind of guy who would be in the starting line behind him, and could find their way around campers.
“If you listened to the coaches,” he said, John Seuclid Jr., who watched the game from his bed, pet. “yes, I think every body implied he would have a chance at the award.”
Three years later, however, John Scully's life is empty, save for the questionnaire he filled up upon his graduation. He performs in a few high school all-star games. The sports information department reports no contact with him, and interviews with John Scully, who chose Note Dame from 100 colleges that had expressed an interest in her career not popular interview subjects.
After a frustrating three years on the depth chart, John Scullily will finally hear his name called as a star. He is not alone; he knows that he still won't be getting star billing. The glory goes to the offensive backs, and reporters avoid a center locker as if they were worn by the Four Horsemen.
But if glory has been his goal, John Nealy would have pried the splinter out of his rear end and used his ample speed to get to it. "If he might start thinking of transferring," his father says.
His girlfriend suspected he might
All true, John Scully says, but out of the question. "I hate to quit at things," says this 6-foot-2, 540-inch immobile with the force. "I don't like people that quit nothing, no matter what it is."
leave football altogether. "After his first two years, he could have played a full season in Valerie Gulys." "His father was perfectly capable of picking up his
When he first packed his bags for South Bend, quitting was the farthest thing from his mind. all he could think about was continuing a long career he had begun at Holy Cross School in Huntington, New York.
B ECAUSE he played so well as a senior, he chosen to perform several high school alli.
star games. As a result, he arrives at *Notte Dame* with toochairballs and an earplug. He asks, "I thought it was when I got to scum." Sally says, "in her eyes," but she really favoring it a lot. In the increasingly gored lime fragments in her ears.
He also destroyed any plans for instant success. "I was more or less seven weeks ago," he recalled, "weeks I was at Notre Dame," he says. "After the second or third year of my studies, I played any more. My arch had headed by them, but my ankle was broken."
Moreover, he never even dressed for practice; I would go and lift a chair to teach. He well-acquainted with other members of my class. I simply members of my class. I simply
10 SPORTS BULLETIN
He was homeshock to boot, and his grades weren't much to cheer about. He went through that first year had to do a new dress," says Brian Boulou, the Notre Dame line coach. "It was really pressing," says Seymour. "I was just limping around. I thought my knee was ruined. I ended up with a 2.3 grade average, but I think my grade was in the course of what I was going through.
His ankle healed faster than his hip. Because coaches play gamers, they need to have little attention to spare for little damage damaged merchandise that doesn't figure in the following week's game. When you know you get to know them better, 'Silly says now.' It's only natural that they pay more attention to their players on a more regular basis, and they're more interested in seeing them improve themselves. I eventually realized they live their life well. They're not going to do something that would endanger them. They're too work toward the best possible teamwork.
At the time, however, it was difficult for him to comprehend that the best possible squid didn’t in fact know how to come up with one to turn to, no one to问。
to about the injustice of it all. Ed Chiehke, the man chiefly responsible for the recruitment of John Schull, had taken the head coaching job at Eastern Michigan and wasn't away when he got there but he didn't want there. He was kind of a lot of "loss." She was kind of a lot of "loss."
Meanwhile, out on the practice field, the other freshmen were playing Go to the Head of the Class.
"I felt a sense of despair because we all linenemen were already there," he says of my freshman class. "Nelly said she taught my class had 10 offensive lines, which I think, is really a lot. Ten lines, not including tight ends."
"I left at the bottom of the towel pot. There wasn't much of a motivating factor there. I was really in a state of stumbo. I wank really sure I was feeling much more anytime. I was wondering how it's going to be for four weeks."
Nothing that happened in the spring indicated otherwise. Scully's study of the way he didn't seem to be making much of an impression. "I didn't think I was really well," he says. Apparently the coaches didn't learn John Scully the necessary skills.
"That's what the whole thing we I think, says 'Scary' they techniques perfect, my pass block was as good as any body, but I wouldn't say as good as anybody." Sally shrugs. "Well, I shouldn't say to him, to give you
H
I shuffle,again "You can't be a grou on the field. I don't see ing you have to be
dirty, but you can't be a nice guy from the beginning to the whole story. You need to knock on the ground and knock the helmet off his head. I don't try to knock someone's head off! I'd do it from my experience in high school.
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Renorter
Tick, Tick, Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out the messages for Oct. 19, 2019, Tick, good,
Tick, good, Tick.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State officials called the accusations false.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the market had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in America."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the effect of the marked crash did not hit the Midwest.
Inventors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said, and, except for Chicago, there was no danger.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales rush that any of them made a comment."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun in October. The bank's carrier carried the same daily access of slumping stocks. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that encouraging investments and predicting a boom year in 1986.
THE 1920S HAD been boon years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market. Stocks rose by 10 percent and all 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simple producers, who were more likely to buy machines like Galbrath. Growing industry needed more capital!
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end to easy money matters. But each week, stocks rose and fell, early as 1928, according to Gallibrue. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the Great Depression came from banks.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Emebzzelz, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, said phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The accountant calculated the crash was coming, Galbraith said.
RUNNING ALMOST pill-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and partners of J.P. Morgan met several times. Accordingly, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoy said.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation. Total Drop of Billions.” Stockholders were shocked by the drop in prices at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infections, Galbraith said. More than $1 billion in losses over the last less was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more accurate than the annual forecast and conditions were sound. But the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assuredly before midnight.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, bushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a franchise, with the company having to stop selling the time the ticker tape tapes signed off with the store and start buying from them had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get," McCoy said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Slowly, the force of the crush hit industry. Factors like an increase in labor and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 18 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1984. Prices dropped, but even at new lows no one would buy a car.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 46
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Mondav, October 29.1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KU
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory behavior in recruiting membership applications.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
Still kickina
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in
Several former members of the KU pounpoun square ride atop a Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty-seven people attended the event.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one, Bailey said.
KCCR to investigate clubs
BARB KI
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some now to the field at ballet of the homecoming football team, are on campus.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU administers and beat debate coach, at last week.
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate," Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974. KU teams were also fifth in 1972, 1973, and 1974.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver
one, said each debater 10 file
documents. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or
newspapers.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Zac Grant, Jolin, Phoem, sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCRC had to complete an investigation into the death of one staff member and could begin its investigation of the clubs, Sheenamigans, 801 Mississippi St., and St. Louis, where a staff member was killed.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior by club clubs and disc clubs would be 'pelvicularly abrupt.'
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
"My debate teacher told n, outstanding academic and i reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also as KU because of the def of his status as one of the programs.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national challege throughout the United States.
"WOULDN'T WORK IKE to prestigious tournaments in Tokyo," he said. "We need the competition teams to get ready for the Olympics."
Parson also said KU has good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The teams are selected by their performance in the deba The debate season lasts through March.
at the University of Arizona or
Atleast increasing compa-
nements, he said KU's贝达
looked encouraged because
people being involved in
these initiatives was not so
in financial support.
This year's national champion at the University of Arizona.
"I think our reputation
attract draws," he said
need additional funding for
home attendance to compa-
tion tournaments."
He said the team receives Senat to use for transport two meals a day at tournemant restaurants as a cost at 195 level.
5
I was wrong, too."
The error of his ways didn't haunt him, though, until he returned to college, more year. At spring practice, he had been elevated to the second team. During fall workouts, he was hit by a defensive tackle, to the offensive unit. "He was kind of working with us," he explained, they thought just wanted another task.
What they wanted, in fact, was
an offensive tackle to replace John
Anschuay, as a backup player on the
varsity. The handwriting was for
the locker room. The scull ambed into
the locker room before practice. The depth chart
listed Martinovich in the spot Scull
had held since the spring. The
move made two weeks before the
season, left Scull off the
varsity and very nearly off his
rocker.
LLUSTRATION BY KEN SMITH
"I just remember my heart dropping down to my socks. Scafully, "I'd gotten the impression that I'd been less different than the year before. To this day, I thought I was doing a good job."
Looking back, Scully says, "I seemed the bad one he'd been considering making in move like that for a while. But it came unexpectedly." The players, wearing their massive shoulders, played players were shocked, too although
"I just remember my heart dropping down to my socks. I thought I was doing a good enough job."
they weren't experts on what goes on in coaches' minds."
To gain insight, if not a reprise,
Sully headed for Brian Boulevard.
Soily might have demonstrated his killer instinct by lowering
"He basically gave the reason he expected. "Scully says. "He said I should play the position yet, Steve Damiels was there that year; he played right tuck and weighted in a back pocket. Traditionally, they are used to dealing with tuckers who are big and powerful in those specific power in those specific roles as a fallback should be a good blocker or a halback should be a good blocker."
Scully left Boula's office with an explanation without a spot on the varsity. He was sentenced to two years of hard labor on the prep squat and the dame's answer to the chain gag "The first two teams on offense and defense are more or less the varsity." Explains Scott "There is no need for a third team and maybe another half team; and they work against the first and second teams. The third-team offers works against them, but defense it's called the prep squat. And I moved down toward that."
HE emphasis is on the word down. From the word squel, there is nowhere to be up but "NX's the most
unrigging position in football.
ways. Bouton? You're competing
with the team. And if you look too good,
you're going to get yelled at. You are
not a good player.
"It was kind of like the suicide squad." Scully says. Nevertheless, he accepted his fate, and eventually found himself詹昌说: "I wasn't about to let myself be unknown I wasn't about to lest I defeat the defensive coaches that say something. And at least that was an outlet for my frustration."
On the prep dupl, he discovered an esprit de corps not unlike a among prisoners plaiting a silhouette. "It'a different sense of camaraderie on four-sides kind of camaraderie. Not that we felt the defense was the
SPORTS BULLETIN 11
---
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The final messages for Oct 29, 1929. Tick, good.
The final messages for Oct 29, 1929. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on Wall Street. Wall Street, hurried home from classes, 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the country."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the full effect of the market crash did not hit the
business. "People were better off," he said.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said and, except for Chicago, there was no impact.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1929 Christmas sales rush that any more people learned."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun Sept. 1. The New York Times carried an article describing how the stock market decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that investment campaigns and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boon years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, that is, on a system of credit, often paying as much as $750.
By 1923, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were spending more and more on Glassbriar. Growing industries needed more capital*
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But catering artists and craftsmen have a special interest according to Galbraith. Credit is too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the period have already been sold.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Emberzebels knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The expert speculator knew the crush was coming, the speculator knew the crash was coming.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pill-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Gianmilian, president of the Bank of America and Joseph Morgan meet several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions” Stockholders who had been buying shares at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and anger was infectious, Galbraith said. More than 700 million dollars more was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been sterned, the Times reported, and the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured that the crash was over.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, bushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became break, then surged into a franchise, untouched by the ticketer. In the time the ticker tape machines signed off with the deadline, the ticketed had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get," McCov said.
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factors such as high insurance and credit were tight. By 1922, more than 18 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbraith wrote in 1943. Prices dropped, but even at a low no one was buying.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 46
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Monday, October 29, 1979
See story page six
Yankees fire Billy Martin
KCCR to investigate clubs
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCCR investigation of alleged discriminatory practices against those clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenamigans, 901 Missoula St., and Clyde St., in which Mr. Bailey
He said the commission's decision $^{b}$ based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory attributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
THE FIRST ANNUAL Lite BEER BANQUET
ITE BEER BANQUET
THE FIRST ANNUAL LITE BEER BANQUET AND"I RESPECT RODNEY DANGERFIELD"TELETHON.
(CLOCKWISE STARTING FROM ROTTOM (FET))
Jim Hancock: Not-so-keen evening caused him to flower arrangement for main course (after mistock
Don Carter! Received compliment on his jacket from
Jim Hennonchirk
Bubba Smith: Said best thing about life is it tastes great. Norm Sneed argued best thing is it's less filling. Changed mind with Smith's suggestion of easy-opening earphones.
Mickey Spillane! Announced plans to open chain of hair salons featuring unisex crewcuts
Boom Boom Geoffrion: Said, "La bier leste de Miller
Boom Boom Geoffition: Said, 'La bête刃 die Millean a un goût magnifique; Monrise Dangerfief' et 'Le grand magnifique.'
Deacon Jones: Picked fight with state of New York. New York hacked down.
Grits Gresham Claimed he once caught Great White
Shark in his hat.
Rodney Dangerfield. As toastmasters, figured he might finally get some respect. Forgot wrong. Meal arrived.
3en Davidson Disagree with Grits over best thing
about Gordon's belief that the United States is a global leader.
Mendy Rudolph: *affective offal on Rainey's* tommy Tommy Heilson: *HIT with technical for using wrong*
Quarterbacks Norm Snead, Charlie Johnson and
and chirped Johnson and Terry Hanratty. Aftertermed forward pass at waitress.
Happy Hairstain. Even happier than usual. May change name to "Ecstatic Hairstain".
Steve Mizerak: Just showed off
There were 16 famous Lite Beer drinkers on hand for the first Initial Lite Beer Banquet — and good times (am) at the event.
Considering how much they are, it comes as no surprise when some of the guys said that life goes great with food because it's less filling — it gets a third less calories than our regular beer.
But then some of the other guys stopped eating long
enough to argue that Lite goes great with food because it tastes terrific.
Well, at least they all agreed on one thing. Whether you eating beetwell Wellington or belly jerky, make sure you eat a lot of it.
P. S. The "I" Respect Roaney Dangerfield" Telephone was cancelled to complete lack of interest
LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED
IN A BEAER. AND LESS.
©1979 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped messages for October 29, 1929. Tick, good, tick, tidk, much.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, and recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the market. That was only for the rich in the Fastest Market."
According to Donald McCoy, professor history,
the fall effect of the market crash did not hit the
bankers.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, MMcOy said, and except for Chicago, there was no big problem.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until the 1920s Christmas sales raked in," she wrote. "The business was done."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been slow since January. The Dow almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that investors engaged investments and predicting a boom year in 1990.
THE 1920S HAD been benn years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin as much as anyone else, based on the actual value of the board.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were more likely to invest in technology, Galbraith. Growing industries needed more capita!
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and investors are increasingly depending on credit according to Galbraith. Credit is too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the year have been lost.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emberzels, knowing that speculation fleece made people recklek, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculator calculated the crash was coming, Grabhair said.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said, "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pill-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and Joseph Morgan meet several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions.” Stockholders are now facing a tough choice at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infections, Gabrath said. More than $30 billion in securities were the loss more than $4 billion, treated by the TIME magazine.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more
relevant than the starters, and the teams
announced, and conditions are bound. But the
crowds formed early Friday morning outside
the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured
that the crowd would stay.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive bushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a surge, uncontrollably. The market rose by the time the ticker tape machines signed off with the loss, and the tick rate had been买 more. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF the experts foresaw how bad it would get," McCoy said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction LAST HASH BASE
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factors that contributed to this were credit and were tight. By 1922, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1934. Prices dropped, but even at a low no one was willing to pay.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Vol. 90. No. 46
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KU
KCCR to investigate clubs
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior at public discus club clubs would be, politely shortly.
director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KACE will complete an investigation already in progress to could begin its investigation of the clubs, Sheenamagans, 901 Mississippi St., and Cayman Islands.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory practices in distributing membership applications.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's,
and John Shoppard, manager of
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pomp squan ride alape at Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty men and women attended.
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some to the field at haltamombe for the Homecoming footwears.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver said he would keep 10 file drawers in his apartment, 1,980 books. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or newspapers.
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU and Oklahoma State and head debate coach, said last week.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, and 1974. KU teams also were fifth in 1974, 1977 and 1978.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior,
said the research involved in debate was
like an "on-going term paper."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Zac Grant, Joplin, M. , sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems, he said, "in debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Scully stretches and runs to stay in game-ready condition.
'My debate teacher told outstanding academic reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also a KU because of the c he was as one of the programs.
BRAZIL
Parson also said KU ha good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
IT WOULDN'T WORK
compete against quality
*We need the competence teams to get ready for the challenge.*
"I think our reputation attracts debaters," he said need additional funding or team to compete with team tournaments."
This year's national cat at the University of Arizona on Saturday, surrounded by nannements, he said KU'sLook encouraged because people being involved in their work not as a financial support.
He said the team receive
Senate to use for transport
two meals a day at a tourn-
ce and costs an $197 level.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national a committee of debate throughout the United States and to provide their performance in the de The debate season last through March.
enemy, or anything like that, but we just committed ourselves to doing the job the best we could."
MARCO CUNAVERA
There are undoubtedly easier tasks for able-bodied young men to undertake: "Every day," says Mr. McCarthy, who like Willie Fry,杰 West; Mike Calhoun, and the like. It's either kill or be killed. You can just defend yourself, or you can go out and do something positive.
"I'd be painful at times, but I think I developed myself as a (football player more than at any other time in my career."
The rewards did not include a spot on the bench on most Saturday nights. Scully was allowed to suit up for the game (Georgia Tech and Navy), and he action in just one—a five-minute stint against Tech. While he played, he prepared prep squads watched from the stands. But if Notre Dame won big, the prep squads members liked to think they deserved more of the credit.
"That was the year of that big win over USC in the stadium." Scully recalls. "That week in particular, we really went all out to give the defense a good picture of what happened when we hitting that week — bone-crunching hits. We felt we contributed as much to anybody as the win."
VEN so, praise did not flow as freely as victory beer A "nice block" beer
E
kids came from the players, not the coaches, but that was more important. The coaches think you're great and the players think you're mediocre. But the coaches think you're great.
For what it was worth, the feedback from the players was positive. They were men telling me what a good job I was doing. "Scully says," they tell as if I didn't have any important observation. That was really important to at the time, because it was a point where I wasn't sure I needed to change.
By the end of the winter, Scully's letters home were more encouraging.
14 SPORTS BULLETIN
His grades were on their way up, adding credence to his how to graduate with a 3.0 average He brought the girl he plans to marry. And before long he expected to be in charge of the prepaid up in the past week.
"The spring of his sophomore year, he had a tremendous season," says Brain Boulat. "He had proven that he was a football player!"
Scully had climbed back to the second team by the middle of the four-week practice. "I was told by a number of sources that I tried an excellent spring it. It was the best information I got so far."
The party was over, however when he wore ligatures in his right hand, the band snapped. On Monday he underwent surgery. "I felt like nothing was going to go with it," he said.
"It seemed kind of ironic, but when I was in the hospital after surgery. Coach Boulac and Coach Hammond ordained who has since gone to Oklahoma told me I would have had an excellent chance of starting had I not been hurt. I guess that my experience is a good agreement in my state of aneurysm."
The coaches, of course, had no idea how far the encouragement would go. Before long, Scully was able to land, working with strength to strengthen his arm, but was just tortured, he says. "The first day I started running, I walked down a high school to do some jogging. I had just gotten off on my way home, and pushed past to the other and it looked like it was about three miles away, I ran 100 yards, just jogged, barely than a walk. My leg was pounding. But it really came around quick, that later. I was playing basketball, and it really responded pretty well."
So well, in fact, that Scully reported for practice that fail of his junior year "in the best condition I had played," and were really shocked that coaches ready for the first day of practice: They wanted me available by the start of the season, but I came back played in all the双 sessions.
In time Scully locked up a spot on the second team, backuping up the first team to offensive tackles. "I finally started making my efforts," he says. He played in six games against Michigan and Florida, Miami, and Georgia Tech. "I played against Georgia Tech as a sophomore. I kind of felt like a kid," he said. "Now I felt a lot more at ease, playing with guys I was friends with. I found it a lot easier to get psyched up. It was fun to play."
And for once, it was fun to participate the future. As Sally paused the course, she was only a time-out, or an injury giving his chance. "I was totally mentally involved," he says. "Rwaz's really tough, and I played. I ask Rob (Martinovich) how the guy was playing him, what was using him, what was using him. I always hoped that I could."
UIT as Scoutly notes, help for your change doesn't mean hoping a starter crumbles to the loot.
you're jealous of the position they have," he says. "But I wouldn't go out to plot to have them in an armory, though a that bad breakup, that a bad breakup, a starter is usually a good break for a bencherwoman. "Injuries are the
"I looked from one goalpost to the other and it looked like it was about three miles away."
main variables. he says, "Anything can happen. You can think you’re in a hospice situation, and a string can be part of the context for a starting point."
No longer will John Scully have to worry about such variables. The season when opens, the crackling voice of the public addressed by Drew Pearson "And now, starting at center for Notre Dame number, 57. John Scully." Never mind that he hasn't played center in competition since last fall, the team wanted to be an offensive tackle. When Dave Huffman, Notre Dame's star center, picked up his diploma last spring, competition for his candidate opened to all worthy candidates. John Scully was the worstener.
Sically learned the assurance that this time his name would not change between spring and fall. It takes a former member of the prep squad to know what that means. "The freshman, freshman and sophomore years, I don't think they can appreciate it because he's known nothing but success."
The good news doesn't end there. Because injuries wiped out his back, he returned for another season after one, if he chooses. Last spring, before leaving for Washington, he attended a special congress in the office of Illinois Congressman der Warkinsmith. John Scully leaved back and said, "I am satisfied with the opportunity to play pro Ballet. I've really life's good thing, things are going good with Valerie. Everything's looking up, for a change."
"You can't listen to guys who say there's no way out. Those are the ones you need to fight to them. You've got to remain angry, not at anybody in particular, but at your situation. Keep mowing, keeping a sawing. I'm not going to let it happen to me." There's a very fine line between players who can make it happen.
- John Scully
Joel Bierig covers college sports for the Louisville Courier-Journal.
---
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2020. Tick. good, tick.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors at Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on campus, hurried home from class. Headlines of the feverish news on Tuesday, 28, 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State officials said the assault occurred.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about them," she said. That was one for the rich in the East, "McNeal's."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the full effect of the market crash did not hit the Midwest.
The report said.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCupid and, except for Chicago, there was little involvement.
"Some people became nervous, but it was not until well after the 1920s Christmas sales that any real change took place."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been preceded by a strong decline in almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that investors投资和 predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1920s HAD been boon years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market, which is now about as little as 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrials were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were increasingly buying food from Gabrathra, Growth industries needed more capita*
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into the bank.
TO THE CASIAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money purchases andrusts, but as a result saw trouble as early as 2002 according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the period were highly risky.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Emebezzerz, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculator exploded the crash was coming, Grubath said.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoys said,
"Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoys said.
RUNNING ALMOST pill-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and Morgan.net several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Haavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions.” Stockholders had been warned at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear that was infectious, Gailbrath said. More than 484,000 dollars were more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been stemmed, the Times reported, by a sudden surge in crowds formed early Friday outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assuredly on Thursday.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent. a massive, hushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable斗时 run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16,383,700 shares of stock had been sold. Total loss was more than $1 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF the exports foresaw how bad it would get," McCoy said.
the pump or an awkward tarmers aided to the
normal work of seeding, overproduction
for CEE registration. *SEE CHRIS*
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factor 1 was the high number of workers and credit were tight. By 1922, more than 19 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbraith wrote in 1924. Prices dropped, but even at low noews one factor was rising.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
Vol.90, No.46
free on campus
Monday. October 29.1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KU
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior at disc clubs would be "relatively short."
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation into the alleged theft of equipment that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shemaniagan 901 West Illinois St., and Cahoon 852 East Michigan St.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Although the commission
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory practices distributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daryl Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would obtain membership rolls and any other
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pumpson squad ride alape at Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty-nine were there in 2014 and 2015, according to reports.
pot girl reunion. About 30 of the women, some no to the field at halftime or the Homecoming footwear, were also unaccounted.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, UD director of l宾务 and best coach duck, of KU.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate. "Parson said,
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974. The teams also were both finals in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said each debater keep 10 file copies of his work. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or websites.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons. Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Zac Grant, Joplin, M. sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
HOWEY, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
"My debate teacher told,
outstanding academic and
reputation, so I decided
Johnson said. Grant also is
KU because of the c
because one of our pro-
grams.
Parson also said KU he good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
*IT WOULDN'T WORK*
to compete against low score in
competition against quite a
'we need the competitor'
teams to get ready for the
match.
This year's national card at the University of Arizona has included narrations, he said KU's data looked encouraged because people being involved in research was not so financial support.
"I think our reputation attract defenders," he said need additional funding it continues to compete in tournaments.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national a committee of debate throughout the United States. The teams are selected three times a season. The debate season last March.
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at tauroma costs at 1973 price costs at a 1973 price
if you were COACH
It's make-it-or-break-it time out on the field, and the team anxiously awaits your decision. Test your coaching skill in these situations, taken from real college games of the recent past. After you make your choice, check out ■ ■ what actually happened
BY BILL KAUFFMAN
1 1 1 0 5 2 1 4
RED TIME LEFT WHITE
4 1 1 4
DOWN YARD TO GO YARD LINE QUARTER
It's early in the fourth quarter. You're losing 14-11 to your bitterest team. You have the ball four down, but you're up against the nation's best goal defense. In the game, you held you on a first and goal from the foul. However, a tie would still be decided by a bowl game. Decisions, decisions.
And here's what happened . . .
19th in Michigan Bo Schemers, who had the nearly annual battle for a Rose Bowl bid. Schember elected to go for the TD on the ground with Mike Schwartz, the snake. He was stopped by Bucke Randy Gradsharif. Ohio State won the Hail and earn the coveted bowl bid.
We will give you a little
more breathing room
(for the upward)
(injury) to this-pur-
not-mot-to-call-cap.
They are faced with a fourth
and four at midnight.
6 8 0 0 1 0
MED TIME LEFT WHITE
4 4 50 4 QUARTER
DOWN YARD LAKE
ponent scoreless since the first half -but they can be explosive!
And here's what happened
And here's what happened . . .
Darrell Royal brought his Texas pumper in, and he dummed a beautiful ball. But the Troopers never let the Long-horns touch the football, holding it for the full eight minute and a 10-6 win. Royal later said that if he'd known they wouldn't get the ball on fourth and four — even a quarter-back sneak. What hindsight!
5
Are you a gambler? With the score tied 13-1, less than two quarter and the ball on your side here's your choice: a reverse, daring but sure to surprise the defense, or a middle in the hope of a breakaway.
You're losing 24-23 and have just punted from deep in your own territory. The ball rolls dead at the 1, but toughing the kicker is it and touching the glove gives and three and at their 45 remain; a national make. What will you do?
And here's what happened... In the December 31, 1973, Sugar Ball between Notte Dame and Alabama. Basketball chose to refuse the penalty. But Alabama couldn't get the ball back from the Irish, as quarterback Tom Clemson first down and ran 7 yards for another. Notre Dame held for a 24-23 run and the national title.
Losing 22-15 in a contest heavy on offense, you score with 5 remaining in the game. If you win this game it's off to a major bowl, lose it or tie, and its second win. It was a possibility of a minor bowl bid. Remember, you really haven't held this team all day, and all that's left is five minutes. Okay, then choose your conversion.
And here's what happened... Olddy, Georgia coach Vince Dooley elected to give up one point conversion in this 1978 game against Auburn. His kicker made the point, tying the score 22-22, and that's how he ended. He dops finished second to Alabama and went to the Bluebonnet Bowl instead of the Sugar Bowl.
And here's what happened . . .
With a 1956 Missouri-Kansas
30
OE
APPENED . . . . .
Kunlun
2 3
RED
TIME LEFT
2 4
WHITE
1 10
DOWN
YAIRS TO GO
1 4
YARD LINE
QUARTER
2 1
RED
5 1 8
TIME LEFT
2 2
WHITE
3
DOWN
YARDS
LAKE
4
QUARTER
YARDS
LAKE
game supplying the backdrop, jay hacks couch Chuck Matter decided to roll the dice and the carve. Kama quarterback Wally Tollman ran the ball into Robinson,Robinson,outside defense tackle Chuck Meckle read the midsection and dumped Robinson in the end zone for a two-point safety and a 15-13 win. Matter thundered the ball was on the 9.
XXXXXXXXXX
1 3 RED
10 DOWN
YARD TO GO
1 3 TIME LIFT
1 3 WHITE
4 YARD LINE
QUARTER
continued on page 16
SPORTS BULLETIN $ _{1}^{15} $
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped
messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good.
Tick, bad.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on campus because of the floods, headlines the University Daily Kannan, Oct. 29, 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University students at the university that the State had suffered a 3-10 loss from KU back weekend.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was on one of the rich in America."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the full effect of the market crash did not hit the
millionaire class.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, M.Coay said, and, except for Chicago, there was little damage.
Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1928 Christmas sales rush that any of these problems disappeared.
it was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun Sept. 1. The New York Times carried an article in which it reported that a decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that financial investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1920S HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market because they had not much as little as 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrials are encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, and now they were consumers of high-quality Gulrahtr. Growing industries needed more capita!
investments and Americans, with more money ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economics and investment were becoming more according to Gallibrath. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the crisis had been purchased before.
Fortunes were being made of paper, Embzzelers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experiened speculated knew the crash was coming,
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said,
"Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Gianni, president of the Bank of America and Morgan meet several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions." Stockholders were shocked that prices had fallen at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than 10% of the world's stock market was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic, with news of a new stock and conditions were sound. But the crowds started early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Hallway. They went away assured
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive. hushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16,383,700 shares had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF THE EXPERTS foresaw how bad it woug't,
McCoy said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factors that contributed to this were damage and credit were tight. By 1922, more than 19 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1934. Prices dropped, but even at a low one year ago.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Vol. 90, No. 46
10 cents off campus
free on campus
KU
Monday, October 29. 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pomp squad ride alope at Homecoming float during Friday's afternoon parade. Thirty-seven of the teammates have joined the squad.
BARB
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some in the field at halftime or the homecoming food event, were from New York.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said he debated 10 file titles before he became a professor. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or newspapers.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
Staff Reporter
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said. "It is not easy."
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU and University of Pennsylvania and head debate coach, said last week.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1975, and 1976. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1973 and 1978.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among schools outside Kansas.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies in the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Zac Grant, Jolin, M., sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems, he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
KCCR to investigate clubs
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
HOWEY. Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
'My debate teacher told
outstanding academic are
reputation, so I decided
Johnson said. Grant also
KU because of the >'
and one of its programs
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
This year's national charm at the University of Arisaome, with its namens, he said KU's deb looked encouraging because people been involved in economic activity not as a financial support.
"IT WOULDN'T WORK to compete against quality! "We need the competitions to get ready for the challenge."
Parson also said KU h good reputation in debate b against weaker opponents.
The top 60 debate team teams from U.S. colleges and universities will serve as a committee of debate throughout the United State in the fall. Teams will perform their performance in the de-
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCCR investigation of alleged discriminatory practices in the clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KUCB had to complete an investigation of a shooting that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shemianagus 101 Mississippi St., and Mamaroneck 79 N.Y.C.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Allibaug the commission
"I think our reputation attracts debaters," he saus need additional funding. Senate to continue to comp
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's,
and John Sheppard.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into consistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
He said the team receive
Senate to use for transport
two meals a day at a tour
centre and two meals a
costs at an 1893 level.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would obtain membership rolls and any other
He said the commission's decision *w* he based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory distributing membership application forms.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
continued from page 15
1 7 1 0 0 0 TIME LEFT 0 RED WHITE
4 1 15 3 DOWN YARDS TO GO YARD LINE QUARTER
continued from page 15
1 7 1 0 0 0 0
RED TIME LEFT 0 WHITE
4 1 15 3 14 DOWN YARD TO GO YARD QUARTER WEEK
You're leading 17-0 in this one; it's still early in the third quarter. The ball is on your own 15-yard line, and the situation is fourth and one. Controlling every aspect of the game, which by the way, is a bowl contest, will you give up the football or go for another first down?
And here's what happened ...
2
And here's what happened . . .
On December 30, 1967, in the Gator Bowl, then-year-season head coach Joe Paterno叫aled to the defense by Sherman. It failed; but that not all. Florida State, given life, new
back came to score three times, the
final time a field goal with 15
yards. The next time it was Nitanya
lost 17-all, Paterson two
and T'12 blew in. It'll always be
3-12.
1 0 1 0 0 1 0
MED TIME LEFT WHITE
1 10 30 4
DOWN YARD TO GO YARD QUARTER
20-yard lines, but you have little faith in your field goal kicker. The question: Will you try to score again or run out the clock?
Ar N el F
A 10-10 tie causes the controversy here, with another national champion. You can take your own 30 with about a minute to play. You have been able to win three times.
Here's another tie with time running out. This time the score is 16-16 and we'll give you 23 seconds to work with. Your opponent
1 6
RED
TIME LEFT
1 6
WHITE
1 10
DOWN
TANKS
10 GO
43
TANKS
QUARTER
4
And here's what happened . . .
Notre Dame's Arse Paraschiene elected to sit on the ball during this clash with Michigan State. State officials said, "We kept watching for the pass in their final series, but all they did was run. We were really stunned. Then it dawned on us. They were angry and we the pollsters agreed with Paraschiene and voted Notre Dame number one.
has just squabbed an 18-vendor,
having you the ball at them. 43 it's
a regular season game and you know
you will applause you will applace
them this time?
And here's what happened . . .
Brightingham University head coach Nick Miles, and three wide receivers in this 1976 game against Arizona, making every happy, save the Wildcats. With split end George Harris going over a block, the Nalson into the left, the play was designed to hit John Van Der Wouder undermined the coverage and gain enough yardage to set up a pass rush. The defense was playing for the short pass, streaked into the end
40
zone and challenge the game-winning pass from quarterback Gelford-Nielsen. Edwards commented, "If we had not worn it, probably wouldn't have worked."
2 8 RED 1 0 4 0 TIME LEFT 1 3 WHITE
3 DOWN YARDS 4 GO 3 YARDS QUARTER
G
viral and you both
rincal into the context with
0-12 points. Is it that lead safe e-mail? Is that should you contact him or the two-point comment.
This one is for real secon-
guers. Your team has just scored
a touchdown to give you a 28-13
point victory in the game.
Your opponent is our arch
And here's what happened
happens.
A one-point scented the logical choice to Yale coach Carmen Corza, and that's what he ordered in this 1968 game. It was a scent that the team scored 29-13 in favor of York, looked mistake-proof. But the other team was Harvard, and nothing resembling logic ever entered it into the scoring chart. The score string Harvard quarterback Frank Champi, a biding, 20-year-old English major, threw a 15-yard kick. He made a 30-yard second, and after a two-point conversion made it 29-21, the impossible took place. A recovered pass was as time ran out—and the two point conversion for a breathing 29-29 tie.
1 2 1 0 0 1 9
RED TIME LEFT WHITE
DOWN YARDS 7 TO 60 YARD LOW QUARTER
Your first-ever unbeaten season is one game away, only you're losing 19-6 going into the final quarter. Still, a TD makes it 19-12
RATE YOURSELF
and now a conversion is in order Be careful, this one's tricky.
And here's what happened . . .
9-10: Expert
(Go straight to football office, do not pass dean)
6-8: Average
(Go straight to TV set, do not pass out opinions)
5 or below. Poor
(Go straight to your books, pass on a coaching career)
Bill Kauffman, a sportswriter for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, a syndicated sports quiz column
And here's what happened . . .
Get you?' a one-point conversion
that made him make another touchdown the winner. But in 1961 Ruggers head couch went for two and missed, and he had to overcome Columbia and that mistake 32-19. He said he 'gott caught it', and just blew it! It happens.
16 SPORTS BULLETIN
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker机表 mapped
mail messages for October 29, 1929. Tick, good,
tick, bad.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Denression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Ouret, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In April, a man was killed in a raid, 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players, Iowa State University.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for rich in the country."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the full effect of the market crash did not hit the
company.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy亏了 and, except for Chicago, there was little impact.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales rush that any of us had a chance to get away."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been averted by the calm of early morning, almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that retail investors investing and predicting a boom year in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market; middle-income investors bought 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, and manufacturers were forced to Glaubrath. Growing industry needed more capita!
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASAL, stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists are worried that it will increase, according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the recession were not.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embezzlers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phenyl stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculator cuckold knew the crash was coming, Grathraad said.
Even President Herbert Hoover new, McCoy said,
"Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered on September 28. When the market slumped in September, efforts to combat it affords to it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National CIO Bank, Amadeo Peter Cohen, a former New York mayor, and partners of J.P. Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the downfall.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation and Drew $3 Billion. Stockholders had been impatient and happened at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and gears were infectious, Galbraith said. More than $7 billion in losses this year less was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more
narrative than alarming. The news
announced, and conditions were sound. But the
crowds formed early Friday morning outside the
Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured
of safety.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the tape ticket machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16,383,700 shares had sold been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
Wall Street stood silent. a massive, hushed ruin.
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get," McCov said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Facility and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobless, Galbrash wrote in 1994. Prices dropped, but even at new lows no one
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Vol. 90, No.46
Yankees fire Billy Martin
Mondav. October 29,1979
See story page six
KU
Still kickina
KCCR to investigate clubs
Several former members of the KU pomp square ride aop
Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty-
seven people attended the event.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory distributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would obtain membership rolls and any other
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the club," he said.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCCR investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior by student clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCU had to complete an investigation of Mr. Bailey's case and could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenanigans, 101 Missouri St., and Spencer University, 90 West Virginia St.
girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some on the field at haltime of the Homecoming feast, got into the car.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Although the commission
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's,
and John Sheppard, manager of
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU and University of Chicago and head debate coach, said last week.
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1978, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, 1974, and 1975. KU also were fifth in 1972, 1973 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons. Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver,
miner, said he had kept file debriefs for
1,000 people and 1,900 people. The
file drawers are filled with information
on subjects taken from magazines, books or
journals.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON. Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, that he, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Zac Grant, Joplin, Mo, sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
'My debate teacher told me outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also was KU because of the fact that one of our programs.
Parson also said KU h good reputation in debate against weaker opponents.
"I WOULDN'T WORK to compete against quality it "we need the competitive teams to get ready for the challenge."
at the University of Arizona
Despite increasing comm-
niments, he said KU's de-
looked encouragement becas-
ing he was not to be
But he said he was not to
financial support.
"I think our reputation attracts defenders," he says need additional funding it takes to compete in tournaments."
This year's national char at the University of Arizona
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at a taurine costs at 175 per cent at a 197 level.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges and universities a committee of debate throughout the United States during the season and their performance in the det. the debate season last the debate season
UNION
THE HOTTEST TICKET IN TOWN
The price is right for football seats, but student demand often exceeds supply.
BY DAVE REYNOLDS
"T'S an autumn Saturday morning in the Midwest. Thousands of college students are pushing and shoving their way through the hallways, officials try to control them. The severity of the situation is summed up by one student: 'I sure glad I didn't have my friend with me, because I had to take care of myself.' just taking care of myself."
This isn't a flashback to the '60s
ILLUSTRATION BY KEN SMITH
Several people were hurt in the wilderness at Ames, although just one was seriously injured (a severed finger on the fence wire leading to a gravestone) and helped lead to a seating policy change at ISU (although university
student rosters, or even a glimpse of a 1944 airport crowd welcoming the students to a big Aight football contest between Nebraska and Iowa last fall. The ISU students were in the empty stadium's best seats.
officials insist the incident was a major factor in the change, since a policy modification was already in the works.
Iowa's state convention to a partial reserved placement for its plan at the school to break away from a school to break open from a first-complete system. In at least two other leagues, the primary reason for the switch to a reserved-sitting arrangement. Still, the arrangement seemingly remains an arrangement seemingly forever. At
any rate, the trend in what many consider to be the nation's top football conference is toward reserved seating for students.
"We're on reserved seating" sae. Nebraska assistant athletic director Larry Sage has had the policy for more than 30 years. "It cuts down on the possibility of rowdiness and hassling for our staff," he said, organization and control. It just more dignity and class to it than having students rishit the gate."
SPORTS BULLETIN 17
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticket tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 29, 1929. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. The crowd was filled with shock, with 1928, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU pitched its players. Iowa State lost to No. 15 Syracuse in the game.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the US."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the full effect of the market crash did not hit the stock price.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCain said, and except for Chicago, there was no major impact.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1923 Christmas sales rush that they could afford the new dress."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually stopped months earlier. This meant almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that more than 100 investment and predict a boom year in 1950.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, that is, on a system of credit, often paying as interest.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrials are encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, making them more involved in the industry. Gaulbrath, Growing industries needed more capital*
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy credit, even when the risk of trouble as early as 1923 according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the Great Depression had been not so well backed.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emebelzers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experienced speculator knew the crash was coming, and the speculator knew the crash was coming.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy," McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Upsets" and it was clear that pawned and dumped stock onto the market all at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fumu was infectious, Gaibrath said. More than a quarter of the stocks lost mass was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been timed, the Times reported. Crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange and went away assured a fairly fully. It almost
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16,383,700 shares of stock were up in the air. The Wall Street stood silent, a思索 hushed rub
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get," McCoy said.
Slowly, the force of the crush hit industry. Factors that made it difficult to credit and were tight. By 1922, more than 18 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1943. Prices dropped, but even at low no one a
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction and overgrazing contributed.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
See CRASH back nag
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 90, No. 46
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Mondav. October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KU
KCCR to investigate clubs
The director, Michael B. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation and begin its work before it could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shemaniagans 901 Mississippi St., and Teague 824 Tampa Bay.
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory membership polutes at two local club clubs
Several former members of the KU pong squad ride a台e Homecoming food during Friday's afternoon parade. Thirty years later, they are back in action.
Still kickina
the seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Although the commission
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into consistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory practice in distributing membership applications.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed or those at the clubs," he said.
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some to
the field at hallam of the Homecoming floor,
some in the library.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would
obtain membership rolls and any other
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's and John Shepherd. manager of
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said each debater kept 10 file copies of the paper. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or movies.
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU. Students in academics and head debate coach, said last week.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973. The team also were fifth in 1974, 1975 and 1978.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
He also said 57 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Zac Grant, Joquin, Mophore, somachre, research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
HOWEVER. Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Johnson said the KU debate program had "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Parson also said KU h good reputation in debate b against weaker opponents.
"My debate teacher told outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also is KU because of the d challenge as one of the programs.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the nationalals throughout the United States
The teams are selected their performance in the del The debate season last through March.
IT WOULD NOT WORK
to compete against quail
tough competition.
*we need the competitive
teams to get ready for the*
battle.*
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at a time and costs at a rate of $195 per meal at an 19% level.
"I think our reputation attackers, he"s not needed additional funding to come to tournaments."
This year's national char at the University of Arizona has been a good one for naments, he said KU's dues looked encouraging because people becoming involved in college did not set as financial support.
"LITE TASTES GREAT AND IT'S LESS FILLING. I ALSO LIKE THE EASY OPENING CAN."
Bubba Smith
Former All-Pro Lineman
Rip, tear and mutilate along dotted line.
"LITE TASTES GREAT AND IT'S LESS FILLING. I ALSO LIKE THE EASY-OPENING CAN."
FOR FREE BUBBA POSTER,
USE THIS
EASY-OPENING COUpon.
Send for my full color 24 x 36 poster today. It free and will sure look good on your wall. Just fill out the coupon and send it to Bubba Smith Poster. PO Box 11973, Milwaukee, WI 53211. As you know, we always liked hanging around with Lite Beer — Bubba.
Name
Address
City
State
Zip
Offer expires June 30, 1980. Void in Colin County. No Rx and where prohibited by law.
LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS.
©1979 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
Rip, tear,
and mutilate along dotted line.
LITE TASTES GREAT AND IT'S LESS FELLING. I ALSO LIKE THE EASY-OPENING CALL!
LITE BEER FROM MILLER
FOR FREE BUBBA POSTER,
USE THIS EASY-OPENING COUPON.
Send for my full color 24 x 36 poster today it's free and will sure look good on your wall. Just fill out the coupon and send it to Bubba Smith Plaza PO Box 19723 Milwaukee, WI 55211. As you know, I've always liked hanging around with the beer — Bubba
Name:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip:
Offer expires June 30, 1980. Void in Calo. Ohio, Va. Ky. and where prohibited by law
LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS.
©1979 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped
mails messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good.
Tick, tick. Tick.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1928, she revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the city."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, a fall effect of the market crash did not hit the Dow Jones index.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crush, McCoy said, and even for Chicago, there was no hope.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales ruck that any of us bothered to watch."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun Sept. 1. The New York Times carried an article in which Mr. Trump said the decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times carried optimistic articles, encouraging investments in companies.
The 1926 HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin that is, on a system of credit, often paying as usual.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, reducing the need for workers. Gabralrath. Growing industries needed more capita'
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money and economists and investors. While companies according to Galtbrahter, Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the recession were not so well known according to Galtbrahter.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emebelzers, knowing that speculation fire made people reckless, said phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculator calculated the crash was coming, Grabhain said.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew. McCoy said, "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pill-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and John M. Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billion’s. Stockholders have been left with no money at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infections, Galbraith said. More than $1 billion was lost, and less was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.”
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 28, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been timed, the Times reported, but crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured that the damage was minor.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling, became brake, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable frenzy. As the ticker ticked, the time the ticker tape machines signed off with the loss exceeded $10 million had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, hushed ruin.
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get." McCov said.
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factories began to close workers who had worked for 18 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1904. Prices dropped, but even at new lows no one
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
Vol. 90, No.46
10 cents off campus
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KU
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory clubs would be "relatively shorty."
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation of the shooting and could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenanigans, 901 Mississippi St., and Shamrock St. (375) 642-4800.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision wa- based on information obtained from news media reports of alleged discriminatory practice, distributing membership application
Earlier this fall, local and area media,
including the University Daily Kansan,
conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in
the clubs' membership policies.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's
road. John. Shannon, manager
Still kicking
Several former members of the KU pump squonk ride atop a Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty members took part in the fun.
B ARB
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some no
to the field at halfmile of the Homecoming booth
of the homecoming booth.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU director of forensics and head debate coach, of the university.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate. "Parson said."
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974. KU also were also fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said each debater 10 file his works. The file the drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or newspapers.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
Zac Grant, Joplin, Mo., sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
"My debate teacher told, 'outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also is because of the reputation as one of the programs."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
"IT WOULDN'T WORK
less prestigious培训
team to deal with"
"We need the competi-
teams to team up for the
Parson also said KU ha good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
This year's national char- at the University of Arizona in Tucson, he said sen- naments, he said KU's dee- looked encouraged because people being involved with UA not so financial support
The top 60 debate teams teams from U. colleges are chosen for the national college debate throughout the United States
relationship between students' behavior and the type of seating associated with their role as associate athletic director Matee Urick. "But If be blind I will if I completely accept that. Open seating at atmosphere around the gate."
"I think our reputation attracts defenders," he says need additional funding to compete with tournament."
The teams are selected their performance in the det The debate season last through March.
Lines for an Iowa State home game last fall began forming on the Monday before the Saturday of the game. Students pitched tents, dug holes and baked spies spelled each other in hopes of gaining excellent seats. Besides the pushing at the gate, problems developed within the stadium itself when students tried to save large numbers of choice seats for their friends.
He said the team receive
Senate to use for transport
two meals a day at a tour
station and costs at a 1973 level.
However, strong student support for both policies has gotten the State a clear message. The State, with about one-third of the seats to remain general-admission, is one of the best states.
Student reaction to the new plan is varied.
"I think it's an excellent plan," I says interfacility council press briefing on the policy changeover. "It gives an opportunity to the student who doesn't want to be a student and to the student who doesn't want to have assistance in standing up."
All of the Big Eight's school employs a lottery system in which that has been given a new number that has been determined. But three conference schools—Kansas, Colorado and Oklahoma—have their student's year in school. Graduate students and seniors, for instance, have named their places in a draw.
Oklahoma's system ranks Iowa's gate state in the fall. In the fall tickets are first-floor, first-care, first-served basis, beginning with seniors. Many students attend the priority list) camp for days outside the site of the drawing in Oklahoma.
"We always run out of the tanks on the first day, we get to the second day," John Terry said. "I'd be more happy if we sold them in the spring, but it was tough."
Another school that recently changed its policy is Kansas State. K-State used to have both open access and a subscription, but an all-reserved system has fall
"We had a tough situation in that game," says business manager Conrad Colbert. "There were many students who brought general-admission tickets and then walked in and took the public's seats. But with the reserved system, we'll have enough seats in designated areas."
Perhaps the most elaborate student ticket policy belongs to Oklahoma State OSU uses a ticket system. Students in a student may exchange the reserved seat he has one week for a different seat the next week. Or he may keep
A student may have a goal-line one week, or 50 yard-line another. Manager Hina Houston. "It works well for the students, and it's a good skill."
Missouri also offers an interesting alternative. While some 95 percent of MU students go to the games, through a group-sitting system, some 60 percent are some 10,000 general-admission seats on what is called "The Hill."
Tickets for places on this grassy slope overlooking the north end of Zone FAUO Field are sold to those who register at the reserved seats have sold out.
George Hough, Miraz's店 manager, believes MIU offers its students a better deal than other schools. "We have the whole east side of the stadium plus the new south end zone stands. That's pretty darn good sitting. But then, we wouldn't beating it if we did not have the students."
Ticket sales at most of the B i Eight schools are either holdin stead or increasing Iowa state frank explains why: "Big Egf youth football, advantageous seating, an a break in price. As a result, the turn out in number numbers." All of the Big Egf eight schools offer discount on season tickets for students and parents. The offers, students' student discount for
Following is a list of each school, the number of tickets allotted to its students, the season-ticket prices, and the school's policy on the school's seating policy. (Most
KANSAS: 8,500-11,000 tickets for $23 each. All reserved; seniority system.
KANSAS STATE: 7,000 tickets for $20 each. All reserved
COLORADO: 9,500 tickets for
$3 each. About 7,500 reserved,
2,000 general-admission.
schools try to adjust the number of student tickets to meet demand
IOWA STATE: About 13,000 people at $18 each for general admission and $20 for reserved general admission. 8,400 rented.
MISSOURI 1: Approximately
16,000 received tickets at $30 each
10,000 general-admission tickets at
$25 each
General-admission public session is sold out
NEBRASKA: 16,500-18,500 bickets at $25 each. All reserved.
$12 each. All reserved.
OKLAHOMA 18,000 tickets at
$17 each. All reserved.
seniority
system.
OKLAHOMA STATE 14-749-
plus tickets to $20.80 each.
All reserved; required (student)
may change swats game!
Dave Reynolds is a sportswriter for the Ames Daily Tribune.
THE INTRICATE ART OF SCHEDULING
The perfect schedule wins games, money, and fan support. For most teams, it's an elusive dream.
BY LARRY BORTSTEIN
Editors' Note: Patting together a football schedule is a tough assignment. If the team plays plays, will the fans be happy or joyful, and can they celebrate a national victory in the arm at a sure ticket to a demoralizing season? And how can you predict these things when making a schedule for 10 years in high school? Big eight strategies differ.
HE Big Eight is considered by many to be the strongest team in the nation. It is certainly one of the most prestigious. Although Oklahoma and Nebraska have won four Gators, the past two decades, virtually every game involving a Big Eight school gets more of its fair share
Schools in the conference play one another every season, which accounts for seven games of the
- The opponent is a weak sister.
*Either the financial arrangement assures the school of a good guarantee (on the road), or else it pays its applicant a large guarantee.
traditional 11-game schedule for each one. Year A big Eight team will play at home and four on the road, the following year it will play four at home and four on the road.
*The match up promises to draw a good turnout at home (or, on the road, will bring in loyal out-of-state alumni)
With seven of their schools annual II games taken care of, the athletic directors begin the challenging season by learning about the non conference games. Every member of the conference has a different philosophy regarding what it means to be an athlete. A survey of Big Eight athletic directors and schedule makers indicates that they choose noneague or more of the following reason.
and there's a good chance of a win to keep fans happy and coaches employed.
- The opponent is strong enough to provide a full test of strength, adding to the Big Eight team's stature as a national contender.
The "haven" is Okahoma, NaHo-
mane and Colorado. This quai-
tion requires the bar of request from other schools who want to play a Big Eight
The "have-nots" are Kansas State, Iowa State, and Oklahoma State. The latter two have attended football at both Kansas schools has been in decline for some time. These teams must make financial arrangements that aren't already so generated by the top four.
SPORTS BULLETIN 19
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
Bv KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick, Tick, Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In May 1929, the state issued a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU played its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in America."
According to Donald Ncoy, professor of history, the effect on the market crashed did not hit the Midwest. He said:
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the McCain, McCoy outages, and except for Chicago, there was no problem.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1929 Christmas sales rush that any of us got into the habit."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been triggered by a fall in stock prices almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that investors were investing investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1920s HAD been boon years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the market, and they saw little change in the little as 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists are encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, raising the price of food and consumer goods. Galbrath. Growing industries needed more capita'
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy access to financial services. I found it trouble to easily ascend according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the pandemic were held up by banks.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to be the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emebelzers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The explorer's calculator knew the crash was coming, Galbrath said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannim, president of the Bank of America and Andrew F. Morgan met several times. According to McOy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions" Stockholders were left without liquidity after the loss at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than a million shares of Gold was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been stemmed, the Times reported, by a surge in vaccine crowds formed early Friday outside the Stock Exchange Bathing. They went away assured the authorities.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, bushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling in the store surged into a frank, unstopable, downhill run. The time the ticker tape machines signed off with the time the tickers had signed off had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get." McCov said.
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Factors that caused it to close included creep and crack. By 1932, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobless, Gallbrath wrote in 1944. Prices dropped, but even at new lows no one was able to afford them.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
free on campus
10 cents off campus
Vol. 90, No. 46
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KU
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a RCCR investigation of alleged discriminatory practices against clubs would be "relatively shorty."
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCUR had to complete an investigation and conclude that it could begin its investigation of the clubs, Sheenagams, 901 Illinois St., and St. Louis, 801 Kentucky St.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Although the commission
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision w
based on information obtained from news
media reports of alleged discriminatory
distributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would obtain membership rolls and any other
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's and John Sheppard, manager of
Still kickina
Several former members of the KU pompom squad ride alope a Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty people participated in the event.
pon girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some no to the field at haltamom of the Homecoming football game.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, RD director of faculties and head debate coach,
The 1970s have been called the "decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973. KU teams also were both KU teams also were both in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Deneve,
Nierer, said each debater kept 10 file
sheets in the drawers. The file the drawers are filled with information
an subjects taken from magazines, books or
journals.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-giving term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
Zac Grant, Jolin, M. sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school,
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
"My debate teacher told outstanding academic竞 reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grunt also caused the reputation as one of the programs.
The top 60 debate teams
teams from U.S. colleges
are chosen for the national
all-star game throughout
throughout the United State
*IT WOULDN'T WORK*
compete against quality it
*we need the competitive
teams to get ready for the
Parson also said KU had good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
Despite increasing com-
ference with other people, he
looked encouraged because
people becoming involved
but he said he was not goo-
d at it.
The teams are selected their performance in the det. The debate season last through March.
"I think our reputation attracters detract," he sai need additional funding to commit to tournaments.
This year's national char at the University of Arizona
He said the team receive
Senate to use for transport
two meals a day at tourn-
ing cost at 175 levels
at a 175 level.
HEAD COACH
"We play in the smallest stadium and the Big Eight," says Corradi. "We also have a manager of athletes, whose duties include arranging future schedules." "We generally would have no problem if we wanted to play, but if we want to play an attractive team from another conference, often well have to go to their stadium."
Money may be the most important factor in scheduling. A Big Eight team can expect a minimum on-base salary of $100,000 per game. When it takes on an outside team at home, it generally offers the opponent full saturn of $75,000 or more, or a salary of $125,000 or more expenses have been taken out. A game between two Big Eight schools guarantees the team a maximum of $175,000, an amount which is just enough for new capacity at different schools.
In some cases, a nonleague opponent wants to step up in class to meet a Big Eight team. The two teams are often placed in a location whereby the opponent will visit the Big Eight team, collect a sizable guarantee, and then either return to its own level or use the as a springboard into the big time.
Any nonleague team playing Nebraska in Lincoln, for example, would be financially, it not in the victory column, but has the largest stadium in the Big Eight, several expansions since 1972 and has the capacity to more than 76,000.
What's more, the people who correspond to Corwinshir fortune are followers in the land. The Corwinshir's first game of 1979 was at home.
Nebraska's 100th sellout crowd in a row and an NCAA record.
Nebraska's opponent that day, Utah State, wouldn't appear to be in a competitive class with the Baylor and Nebraska's former head coach and now its athletic director, pointed out. "They want to play us and we need them to do it."
Devaney explains Nebraska's non-league schedule for the rest of the season, and then the neighboring state, and it'll be a game that a lot of our fans will be able to drive up to see. "Penn State, one of the national powers, like one of the players to play. A real test for our team before we play our league schedule." Heavier Staples at home. "Again, we play in the league to play us for a long time, maybe stepping out of its class, but an interesting game for us that will work."
20 SPORTS BULLETIN
It's atypical that Nebraska is playing three of its four nonleague teams, including Colorado is also playing three of its outside opponents at Folsom.
Meanwhile, Oklahoma has a team all its own. It only needs to win 4-1 and be played at least a per season, for many years the Senators have played Texas of their own. The Cowboys have the Cotton Bowl. The game is often watched by a national television network.
and Texas in football is one of the fiercest rivalries anywhere in sports."
"We certainly have to treat that game with the same importance as a basketball game," Farris, associate athletic director and business manager at Oakland High School, said. "He adds, 'National ranking, a bask game, recruiting, and so on.'"
Though another Big Fight representative scouts at Iowa State's Nassau College, they didn't get to be 8-3 by playing Notre Dame's McCullough, it was our main games are the Big Fight championship for the Big Fight championship every year. When you are in a league where you have to look at it, the way you have to look at it.
At Iowa State, athletic director Lou McCullough uses a different approach "We try to schedule our four nonleague games with the idea that we can win three of them," he says. "There's no need to outcompete our coach a schedule he can't walk in. That doesn't help anybody."
Marcum's dermatology is not uncom-
mon. It's a difficulty every athletic
director faces when the mastery of
the skin permits more than 10 years ahead of it.
ANNAN athlete director, Bob Hutchorn; also sub-supervisory coach for practice of trying to line up at three non-game clubs that the team plays.
"But that backfire on us last season," recalls Marum "When we originally scheduled TAA&M at the end of this year, for last year, they were all in down periods. Well, we lost to all three of them last year. The other nonleague game was against UCLA. And that game was against w loss too. But that one won we."
"This does create a problem," says Eddie Crouch, athletic director of the university's golf team. "Won't you wasn't always this way, but this is such a competitive situation that I have to think about."
years ahead now. We have games booked into the 1990s already, although we have the exact playing date in every case."
As a result of the advance scheduling, says Marcau, Karnas has not been able to respond. "It's not something we can control, but we aware of it and we control."
Kansas State's Conrad L. Uwuwa was one of the problems a bus driver faced in the past, big population centers in the state, which cuts down on the number of students attending our stadiums and the smallness of our stadiums. It's tough for schools like us, but we are fortunate to have them.
While Kansas and Iowa State search for teams they can beat. Missouri uses its four no-huller teams in the annual run for the conference crown.
"You want to use your four non-conference games to get ready for the season," he said. The Heydowoff court at Miusi sufforts; "Meally you want to play one very good team somewhere with Faxas this year, and with Faxas this year. And it's good that they're the last non-league game we play before the league games."
If we placed them too early and got heat up, it might get our players off the rest of the nonleague games. Playing a strong team late help you prepare for them better. Your players should be ready and have played some games later.
One recent addition to the ranks of Big Right athletic directors, is Dr. Richard Young, who came to Oklahoma State last year after being a board member and director at Bowling Green College's Mid-American Conference.
“Olivivy, I had not hurt much to say about scheduling here but my philosophy is point out. Our twofold: At home, keep the fans happy by bringing in interesting stuff like a guitar, go路, where the alumni are. We have alumni all over the country, the West Coast, the West Coast, we are assured of having Oklahoma State alumni attending the game and roaring for it.
Also, we try to use our road games as a recruiting tool to let them know where we play and know that we play an interpersonal schedule ahead of repre-
If Dr. Young practice what he preaches, he may come up with the dream of all athletic directors - the perfect football schedule
Larry Borset, on the staff of the Denver Post, has written about sports for numerous publications.
ILLUSTRATION BY NEAL MCPHEETERS
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
Bv KATE POUND
Staff Renorter
Tick, Tick, Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped messages for Oct. 29, 1929. Tick, good, tick, much.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Ouret, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State officials said they were not involved.
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the market. That was only for the rich in the End." Mackenzie
According to Donald McCay, professor of history, the full effect of the market crash did not hit the capital markets.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCoy said and, except for Chicago, there was no impact.
"Some people become nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1929 Christmas sales rush that any of us got used to it."
it was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually started well before that. It almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times published a report of investment and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the basis of high returns; this was little as 10 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, who were still buying beef and pork. Galbrath, Growing industries needed more capital!
THE CASHAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economists and investment managers are according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain, far too many of the stocks purchased during the financial crisis.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embezzlers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phenyl stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculation accounted for the crash was coming, Grathraith said.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said. "Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeus Peter Gannimin, president of the Bank of America and partners of P.J. Morgan met several times. Accelerating their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, "Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions." Stockholders were shocked when news that a stock at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than 1,048,359 shares were traded that day. The loss from this week's panic was $265 million.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more enthusiastic. The crash had been stemmed, the Times said. Yet as early as Wednesday, the crowds formed early Friday outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured investors.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the ticket tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 15, 383,700 shares of stock had been sold. Total loss was more than $1 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Wall Street stood silent. a massive, hushed ruin
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get.
McCavoy said."
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction CRAZE
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Fashion and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobsless, Gallibrath wrote in 1994. Prices dropped, but even at new lows one no longer can afford to eat.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 90, No.46
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
KU
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory practices would be展开, relatively shortly.
the director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCCR had to complete an investigation into Mr. Sullivan's behavior that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Sheenanigans, 901 Illinois St. and Brooklyn Center.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory practices in distributing membership applications.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Although the commission
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's,
and John Sheppard, manager of
Still kickina
BARB
Several former members of the KU pomp squan ride ala-pen a Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty girls, ages 13 to 18, wore tutu skirts and floral embellishments.
pam girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some no to the field at halftime of the Homecoming footballs, are on a farm in West Michigan.
Debate team claims far in national tournament
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation. Donn Parson, KU director of念头 and head debate coach, works with the team.
"The 1970s have been called the decade of KU" by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970. Parson said.
He also said 37 KU debate teams had been invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons. Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver University graduate and key learner in the life app for iPad users with 1,900 apps. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or other sources.
sure, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
Zac Grant, Joopin, Mo. ; rophmore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
'My debate teacher told us outstanding academic and reputation, so I decided Johnson said. Grant also a KU because of the deeds as one of the programs.
"IT WOULD NOT WORK to compete against quality team." We need the competitive teams to get ready for the competition.
Parson also said KU ha good reputation in debate by against weaker opponents.
The top 60 debate teams teams from U.S. colleges are chosen for the national at the college level throughout the United States
The teams are selected their performance in the deli The debate season lasts through March.
at the University of Arizona. Despite increasing commitments, he said KU's dears looked encouraged because people involved in his work are not so financial support.
"I think our reputation attracts detractors," he said need additional funding to compete in tournaments."
He said the team receive Senate to use for transport two meals a day at tournaments cost at a 1975 level. costs at a 1975 level.
This year's national chari
at the University of Arizona
HE Cotton Bowl. 1954 Dickie Wicke of Rice takes the ball at the 5 and breaks through the line at 2
the clear, and is outrunning every. Alabama defender nits it. Sight it, you know where the ball goes and touchdown. But as Moogie darts down the sideline and crosses muffled, the pressure of the moment in a tight game became too much for Alabama bulldown backtown Lewis, who is sitting out the play with his arm. Moogie goes Bangle on a haul with jarring body block. (The reference declared a Rice toowndose Bangle.
"Ikept saying to myself, 'I didn't do it,' I didn't do it." But I knew did it, an embarrassed Lewis told
the press later. "I'm too emotional I guess I'm too full of 'Bama.'"
Jumping over a low wall.
Say what you will about college football, but don’t ever say it isn’t emotional. Sunday afternoon footbal and approaching perfection and perceptible. not but the college game. The passions run high Winning matters. Loving hirsits. Human valor and human error will make a difference.
And fans, consequently, are well advised to prepare for the unforeseeable circumstances of the field and in the stands not enough to render the game a force.
After it, the moment Cotton Bowl tackle, Lewis receives a telegram of encouragement from Roy Regel, who knew what Lewa was feeling. "Laugh with them all you’ve got to do," Regel wired.
Riegels, of course, is the man who recovered a fumble for California in the 1929 Rose Bowel and ran
RUGBY
Strange Moments in College Football
KICKIN' 'N' GRINNIN'
with it, the wrong way. Atmmatec caught up with him before he could be heard. He told Tech, but Tech was picked up a two-pot safe, on the next play.
According to legend, there was once an interesting reversal of the extra-maid on-the-field incident. A player named Houses Audrey suposely arrived on game day in his street clothes. On the first play he struck a foul ball that unintentionally onto the field and caught touchdown pass.
Oftentimes, though, people on the field who look like spectators are real spectators, and something wild is in the works. Like the 1972 Ohio State-Michigan game, as possession a rivalry as in any of the 19th-century Big Ten Buckeyes fans surged into the field and tore down the goalspost.
Unfortunately the game was over. There were still 13 seconds left, and Michigan had the ball at Ohio State's 41-yard line, trailing effectively by a field goal, effectively scared a field goal from Michigan's list option.
MAY SWAYT WILL DOLLY MARY MATT LOVE UNLE
No matter Michigan coach Beeblehem didn't planned to try a field goal anyway. The score did not change in the final seconds.
Fam can get a bit overtusiveness at times. One of the most comfortable political hosts Hoy Long of Louisiana, who flexed his considerable political muscle on behalf of LSI football in the early 1980s. In his fight song, hung the band director, and offering advice to the coaches, long wanted to see a large student contingent on guard for outdoor sports. He also wanted the railroad to offer students a discount price. Railroad officials complained that this was a monotonous, tedious job.
with another proposition - a still new tax. The bank tail discount became a reality without further ado.
PULL ON!
Sometimes there's as much excitement and drama in the stands as there is on the stage. They've been supported several years by Brigham Young student Lyle Mestenbrough. At haltime, Brennan shines up with an eerie smile, hold up placards directed at the bleachers. The signs read "MARY SHOP" "I WOULY MARRY YOU" and "WHO WANTS ME?".
What else could Mary do but accept?
Meanwhile, back on the field, one hallmark of college football is that teams play games they plays. The University of Maine recently unveiled the most bizarre touchdown play since Harper Mars crossed the goal line in a street
In the 1978 contest with New Hampshire, lineup made on line up against the ball. The 21. but instead of holding the ball on the ground for the kick, Traitron flipped it to the ground and hit the ball forward with his fat. The ball wuglled into the end zone, where Dave Huggins dug on it for a first.
Maine had practiced the play, known officially as a backward pass, for five weeks. Couch Jack Bickle illustrated a markedly illustrated rule book. After some heated confferences, the referees played the play. The game
The backward pass has subsequently been outlawed.
Rensselaer Poly was playing Buf-
Gridiron success or failure it often depend on quarts of fate. One football game was lost because of a shoe.
Ialo in 1947 and the star player, Stan Gorzelenic, ripped his shirt on one play. Gorzelenic wore a knee brace for Jomos to检索 for a replacement show. He had every player remove his knee brace, but no one had the right size. Gorzelenic was forced to stay on the oddins, and Balfour won the
Coach Jontos was tasked after the game when he played a tough 12-2. Greater love had no team than the IU Tigers教练 to TE Liam Player, but he did everything else to insure that his men got to play as well.
Bayne, an assistant coach at 1SU, found out that there were several obstacles to playing the 1893 game with Tulane.
For starters, Tulane don't have a coach. Bayne volunteers to coach Tulane. There were no mails on the field. Bayne built them. On the day of the game, no one was selling tickets, so Bayne sold them.
Aa, there was no referee Banne referred the game. (Who would be more imperial than the man coaching both teams?)
College football has come a long way since T.I. Bayne's day, but so far that it has lost its human scale. Its unfortunate and its genuine emotion continue to make me question the future of the sport, sense the word, sport.
A
SPORTS BULLETIN 21
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticket tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Orland, unaware of the panic on campus at Stanford, were in the headlines of the University Daily Kanan, Oct. 29, 1928, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University president, Dr. Robert A. Kane, that a State had suffered a 3.4-loss from KU but weekend.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the country."
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, a full effect of the market crash did not hit the computer industry.
Inversors and industry were the hardest hit by the crush, McCay said, and except for Chicago, there was little damage.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales rush that they began to realize what was going on."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually begun Sept. 1. The New York Times carried an article saying that the Wall Street decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed by. Again by the middle of October, the Times reported that Wall Street investments and predicting a boom year in 1930.
By 1925, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
The 1920s HAD been boon years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin, that is, on a system of credit, often paying as much as they were worth.
Early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, raising prices and driving demand. Gilbartr, Growing industries needed more capita!
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, willingly deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL, stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy money. But economics are moving slowly and steadily according to Galibrath. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the recession were purchased by hedge funds.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embzzberries, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The experienced speculator knew the crash was coming.
Even President Herbert Hover knew, McCoy said,
"Hoover was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he couldn't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the Hall of 1928. When the market slumped in September, Mr. McCullough joined efforts to combat it. Charles F. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeus Peter Schuster and Thomas K. Moyers, partners of J.P. Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the bank's collapse.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy aquifer depletion and dumped stock onto the makershoppers at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear that the stocks were infectious, Gaibraath said. More than 484,539 to 504,539 million was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.”
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more exciting than ever -- shows announced, and conditions were sound. But the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured that everything was fine.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16, 383,700 shares of stock had been sold. Total loss was more than $1 billion.
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get."
"McCov said."
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Facilities and credit were tight. By 1982, more than 18 million employable Americans were jobsless, Galbrath wrote in 1984. Prices dropped, but even at a low noose one year later.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
See CRASH back page
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
Vol. 90. No. 46
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Yankees fire Billy Martin
Mondav. October 29. 1979
See story page six
KCCR to investigate clubs
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRR investigation of alleged discriminatory practices in their clubs would begin "relatively shortly."
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Although the commission
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCUR had to complete an investigation that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Sheenangam 90, Mississippi St., and Shengangam 80, Virginia Tech.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory distributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media,
including the University Daily Kansas,
conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in
the clubs' membership policies.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would obtain membership rolls and any other
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullwinkle's,
and John Sheppard, manager of
Championship men not available for use.
“If we make ten miles,
I’ll buy you a beer.”
“If we make ten miles,
I’ll buy you a Löwenbrau.”
“If we make ten miles, I’ll buy you a beer.”
“If we make ten miles, I’ll buy you a Löwenbrau.”
Tonight, let it be Löwenbrau.
©1979 Blen Brewed in U.S.A. by Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Tonight, let it be Löwenbräu
©1979 Beer Drewed in U.S.A. by Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker tape machines tapped out their final messages for Oct. 19, 2019. Tick, good,
Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Oread, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from most KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T HAVE enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for the rich in the country."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history, the fall effect of the market crash did not hit the oil price.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the McCoy daunted and, except for Chicago, there was no problem.
"Some people became nervous, but it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas sales ruck that any one knew what was going to happen."
It was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been preceded by a short amount of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times published its first book of investment projects and a predictor年 in 1930.
The 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the basis of interest rates (the average as set in a 19th percent of the actual value of the bond).
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
The early in the decade, speculation fever had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, making them a target of U.S. grafts. Growing industries needed more cannita.
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, will盈缩 deposited their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy access to the stocks purchased during the crisis, but trouble as early as 2013, according to Galbraith. Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the crisis were still available.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Embezzlers, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, sold phony stocks or stockts they didn't own. The experienced speculator knew the crash was coming.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mell, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles F. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giannini, president of the Bank of America and Benjamin Cornish met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billion$.” Stockholders were shocked by the increase at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and ackwud was infectious, Gaulbrath said. More than 40% of the new stock loss was more than $4 billion, according to the Times.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crash had been starmed, the Tunes and their managers were out. Crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange Building. They went away assured that the crash would be over.
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent a massive hushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, Oct. 29, was different. Selling became brisk, then surged into a frantic, unstoppable, downhill run according to the Times. By the time the tape ticket machines signed off with their traditional good night, 16,383,700 shares had been sold. Total loss was more than $10 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF THE experts foresaw how bad it would get." McCosy said.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
Slowly, the force of the crash hit industry. Facilities and credit were tight. By 1923, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobless, Galbrath wrote in 1954. Prices dropped, but even at new lows no one was employed.
AUTUMNY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
10 cents off campus
Vol.90.No.46
free on campus
Monday, October 29, 1979
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KU
Still kickina
Several former members of the KU pompom squad ride alaep a Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty percent of the attendees wore red shirts.
pon girl reunion. About 40 of the women, so far to the field at halitime of the Homecoming form a dance routine to "I am a Jawhawk."
KCCR to investigate clubs
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory practices in distributing membership app
Debate team claims fa in national tournament
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed," he said.
Earlier this fall, local and area media,
including the University Daily Kansan,
conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in
the club, "mumbereboro pollies..."
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons. Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Bailey said.
Staff Renorter
He also said 37 KU debate teams were invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denver junior, said each debater kept 10 file copies of his materials. The file drawers are filled with information on subjects taken from magazines, books or
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
Parson attributed KU's success to the debaters' desire to work, desire to argue and ability of expression.
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said.
"It is not easy."
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, Director of forensics and head debate coach,
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1973. Parson also teamed up with KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
The director, Michael I. Bailey, said the KCU had to complete an investigation into what he suspected could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenangqiang, "010 Missouri St., and Beijing."
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a RCCR investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior from clubs and disc clubs would be "relatively short".
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
Zac Grant, Joplin, Mo, sophomore, said research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new neale there.
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
"I think our reputa
attract debaters," he
need additional fundi
to help them to se-
ture to tournaments.
The teams are sale their performance in th The debate season through March.
He said the team rec
Senate to use for trans
two meals a day at tat
costs at a 1973 level.
at the University of Ark
Despite increasing
naments, he said KU's
looked encouraged beip
people becoming invo
n financial support.
The top 60 debate teams from U.S. college football programs met a committee of de-
committees throughout the United States.
'My debate teacher outstanding academic reputation, so I deal Johnson said, Grant a KU because of the effort of our programs.
This year's national at the University of Ar
Parson also said K good reputation in debt against weaker oppone
**IT WOULDN'T WE**
be prestigious to
compete with the
"we need the compa-
teans to get ready for
Miller High Life GLOSSARY OF FOOTBALL TERMS
Huddle
Third down, three to go.
SAN MARCO
SAN MARCO
SAN MARCO
SAN MARCO
Third down three to go
8 PACK
7 OZ BOTTLES
Miller
High Lave
8 PACK
Miller
High Lave
7 OZ BOTTLES
Down and Out
PARKING
Post-Game Wrap-Up
C1979 Miller Brewing Co. MilesAce, WI
Crash of '29 effects delayed in Midwest
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Tick. Tick. Tick. The ticker machine tapped out their final messages for Oct. 29, 1929. Tick, good.
Across the country, stock brokers, bankers and speculators watched, witnesses to the death of the Roaring Twenties and the birth of an ugly legacy: the Great Depression.
Halfway across the country, students and professors on Mount Ouret, unaware of the panic on New York's Wall Street, hurried home from classes. In December 1929, revealed a normal day on campus. The big news was an accusation made by the Iowa State University football coach that KU paid its players. Iowa State
The stock market was far away from m. est KU students and faculty, Ruth McNair, professor emeritus of biology, said recently. Few people at the university had the money to spend on the market, she said.
"I DIDN'T have enough money to worry about the stock market. That was only for rich in the city."
According to Donald McCoy, professor of history,
the full effect of the market crash did not hit the
business.
Investors and industry were the hardest hit by the crash, McCain said, and except for Chicago, there was no big problem.
"Some people became nervous, but if it wasn't until well after the 1920 Christmas rush that any of us would be worried."
it was different on the East Coast. The panic on Wall Street climaxed on Oct. 29, but had actually been triggered by the recent record almost daily account of slumping stock prices. The decline was slow at first, picked up momentum, then slowed again. By the middle of October, the Times reported that investors are investing in and predicting a boom year in 1930.
THE 1920s HAD been boom years on the market; speculation became easy, a quick way to make money. Middle income earners bought stocks on the margin and got 40 percent of the actual value of the bond.
By 1929, there were more than 9 million stockholders in America and brokers, politicians and industrialists were encouraging wage earners to buy into the market.
Early in the decade, speculation发货 had hit. The post World War I economic boom had suddenly made Americans consumers instead of simply producers, and countries like Japan had to grableath. Growing industries needed more capital*
investments and Americans, with more money than ever to spend, will willingly deposit their savings into banks.
TO THE CASUAL stock market watcher, there was no end in sight to easy mortgage economists and investors. The interest rates according to Galbraith, Credit was too easy to obtain; far too many of the stocks purchased during the recession were so low that credit could not be accorded to Galbraith.
Fortunes were being made of paper. Emebberzels, knowing that speculation fever made people reckless, said phony stocks or stocks they didn't own. The speculator knew the crash was coming. Goliath said this.
Even President Herbert Hoover knew, McCoy said, "Hower was aware of the situation. He tried to help but he could't do it alone. He wasn't able to get the country together on a policy." McCoy said.
RUNNING ALMOST pell-mill, the market entered the fall of 1929. When the market slumped in September, several large investment firms combined efforts to combat it. Charles E. Mitchell, president of New York's National City Bank, Amadeo Peter Giammoli, president of the Bank of America and Morgan met several times. According to McCoy, their efforts only delayed the inevitable crash.
CRASH!
On Oct. 24, Black Thursday, the New York Times headline read, “Prices of Stocks Crash in Heavy Liquidation, Total Drop of Billions.” Stockholders were shocked when the price of most stocks at once. Speculation fever had developed into fear and fear was infectious, Galbraith said. More than a quarter of the stocks were lost. The loss was more than $4 billion, according to the TIME report.
ON FRIDAY, OCT. 25, the headlines were more optimistic. The crisis had been stemmed, the Time magazine reported, by the crowds formed early Friday morning outside the Stock Exchange. They went away assured
The weekend was peaceful. Investment companies kept their offices open on Saturday and Sunday, trying to clear the mounds of paperwork. Few changes occurred in the situation on Monday.
Wall Street stood silent, a massive, hushed ruin.
Tuesday morning, October 29, was different. Selling became brisk, the stock prices jumped and the ticket run according to the Times. By the time the ticker tape manager signed off with the stock, the ticket had been sold. Total loss was more than $1 billion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"NONE OF the experts foresaw how bad it would
get." McVaio said.
Slowly, the force of the crush hit industry. Factors that contributed to this trend and credit were tight. By 1892, more than 15 million employable Americans were jobsless, John轧brown in 1934 Press坏了, but even at new lows one a year.
The plight of Midwestern farmers added to the economic woes. At the beginning, overproduction
AUTUMN
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 90, No.46
10 cents off campus
free on campus
Yankees fire Billy Martin
See story page six
KUO
Monday, October 29, 1979
Still kickina
Several former members of the KU pompon squad ride ala-tau
Homecoming float during Friday afternoon's parade. Thirty
four students attended this year's Homecoming festival.
pam girl reunion. About 20 of the women, some now married, performed at the field at halloween of the Homecoming football game, percussionist and drummer.
Debate team claims fame in national tournaments
Staff Reporter
By HAROLD CAMPBELL
The KU debate team, it seems, has quietly become a national power during the past decade.
"The 1970s have been called the 'decade of KU' by other university debate teams because of KU's consistent success in debate." Parson said.
Among university debate teams nationwide, KU has one of the better debate programs in the nation, Donn Parson, KU and Harvard universities and head debate coach, last week.
Parson said KU had won the national debate championship in 1970 and 1976, and KU teams had been third in 1970, 1971, 1972, and 1973. KU teams also were fifth in 1972, 1974 and 1978.
He also said 37 RU debate teams were invited to the past 33 national tournaments, a record unmatched by any other university in the nation.
Two KU debate teams were invited to the national championship tournament in 1970, Parson said.
A TEAM CONSISTS of two persons, Parson said. He said there were 16 debate teams.
One KU debater, Paul Johnson, Denny,
Jones, said each debater 10 file
documents he was going to send.
The file drawers are filled with information
on subjects taken from magazines, books or
"It takes a lot to be a debater," he said
"It is not easy."
He said, however, that debate was not only an exercise in research, but that it also emphasized the ability to quote authors to make arguments more convincing.
He said a number of the cards were quotes from different authors.
KEVIN WILSON, Austin, Texas, senior, said the research involved in debate was like an "on-going term paper."
"You don't prepare for just one debate tournament at a time," he said. "It is necessary to keep researching day after day to come up with new information."
Zac Grant, Jolin, Phoen, sophomore, research required in debating helped him to organize his thoughts and write better papers for classes.
THE SUCCESSFUL record in debate, Parson said, has given KU's debate program a good reputation even among high schools outside Kansas.
He said he spent about 20 hours a week outside of classes doing research for debates.
He also said he went to about 10 debate tournaments a year. That, he said, often made him absent from Friday and Monday classes.
Debaters also said participating in debate helped their class work and would help in their future jobs.
HOWEVER, Johnson said he enjoyed the work because he enjoyed competition at tournaments and meeting new people there.
"You try to make your schedule so you don't have classes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday," he said.
Debating helps you to develop skills in analyzing problems," he said. "In debate, you must be able to look at both sides of a question intelligently."
Wilson said debating helped him in preparing for law school.
Johnson said the KU debate program had been "highly recommended" to him in high school because his debate teacher was impressed with KU's record.
The top 60 debate teams out of the 1,800 teams from U.S. colleges and universities are chosen for the national championship by the NCAA team coaches throughout the United States.
- "IT WOULDNT WORK for us to only go to less prestigious tournments and not to spend the money we need."
- "We need the competition from quality teams to get the ready for the national championships."
"My debate teacher told me about KU's outstanding academic and team reputation, so I decided to go here," Johnson said. Grant also he attended KU because of the debate squads' status as one of the better debate programs.
Despite increasing competition in tournaments, he said RU's debate team's future was uncertain. He also said people becoming involved in the program. But he said he was not so confident about his prospects.
Parson also said KU had not made its good reputation in debate by competing only against weaker opponents.
the teams are selected on the basis of their performance in the debate season. The debate season lasts from October through March.
This year's national championship will be at the University of Arizona at Tucson
"I think our reputation will continue to attract defenders," he said. "But we will need additional funding from the Student Athletic Council to compete in prestigious tournaments."
The latebite season lasts from October through March.
He said the team receives $1,500 from the Senate to use for transportation, lodging and two meals a day at tournaments, but it would not allow him to learn to break even with costs at a 1975 level.
KCCR to investigate clubs
The director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday that a KCRC investigation of alleged discriminatory behavior by the clubs dis clubs would be, "politely shortly."
The director, Michael L. Bailey, said the KCU had to complete an investigation of a sexual assault that could begin its investigation of the clubs, Shenicamagus, 901 Missouri St., and Wickford, 750 Wisconsin St.
the commission can vote to enter a complaint on its own behalf or conduct an investigation without one. Baile said.
The seven-member commission voted unanimously Thursday night to conduct the investigation. Although the commission does not have a formal complaint, discrimination without a formal complaint,
He said the commission's decision was based on information obtained from news media reports of allegedly discriminatory practices, distributing membership application forms.
Earlier this fall, local and area media, including the University Daily Kansan, conducted inquiries into inconsistencies in the clubs' membership policies.
Bailey said a civil rights specialist would obtain membership rolls and any other records or documents that would be relevant to the case.
"If it's relevant, the investigator might interview parties employed there or patrons of the clubs," he said.
Bailey said he hoped the officials of the clubs would voluntarily give information requested by the investigator.
"But we do have subpoena power if it is needed." he said.
He said that if the investigation revealed that membership policies at the clubs were discriminatory, a cease-and-desist order would be issued to club officials.
Steve Comeau, manager of Bullinwake,
and John Sheppard, manager of
Shenanigans, were not available for comment last night.
Explanations of zoning terms offer citizens insight into property laws
Staff Reporter
Bv ANN LANGENFELD
Downdizing, rezoning, RM-1, RM-3
These are terms associated with property zoning, but they probably are of little interest. The owner until he is confronted with a zoning issue.
Craig Helsher, Junior, is one such person. He lives in a four-plex apartment in the Oread neighborhood. Through misinspiration he moved out of his apartment if the area he lived in was downzoned. He really did not understand downzoning, but he did know it.
The Oread Neighborhood Plan calls for downzoning, which would not allow large apartment buildings to be built in the neighborhood.
Zoning is a description of property use and it regulates land use, height of a building and setback requirements. Stoll said.
The downsizing would affect only future construction, Garner Stoll, a member of the Lawrence-Douglas County planning staff, said last week. Reasoning is not retrofugible.
Setback requirements prescribe how far back from the street a building must be.
Zoning also does not affect the number of people who live in a dwelling unit, Soll said. Heiser would not have to move out of his apartment if his block was downmoved.
STOIL SAYD the city codes allowed a maximum of four unrelated persons to live in a dwelling unit. A blood-related family can be of any size.
The majority of the current zoning in the
Oread neighborhood is residential dormitory and high-density multiple family homes. One of the most residential dormitory zoning allows a dwelling for every 800 square feet of
that means on that a typical 50 by 115-foot Oread灯, an eight-unit apartment could be high-Building multiple family zoning units. The apartment is feet of property or a five-unit apartment.
OTHER RESIDENTIAL zoning classifications in Lawrence include medium-density multiple family, low-density multiple family, residential duplex and single family. Other zoning industrial, food plan.
The Oread Neighborhood Plan calls for changing the majority of the zoning to medium-density multiple family. That means there is a three-unit apartment on a typical lot.
The fringes of the neighborhood that edge the KU campus would remain high density. Stoll said.
The Oread neighborhood borders the KU campus on the north and east. The neighborhood is called St. Street, on the east by Massachusetts Street, on the south by 17th Street and on the west
TOM GLEASON, president of the Oread Neighborhood Association, said the group wanted the area downzoned to preserve the character of the neighborhood.
The current zoning makes it
economically encouraging for some people to tear down an old home to build an apartment when the house could have been rehabilitated. "he said.
When the zoning was written for the neighborhood in 1966 it was predicted that off-campus housing for KU students would spread into the area, he said. The student population has not grown into the area as he changed, so the zoning should be changed.
Mary Lynch, owner of 12 apartments in the Oread neighborhood and an opponent of the downsizing, said the changes would make her apartments a non-conforming place where she would cause her insurance rates to go up and would hurt the building's resale value.
The area is bounded on the north by ninth Street, on the west by Missouri Street, on the south by 11th Street and on the east by an enclave between Illinois and Mississippi streets.
IN JULY, the city commission turned down by a 3-2 vote a request to downzone the entire area. However, the commissioners who voted against the downzoning, Ed Carter, Bob Schumann and Don Binnis, said that they were not specific sections of the Neighborhood under review.
Earlier this month the city commission manually approved rezoning a part of the suburban neighborhood to duplex. In the future only duplexes or single family homes can be built in that area. Storm
Berman proposes scholarship bill
Bv TONI WOOD
Staff Reporter
More scholarship money will be available to more students who are eligible for the State Legislature. The 1961 Legislature passes a proposed bill sponsored by State Senate. Arnold Berman, D-
Berman said Friday he planned to introduce a bill that would award an equal number and amount of scholarships granted to Kansas program and the tuition grant program.
"The only way to get a grant is to attend a private college," he said. "There is no such requirement for state scholarships. The only way can attend a private or public institution."
Under the current system, students who choose to go to a private college can qualify for both the grants and the state scholarships.
"At the present time, there are three times as many tuition grants given as state, scholarships." he said.
However, students who attend public universities can qualify only for the state scholarship.
BERMAN SAID that about 25 percent of private college students received tuition grants. Less than 2 percent of the students attended public institutions receive state scholarships.
A student that is awarded a tuition grant can receive a maximum of $1,200 a year, and state scholarships are given for a maximum of $500 a year.
Berman said the total fund for tutu
grants for fiscal 1980 was about $4 million,
all of which came from the state's general
fund.
Lutz said that about 1,360 students had qualified this year for the state scholarship
HOWEVER, THE STATE scholarship fund for this fiscal year is only $25,254 and must be accompanied by a federal government, according to Nancy Latz, a clerk for the Kansas Board of Trustees.
program but she did not know how many students actually received the scholarship funds.
The scholarships are awarded to students who are designated as state scholars after they score high on the American College Preparatory School. Financial aid also must be earned.
Students can qualify for the grants for eight semesters, Lutz said, but the semesters do not have to be consecutive.
Bob Bingaman, director of the Associated Students of Kansas, said, "Once you are designated a Kansas scholar you can enter into graduate school." You don't consider your erasers. "I
Getting state money into the state scholarship fund has been deemed a priority for ASK, he said, because good students can be able to go to college because of lack of money.
"There is a misconception," he said. "The Legislature thinks there is an unlimited amount of money students can tap into, but there isn't enough."
---
2
Monday, October 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wire Services
Park's assassination confirmed
SEOU, South Korea—President Park Chung-hee and five bodyguards were gunned down deliberately in an assassination planned and executed by the head of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, the government said yesterday.
The official report said KCIA chief Kim Jae-kyu killed Park Friday night because he was out of favor and feared he would be fired. It did not explain why the government first reported that Kim killed the president accidentally during an argument with chief presidential body guard Cha Chishul.
Chief investigator Choo Dao-hun told reporters that Kim shot and Cha three times each during a dinner at a RCA building 500 yards from the apartment.
By prior arrangement with Kim, five KCIA agents waiting in an adjoining room killed four presidential bodyguards and seriously wounded another as soon as they heard Kim's shots. Gen. Chon said, Kim, his five agents and many other KCIA agents have been arrested and are being interrogated, he said.
10 killed in border plane crash
SAN DIEGO — A Mexican government airplane flying American prisoners to a border exchange yesterday slammed into a telephone pole in dense fog and heavy rain.
The dead were four American prisoners and six Mexicans, four guards, the pilot and the co-pilot, according to the U.S. consulate in Tijuana, Mexico.
Police L1. Dwis Spirak said that the pilot of the twin-engine Otter turboprop became insecrated in the fog and that the plane堕 over the border into a cloud.
The pilot contacted the Federal Aviation Administration's Miramar air traffic center, and operators there held his position and gave Tijuana control.
"After turning around, the craft hit a pole on top of Spring Canyon and crashed." Spisak said.
The plane crashed and burned in the rugged Otay Mesa south of San Diego. The area is accessible only by four-wheel drive vehicles.
Miners killed in Korean fire
SEOUL, South Korea—Rescue teams found the bodies of 25 miners early in two smoke-filled auxiliary shafts of a coal mine where an underground gas well was collapsed.
It raised the death toll to 30 in the disaster at the Unsong Mine in Munkyong, 80 miles south of Seoul. Eleven miners still were missing.
A total of 85 miners were rescued yesterday. Mine officials earlier reported that 110 were rescued. However, they were counting the 25 trapped in the mine.
The 400 rescue workers had to wait until late Saturday when the blaze was under control and the smoke and gas began to clear before they could start their fire.
Police foiled strike on Castro
Police officers said the fire was caused either by an overloaded conveyor motor inside the shaft or by a circuit in a power line in the shaft.
NEW YORK—A group claiming responsibility for a bomb that damaged the College Mission said Saturday that it wanted to strike two weeks earlier during the campaign.
"We didn't want to any policemen," an anonymous caller told the Associated Press after the explosion near the mission late Saturday night.
The explosion in a trash container blew out a side door of the mission and shattered windows. Two policemen were treated for cuts and bruises.
Castro stayed at the mission during his recent visit while hundreds of police and Secret Service agents guarded a four-block area around the mid-
After the blast, the caller said a group called Ormega Seven was responsible. The group also, as taken creep for similar attacks along the East Coast and in New York, would be on the run.
Arson suspected in Topeka
TOPEKA-An early-morning fire, which authorities think was set in the backyard of the East Indian Elementary School in north Topsake yesterday, fire officials said.
Ben Neil, Topeka fire chief, said the fire, reported just before 5 a.m., apparently was set by vandals. There were indications that the school had been broken into and that fire extinguishers had been emptied in the school's hallways. Neil said.
The blaze burned out the school's area fire. Firms had set in file drawers, Neil said, and there was smoke and heat damage throughout the building.
Scarpelli libel suit to reopen
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—A civil liaison suit filed by the former chairman of the pathology department at the University of Kansas Medical Center will be tried on Wednesday in a federal court.
Dear Scarpelli, now chairman of the pathology department at Northwestern University, seeks 5000 in damages from four former medical students and a
Scarpelli contends that the five defendants libeded him in 1974 in a complaint filed with the school that accused him of discriminating against black students. In the first trial last year, a mistrial was declared after the jury deadlocked 11-1 in favor of Scarpelli.
The four students, all black, charged Scarpell with "unlawful and unlawful discrimination" toward black students. Their complaint was dismissed after a hearing.
Congress to limit FTC power
WASHINGTON—Concerns is preparing to trim the sails of the Federal Trade Commission, which many small businesses imply imposes too many regulations.
The house is expected to approve early this week a bill that would make the governor's power limited to presiding over congressional proposers, or other House of Congress could block any regulation as long as the governor supports it.
The legislative veto, contained in a bill authorizing funds for the FTC, is proposed as a way to give Congress a tighter rein on what many members see as an agency that has been too aggressive in protecting consumers from unfair business practices.
In other actions expected this week, the Senate will consider emergency aid for starving Cambodians and the House will take up a part of President Carter's energy program and debate whether to expand the federal role in welfare programs administered by the states.
Court stops patient's release
Under the high court's ruling, Noel will remain a patient at Larned State Hospital. In a 38-page opinion, the Supreme Court paid Pawnee County District Judge Philip Aldrich had erased when he ruled in March that Noel should be released.
The Kansas Supreme Court Saturday reversed a strongly contested lower court decision that would have allowed Noet to go free.
TOPEKA-Mental patient Carrol Noel Jr. has lost his bid to leave a state security hospital where he was committed after being found not guilty by the judge.
Aldrich had concluded he had no choice but to release Noel, based on medical testimony that the patient, a diagnosis paranoid schizophrenic, presented no evidence of a mental illness.
The justices said the lower court wrongfully concluded it had to release Noel because of medical testimony that the patient, in his hospital environment, was not dangerous. The hospital at no time recommended the discharge, the opinion of the judge, which was later supported by Mr. Jackson's medicine, was in a suitable environment and was not subjected to stress.
Correction...
The Kansan inadvertently understated an editorial column on the Friday, Oct. 17th. The Kanan. The column, "Students of 1865, today are unique," was written by Kansan.
The National Weather Service in Tepeca predicts partly cloudy skies for today with highs in the low to mid 90s. Winds will be from the south and west.
Weather ...
Monday night there is a 40 percent chance for rain with lows in the low 40s.
BOSTON(AP)--Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D.Mass., will move a step closer to becoming a presidential candidate today with the formation of an exploratory team.
Kennedy to explore 1980 chances
The Kennedy camp, having picked up the idea of Chicago mayor Jane Byrne over the weekend, has been helping that a committee is being set up to collect funds and to assess the senator's chances of winning.
Kennedy already is considered to be a candidate by the Federal Election Commission because he has accepted campaign contributions.
ficially announce his candidacy soon, perhaps this week.
ON A FLIGHT across Massachusetts Friday night, Kennedy told reporters, "I'm tired of screwing around with this. I want to get going."
Saturday, Mayor Jane Byrne said she would formally endorse Kennedy tomorrow. Her endorsement, she said, will be effective
However, aides say Kennedy will of-
EARLIER THIS MONTH, Byrne had said she supported President Carter. And on Saturday she said, "I still support the president. I make it very clear. I think the president is a good man and a very hestman and I would handle him until I thought he could not win."
until a Kennedy returns to the White House. White House.
Chicago and surrounding Cook County have traditionally been important to Democrat presidential candidates. A 1980 attempt by Senator Ted Kennedy's 1980 offer to a Republican majority downstate
and helped John F Kennedy win his narrow victory.
AN UNIDENTIFIED Carter campaign for the Chicago Tribune. "We didn't want to attend at all." The expressions of support we were given privately were completely consistent with the general view of the campaign.
Less than two weeks ago, Carter attend* a dinner in Chicago that resided more than $1 million for the mourners. The mayor said then that he would hold the day that, she would vote for Carter.
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Truffaut:
BED AND BOARD
Directed by Cialdo Wertmilher, with Giancarlo Giannianni and Mangela Melato. A shy and awkward peasant goes to Rome in the 1930s where he机遇了 for the right opportunity in which he kills Benito Mussolini. His hasty misfortunes.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise listed. 1:58 admission. No Reseachs.
Directed by Francois Truffaut, jean-Pierre Leaud. This film continues the adventures of Antoine Clerc and is now married. Francois/ubtitles.
Thursday, November 1
Lina Wertmert
LOVE AND ANARCHY
(1931)
(1974)
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All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud,
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission.
Tuesday, October 30
Hitchcock Double Feature:
SABOTAGE (1936)
and
YOUNG AND INNOCENT
(1937)
Wednesday, October 31
THE THREE PENNY
OPERA
Two Alfred Hitchcock thrillers for the price of one; these are from his film *SABOTAGE* is about a terrorist bombing an ISIS Sylvia Sidney. YOUNG AND INNOCENT is about a murderer who can be recognized by its twitching eyes.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 29. 197?
2
KANSAN On Campus
Frost entertains KU audience with anecdotes
TODAY: ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS for today are: GERT, Benda, Payless Cashmans and Standard Oil Co. interviewing at the University of Oklahoma, Oil, Kansas Department of Transportation and Kansas City Power and Light Co. interviewing at the School of Engineering. AN EXHIBIT honoring the International year of Women will have a lecture by Kansas Union. THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will hold a rally and March at noon between the Union and American University. STUDENTS will have an information luncheon gathering at noon in Cock Room 1 of the University. Professor Emertus KEN-STEPFORD will be hosting Oregon will have a poetry session at 4 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. H.L. Scott from Oklahoma State will hold a PHYSICS AND ASTROLOGY COLLOQUION on Friday at 4:30 to 5:30 Interviews' at 4:30 to 5:30 Mall Hall.
TONIGHT: The Political Action Committee of the COMMISSION ON THE UNION will meet this evening in the Governor's office to discuss THE ADULT LIFE RESOURCE CENTER Career Counseling Workship will hold a talk on "Preparing Your Resume" at p.m. on Thursday, May 15, in the deputy assistant secretary for oil and gas in the U.S. Department of Energy, will hold a talk on "Effective Communication" at 7:30 p.m. in Strong Hall auditorium. Loren Graham will present a lecture on "SOUTIET PERSPECTIVES IN GENETIC ENGINEERING" at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
By AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Reporter
Former President Richard Nixon, the late Robert Kennedy, John Wayne McCain and Robert F. Kennedy came to Hoe Auditorium Friday night in Dairo Proudly avoid recollections of the attacks.
In his homecoming lecture to more than 800 people, the British television journalist told interviews that both inspired and end of "interviews that make it worthwhile."
When interfeiring politicians, Frost said, the most difficult task was getting them to say something definite.
"It's like the blind leading the blind," he said. "You ask them what their favorite color is and they'll say plaid."
The more elusive interviewees was former Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith, who has "been known to invent facts on the spur of the moment," Frost said.
Frost has had lengthy discussions with another infamous politician, Richard Nixon, who was the subject of Frost's historic four-part series of interviews in 1977.
HE SAID NIXON was a “tierely private” man who sometimes did not realize exactly what he was saving.
Before an interview, Nixon once told Frost that he would not want to be a Soviet leader because they "never knew when they were being tapped."
"He didn't realize the dramatic irony of what he was saying," Freed said.
But his interview with another politician,
Sen. Robert Kennedy, was one of the more inspiring of his career.
In the last interview he gave before his assassination in 1966, Kennedy was asked by Frost how he would like to be remembered after his death.
"There was an awesome irony in that question." Frost said.
KENNEDY REFERRED to Albert Camus' statement that this is a world in which children suffer and he said he would remember for lessening this suffering.
"For if we do not do this, who will do this?" Kennedy asked.
When asked the same question, former Israeli defense minister Moshe Dayan told Frost, "That's what I'm dead for—not to care what people say of me."
Frost agreed with the Dayan philosophy and said people today cared too passionately what others will think of them."
He said many of the subjects he had intervened "lived up to their reputations, or they were accused of being murderers who was—as expected—" an extraordinary gift of a man," and Prince Charles, who is now the country's prime minister.
ANOTHER WAS IDI AMIN,posed Ugandan dictator, when Frorn spoke with a *t* time when he was already an ac- tory. "I want but not yet an accredited monster."
Frost said that although Amin was friendly and seemingly mild, it was easy to
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see when he removed his "dashing" beret what a horror he could be.
This also was one of Frost's most chilling interviews, as was his talk with the leader of Hitler youth during the 1930s.
When asked whether there was something that future generations should remember about Hitler, the man said they should "be careful" "fully" way Hitler dealt with unemployment.
After his hour-long speech Frost agreed to an interview, fielding questions from the audience.
ASKED THEY THE UNION States could select the best leaders from its politicians, Frost said Americans must learn lessons from history and be vigilant.
"All politicians suffer from confusing the national interest with their own," he said. "That was Nixon's problem. He thought that a strong chardonnay at Chardonnay was good for the United States."
Frost told the audience that, historically speaking, the one person he would most like to interview would be Jesus Christ, an "obvious but honest choice."
He said he would ask Christ, "Did you really have to die to save us from our sins? Was that really necessary?"
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
October 29,1979
Hall issue unsettling
That promise by University housing officials to turn an entire floor of a University residence hall over to a car park. The effort has led to a headache for all parties involved.
The promise was made last spring to representatives of Alpha Omicron Pi by Fred McEhlene, director of the office of residential programs, Ann Eversole, director of student organizations, and Caryl Smith, dean of student life. AOPI is reorganizing on campus and has asked for a full floor on a residence hall until it establishes its own house in the fall of 1981.
AURH also said that the setting of a sorority within a residence hall would compromise the uniqueness of the residence hall way of life. AURH has further criticized the University for promising rooms to pledges during a sorority shortage and said the move meant state support of a private organization.
HALL RESIDENTS have been quick to protest the promise. The Association of University Residence Halls contends that the AOPI pledges would receive "preferential treatment" in obtaining rooms. It says past occupants of the rooms designated for the sorority would no longer be able to return to them, which they now are allowed to do.
The decision could also set a dangerous precedent. If the University allows one private group a reserved area of a residence hall, then it would find itself under pressure to grant the same privilege to other special groups.
IT WOULD be a simple matter if the argument was as one-sided as that. But
the arguments presented by University officials for reserving a floor take a little sting out of AURH's arguments.
Having a floor to itself would help the organization gel into a solid house. Past experience has shown that the more scattered the members of a Greek house, the weaker that house is. Living together would enable the organization to find a better atmosphere they want and at the same time would cause little commotion.
BUT WHATEVER the arguments, the facts are that a promise was made without consulting AURH—a promise of official officials say they cannot break.
All that can be done now is for everyone involved to sit down and negotiate. AURH has taken the first step in this solution by adopting a proposal to negotiate with AOPI about the housing. So far, no word has come back from the university officials, but it is clear they will have to join in the talks.
However this matter is settled, someone is going to be unhappy. Unfortunately, it could have been avoided with a little careful foresight and a little foresight that we hope will be present in the negotiations for AOPI's housing.
'60s furor not needed to defend high ideals
And the University has openly announced that it favors the establishment of new Greek houses on campus to attract more students and alleviate the University housing crunch. To throw a wrench into the establishment of one house might discourage others from coming to KU.
In comparison with the '60s, most people tell us, the '70s has been a decade of absolute apathy. B big demonstrations, no overt demonstrations, no disillusionment, no turor about much of anything.
But look at it this way - the '69s, with all of the ant-war, anti-racist, anti-establishment rhetoric in our own country. A period in this country's recent history. Activism today tends to be less effusive, but make no mistake about it. It's still there. We don't need to support principles and are willing to defend those principles is still present, even prevalent. And it is probably more con-
The difference? According to latter-day activist Pat Guegen, the student and a major law professor at UCLA liberties there may be less activism, but the high ideals that people seek probably are even more.
"FROM A libertarian point of view," Goodwin said, "our movement is a more principled attack on the governmental encroachment on individual freedoms than movements in the 60s were. In the 80s they were everything—just the sake of doing it."
Goodwin and his colleagues have gotten their point across to the rest of the public and have done so effectively. The military is well-equipped, militaristic. It needs be a part of our security.
A national anti-draft team, Milton Mucke, came to Lawrence last week and troop to a crowd at the Kansas Union. He is a leader of the national Students for a Libertarian Society and was sponsored by the KU Libertarian Alliance. Goodwin and Mucke signed an agreement more than 1,000 signatures of people opposed to mandatory draft restrictions laws.
THIS PAST spring, the alliance listed names of 1,100 students opposed to the draft, 600 voters against it and cities from Maine to California, the liberarians would make their point without being heard.
david
COLUMNIST
preston
It matters little whether you agree with Goodwin. He is taking a stand for what he believes in and he is doing so in a positive way.
The Libertarian Alliance hope to abolish the Selective Service system, which Goodwin said was a threat to individual freedom.
“If we had the power to immediately deploy an army, we would have probably sent troops directly into Nicaragua and Nicaragua, but we wisely stayed out,” he said. “What we have used our military forces for in the past has been to protect our people.” It hasn’t been for the defense our country.
"IF SOMEONE were to invade this country, the government would have so many volunteers it woule be unreal."
So his point is made and it is, quite frankly, a good one. To push the cause, the group has sponsored Muller's visit and set up an exhibit at the airport to be引纳 national exposure to the movement.
They also will support anti-draft candidates in the 1980 elections and will distribute leaflets and material.
WE NEED NOLE of the over-zealousness of the '80s. We should have learned from Kent State and from the Chicago riots that violence in the name of defenses deter the cause. Fumecated at the Seabrook nuclear plant, he dismantled this clearly just two weeks ago.
Whether it is gay rights or civil rights or secular rights, the courts must defend it sensually. As Goodwin aptly said, "our libertarianism is a political idea that covers the right and the left. We do."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
More power to him.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanaan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS6040
800-254-9600. Published on the University of Kuwait August August May and December Thursdays at 10am, 11am, 12pm and 1pm. The book is priced at $35. The compilations by which are used are also $35 for each month of a year in Dept. of Data Science and Mathematics, for the number of pages required for the book to be complete for the number of years it will be published.
Editor Mary Hoenk
Managing Editor
Campus Dresser
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Editorial Editor Mary Ernst
Campus Editor ... Tina Sheehy
Associate Campus Editor ... Dial Carey
Business Manager Cynthia Ray
Retail Sales Manager
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Some of these companies—not all are unoccupied—are capitalizing on the demand for pay more for conveniences, our tendency to eat improperly and the interest in operating on a stellar example of American rationing—if a little something is done.
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
General Manager Rick Musser
THEY ARE selling us vitamins that we don't necessarily need. And we're buying them because they are affordable, whether we really need them, or whether we paying a fair price. Consumers have been known to unwittingly pay as much as times a manufacturer's cost for vitamins.
Oil companies have filled the figurative national pillory long enough. We should make a little room for another economic vitamin–iamn manufacturer. More specifically, it should be mega-vitamin people who are ignorant of basic nutrition.
In 1976, Americans spent $80 million on Vitamin C tablets. And in that same year, we spent more than $100 million on Vitamin E.
As for the Vitamin C, well, we've got million-dollar urine. And many researchers think the only souls who really need vitamins are rats that want to become pregnant.
Vitamin supplements often useless
Vitamins are not just something your mother told you were good for you. They can also help your body large doses and can harm your body. And a lot of Americans are too stupid to learn.
IN 1938, the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act stated that products were considered drugs if they were used in diagnosis, cure, treatment or prevention of a disease.
This doesn't include dietary pills intended for use as a dietary supplement. Any pill with up to 50 percent of the RDA falls in that category.
And in 1973, the Food and Drug Adjuvant validation ruled that any amount of the recommended daily allowance (RDA) of that nutrient is considered a risk.
IN MANY CASES, our own bodies will protect us from our stupidity. Vitamins A and D are essential by the body - pass through the body in urine. Vitamin C, even when taken in doses of more than 3,000 milligrams daily, does little more than cause diarrhea and excrete toxins.
But fat-soluble vitamins, such as A and D, have been known to kill when taken in excessively large amounts.
COLUMNIST thompson
Symptoms of Vitamin A or D overdose include headache, blurred vision, lethargy, nausea, vomiting, bone and joint pain and damage to the nervous system.
How large are "excessive doses?" In some cases, it's 5,000 milligrams or more of vitamin D. It's probably sturdier as to take that much? More than 1,000 cakes of vitamin poisoning are required.
THE PROBLEM *is* with vitamins themselves, nor is it with the microbes in logical use. It's with our misconceptions of how they should be used that makes us easy targets for viruses.
chemical. But the Soviet chemists continue to call it a wonder drug. They say it will treat heart disease, diabetes, gangrene, hypertension, alcoholism, drug addiction, schizophrenia, jaundice and a wonder drug in the treasest no?
Vitamins are useless if there is no fat, protein and carbohydrates in our systems. For example, the B-complex vitamins aid the metabolism of proteins they themselves are not energy sources.
This is where a lot of sports buffs or athletes can be deceived. According to a study conducted by the Mirkin, a physician, there is no scientific evidence to support the belief that athletes have an enhanced performance. And Mirkin says the body's muscles don't increase significantly during exercise.
The basic facts about nutrition aren't guarded secrets. The information is available in any library and often in places where vitamins are sold.
BUT., VITAMIN supplements are still useful and valuable when used knowingly. People who eat lots of processed foods and junk food are probably prime candidates developing minor vitamin deficiencies. Any students are prime examples of such people.
THERE IS also a problem with some substances that are promoted as vitamins when they may actually be quite foreign. The exception is vitamins highly recommended B-13 to their people.
American chemists say they have never even heard of B-15. The FDA is conducting tests because it thinks B-15 is purely
The time you spend looking up the information is likely to be more valuable than your last bottle of multiple-complex vitamins.
M. F. Tiffin
AMS gains profits by harassment
To the Editor:
I attended the press conference called by the University's Custodian Action Committee (CAC) to air their grievances against the employer, the American Management Institute, and to express the shameful treatment that has been meted out to the custodians. And as a member of the KU Committee on South Africa, I would like to draw some parallels between the issue raised by the custodians and our own experiences with African students dissociate itself from racial South Africa.
AMS was hired by KU in 1977 on a two-year contract to supervise the custodial services of the KU hospital and custodial services at KU. It is a division of a huge parent corporation called American Hospital Services Corporation, which also owns the subsidiaries and divisions in South Africa.
In two years AMS received an income of $717,735 for these "services." How does AMS make such an enormous income from the work of such a show time? Amazingly in the company, not for any managieral services but rather receives payment only for the reduction of the custodial labor force. As the CAC chairman, Irving Vanduye, explained, in practice, if AMS can force an employee off to pocket the employees' wages and benefits.
In two years at least 25 custodians have been harassed to the point of quitting their jobs. This harassment fails most heavily on those who work directly even to the point of coaxing custodians who were injured on the job to sign off their own records, which can seriously alylation a violation of the University's affirmative action program. For the custodians, "it is a matter of survival," said Mr. Horton.
The reaction of the KU Endowment Association and KU administration to both issues, to both of these requests for higher moral principles, are similarly irrespective and procrastinating. The custodians have also resisted the contract with AMS in January. They simply want to become University employees again. This might even save KU
If such mortality repugnant treatment of people can take place right under our eyes at KU, where students are supposed to be employed in the hospital, how are we to know how these subsidies and divisions of the American Hospital Corporation are treating their black employees in South Africa, where dehumanizing racial practices are the law under pressure from the worldwide divestment movement do introduce some cosmetic desegregation policies, let us not forget the very reason why they operate in South Africa. It is because in no other place the students will make more money out of human misery.
and the taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars, the hundreds of thousands that AMS is now pocketing.
I appeal to all students and faculty and staff members and campus groups to come help the custodians. Recently the faculty has begun an expenial plan. What the custodians have been facing for two years is much worse than what the faculty may face in future
Anita Chan
Member, KU Committee on South Africa
Sorority housing plan unfair to residents
I am a member of Lewis Hall. I am member rather than resident for many reasons. Yes, I reside within the hall, and my room is in the second floor, namely third floor. I have lived on third floor for two years. I belong. I am a member of said floor. I have been involved in hall government for one year and am also involved with the hall. I am a member.
To the Editor:
People from a floor return to a floor quite frequently. As a member of a floor you grow accustomed to the people on that floor. Each floor of Lewis has its own characteristics and I'm sure this goes for the rest of the building, so there's no stone toen. My floor has a certain coveness.
At this point I would like to ask some pertinent questions. First, what happens to floor togetherness when you "kick" the people off a floor for a sorority for one year? How do you get another floor? What happens when the sorority leaves? Is the floor vacant, does it become all freshmen the next year or do you incite past residents to return? Yes, you worry about the banding together of the people and about the unity of each floor of the hall?
Oh yes, I did attend the Association of University Residents Hall meeting on Tuesday, at least part of it. Enough to realize that, the decision had been made and no, you do not plan to back out no matter what facts were at the least,耐寒
Yes, decisions have been made, but as in deciding to buy a suit, cannot alterations be made afterward. The AOP11 sorority must not have any flexibility within their organization? Could they not be approached with the new arising problems brought by dissenting residents? Could not an altered institution have any power or commitment of office of residential programs and AOP1? IS AURH merely a figurehead used to keep residents happy with no real power nor responsibility for the improvement of consideration a sory sorority commit to the system an invitation to speak out?
KANSAN letters
I know that to assume makes an ass of you and me. But it was wrong to assume that a new sorely could exalt as others do the "set precedent" to "set a precedent" for already existing sororites to live on a residence hall floor, does it not set a precedent for the "bady" class? As I read the passage, they, too, can make the same "deals"? Is this not an infringement upon my right as a past resident to request and perhaps even a new year, as long as it is through the system?
Cannot some of what has transpired be looked over again and "altered" slightly but significantly? There are other possibilities not being taken into consideration. I feel that, as well as all other residents, deserve their attention and the other questions that have arisen.
Patricia A. Dziadura Spring Hill, junior
Criterion a voice not heard in Kansan
To the Editor:
A letter to the editor appeared in the third issue of Criterion from John McLeese and Mark F. Davis, both Shawnee Mission High School students, who understand why adults felt it necessary to develop a primarily black newspaper. They report that the newspaper promotes racism by being sepa-
I have always wanted to ask my fellow
late students, "Do you read Ebook JEL,
and what is it?" I regularly "regularly" meaning every issue. If the answer is "no," which I sure it would be.
As I am sure the answer is because black publications have nothing newsworthy for whites, white publications have nothing newsworthy for blacks.
Don't you think we blacks get tired of looking through the Kansan and seeing only white faces and issues? I'm sure whites are more aware of their situation was the only source available to them.
Oh, sure. the Kansan covers issues about backs, you say. Look back through the Kansan and you'll see blacks is when there are protests and revolts. Other blacks are when their events and organizational functions newsworthy. I've always wondered how the Kansan derives its criteria of blackness.
The Kansan can report Panhellenic functions easily and cover the organizing of while fraternal orders. But do you realize that these organizations are fraternal fraternities and sororities are or how to contact their officers? It felt just because the orders don't have a house, it can't reach them.
There are seven black fraternal organizations on this campus and a new fraternity is being formed. The Kansan never looked into them.
Did it look for black models when it put out its spring fashion section last month? No, it looks like a black women pretty in their eyes". At least one black woman could be used "in"
Did you know blacks are uncomfortable and feel a disavantage when they are the only minority in your community? Crition published an article about this in its first issue on the front page. I was wiped for liking it.
Try it some time. Enroll in an all-black class. From past observations in two African Studies courses, one being Black Women 388, white drops out fast for the very reason of feeling out of place. One white woman did stay in a full semester. At the beginning, she she was glad she did because she learned how it felt to be a minority, for once.
So, until the Kanas can become more sensitive to our needs as a minority and stop its racist practices, there is a need for a black publication.
Alberta N. Wright Lawrence senior
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kanan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters are not sent, and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after the first line of the article, should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. Should include the right to edit letters for publication.
Mondav. October 29. 1979
5
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Police Beat
Lawrence police were kept busy this weekend responding to reports of two assaults, 15 fire slashes, two drug and two weapon attacks, a burglary and three vehicle incidents.
A LAWRENCE MAN WAS ARRESTED for aggravated assault Saturday after threatening his wife and a companion and firing a pistol, a police spokesman said.
Gordon D. Chappell, 142 New York St., was released on $5,000 bond from the Douglas County jail, according to a jail spokesman.
IN A SECOND ASSAULT, a 1-year-old man was attacked by a group of four to six individuals in the 1400 block of New York on Saturday, according to the police spokesperson.
The man, a resident of British Columbia, told police the group vertically harassed him, then pushed him to the ground and beat and kicked him. The snookerman said.
The victim was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and released later Saturday, a hospital spokesman said.
The police said the incident was under investigation and there were several suspects.
IN A SERIES OF INCIDENTS that police said probably were related, the fires of 14 bush trucks on the Ninth Street, Jamaica Drive and Holiday Drive were punctured Friday night. A 15th car had its tires punctured in the 800 block of Cawdor Street, according to a police source.
The police said there were no suspects in the rammee of vandalism.
TWO PERSONS WERE admitted to LMIR after taking overdoses of a variety of substances last week.
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A IN BURGLARY on Saturday, police reported that $1,278 worth of stereo equipment was taken from the apartment of a house in the 200 block of W. 50th Street.
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The police said intruders entered the apartment through a locked bedroom window. There are no suspects, the police said.
TWO MOTORCYCLES, a 1798 Yamaha 125 valued at $900 and a 1974 Yamah 250 valued at $600, were taken from 160 Tennessee S.F. Friday, a police report said. The two uninfected likeites were rolled away. There are no suspects, they said.
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Anti-racist marchers may have broken law
Lawrence Police Chief Richard Stanvix said yesterday he would meet with the city attorney to discuss possible illegal activities during Saturday's anti-racism march.
By JEFF SJERVEN
Staff Reporter
The march involved the International Committee of Human Rights and Progressive Labor Party. Members of the two groups marched Saturday from Wabon Library to the Lawrence Opera House, 642
Stanwick said he would meet early this week with Kcl Knutson, city attorney, to look into possible charges related to the use of sound equipment during the march. He also said he did not know whether action had been taken against him for a flag burning during the demonstration.
Showalter said marchers might have violated city ordinances when they burned a confederate flag in front of the U.S. Army recruiting office at Eighth and Avenue. They also have violated a city ordinance by using sound equipment on city streets, he said.
However, Paul Showalter, INCAR organizer, said yesterday that he doubled that Lawrence officials would take action in response to the activities.
MARCH ORGANIZERS 160 marchers from Madison, Wisconsin; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Austin, Texas; Houston, Kansas; Moore, and Lawrence along the march route.
Area police were present, with one
Lawrence squad car leading the marchers and one following. Some marchers expressed displeasure at the police escort.
"We didn't ask them to show up," one said. "They protect the Cluxt Klux and the Nazis. Now they're trying to show how they are by driving along to protect us."
Stanwick said the escort was intended to make sure that the marchers had a peaceful demonstration and that the people along the route did not interfere.
"That's routine," Stanwix said. "It's our responsibility to see they have a safe and peaceful march."
ALONG THE MARCH route, demonstrators chanted socialist and anti-racist slogans, such as "Cops, courts, Ku Klux Klan are all a part of the boss's plan." Demonstrations against white buryties in the ground, and "Death to the Nazis, Death to the Ku Klux Klan."
The marchers stopped at the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum, where an exhibition about Quantrill's rash is on display.
Standing on the back of the march's lead truck, Showalter criticized the museum and the city of Lawrence for allowing the dislay.
Many of the marchers carried flags attached to heavy, four-foot pieces of wood. Some carried only the two-by-four beams with no flags.
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Showalter said the beams were not intended to be used as weapons.
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University Daily Kansan
39 HOURS
Movie Information
MOVIE INFORMATION
TELEPHONE 841-6418
Athletic department trying to fill vacancy
The KU athletic department has not had a business manager for nearly a month, but Art Lingua, assistant business manager, had not created any severe problems.
"I have been handling the business duties of the office and so far everything has been going pretty well," Lingle said. "I really don't foresee any problems."
"I think that it might have been a bad time of year when they first looked for a place to work in the city, but we was just starting and most business managers were very busy at that time."
The position has remained unfilled until Oct. 10 because the athletic department was closed to in-person initial search for a replacement for Doug Messer, former business manager. He accepted a similar position at Mississippi State in Starkville, Miss., for personal reasons.
Lingle said that Bruce Mays, assistant
Bob Marcum, KU athletic director,
said he would begin reviewing
applications this week that were received
after KU-re-advised the position.
The job description of the business manager has been changed slightly from when the position was initially advertised, Marcum said.
The business manager will no longer oversee the ticket office, Marcum said, because the two should be separated.
Marcum said he would review applications this week, and then a selection committee consisting of himself, Mays, and Craig McCoy, Kansas University treasurer, would interview candidates to make a decision, probably by Nov. 5.
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Monday, October 29, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Martin canned by Yanks again
NEW YORK (AP)—Billy Martin, treas-
tor from another of his celebrated con-
troversies, was fired yesterday as manager
of the New York Yankees.
The Yankees announced that Dick Hower, a previous Yankees' coach and current manager of the Florida State Gators, will lead a team, would be Martin's replacement.
KANSAN Sports
It is the second time in his stormy career that Martin has parted ways with the newsmaker Yankees. In the middle of the 1978
season, Martin bid a tearful and bitter
(arewell after a series of problems both with
management and superstar Reggie
Jackson.
HOWEVER, Yankees owner George Stenecromer abducted the baseball world tour in 1960. The group Martin would be back in 1980. He made the drama a in-dramatic announcement at the ballpark.
It didn't take Martin quite long to let go and take over the team. The Yankees began to fail under pulp leadership this season. Martin assumed the job again as Steubennorme hoped, to "fire up" the team.
WITH A long history of fighting, the trigger-tempered Martin caused the Yankees to end an embarrassment. After he was removed from Reno, Nev., in November 1978, Stenbremer打下 an ultimate that Martin would only return to the Yankees if they would.
He was relatively fight-free in 1979, although he had personal conflicts with players such as Garrison and monumental egos. Failing to inspire the Yankees to a four straight American League championship, he ended the desultory season in New York. The two-time World Series champions,加idled with in-game fights, were unable to play.
LESS THAN a month after the season, he got hurt in a fight with Bloomington, Mam., when he was accused of punishing an Illinois man in a hotel. Martin denied he hit the man, who received two arrests.
"I'm not a violent person." Martin said after that incident.
As a flesy, little second baseman with the Vankee in the 1960s, Martin was at the center of the team's offense. He penchant for fist-fighting continued when he left the field and assumed the managerial
He was brought to New York for the 1976 season, when he promptly led the Yankees to their first pennant of 1964. But it was a disappointment that he produced, a room rite with controversy.
HIS TEMPER got him into trouble with the Minnesota Twins and through his tenure usual, he were successful with management were not. He had short-lived careers with the Minnesota Twins, a long-time member of the team.
MOST OF THE storm center moved around Martin's constant battles with Jackson and Stenbremer. These continued into the 1972 season, when Martin nearly came to blows with Jackson in the dugout during a highly televised game with the Boston Red Sox.
The Yankees managed to win another pennant, and the World Series, despite themselves, and sterned right into the 1978 season with the same troubled look.
It was during this season that Martin quit halfway through, bowing out with infamous remarks about Jackson and Steinbrenner.
"THEY DESERVE each other," Martin was quoted as saying, "One's a born liar and the other's a convict."
In Steinbrenner's case, Martin referred to the owner's conviction for making illegal contributions. In Richard Nixon's case, the owner accused his missioner Bowie Kuwan initially banned Steinbrenner from the sport for two years, but he managed to magnate was back on the scene in 16 months.
10 20
COKE
Repeat performance
manager for the second time in two years. Initially caught in 1878, Martin returned midway through last season only to struggle to a fourth place finish. Martin is pictured here as a senior midfielder for the same club in 1976.
Wayne Capers, Kapans tailback, slips through OSU defense红Rick Antle's hand during Saturday's game. Capes, who started in place of the injury Walter Mack, gain control on a fastbreak attempt against Benny Wright.
Billy Martin is out of a uniform fair. His stormy baseball life run into more turbularity yesterday when New York Yankee owner George Steinbrueck fired the Yankee
Cruisin' Capers
Second-half drought dooms KU
By TONY FITTS
Sports Editor
At the end of the first half of KU's football game Saturday, when Darius Leather had 153 yards and 6 touchdowns on his way to a KU single-game receiving record, and like KU was on its way to a playoff win, Leather
After all, the Jayhawks have come from 16 points behind to take a one-point halftime lead. They've been beckoning me to be clicking. The offense was moving the ball, the defense was holding the Cowboys, and Mike Husbach had kicked a school-record 33-ard field goal. How could they
They could lose by falling apart in the second half. And they did. Hubbard missed field goals of 20 and 43 yards, Bryant Hebert scored 18 points at the goal line, the offensive line let the OSU defense sack Bettke twice, and worst of all, Verser fumbled on a reverse end with own end zone. OSU followed that near touchdown. The final score was 30-17, OSU.
"THAT WAS ONE of the strangest football games I've ever been involved in." KU coach Duffy said that he had big comeback after being 16 points. Vker was close to some sort of a game, but not at least as good as it was any better. But what killed us was giving up the big play on defense and not letting our team win.
KU spent the afternoon making a lot of "almost" big plays. Verser's first two
catches, of 35 and 67 yards, would have been touchdowns for last-minute tackles but they were not. The great day returning pants, did not score, although he returned five pants for 114 yards.
"I DON'T THIN' they practiced too hard last week at stopping me." Irvin said. "I just thought I could help the offense—just get good field position and get some touchdowns. I was surprised I didn't score. I would have had have at least two touchdowns."
Nor was Veser pleased with his day as he nor了 two yards short of the KU single-game receiving record of 135 yards, set by Bill Schauke against Oklahoma State in 1949.
"I feel like it's my worst day ever," Verser said. "It was all right in the first half, but I don't catch a pass in the second half." He didn't give us enough time to throw the ball.
"Most of the time our offensive line doubled real-time," he said. "There were a couple of tough plays that went through enough time. In the second half, they played a little bit more double man on David
BRIAN BETHEK, the KU quarterback trying to throw the ball behind that line, wasn't quite so critical of them.
Verser said, "They had a man on me on the line that bumped me and a man 10 yards up field. But I could beat him. And when I told Sebek usually was open over the middie."
OKLAHOMA STATE coach Jimmy Johnson was impressed with Verser's performance, even if Veraser wasn't.
"Venser is a great athlete," he said. "He is four inches tall than any of our defensive bats, and a beakbox lattaker He did not move in the reverser. The one that went 37 vards."
The reverse, the one that went 37 yards and the one that went for a Cowboy touchdown, epitomized what happened to KU Saturday, Fambrouch said.
"It worked like a charm there sometimes," he said, "but when we really needed it, it wasn't there."
It, the reverse, worked once. Bethke took the ball from center, handed off to Higgins going right who handed off to Verser going left.
He took it downfelt—32 yards to set up a touchdown. But when the 'Bawks ran it later in the game, from their own 20 just after it, he took downfelt to regain the lead, it didn't work.
BETHEK AGAIN HANDED off to Higgins, who handed off to Visser. But Vesser never saw him in action. The fist jugging it, he was hit by OSU's Curtis Boone jerring the ball free. Dexter Manley covered it in the end zone for a touchdown and a two-point conversion made the score
Fambrough defended the play-calling of offensive coordinator John Hadl even the risky reverse deen in KU territory.
"When your pass protection and things like that break down, you have to try
something," he said. "I'm not second-guessing anything we called."
AFTER THE GAME, he had said, "It seemed like everything we called backfired on us today."
Whatever the reasons for the defeat, the KU players were disappointed after the game.
"They just came out and kicked our asses." Harry Sydney said. "It just seemed like they wanted it better than we did. We got Alabama State has a jon on us or something."
Kirsi Crawley, linebacker, said, "We gave the ball game away. We had a one point lead at haunttum and all the defense had to do was shut them down. It seems like we should just make it every year they just wait for you to make a mistake, offensively or defensively."
NEXT EEEK, Kansas fans Kansas State in Memorial Stadium. The Wildcats shocked Missouri fans by defeating the Tigers 193 Saturday. Some of the KU players said they were impressed with the performance from that victory would make any difference next week against the Wildcats.
"They should have momentum all this week," Irwin said, "but when 1:30 comes Saturday, we'll do something to change that momentum. It is the most important of the year for us right now." Coach Famee of the alumni really want to win this one."
KU has at least one player who will miss the K-State game. Defensive tackle Jeff Fox injured his knee against Oklahoma State.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Weekend Sports Roundup
Men harriers place second
Colorado placed runners in four of the five spots, easily outstanding second place Kansas for its fourth consecutive Bight Eighteen men's cross country
Colorado won the meet with 22 points, while KU was next with 65 and Oklahoma third with 80.
Oklahoma third with 60.
The Jawhays were led by junior Paul Schultz, who finished third in 30-53.7.
"Give into it we thought we could win it," Goldsmith said. "Colorado has a great team and they run a good race. Their fifth man finished 10th."
The other KU campers were Tim Tays, 15th; Kendall Smith, 18th; Tim Gundy, 22nd; Jan陈Caiden, 24th; and Brent Swanson, 27th.
Jauvees aim for second win
"If one of their top five had a bad race, we possibly could have won. They're a better team in the top five, but their sixth and sevenen are as good as they were."
KU's junior varsity football team winds up its season today with a 1:30 p.m. game at Memorial Stadium against Baker.
But only a team's first five finishers count in scoring.
13 Jafrahs have been defeated their 17-8 loss to Nebraska two weeks ago. After a opening 12-4 victory over Oklahoma State, the Hawks lost 16 to Missouri in a closely contested game. The Hawks lost 7 to Missouri before
Sophomore Steve Smith will open at quarterback for KU, backed by freshmen Mike Phipps and Mike Bohn.
Red squad wins intrasquad
Three double winners and a new school record weren't enough to lift the蓝 past the Red in Friday's women's intrasquared swimming meet at Robinson
The Red team won eight events to win the meet 156-152.
T-captain Janet Linstedt, who placed third in the 200-yard freestyle at the AIAW nationals last season, paced the winners with victories in the 200 and 150-meter races.
Tammy Thomas, one of three freshmen who won two events, swam the 50-
yard freestyle in 24.4 seconds, a national qualifying time and the fastest time ever swain in the Big Eight, according to women's swimming coach Gary
"I was very pleased with the performance of our freshmen," Kempf said. "It was their first chance to swim under the clock in college."
Women harriers place fourth
The Big Eight has known it for years, but Saturday it finally became official.
The Big Eight has known it for years, but Saturday it finally became official. Iowa State, the traditional class of Big Eight women's cross country, captured the conference championship in Lincoln, Neb., in the first Big Eight saturation competition. But UIS has also won the last four unofficial conference crowns.
Senior Michelle Brown turned in KU's best time over the 5,000-meter course. Her 18:26 was good enough for seventh place. ISU's Christine McMeen skipped an eleventh.
The Cyclones finished with 31 points with Missouri a distant second with 64. Kansas State was next with 66, and KU, which took last third year, was fourth with 59.
KU's other finishers were Susan Phillips, 17th in 19:00; Trace Wong, 18th in 19:02; Finnemore Fainholm, 18th in 19:14; Derek Hertzig, 19th in 19:14; Tami Gunn, 19th in 19:26.
Soccer club's strina broken
The KU Soccer Club saw its home shutout stirring airbag yesterday, but not in a losing cause. Central Missouri State scored two first-half goals, the only ones from the game.
KU's Pete Nelson knocked in a penalty shot early in the second half to tie game 2. An earlier shot by Nelson barely missed when it hit the goal post.
The 'Hawks had several sure-fire chances for the teibraker but couldn't connect. Two shots penalty were missed along with several close shot-on-goal.
CMSU opened the scoring 25 minutes into the first half on a breakaway goal. ten minutes later KU used it to a Frisco Sanford goal. CMSUTAigned again two minutes later.
KU plays at home again Sunday. The opponent is Kansas State, which KU defeated every time they played last season.
Broncos crush KC behind Morton's arm
DENVER (AP) - Craig Morton riffed two first-half touchdowns and passback Jon Keyworth added another score on a halftail option pass, leading the Denver Broncos to a technical 28-3 victory over the National Football League action yesterday.
The victory boasted the Broncos' record to 6-4 and into a first-placed tie with San Diego in the AFC West, while the Chiefs dropped their third straight and slipped to 4-5.
Denver scored on its first possession, marching 80 yards in eight plays with Morton cutting passes of 24 and 22 yards to tight end Riley Odoms and a 17-yarder to Haven Moses. Jim Denner jot the score, and Morton ran into cramping 24 yards behind perfect blocking.
Morton hit a wide-open Rick Uphchurch in the end zone for a 5-yard scoreplay.
THE BRONCOS extended their lead to 14-0 early in the second quarter after an interception by safety Bill Thompson deep in Chief's territory.
About eight minutes later, Denver then missed the kick for the extra point. The Chiefs finally broke through on Jan 16, but the Knicks had driven to the Brogney's 2-3 line but had drawn from the Brogney's 4-2 line.
In the third period, the Brooks needed last three plays to score their third TD. Michael Horn scored a passing score at keyword, who found Upl church alone at the 2 yard line for an easy win.
running back Ted McKnight was thrown for an 8-yard loss to Denver cornerback Louis Wright on third down, forcing the field goal.
MORTON COMPLETED 14 of 22 passes for 198 yards in the first half as Denver assumed command early.
Jim Turner's extra-point kick after the first touchdown gave him 1,400 points in his career. He trails only George Blanda, the all-time leader with 2,002.
Thompson's interception came on a tipped pass by Kansas City quarterback Mike McCarthy. McCarthy spotted on the tackle, giving Denver possession at the Chiefs' 12-yard line, and had it missed.
The Chiefs, meanwhile, crossed mid-field three times in the half, but they made only one attempt to score. He forced to paint from kick in its own territory and J.T.Smith returned the kick 19 yards to the Denver 38. But the Chiefs failed to cash in when Stemmed留下 a 42-yard field goal.
AFTER DROPPING behind 20-4 on Keyword's touchdown touch, the Chiefs mounted a 15-play drive behind reserve against the Broncos were called for an apparently costly off-side penalty that moved the ball to the 2-yard line, but on the next play McKnight was stopped cold by Wright at the end of the inning. Chiefs Chefs on the scoreboard with his 9-pointer.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 29, 1979
7
SenEx panel requests clarification of exigency
By DAVE LEWIS
dy DAVE LEWR Staff Reporter
The University Senate executive committee's ad hoc committee on financial exigency released a report Friday recommending that the Kansas Legislature clarify financial exigency exigency financial stress or budgetary constraint.
Some KU faculty members have contended that the effectiveness of KU's Regents has not been recently approved Regents policy that did not specify what constituted financial
The report will be placed on the agenda of KU's University Council at its next meeting scheduled Wednesday.
THE RECOMMENDATIONS would be to warranted to Chancellor Archery R. Dykes that the recommendations could present the recommendations to the Regents Council of Presidents for approval.
Financial exigency is a state of financial crisis and would be declared by Dykes if budgetary difficulties arose and the university renamed faculty members was necessary.
William Kauffman, legal counsel for
the Regents, had written a letter to Dykes Oct. 11 saying that the more general Regents policy would not conflict with KU's policy.
Kauffman was not available for comment yesterday.
The Regents policy, approved Sept. 21, says, "it will be the responsibility of the chief executive officer of each Regents institution, in consultation with appraisal experts, to reduce reductions in personnel as necessitated by conditions of financial exigency."
KU'S POLICY, approved in 1976, states that the release faculty should be to university students as possible alternatives have in good faith been examined, and utilized or reje
The SenEx committee recommended in the report that the Regents policy be challenged to the exigency will be declared only as a last resort, possible alternatives calculated to preserve the survival of these colleges and universities as quality institutions of higher education.
The committee also requested that the Regents policy provide at least a year's notice for instructors being released.
Bv JENNIFER HOLT
Women advised to build credit
Although federal law prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex and marital status in any credit transaction, it does not guarantee that women will find it easy to establish credit, according to a study by Women for Women's Resource and Career Center.
Staff Reporter
The spokesman, Nancy Hiebert, graduate assistant, last week told the Equal Rights Advocate that she was a credit bureau to keep separate credit histories for husbands and wives who share an account. However, she said, the main challenge is that they often have no personal credit history.
"Build up reference references in your own name before and during marriage," she said. "We try to discriminate against women, but if the women had no credit rating, many ratings were declined."
FOR ACCOUNTS ESTABLISHED before the act was passed, the creditors must provide a form, Notes of Credit History for Married Persons, which either spouse can sign and return, Hether had. The creditor should add to the second spouse's name to the file
Though the wife may be responsible for paying monthly bills, credit accounts often are listed under the husband's name.
Problems arise when the woman is divorced, widowed or wants credit in her own name. HEBERT said. Creditors often say, "If you get 'no file' response from the credit agency,"
Hiebert said, and these account records might be kent in the husband's file.
The wife may have an excellent credit history—but it is "lost" in her husband's file. Hiebert said.
Powell suggested five steps that women could take to establish a credit history:
First, renters can use landlords as a reference by consistently paying rent on time or even a day or two early.
SIMILAR PROBLEMS can occur when a woman gets married and changes her name. Old accounts in her maiden name old records of marriage under her married name because she had not thought it was necessary to change As a result, her credit history could be lost.
Credit requirements for men and women are the same at the First National Bank of Lawrence, 900 Massachusetts, according to Ann Powell, loan officer.
Second, pay for groceries, utilities and phone bills by check to keep a record, and use the grocery store and companies as a place for a notification of good standing.
Third, obtain a gasoline card, which is usually easy to get, she said.
Fourth, set up a three-month or $10 loan at the bank where you keep a savings or checking accounts. "It's just for the sake of money," he said. "This will establish you on the bank."
Powell said that a fifth step was to set up a credit rating at a department store using the other stores as references.
Powell said that a woman also should maintain her checking account properly at the bank where she intends to apply for the loan. She will show some stability in her job and income.
**WE LOOK TO see if he or she has held down a job for at least a year, has monthly income, owns a house, monthly income and other credit cards as another source of credit rating.**
Carol McDowell, a partner in the law firm of Levy, Ambrosia and McDowell, of Topeka, she stressed that women should use the same name consistently.
"Men don't have the problem of changing names," she said. "You need to decide when you want your children to rest the rest of your life. It's not unusual for some women to be listed under four or five."
McDowell also advised women to get a credit card in their own name and to establish a separate checking account.
child and support payments as assets for credit ratings because they are considered waes.
Powell said that women also could count
However, when applying for a loan, women do not have to reveal child or support payments as a basis for repayment on the loan, she said. Photocopies of child and support payment checks were valuable in proving assets to establish credits, she said.
LELAND PRITCHARD, professor emeritus of economics in personal finance, said that if a woman had a stable job, she should have no problems obtaining credit.
However, if a woman thinks she has been unlawfully denied credit, several steps can be taken, according to McDowell.
SHE SAID women who thought they were denied credit on the basis of sex or marital status, could call the credit bureau of her employer and request that she be on Civil Rights in Topeka, or call the Consumer Protection Division of the Attorney's office in the county court house.
McDowell also said that any woman who suspected discrimination by retail stores, finance companies or credit card issuers may be prosecuted under Trade Commission in Washington, DC.
For possible credit discrimination by a national bank, the Comptroller of Currency in Washington, D.C. should be contacted
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Also selling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
Students interested in study abroad in Israel,
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also tasted, red and raw peanuts. Fresh pineapple, yellow and white pomegranate, yellow and white pomelo, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday.
meet with Professor Greenbaum of the Hebrew University for lunch, November 1, Kansas Union, 3rd floor, Cork II, noon-2 p.m.
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Home watch for truck parked at 108th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 109th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 110th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 111th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 112th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 113th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 114th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 115th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 116th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 117th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 118th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 119th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 120th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 121th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 122th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 123th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 124th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 125th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 126th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 127th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 128th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 129th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 130th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 131th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 132th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 133th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 134th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 135th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 136th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 137th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 138th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 139th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 140th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 141th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 142th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 143th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 144th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 145th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 146th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 147th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 148th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 149th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 150th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 151th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 152th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 153th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 154th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 155th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 156th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 157th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 158th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 159th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 160th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 161th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 162th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 163th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 164th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 165th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 166th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 167th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 168th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 169th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 170th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 171th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 172th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 173th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 174th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 175th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 176th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 177th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 178th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 179th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 180th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 181th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 182th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 183th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 184th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 185th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 186th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 187th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 188th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 189th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 190th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 191th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 192th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 193th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 194th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 195th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 196th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 197th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 198th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 199th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 200th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 201th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 202th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 203th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 204th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 205th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 206th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 207th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 208th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 209th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 210th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 211th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 212th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 213th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 214th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 215th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 216th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 217th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 218th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 219th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 220th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 221th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 222th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 223th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 224th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 225th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 226th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 227th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 228th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 229th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 230th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 231th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 232th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 233th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 234th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 235th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 236th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 237th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 238th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 239th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 240th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 241th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 242th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 243th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 244th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 245th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 246th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 247th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 248th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 249th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 250th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 251th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 252th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 253th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 254th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 255th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 256th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 257th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 258th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 259th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 260th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 261th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 262th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 263th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 264th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 265th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 266th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 267th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 268th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 269th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 270th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 271th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 272th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 273th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 274th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 275th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 276th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 277th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 278th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 279th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 280th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 281th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 282th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 283th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 284th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 285th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 286th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 287th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 288th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 289th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 290th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 291th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 292th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 293th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 294th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 295th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 296th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 297th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 298th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 299th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 300th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 301th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 302th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 303th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 304th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 305th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 306th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 307th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 308th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 309th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 310th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 311th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 312th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 313th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 314th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 315th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 316th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 317th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 318th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 319th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 320th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 321th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 322th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 323th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 324th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 325th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 326th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 327th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 328th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 329th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 330th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 331th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 332th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 333th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 334th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 335th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 336th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 337th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 338th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 339th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 340th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 341th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 342th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 343th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 344th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 345th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 346th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 347th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 348th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 349th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 350th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 351th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 352th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 353th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 354th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 355th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 356th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 357th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 358th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 359th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 360th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 361th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 362th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 363th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 364th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 365th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 366th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 367th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 368th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 369th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 370th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 371th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 372th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 373th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 374th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 375th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 376th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 377th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 378th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 379th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 380th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 381th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 382th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 383th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 384th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 385th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 386th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 387th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 388th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 389th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 390th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 391th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 392th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 393th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 394th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 395th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 396th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 397th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 398th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 399th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 400th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 401th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 402th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 403th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 404th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 405th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 406th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 407th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 408th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 409th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 410th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 411th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 412th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 413th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 414th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 415th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 416th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 417th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 418th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 419th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 420th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 421th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 422th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 423th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 424th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 425th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 426th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 427th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 428th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 429th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 430th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 431th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 432th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 433th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 434th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 435th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 436th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 437th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 438th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 439th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 440th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 441th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 442th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 443th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 444th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 445th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 446th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 447th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 448th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 449th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 450th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 451th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 452th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 453th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 454th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 455th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 456th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 457th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 458th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 459th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 460th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 461th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 462th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 463th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 464th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 465th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 466th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 467th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 468th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 469th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 470th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 471th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 472th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 473th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 474th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 475th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 476th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 477th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 478th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 479th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 480th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 481th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 482th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 483th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 484th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 485th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 486th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 487th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 488th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 489th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 490th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 491th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 492th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 493th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 494th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 495th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 496th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 497th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 498th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 499th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 500th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 501th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 502th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 503th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 504th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 505th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 506th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 507th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 508th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 509th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 510th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 511th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 512th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 513th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 514th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 515th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 516th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 517th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 518th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 519th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 520th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 521th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 522th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 523th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 524th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 525th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 526th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 527th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 528th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 529th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 530th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 531th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 532th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 533th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 534th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 535th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 536th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 537th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 538th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 539th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 540th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 541th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 542th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 543th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 544th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 545th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 546th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 547th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 548th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 549th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 550th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 551th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 552th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 553th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 554th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 555th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 556th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 557th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 558th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 559th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 560th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 561th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 562th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 563th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 564th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 565th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 566th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 567th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 568th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 569th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 570th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 571th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 572th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 573th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 574th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 575th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 576th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 577th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 578th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 579th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 580th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 581th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 582th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 583th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 584th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 585th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 586th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 587th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 588th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 589th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 590th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 591th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 592th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 593th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 594th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 595th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 596th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 597th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 598th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 599th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 600th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 601th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 602th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 603th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 604th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 605th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 606th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 607th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 608th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 609th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 610th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 611th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 612th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 613th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 614th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 615th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 616th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 617th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 618th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 619th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 620th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 621th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 622th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 623th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 624th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 625th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 626th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 627th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 628th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 629th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 630th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 631th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 632th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 633th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 634th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 635th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 636th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 637th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 638th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 639th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 640th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 641th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 642th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 643th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 644th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 645th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 646th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 647th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 648th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 649th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 650th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 651th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 652th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 653th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 654th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 655th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 656th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 657th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 658th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 659th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 660th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 661th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 662th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 663th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 664th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 665th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 666th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 667th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 668th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 669th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 670th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 671th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 672th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 673th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 674th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 675th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 676th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 677th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 678th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 679th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 680th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 681th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 682th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 683th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 684th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 685th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 686th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 687th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 688th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 689th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 690th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 691th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 692th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 693th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 694th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 695th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 696th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 697th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 698th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 699th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 700th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 701th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 702th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 703th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 704th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 705th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 706th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 707th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 708th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 709th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 710th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 711th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 712th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 713th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 714th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 715th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 716th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 717th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 718th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 719th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 720th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 721th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 722th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 723th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 724th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 725th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 726th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 727th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 728th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 729th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 730th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 731th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 732th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 733th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 734th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 735th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 736th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 737th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 738th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 739th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 740th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 741th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 742th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 743th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 744th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 745th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 746th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 747th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 748th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 749th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 750th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 751th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 752th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 753th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 754th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 755th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 756th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 757th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 758th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 759th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 760th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 761th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 762th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 763th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 764th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 765th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 766th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 767th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 768th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 769th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 770th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 771th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 772th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 773th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 774th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 775th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 776th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 777th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 778th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 779th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 780th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 781th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 782th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 783th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 784th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 785th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 786th & Illinois. Home watch for truck parked at 787th & Illinois. 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lining wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd.
'Our Blue Monday, but the Harbour Lites is a first-stay d course so we join for $115 for bachelors and 63 cann and batten between 7:40 p.m. to 10:25 p.m. and ship together at the Harbour Lights 1031 Mass.
PAPER BACK SALES ALL 15% nationally
HOOD BOOKSELLER all of our 20,000 paperback
price—have always been and will always
price—we have been and will always
4644
admission at browns and 1401 at堂
10-31
K.U. B'nai B'rith
Hillel Foundation
Sponsors
ISRAELI
FOLK DANCING
Every Tuesday night
until semester break,
8:30 p.m.
Get a jump of the Wildcats. Come to the pre-print event at the Wildcats, for $40 or all FRESHMAN SOPHOMORES AND ZUNIORS $25 non-members $10 members. Sponsored by Board of Class Officers. Sponsored by Board of Class Officers.
Lawrence Jewish
Community Center
917 Highland Dr.
(Across from Hillcrest)
8-9:30 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
DISCO TO GO: offers quality and reliability not only for power bewr, but also power bewr.able Allez speakers, channel lighting, and experienced deck jockeys with national rank in county. National rates include delivery, setup, country. National rates include delivery, setup, 2015 Kentucky, Kansas 60444. With over 4 years experience and hundreds of sales experiences, this team provides power bewr.able Allez speakers, channel lighting, and experienced deck jockeys with national rank in count
FOR RENT
FOR SALE
TUMBER LEADER APARTMENTS NOW RENT-
ONE bedroom, one bathroom, one ma-
nage rent free on 1 bedroom, i and 2
bathrooms. Two hundred square feet.
Two humidity pumps, large chicken coop,
large wood stoves. For appointment 842-4844 or see at
www.tumberleader.com
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes, rooms near KU. Possible rent reduction for la-
cation Call 841-6254 or 842-6065. 10-31
Naimuth Hall has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day.
All Frontier Rape Apts. 1 month rent free. $50
security on all 1 bedrooms. If
1 room furnished apartment, private entrance,
utilities paid, college开放, college
843-504 after 3
Lease 5 bdmr, older house. South Mass $390
month, avail. Nov. 1st. Call 843-6270; 843-6911.
10-31
For suburban. One bedroom ap, at Park 25. $215/month + gas and electricity. On bus route. Call 842-3885. Keep trying. 10-31
Beautiful 3 bedroom house available immediately.
spare room, kitchen, laundry, appliances.
1 bedroom, 2 baths, 900 sqft, 842-223.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Makes sense at Trier, in preparation. 3. For exam preparation. 'New' preparation. 4. For town preparation. 'Now available at Town Crier, Malta'. In preparation.
FOR SALE
SunSeen-Sun glasses are our specialty. Not-
prescribed only. Huge selection, reasonably
priced. 1021 Mass. 841-3770. TF
1 bedroom apt apt. close to campus. Call 842-6032.
p.m. 12-12pm or m. 43-7236, from 1 p.m. - 10 p.m.
m. 12-12pm or m. 43-7236, from 1 p.m. - 10 p.m.
One bedroom apartment available at Christmas break. Furnished, Reasonable rent and utilities
Call at 842-7228. 11-1
A real home for $18,000, central air, Danish
home style, hardwood flooring, root growing,
salt sprayed pool, high ceilings, beautiful
bathroom, two bedrooms, conform to all policy
Boston, two baths, conform to all policy
Boston, 842-6161 or emergency, 842-9711
Boston, 842-6161 or emergency, 842-9711
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Puch Mopfs
Rick's Bike Shop 1032 Vermont 41-644. 79
Nikon F.2, with Nikkor 50mm Portrait Lens
Nikon 50mm Wide-Angle Lens, 50mm Boubil
Telephoto along with travel case and some
equipment, 400m, kcal. Kevin at 16:50-18:27
100
Brighten up your Sundays by having the Sun.
New York Times delivered to your home or apartment. 841-5073. 10-20
Alternator, starter and generator specimen-
ments
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-808-6900, 3200 W, 60 H, UH
1
V-W Rabbit -70 -56,000 miles with 2 snowflies.
$2600. 843-5178.
19-31
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $39.98 per year
guarantee WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-136-136
HOLMES, 290 watt guitar amplifier, solidstate head with 4 $10^{-6}$ speaker box, 842-8501 ask for Pedro. 10-31
1971 Camaro~vice rite 350, auto, mag wheel,
storey reasonably priced. AT, PS. AC 833-948-938
Michelin Tire Sale! 30, 25, and 30% discount at Ray Stonehack's downtown. The appliance store with discount tire dept. 10-30
1975 Chrysler Cordoba, PS, PB, AC, cruise,
leather interior, buckets, AM/FM store,
good gas mileage, great shape. Call 887-6623 or
887-6542
AKC registered toyoodles. Very small. Call
887-6486 or 1-232-4549.
10-30
78. Cameroon, excellent condition, low mileage,
-864-2253, ask for Becky.
10-29
Frostlines Kit, medium women's down skirt. Will sell as or ready-made. Abya, 834-3620, 11-2
1073 Camara LT, 57,000 miles, ps, pb, mug whis,
and tires. Must sell. 842-7857. 11-2
370 Acoustic Bass Amp with cabinet, $375. Gibson Triumph Bass Guitar Bundle with cabinet, $425. After 3 p.m. on Saturday, $150.
JVC JR-5201, receiver, JVC SK-700 speaker,
JVC QAJ-ATZ, turbine terminal, M-18 cabinet
deck, after 7:00 p.m. p81-1378, best offer. Must
sell. 11-2
70 Opel, 57 Charger, Brake engine, tires good,
Package deal, $800. Call Mike after midnight
864-5531. Together makes dependable transportation.
11-2
One United Airlines 50% discount coupon. $40.00
Call 844-6039 or 842-3085. 11-1
Kentwood amp., excellent condition $120
and special speakers - $30. Call 845-769-112
more info
1963 Triumph 500 motorcycle $200.00 A do-it-yourself kit in 1,000 easy-to-assemble parts: 862404 or 842-1721. 11-9
FOUND
Cross pen in front of Carruth-O'Leary. Call 864-2925 to identify.
Female growth stripped tiger cat 1 yr old White
fur color, collar, extras. #82-96-96
Gray and brown Tiger Stripe kitten found Fr.
October (Oct 19) at 14th and Louisiana. Call
16-258
Found AM-FM portable radio near 19th and
Maine, Call and identify MH-3209. 10a-31
Calculator found near Mallott Hall. Call 852-8584 to claim.
MEN! WOMEN! JOBS! CRUISEHISHS! SAILING EXPEDITIONS! Experience. Good job with our application. Please reference for APPLICATION INFO-JOBS to: CRUSEHISHS 133, Box 60129, Sarango, CA 95806
OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer year, round Europe,
S. America, Arica, Astia, Ata, all. All fields $160-
$120 monthly, expenses paid, Sightseeing, Free
ACA, ICBS, BX - Box 84, CA-Sea, CA-10
12-29
Civil Engineering Department of the University of Kansas is responsible for assisting professor of civil engineering both undergraduate and graduate students in the area of civil engineering software and computer aided design (CAD). Applicants must have B.S. and Ph.D. in civil engineering and dynamic finite element, Send resume to Dt. Stuart K. Holle Department of Civil Engineering, Kansas University, Kansas, KS 66042. An affiliated university is required.
Immediate opening for talented singers. Must be uninhibited. Call 841-8515. 10-29
NEEDED IMIDENTIFIED. Nursing Assistants, male and female. Starting salary Above MOVEN-10 Opening on all shifts. Apply at Cherry Manor, Manor Place, 304-827-5090, 301-827-5109, 113 Street. Phone 842-7283.
Barmaid needed. 21 years of age. Experience preferred; but not necessary. Part-time help available. Call for appointment after 11 a.m.
*84-9040* 10-31
need waiters. 21 years of age. Full and part-time positions available. Knwiidge of drinks preferred. Must be neat and like people. Call for appt after 11 a.m. 843-904-601
Large male cat, beige and white tabby, red color with flae tag, near l9th and 19th M—Much loved friend, call before 9 or after 6 at 843-3485. 10-30
Now hiring delivery drivers-full and part-time.
Apply in person at Gabriela, 249 Iowa, Holiday Plaza.
10-30
Married student wanted for part time help to maintain trees and deliver heavy appliances. Must be not appraised and have mechanical equipment or a Bachelor's in Stonebrace's at 821 McLawrence, NS
Part-time student electrical worker to answer phone, write repair order and dari other related requests. Job Title: Haitong Housing Dep. Maintenance Shop. 684-370-2851. Opportunity/Affirmative Employment. 10/25-11/18.
LOST
Oct. 19, 19 black Jlab, Lab white, brown collar, brown
684-311-301 for Greg, before 5 p.m.
10-29
School Aid wanted to Assist quadripartite student 25 hours per week. Must be able to type with library work and have English language skills on their own transportation. Call 843-4232 or 843-1011.
Bureau of Child Research, University of Kansas is one of the largest and most well-respected universities in administrative politics for a community-based, research-based education. Bakersfield degree in behavioral science, behavior ability to work in cooperation with other professionals and experience in working with community travel between Lawrence and Kansas City and $1,000,000 depending on qualifications Contact Achievement Place Project. Bureau of Child Research, Kansas City (933) 644-3448. Deadline for application: May 25, 19.
glasses between Polter's Lake and Potter parking lot. Wed. Oct. 24. Claim at Kansas Business Office. 10-30
MISCELLANEOUS
Ladies gold Omega watch missing since October 3, large reward 864-1518, sentimental value. Please return. 11-2
THISIS BINDING COPYING-The House of Ubice's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for tiers binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us see at 838 Male or phone 842-360. To view the firm, go to www.ubice.com.
NOTICE
PERSONAL
in order to test this灯 and we are offering the following items: 6 $40 cash coupon with automatic shutter; 8 digital bullet board $25 with automatic shutter; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 plains. We offer 6 $40 cash coupon with automatic shutter; 8 digital bullet board $25 with automatic shutter; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 plains. We offer 6 $40 cash coupon with automatic shutter; 8 digital bullet board $25 with automatic shutter; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 plains. We offer 6 $40 cash coupon with automatic shutter; 8 digital bullet board $25 with automatic shutter; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 plains. We offer 6 $40 cash coupon with automatic shutter; 8 digital bullet board $25 with automatic shutter; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 plains. We offer 6 $40 cash coupon with automatic shutter; 8 digital bullet board $25 with automatic shutter; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 planks; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 plains. We offer 6 $40 cash coupon with automatic shutter; 8 digital bullet board $25 with automatic shutter; 10$40 compartmental case carved wood, 3 plain
A pleasant atmosphere for cross cultural learning and friendship. Tongue and every day meeting at Operation Friendship 7:00 p.m. at the W.P. W. 19th, W. 19th, of Oliver (W. 19th, B.I.) 10-29
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid 864-5564. If
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--increases up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Counseling Tubal Ligation appointment. Childbirth. Nursery 642-150-6430, 4601 91st Overland Park, KS
WHO ARE YOU?
DO YOU KNOW WHO YOUR ANESTHETES WERE BEFORE THEY WERE GERMAN, AUFONS SCOTS, AND MUSLIMS? FANS NOW SCREAM FOR FANNYS SCREAMS NOWSEEKING, FUG
Some authorities estimate that as many as two million Americans now believe that the Bible was actually descended from the Bible-believers who were dispersed north into Europe.
so, if that would mean most White Americans are Israelites, and that America rather than Palestine is the "Promised Land," the great Zion of Bible Prophecy.
PERSONAL
Almost all denominational ministers are opposed to this theory and many evangelists write and preach against it.
If you or members of your family are involved in any form of religion in any way, you should know more about this matter. You should have seen harsh contraversies in many churches.
PASTOR SHELDON EMRY
P.O. Box 1444
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA 85258
If you're looking for a car with cheap best good quality leather seats, you can't go wrong with the Harbour Lifespan. You people like it. The Harbour Lifespan has long days and Friday afternoons for TOF! Now new Harbour Lifespan cars can be shipped to your ship partner at the Harbour Lifespan.
For a sample of the "American-Israel" arguments so you can study them for yourself, write for the free "Israeli Packer" from:
It's showing today in Colorado! Wish you were there? Great skiing is awaiting for you at the Summit. Contact S.U.A. Travel, 864-317-22
ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for e-
occasion. Birthday, Anniversary, Get Wet,
Secret Admirer. 841-8512. 11-6
Come to the all new MAD HATTER Happy Hour 4-9 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Open 7 nights 10-21
Ski the West-West Steamboat Spring Break!
$277 Contact SUA Limited space up sign now.
Veterans for employment assistance contact Campus Veterans—118 B Kansas University, 8644-8478.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid -864-5564
tf
BREKEENRIDGE, Call Brad. 841-607-00
BREKEENRIDGE, Call Brad. 841-607-00
CUNSELING REFERALS through Head
**AETT** gives you the chance to build a fraternity.
Don't miss your chance! **10-31**
GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Headquarters, 814-235 and KU info, 864-206, ff.
Want to have a ball? Just for fun—Come play ping-pong at Robinson on Thursday. Nov. 1 at 10-8 Tournament info also. 11-1
Happy Re-letted birthday to the best "Big Brother"
'in the Whole Wide World! Edgar Grant!
Love and Kisses, ME.
Give yourself for Christmas, a portrait from "Shooting Gallery." Shooting Gallery Photography; 841-2369. 621 Connecticut. 11-9
A pleasant atmosphere for cross cultural learning and friendship. Tonight and every Monday at Gower College Friendship 7:00 p.m. on the 29th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th (9:10 ST.) 10-29
TENNIS AND RECORDTRAIL PLAYERS. You're requests read for the indoor season? Call 844-262-806, Member Professional Strippers at www.tennisandrecords.com. Rateable rates on good strings and guitars. 11-9
SERVICES OFFERED
EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 6753-7855 MATH 115-7821 call 6343-7855 STATISTICS 100-7821 call 6343-7855 STATISTICS 100-7821 call 6343-7855 ENGLISH and SPANISH call 845-7071
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the Home of Ushers Quick Copy Center. It is available from AM to 5 M on Friday to, 9 am to 1 PM on Tuesday to 83M. Mass.
IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $148 for your 390-page catalog of college research. 10,250 items listed. BOX 22597C, Los Angeles, CA.
90255 (213) 477-8256.
BUYING LIFE INSURANCE? Check our rates and values here. Call 842-7942, 842-7902.
CREATIVE ILLUSTRATIONS—Artwork and Illustrations for advertising, logo, personal use, and cartoons. Plume 81-7650 or 81-7588 10-29
Experienced Teacher of English As A Second Language would like to tutor foreign persons (age)学习 English Call 841-7290 11-11 at 400.
BANDS SONGWRITERS record your songs at
Markrick Recordings. Call: 841-0923.
- Women's Health Care Service, Confidential health care for women with unexpected pregnancies to 20 weeks as an unprotected Information free pregnancy testing 684-5188. Wichita
TYPING
Journalism typographer. 20 years typing (typing
experience). 4 years academic typing; Lab-
rary equipment; 824-4844. University Labs.
Selective equipment. 824-4844.
79
Experience typing, Faculty of Law.
I do damn good typing. Peggy. 842-4176
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4800
TPY Editor, IBM Pics Kite. Quality work.
Textbook. ISBN 978-0-385-87087-6
wetbed edition, layout Call. Gou
Experienced typist—Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 831-5910. TF
TYPING
Experienced Typed—term papers, theses, mice,
electric IBM Solicite. Proofreading spelling
corrected. 843-9554 Mrs. Wright.
TP
Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correcting elektric. Barb 864-3138; evenings 862-2310.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correct Selecctr. Call Elen
or Jeannan, 841-2172.
Some same typing don’t? Quality work, low rates
Contact ncid at 843-7854. 4 p.m. to 10.
MASTERDEPTNDS professional typing Fax, accr-
sional Spelling, Grammar corrections Corral 841-3287
Experienced tynist. Quality work. IBM Correcting
Solemic References available. Sandy. 864-4904.
Evenings. 768-8181. tf
Dial up dialer typing. Under 30pp only
Call Ruth, 914-6248, after 5 p.m. 11-11
Quality training at competitive prices—no jobs to big or small, 842-2756. 10-20
1. type term papers, dissertations, resumes,
recommendation rates.
2. call 812-3232 after
noon or evening.
Will type papers and book reviews, etc. Call
811-6486
TYPING-Quick, accurate, and cheap. Call 841:
7763 late evenings and weekends. 11-7
WANTED
People who have Executive, Penetrator, Death
Mercant, or Matt Hale books- call David 861-345-7200.
PSYCHIATIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES CERTIFIED BY Topeka State Hospital, Topeka, KS. Phone: 512-518-3660; W21 W. 6th, Topeka, KS. Phone: 512-518-3660; Mails encouraged to apply. An equal opportunity employer.
EDITOR for Newspaper. Requirements:
* student, graduate degree in Journalism or related专业; Date of毕业: 20. Send letter and request to Graduate Student Number: Katherine Guson, Lawrence, Kansas 6864. 8653-4944
ROOMMATES. Naimih Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8559 any time of the day, if
Wanted: Pernile roommate. No. to share comfortable apts apartment. Close to Campus and Downown. $85.00 mo. Util. pd. Call 412-6080.
Keep trying.
Cair Pool needed, desperate, area of greatest K.C. 373-3527 after 5:00. Time flexible, Charlotte
Needle immediately. Female personnel wanted to share nine 2 bdm. apt. on bus line $1. units%; reasonable rent. Call 841-8762. ask for Kay or Cindy. 10-30
Female roommate wanted to share 4 bedrooms.
house. Located near campus and downtown.
$812.50 + 1/4 utilities. 842-5368, keep trying. If
Roommate to share excellent 3 bedroom duplex,
finished basement, fireplace, flower & dryer.
Reasonable rent and 1/3 utilities. Call 841-502-9621
Female roommate wanted. Rent, $88.00 plus 1/3
utilities. Call Diane 841-6133. Heatherwood Apartments.
11-2
Drivers wanted to deliver with your own car two nights a week, good pay & benefits. 10-20 Christian female to share house with 3, other females $12/month + 4 utilities 11-12 3629
Someone to do basic living at reasonable rates for junior business major. Call 810-5435 - 10-25 Patch teacher training courses evening events Intermediate Applied courses Ballard Community College, B42 - 8729. OE I. E. 12-24.
HOTEL SANTA MARIA
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT!
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan
Classified sells it. Just mail
in this form with check or
money order to 111 Flint
Court and send the check
to figure costs. Now you've
got it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Tuesday 5 pm
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
1 time $2.00
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:
2
times
$2.25
.02
RATES:
15 words or less
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1. Col. x 1 Inch - $3.50
4 times
$2.75
.04
DATES TO RUN:__
5 times $3.00 .05
NAME: _
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD.
-
8
Monday, October 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Crash ...
From nage one
forced prices down. Wheat prices dropped from around $14 per bushel to between 28 and 30 cents, according to records from the City Board of Trade. If cost farmers more to ship cattle to market than they made by sell-
Farming had been a difficult way to earn a living in the 1920s. During the '30s it became impossible.
UNTIL 1932, however, farmers were able to feed their families. Then drought struck and in Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Texas, the Dakotas and Colorado, farmers watched their crops die. They watched them die too, but they survived. The tortus and turned into black duststorms.
Farmers failed to meet mortgage payments. Banks foreclosed on the debts. The farmers were forced to leave their homes and wander, looking for work.
Gunnard Johnson, a broker with the
Kansas City Wiltco and Lincoln firm and member of the Kansas City Board of Trade since 1923, watched the grain and livestock markets drop during those years.
"The farmers didn't suffer immediately because they were not in the mid 30s there was a drought. In 1952 we handled only 85 million bushels of wheat. In comparison, last year we handled 400 million bushels."
In 1931 the bank at Sabetbaa failed. not long after the banks in Hiawatha and Highland closed. They were closing all over "Cole said."
- ALSO, THE BANKS began to fail. By 1月3, 1953, 17 states had declared bank holidays, closing the banks for prevent more creditors from using them. Colleen Src, recalled banks in Clansburg.
None of the Lawrence banks failed, Thomas Ryther, professor emeritus of journalism, said. Ryther, then an employee
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon Omega flight took first place in division one—three-dimensional floats with moving parts—in KU's first homecomer narada Friday.
First place in division two-three-dimensional floats with non-moving parts—was won by the combined efforts of Phi Delta Theta and Alba Chu Omega.
Float winners named at homecoming parade
The floats in the parade represented the work of 23 University sororites and fraternists, and two University residence halls. More than 1,500 students of Student Union Activities, said yesterday.
"THE GUYS PULLED a couple of alligators toward the end of the week to finish the floats." Elliain said. She said the float cost about $500 to build.
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chi Omega program features Jayhawk in cowboy garring in a stancecoach, and an Indian Jayhawk shooting an arrow at the Oklahoma State
Phil Hattaway, Kansas City Kan,
sophomore and the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, and Madelin Elain, Overland Park senior and member of the Chi Omega security, said members of the Phi Kappa Delta had worked about 60 hours to build the float.
the winner of division two, a boat built by the Delta Tephra Fraternity and the Alpha Kappa Delta fraternity scene with a Jayhawk standing by the double-doors Rikking an Oklahoma State university.
About 70 hours of construction went into
the float, according to Scott Stallard,
Leawood senior and member of Phi Delta
Theta.
"Actual construction took about eight days," he said. "About ten people a day worked on the float."
The second place float of division one, built by the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, is the $25,000 float showed a Jawbone branding an Oklahoma State Cowboy. Floral sheeting was a unique feature of the float, Jenni Stitz, Mission Bay and Kappa Alpha Theta member.
Honorable mentions went to the Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta float and the Sigma Nu-Alpha Omicron Pi float in order to be awarded the Deltai-Pi Beta Phi float in division two.
A ROLLING BAR, built by Delta Chi, took second place in division two. A dancehall Jayhawk, a dayhawk gunginger and a dead horse, a spotted paper bar, and laid around the creeped wood.
The floats were by an eight- panel parade float in University faculty, alumni and a ceremony. Winners were named in the X-Z Parking lot following the homecoming parade
of the University Printing Service, said the two Lawrence banks remained solid.
The first and second place floats in each division were displayed during pre-game footwear display. University game Saturday, and the division winners were part of the game's halftime show.
"No one in Lawrence could see a reason for closing the banks. We didn't know why the government closed them all," Ryther said.
ON MARCH 4, 1933, newly inaugurated President Franklin D. Roosevelt closed the nation's banks for four days.
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Roosevelt's measures, however, did little at first to heal the wounds caused by the crash. Rhyton recalled the 10 percent pay all state employees received in 1831. The governor said that pay cuts easier to compute, just cut everyone a 10 cent an hour, he said.
"To cut us 10 cents just to make it even money seemed like a violation of some sort of rules, but we didn't complain. We had jobs and were getting by." Rither said.
According to McNair and her sister-in-law, Jeannette Klinglesmith, getting by was all people did.
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Marjorie Owens, who was elected chairman of the committee Saturday, said the conference was planned both to give students access to learning and to aid in recruiting minority students for jobs.
The committee, along with several other University offices and groups, has helped to organize internships for students involved in interviewing and resume workshop, which was held in cooperation with the University.
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drain of money from the black community. These small companies are now locked in a battle for the minority dollar with large corporations. You must support our people's business even if it means looking a little more digging, or even paying a little more.
"YOU MUST NOT be content with being merely the snook who sits by the door."
dollar, blacks are trapped in a dichotomy, he said. "White people in high public places cont that social progress is significant and that race is no longer a factor in the economic environment. But the fact remains that today, there is a small minority of white women. The middle class with rising incomes. The majority today are still poor."
"My husband worked for the state of Oklahoma then," Klimsinger said. "And they didn't pay much of anything. We got away, I managed to keep our bail down."
The job fair, counseling sessions and Johnson's address were organized by the Black Alumni Committee of the KU Alumni Association.
An Exemplary Achievement Award from the National Council for the Advancement and Support of Education was given to the students who demonstrated the group's work with black students.
McNair said, "I know we lived on a sheeing, but no one had to move on. And, you know, everyone was satisfied to live on what they could."
The conference was highlighted by an address from George Johnson, president of Johnson Products, Inc. which makes Ultra Sheen products.
Nearly 470 students attended the three-day Black Adult Job Opportunity Fair and Career conference last weekend, Leslie Kirchner said. The KU Alumni Association, said waddestra
Johnson said that a protected black market no longer existed and that blacks must help to support small minority-run businesses by buying their products.
The conference was made up of a job opportunity fair, during which representation was encouraged and answered students' questions, as well as alumni counseling sessions, and an
Johnson told a crowd of about 75 students, administrators, faculty and alumni that the era of "real progress" in civil rights had passed.
"Black people find themselves, once again, in the depths of social despair," Johnson said.
A. N.
"It is critically important that you be well prepared to strive for excellence in the management of your business inside the major business or organizations and work to combat the real, but invisible, ceiling that keeps blocks stuck in the ranks of executives and out of the upper level executive positions.
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Johnson said blacks must work twice as hard in their jobs to advance in their careers.
"This is necessary," he said, "to halt the
for relaxed atmosphere, rewarding interaction, and refreshments.
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Black job opportunities, rights discussed at career conference
Many of Johnson's statements were greeted with applause from the audience.
Uppercut
"OUR SUCCESS
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By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
"IN A TIME of spiraling inflation, dependence on foreign oil and a declining
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The announcement of the Honors for an award was made on Monday, originally planned this weekend at ballroom 10 of the KU-KState football game, has been postponed until Nov. 17 at the KU-Calorado Stadium.
Jim West, co-chairman of the HOPE award committee, said yesterday that the change was made because the K-State band was made during pregame and half-time ceremonies.
HOPE ceremony delayed
final balloting for the HOPE award was completed last Friday. West said there had been a good turnout at the polls and
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estimated that more than 400 seniors had voted.
The five finalists are: William Bafour,
professor of physiology and cell biology;
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professor of business; Frank Gurlter,
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Alpha Epsilon Pi is reorganizing on the KU Campus by pledging men as brothers of the Kappa Upsilon Chapter. AEII, a predominately Jewish fraternity, gives you the opportunity of building a strong bond of brotherhood. We want to offer you a life-time experience. AEII will be holding meetings October 30, 31 and November 1. Alpha Epsilon Pi provides an opportunity to join a national fraternity with chapters throughout the United States. We are a member of the National Interfraternity Conference. Founded on November 7, 1913.
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KU ?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No.47
Assistant police chief resigns
10 cents off campus
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Tuesday, October 30, 1979
See story page seven
Custodians to seek ACLU aid in dispute with AMS
Rv PAM1LANDON
Staff Reporter
The KU Custodian Action Committee will file a complaint against American Management Services today with the state legal panel of the American Civil Liberties Union, according to a local ACLU official.
Daniel Wildcat, vice-president of the Lawrence chapter of the ACU, said at a CAC press conference yesterday that the complaint would charge AMS with "the rights" to free speech and peaceful assembly.
The state legal panel of the ACLI is comprised of attorneys who decide which cases the ACLI will take.
The CAC, a group of about 40 to 50 Lawrence campuses custodians, has been meeting since last
August to research and document allegations of barassment of KU custodians by AMS.
AMS, a custodial management service, was hired to improve the efficiency of housekeeping department in 1977. AMS initiated its program at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., and in December 1977, it took over the job.
THE CAC SAID at a press conference Oct. 19 that the contract which the University has with AMS encourages AMS to terminate workers, especially nurses, in seniority, receive the highest pay and are handcanceled.
AMS receives $78,163 a month from the University for its services at the Lawrence campus. After custodial wages are taken from this amount, the difference is AMS's actual payment.
The CAC has said that by reducing the number of employees, AMS increased its profit margin. The CAC has also said AMS harassed custodians to get them out.
At the Oct. 19 press conference, the CAC also alleged that AMS officials had tried to harass members of the meeting. CAC members and members of their support group AMS officials tried to gain entry into an O.3 meeting, looked in the windows during the meeting and took the names of custodians coming out of the meeting.
THEY ALSO and K two CUATUAL supervisors had been asked by AMS officials to go to future CAC
- Rodger Oroke, University support services director, said recently that he thought complaints the
CAC made at the Oct. 19 press conference were unbound.
Wildcat said yesterday at the CAC press conference that the ACUL had affidavit from people affected by the attack.
"It is quite clear in our eyes that the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution have done nothing to curb it."
"This situation is represehnable. The ACLU would hope KU would take immediate action on this issue."
NORMAN FORER, associate professor of social welfare and a support group member, said that the CAC would charge AMS with violation of the sections of clause 5 of the Public Employee Relations Act.
Forer said that this section of the act prohibited, among other things, interference in the formation of
Members of the CAC's support group include social agencies, community service organizations, faculty
Both Broke and Dave Baldwin, AMS director of housekeeping on the Lawrence campus, said they would have no comment on CAC allegations until today.
Right-to-abortion demonstrators lobby Kansas senators by mail
Howe said CAC members and others would distribute leaflets on campus today explaining the benefits of using the program.
Bv JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
Sporting blue and yellow "Choice" badges, about 30 people walked across campus yesterday to mail more than 3,000 tickets at a women's court to have an abortion.
The mailing of the cards, addressed to Kansas senators, marked the end of the National Abortion Rights League Week, which began Oct. 22.
During a rally in front of the Kansas Union before the march to the post office in Strong Hall, Dee Dae Appel, coordinator for the Kansas NAIL, said the postcards were not the only weapons officers are not the majority in this issue. *Pro-life groups oppose legal abortions.*
Appel said more than 3,000 other post cards already had been mailed to the two Kansas senators in Washington.
LAST WEEK, the NARL, the KU Commission on the Status of Women, the Women's Condition and the KU-Y collected student's signatures on the post cards, which read
A press secretary for Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan, said Dole had received "a quite few" of the post cards sent earlier. He said Dole had received "more than 1 million campaign emails with form letters."
The form letters, he said, usually stated "extremist on both sides are so vocal that it is almost impossible" to discuss the issue objectively.
Dole, who has said he disproves of abortion for personal reasons, voted for legislation providing federal funds for rape and incest victims.
Emerson Lynn, press secretary for Sen. Nancy Kass楚baum, R-Kan., said Kass楚baum also responded to the post cards with form letters.
THE FORM LETTER told constituents that the Kasbamah believe "told us to take the bishop's advice," but that there should be a choice. The letter also said that the "tragedy of abortion is best addressed by education," but for that reason, she would not support a constitution amendment granting abolition.
Terry Dirks, a lobbyist for abortion rights, said at the rally that a woman's right to legal abortion was under attack.
"The assault on women's rights takes a long time. But the United States consistently to deny each woman the right to control her own reproductive capacity, and to put that control into the hand of the man."
Dirk's talk was followed by a speech by Linda Thurston, president of the Kansas City Urban National Organization for Women.
THEURSTON SAID CARES' vote in 1974 to deny federal funding for abortions to Medical recipients was "the first step in reducing the number on the most vulnerable class of women."
"This incredible injustice places our government on the record as being morally opposed to the right of women to control their own bodies," she said.
The Rev. Jack Brenmer, director of Ecumenical Christian Ministries in Lawrence, also spoke at the rally.
He said the major Protestant religions had joined the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights, which includes national churches and the Catholic and other religious organizations.
"We recognize that abortion is neither an unqualified good nor an unmitigated evil," he said.
"Consequently," Bremmer said, "we do not recommend abortion except in those tragic conflicts of life with which justify such action in terms of its effect on the lives of involved—the fetus, the mother and father family members, and larger society."
KEEP ADOPTION SAFE AND LEGAL
NARAL
Narissa Aherion
Mail march
Members and supporters of the National Abortion Rights League march along Jayhawk Boulevard to mail postcards advocating
abortion to Sen. Robert Dole and Sen. Nancy Kasshese. the marches held a short rally by the Kansas Union dayafter her arrest.
Official calls for energy dialogue
Bv AMY HOLLOWELL
Staff Reporter
Although much has been accomplished in the crusade to remedy America's "dire" energy situation, a U.S. Department of Energy official said on Thursday that an ambitious plan to the oil and gas industry and the federal government.
"Consumers, the fees and the oil and gas industry haven't had meaningful dialogue on what energy价格 should be," he said. Steve McGregor, deputy assistant secretary for oil and gas in the U.S. Department of Energy, speaking at the annual meeting of the American Petroleum Institute.
MeGregor was speaking as part of a course that former Kansas Sen. James Pearson is teaching this fall.
McGregor said that U.S. oil policy has dealt with the issues of decontrol and windfall profits, but has not done so with gas.
McGregor said major policy decisions needed to be made to maintain a substantial strategic petroleum
reserve and to establish a definite policy on domestic refining of crude oil.
A strategic petroleum reserve is necessary, he said, to offer possible political disruptions in foreign oil export countries and to preclude the possibility of United States becoming the target of an oil embargo.
He also said that U.S. refineries should be encouraged to purchase domestic oil.
McGregor said leaders of both the House and the Senate had indicated that the windfall profits tax now pending in Congress would be completed by the end of the year.
"Rewvenes from the windfall action will be used to lessen our dependence on foreign oil," he said.
He said the tax revenue would be used to finance the development of alternative energy sources, for both low income assistance and for mass transportation development.
The government also is in the process of developing
1983
See McGREGOR page seven
Television producer, Norman Lear, right, clowns on for his audience while his co-producer, Bud York, answers a question. Learn and York are guest lecturers in two radio, television and film classes yesterday.
Good times
Room rate increase proposed
Rv ROR PITTMAN
Staff Renorter
The residential programs advisory board has proposed an increase of about 9.7 percent for next year's University residence hall rates, Caryl K. Hudson, president and chairman of the advisory board, said yesterday.
Under the proposal, base rates for a double-
occupancy room in a University residence hall would be $1497, an increase of $132 over the present base rate.
The single-occupancy room base rate would be $2277 under the proposal, an increase of $373 over the current base rate of $1900 for single-occupancy rooms.
However, Lance Tomlin, chairman of the Association of University Residence Halls contracts committee, said residents would be paying even more than the base prices.
"You've got to keep in mind that no one would be paying the base price." Tomlin said. He said the base prices did not include surcharges for residence hall fees and had to enter the base价 of every residence hall contract.
FOR EXAMPLE, although the base price for single-occupancy room is $1385, residents a of this building are charged $150 each. R. Pearson, Lewis and Templin Hall pays $15 in surcharges, which brings their contract prices to $1625.
Residents of McColm Hall pay $25 i.e. surcharges,
residents of Hixingham Hall pay $15, and residents of
Huxley Hall pay $7.
The proposals were made last Thursday by th advisory board following the submission of the AURI proposals. AURI proposed that the increases be se at either 8 or 10 percent.
The advisory board's proposals have been submitted to David A. Ambler, vice-chancellor for student affairs, Smith said, and must be approved by the Board of Trustees and the Kansas Board of Regents before final adoption.
SMITH SAID although increases were not necessarily made every year, the jumps represent what the University needs to keep up with the cost of inflation.
Other changes made in the original AUHR proposals by the advisory board include increasing
the AUHR fund allocation to $, Currently, AUHR receives $ from every residence hall contract for funding. The AUHR proposal asked for an increase of $ per contract, or $6.
The advisory board also proposed a $15 extra security surcharge for the residents of GSP-Corbin Security that would be paid to pay for security monitors. The doubling of the cost would provide the necessary funds to hire two aid workers.
A salary increase of $10 for University residence hall staffs also was included in the proposal by the advisory board. From every residence hall contract, $130 would go to staff salaries under the proceus.
Under the advisory board proposals, applications for single-occupancy residence hall rooms would be reserved. Two such rooms are reserved for single-occupancy room. This year, single-occupancy rooms were limited to 12 percent of rooms.
Resident assistants, AUHR executive board members and hall presidents, however, would be immune from the reservation percentages, and would be guaranteed a single room.
Diet Center offers dual transformation: fewer pounds and new self-confidence
Rv DOUG WAHL
Staff Reporter
Kathy Kesinger stood up behold her desk with her hands caked on cockers on her shirt. She twirled around once and said, "I wouldn't have done this twenty pounds I would have just sat behind my desk and behind my duck帽子."
Kesinger went on a diet four years ago, which she said improved not only her outlook on herself and others but prompted her to start a Diet Center in Lawrence three years ago.
The center is at the Hillcrest Medical Center, 9th and Iowa.
"Before I lost weight, I wasn't aggressive or outgoing and I would have a waistcoat to hide my lips," she said. "I didn't want to go anywhere. Now, I'm not so obsessed with you. You really do totally catch if you lose weight."
Kesing plummeted from 147 pounds to 118 pounds on the Diet center distinguisheI while working out at a rate of 120 calories per hour.
She said the Diet Center program was a quick way to lose weight without starvation or drunkenness.
"You eat common foods like meats or fruits and some breads," she said. "If you balance out a diet, it helps you to get all the nutrients from food you do not need to eat. It totally balances food, you don't care ninths to吃."
KESINGER SAID she had noticed an interesting
difference between the men and women who came to the center. She said the men listened better than the men in the first row.
"Most men don't know a lot about dieting and they listen when you tell them they have to stick with it. Women know more about calories and they will try to substitute.
For instance they will give up a 3½ ounce piece of chicken and eat something else in its place like a burger.
'Most men do real well. They just listen to us. Women will try to do their own thing here and there'
**"I'll just stick with what I know."**
Kesinger said she had tried several diet plans but she had always rained the weight back.
She said about 10 percent of the women strapped from their diet but only 1 percent of the men tried to eat them.
SHE SAID substituting the calories in one food for the calories in another would not work because the Diet Center relied on the chemical balance of foods working together to burn each other up.
She also said a pill that contained calcium, vitamin protein, sugar substitute and B-complex vitamin.
"This is the easiest program I've ever been on," she said. "Because all the foods are common, easy to get, you don't have to live on weird stuff. You don't have to do a different meal every day."
"It's not so much weighted program that you pay for, but an investment in yourself," she said.
She said the Diet Center plan success rate was unusually high, about 65 percent. She said this represented the percentage of people who lost weight and then kept it off.
KESINGER SAID the Diet Center plan offered counseling even after the initial pounds were drop.
The Lawrence Diet Center has helped about 1,800 people lose weight so far. Kesinger said about 150 of them are overweight and have registrations, not contracts, with people," she said. "That way the person feels at ease. We never let anyone feel sick."
She said women could lose up to 3/4 of a pound a day and men could lose up to one aound a day.
She said this was because of different hormones in their bodies and because men had a higher risk of cancer than women. This reason, she is a difference in meats that men and women can eat. She said men could eat beef, but women couldn't. Beef, she said, contained too much fat in their bodies to use up men could hold the extra fat.
"Our program is not guaranteed but if a person follows the program, you get results, you'll lose money."
2
2 Tuesday, October 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wire Services
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
CAB approves airline meraer
- **ASHINGTON - The Civil Aeronautics Board said yesterday it recommended to President Carter that Pan American World Airways and National Airlines merge into the nation's second largest carrier and give Pan Am a long-sought network of domestic routes.**
The action nearly completes a complicated merger case that involved four airlines and lasted over 15 months.
In July the CAB tentatively approved the Pan Am-National merger and Texas International Airlines' bid to gain control of National.
The board said it sent its formal ruling to the White House last Thursday. The president must make the final decision because a *transfer* of international ambitions would be necessary.
Chairman Mervin Cohen said Monday that although the board okayed the Texas international proposal, the approval was most because the Texas carrier dropped out of the negotiations in late July and agreed to sell its 2.1 million shares of National stock to Pan Am for $4 a share.
Bostonians unite against racism
BOSTON - Clermygin, public officials and a professional football team all announced plans yesterday to defuse a bomb in explosive racial climate
WBZ-TV, at the urging of both airwild and local community leaders, won't broadcast NBC's two-part drama "Freedom Road" tonight and tomorrow.
Cardinal Humberto Mederosio, with other religious leaders, told a news conference of plans for a "covental" of racial harmony that will be launched at the Archbishopric of Santo Domingo.
The involvement of Medecer, spiritual leader of the Boston Catholic Archdiocese, is considered significant because about 75 percent of the city's
The clergymen joined the management of the New England Patriots and officials of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority to try to end the
The Patriots asked their players to volunteer to meet with students in the city's racially tense schools.
The transportation authority said it would add buses to school transit routes and increase security to prevent skirmishes between black and white students.
Carlin seeks Rock Island aid
TOPEKA-A group of witnesses headed by Gov. John Garlin asked the Interstate Commerce Commission yesterday to keep the Rock Island Railroad in compliance with its own rules and regulations.
Recommended long-term proposals call for the sale of the Rock Island lines to other railroad companies.
Carlin testified at the ICC hearing primarily to advocate the need for extended directed operation of the Rock Island by the Kansas City Terminal. He also testified that the City's security team
Cairn recommended specifically: the purchase of Rock Island lines by other railroads; the continuance of directed service until ultimate disposition of the line is determined; and a grant of operating rights to companies that would supply lines without subsidy and with adequate levels of thorough and local services.
Oil tax too low, Carter says
PROVIDENCE, R.I.-President Carter, making his second foray in nine Kentucky into country, said yesterday that the Senate-supported windfall fund would be used to help him.
In Rhode Island, he said the house-passed bill would return $151 billion to the oil companies from higher oil prices in the next 10 years.
He said that the bill being prepared by the Senate Finance Committee would return $374 billion.
With the price and availability of imported oil a leading political issue in New England, the president also declared that the government had surpassed its capacity to deal with such problems.
Carter visited Rhode Island to address a northeast governor's summit conference on energy.
State OK's insurance rate hike
TOPEKA-A $1.91 million rate increase for Kansas Cross-Blue Shield was approved yesterday by Kansas insurance commissioner Fletcher Bell. He said the new rate increase would help lower the cost of the shield.
The increases will apply to persons in groups with less than 25 contracts, farm associations, non-group subscribers and persons covered by plan 65 and plan D
"This is the first increase for Blue Cross and Blue Shield subscribers in these categories in two years, and is necessary to cover increased costs of medical care and to keep the reserves of Blue Cross and Blue Shield at an adequate level to pay any future claims." Bell said.
The four policyholders' groups account for about 45 percent of the company's $75,000 subscriber base in the state. Kansas Cross Blue-Blush盾 serves all of
Israeli cabinet post still open
TEL, AVIV, ISRAEL (AP)-Prime Minister Menachem Begin was refused help in his attempt to choose a new foreign minister and pull himself out of the coalition.
Deputy Prime Minister Yigael Yadin refused Begin's offer to fill the post last vacant week by Mousse Dayan. Dayan quit in a disagreement over the cabinet reshuffle.
Yadin said a difference of views on some issues of foreign policy kept him from accepting the job. However, he said that if Begin accepted him the position of head of Israel's negotiating team on West Bank autonomy, he would reconsider his refusal.
Two other ministers have threatened to leave Begin's cabinet. Finance Minister Simeh Erich, under fire for Israel's economic troubles, said he would leave by mid-November, and Ariel Sharon, the minister in charge of security, said he would not resign. The government ordered evacuation of the Elon Merch settlement in the West Bank.
Frontier drops Chicago route
A Frontier spokesman said the route had not been profitable since the Denver-based airline began飞行 it in November, 1977.
DENVER - Frontier Airlines said yesterday it would discontinue flights from three Kansas cities and a flight from Lincoln, Neb., to Chicago Feb. 1.
Hearing to close trial delaued
The decision to drop the Frontier flights was made because of rising costs and insufficient passenger traffic, he said.
In St. Louis yesterday, Ozark Airlines officials said the airline should have its first plane in the air by Monday. The airline has been shut down since flight operations were suspended.
The two round-trip flights a day operate between Salina, Manhattan and Topeka in Kansas; and Chicago, with a stone each way in Lincoln.
Frontier will continue to serve the three Kansas cities with flights from Denver and Kansas City.
MATHOH—A decision on whether to admit the public and the news media to trials in the kidnapping and murder of Grant Avery, Peace State Bankruptcy Judge.
Associate District Judge George F. Scott was to have considered the defense motion tomorrow. However, the hearing on the request to close the courtroom was delayed because of the death of the judge's father, Gerald R. Scott. 75. He died Saturday in Fort Smith. It was not known when the hearing would be held.
Timothy Newfield, charged in the July 29 laying of 25-year-old Avery, has not guilty to charges of kidnapping, premeditated murder, felony intentional homicide.
Newfield, 18, is being held in jail on $300,000 bond. His trial is scheduled to begin Dec. 17.
Weather ...
The KU Weather Service predicts that cloudy skies will prevail today. Rain is likely and the high temperature will be near 38 degrees. Winds will blow on low
Rain is likely again tonight, with temperatures dropping to near 42 degrees.
Winds will be out of the east at 5 to 15 m.p.h.
Tomorrow, rain is expected to end by late afternoon. The high will be in the low 90s.
Park's death may unleash political opposition
SEOUL, South Korea (AP)—The assassination of former U.S. president for a softening of the iron rule that has held down opposition in this country for years, informed political leaders.
The government may have signaled its intentions by allowing publication of an opposition appeal for democratic reforms in South Korea.
But North Korea charged that the Park killing was aimed at preserving the "fascist regime."
The Soviet Union accused the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency of having directed the death plot to protect American interests. The agency was denied by the Carter administration.
The helicopter carrier USS Blue Ridge, meanwhile, was cruising to the Southwest when a fuel spill of continued American support for the Seoul government. It was scheduled to arrive
South Korea's acting president, Choi Kyu-hap, and Cabinet ministers met in closed sessions for hours yesterday, presumably to discuss the crisis and possible replacements for Park.
AT THE DEFENSE Ministry, top generals were said to have begun meeting at
No information was available on the gathering of the military chiefs, who have long been the real power base in South Korea.
10 p.m., when a martial-law curfew went into effect.
The nation outwardly calm as hundreds of thousands across South Korea gathered for a memorialize Park. The South Korean bodyguards at a dinner party last Friday.
The government said the 62-year-old gunned down by KCLA chief Kim kej-kyu in a plot that stemmed from Kim's fear of losing his job because he had fallen out of love.
INFORMED POLITICAL sources, who asked not to be named, said Kim's main enemy was Park's chief bodyguard, Chi-chul, who was among those slain.
night at a Korean Central Intelligence Agency guesthouse.
They said the ruling circles in South blamed Cha for political blunders that stirred anti-government unrest in recent months.
The sources agreed that Assembly members Kim Jong-pil, $3, and Chung Ikwon, $6, both former military men and commanders, ministers, were possible successors to Park
However, one source noted that both men had enemies inside and outside the ruling Democratic Republican Party.
Wall St. nuclear protesters jailed
NEW YORK (AP)—To the brace of a brass band, more than 1,000 anti-nuclear demonstrators tried in vain yesterday to stop a bankrupt 50th anniversary of the stock market crash.
Police reported 959 arrests in the largest of several anti-nuclear demonstrations across the nation.
In Washington, D.C., about 220 protesters blocked doorways to the Energy Department and rallied on Independence Avenue, and 88 persons were taken into custody
during a protest at the Trident nuclear submarine base in Bangor, Maine.
In New York, scores of demonstrators jammed the exchange on Wall and Broad streets, and said their targets were firms that finance the nuclear industry.
AMONG THE FIRST to be arrested was Daniel Ellisberg, key figure in the Vietnam-era Penetration Papers case.
"Don't go to work today and take a holiday from death," one demonstrator urged the stock exchange employees.
Wall and Broad streets were closed, but traffic was delayed for nine blocks on nearby Broadway.
Aside from occasional brief scuffing at police barricades, the mood was festive, with a 15-piece band providing circus music.
Most of those arrested were charged with the offense of obstruction of governmental administration, lay down were booked for resisting arrest. Seven had 764 summonses were issued and 209 per� cases.
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1
Tuesday, October 30. 1979
SINCE 1975
3
John Casteen
Lone piper's haunting melodies fill autumn air with romance
By JENNIFER HOLT Staff Renorter
It's a quiet October night and a lone baggage steadily marches in a straight line under the west wing of Memorial Stadium. The haunting, romantic echoes of his baggage off the stadium's roof and harmonize with the Campanile bells.
He's not practicing for a surprise appearance with the KU Marching Band; he's just carrying on a family tradition.
Bapipes are a way of life for John Casteen, a Bakersfield, FI, freshman, whose parents are KU graduates and whose older brother and sister are KU students. He is very other night at the stadium to his high-key bapine technique in top form
"Playing the bagpipe is a challenge for me--it's difficult keeping all four items going at the same time." Casteen said.
"When I first arrived here I was practicing at Porter's pavilion, but I was killing myself. I got no sound back there and nothing was in tune. One night I went to the basement and found I could get really good sound. I am improved in the last three weeks."
AND THAT'S where he will keep playing until it gets too cold and he moves inside Murphy Hall to practice.
Casteen said he remembered growing up at home with bagpipes all around his parent's house in Bakersfield.
He first became interested with the baggie when he was eight-years-old, he
said. His father was at a museum meetup on Thursday and we had a baggage bag on a shop window. He bought the baggage and then an advertisement in the Los Angeles Times ran about him.
The teacher, who was a member of a baggie band in Los Angeles, offered to travel to Bakersfield to teach Casteen, his brother and sister.
"Playing the baggie became a family activity," he recalled.
CASTEEN'S HIGHLAND bagpipe is meant to be played in the outdoors. The cooler fall weather is best suited for the instrument, he said it is four years old and is quite hard to play.
Each of three drone pipes contains a drone reed, which is the size of a leaf. The reed is double cane reed, which resembles an ooze reed except that it is much larger.
The drone pipes are built from African blackwood, stealing silver and ivory.
"There's a bigger demand for the bapipe now," Casteen said, "and for awhile, they were hard to get because of a boycott of blackwood in Africa."
Casteen, who is considering majoring in computer science or engineering, has not decided how much longer he will continue to play his bapipes.
Until then, the melody of a Scottish march or the refrain from "The Glasgow Week in Hamburg," "The Dark Isle" or "The Ghost Hill" will propel the hill from the vicinity of the stadium.
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"It had to be done when we had a donor," Bell said.
'Everything went well with most of the moving been done on Friday.
The kidney transplant was performed Sunday night.
"Everything is ready. We had no hitches and we're ready for surgery," he said.
TODAY: NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENT ORGANIZATION luncheon from 11:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m. in Cork 2 of the Kansas Union Museum OF MODERN ART in Burlington, Nebraska. Sandra curator of photography, will speak near you, in the Spencer Museum of Art.
The surgery chart at the University of Kansas Medical Center will return to normal today following the surgery depart. The three-day move into Bell Memorial Hospital.
Enough equipment was moved during the weekend to set up 14 of the hospital's 28 operating rooms. Bell said.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
THE INTENSIVE care patients and surgical floor patients were moved Friday. Operating room equipment and the blood bank were moved Thursday and Friday.
R
By ROSEMARY INTFE Staff Reporter
David Bell, hospital outpatient coordinator, said yesterday the only problems during the move were seven emergency surgeries, including one kidney transplant.
TONGIC; STRENCH FICTION CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union, WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM, "The Light of Experience," at 7:30 p.m. in
Surgery routine back to normal after move into Bell Memorial
All of the emergency surgeries were done in the new hospital, utilizing what equipment was available. Bell said.
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Room 3 of Old Green Hall, TAPAC SCHAL BIRTH FORUM will be held at 7 p.m. at the Lawrence Public Library, HIELL FOLK DANCE will be at 8 p.m. at the Lawrence University Porter, PROFESSOR EMERITIS UNIVERSITY OF OREGON will speak on "The Businessman in Folkere," at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union, "THE INK HEARED LADY-SCAPIN" play will be held at 8 p.m. in the Inge Theatre, Murray Hall.
Bell said surgery equipment was still being set up yesterday in preparation for todav's survery.
Although no surgery had been scheduled since Thursday, Bell said the hospital did not have any problems missing a few days of surgery.
"This has been the most complex move that we've had because we have to cover everything. When surgery shut down in the hospital, we were ready to go in the new hospital," Bell said.
"The surgery schedule varies. Thursday we had 36 and we've had as many as 50 in one day."
HE SAID that the Med Center would have
sua films
Tuesday, October 30
Hitchcock Double Feature:
SABOTAGE (1998) and
YOUNG AND INCENT
Two Alfred Hitchcock thrillers for the price of one; these are from his British heroid. SABOTAGE is about a murderer who uses a young Sidney Linden. YOUNG AND INCENT is about a murderer who can only be recognized by his witching touch.
Directed by G.W. Pabst. This curious musical fantasy of catechus by the 1890s was based on the play by Bertel Brecht. Music by Kurt Wellg, Gehring.
Wednesday, October 3'
THE THREE PENNY
OPERA
Directly by Lee Ward尔曼, with the help of the late John Molato. A shy and awkward pessimist goes to Rome in the 1930s where he meets a young girl named Katie who is likely in which to kill Benito Mussolini.
Thursday, November 1
Lina Wertmuller:
LOVE AND ANARCHY
Friday & Saturday
November 2-3
FOUL PLAY
Chase, Goldie Hawn, and Burpee Meredith, in a comedy/thriller. Plus: A film about a short, sharp The Musketeers of Pig Alp, 'one of the first gangster films' on Broadway.
- No matinee on Friday.
Midnight Movies COLLISIONS (1978)
An experimental science fiction "work-in-progress" about alien space exploration. Stella Lily Tatum, Dan Aykroyd and Glida Radaer; video work by Ed Emshiller and choreography by Louis Ilms. With illustrations. *Hardware Wars*.
turned down any critical patients during the weekend if it had to
University Daily Kansan
A communication system in the emergency room was set up to inform ambulance drivers to take critical patients to other hospitals in the area, Bell said.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud,
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission.
The relocation of the surgery department is one of the final steps in moving the Memorandum to the nursery and delivery rooms have not been relocated, Bell said. A decision will be made today on how to handle it.
Weekends show also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 8:30 or 12 midnight and Sum. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted. At 1:00 am, admission. No Refreshments.
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Attrition study analyzes students' problems, needs
By JEFF SJERVEN Staff Reporter
A detailed study of student needs at the University of Kansas is near completion at the Student Assistance Center, an office of the division of student affairs.
Lorna Grunz, director of the center, said yesterday the needs analysis was prompted by concern about the causes of student withdrawals.
"There has been a large body of literature concerning student attribution at American universities," Grunz said. "We wanted to get a localized picture of the situation at KU."
"We wanted to find out how the University environment affected students and how the University could improve its programs."
Grunz said students withdrawing from KU were asked to suggest ways the University could have made its studies more productive.
"Most students who are withdrawing from school may stop supplying her suggestions and she said. "The fact that someone is actually interested in what happens to them often generates interest."
THE CENTER'S STUDY, conducted by assistant director Dick Johnson, began last spring with interviews of 75 faculty members and 260 students.
"The questions we asked at that point were very general," she said. "We'd ask questions like, what do you like about this program or that?"
From early interviews of withdrawing students, the center designed questionnaires to deal with more specific topics, Grunz said.
The questionnaires dealt with problems such as working and attending school at the same time, academic performance, class requirements and university services.
About 500 undergraduates and 300 faculty and staff members have responded to the questionaires, Grunz said.
"We will make recommendations based on the data on matters concerning our office." she said. "Recommendations concern issues that would affect the directors of those departments."
THE DATA are currently being analysed and will be presented to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and other administrators as soon as possible, she said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editorial staff.
October 30,1979
Nuclear power costly
The sheer destructive capability of nuclear power has turned a lot of people into anti-nuclear supporters recently. But for some, the threat of nuclear power is wiped out by a cost-benefit formula that seems to say that greedy America will only be hurt by curtailing that energy source.
But that economic cost-benefit equation is slowly beginning to show signs of working against nuclear power.
Nuclear power supplies only 3 percent of our total energy consumption-12 percent of our electrical—yet the cost is astronomical.
JUST LAST weekend, federal regulators told the utility companies building nuclear power plants in Kansas and Missouri that they must make more than 60 key changes for the plants to meet government fire safety standards. The cost may run about $10 million for the Wolf Creek plant in Burlington, Kan., which already has gone over the $1 billion figure in costs.
The money pumped into the changes
The NRC has acknowledged that stricter regulations are needed to prevent nuclear holocauses. But if the fear of destruction does not persuade people that nuclear power does not have a place in our nation's foreseeable energy future, then perhaps the NRC should the debate should persuade them.
Nuclear energy-in terms of both destructive capability and cost-is a non-profit venture.
The fact is that nuclear plants have not been proven safe. Arguments that say, "See, we stopped a catastrophe," do not ease any anxieties. The threat comes from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is one of the first to admit it.
and corrections that continue to pile up for the power plants are unsafe investments at best. Worries about the Three Mile Accident in March and a 1975 accident in Alabama have created an atmosphere in which it is very clear that a moratorium on the construction of these power plants may materialize down the road.
Current KU cheers often inane or crude
Ever wonder who the University of Kansas cheerleaders are cheering to?
I CAN, however, hear the "mike man" I can. He is one of the many detractors. His rhythmic chants of 'Jayhawks' are more often than not accompanied by an equally rhythmic chant of 'Jayhawks.'
I do. Each home game I sit in my well-carved senior seat on the 50-yard line to watch the ball go through the garbled scrapes of sounds like a high school cheer float up from 20 rows below me and I look down to see 10 nearly always scarily clawed young women waving their pompons at the crowd. By strraining me ears I can hardly catch the cheer over the din of the crowd.
Looking around I usually can count the number of persons following the cheer on one finger. Even that person looks a trifle bored.
Is this a symptom of student apathy? I think not. When KU fans are aroused, they are some of the most vocal and baiterous in the game, and they also can be some of the most lyratic.
It is the job of the spirit squirt to whip the fans into a frenzy and to create a wave of emotion that will carry the teams to victory. The best way to make it barely make rinkles, let alone waves.
MUCH OF the problem lies not with the squad, but with the cheers, many of which would be good for a junior high school squad to do, but which flap on the college level. "We are the blue. We are KU" may look good on paper. It even twitches. But try to go down and throw things with you on a Saturday afternoon and cheer curries into a ridiculous audacity.
There are several other equally inane cheers in the spirit squirt's cheerbook, each capable of drawing mowns and catfalls from the swamp. We still hear them over and over again.
Why? When it is clear that something is not firing up a crowd, why use it? Even in high school, cheers like that didn't work.
COLUMNIST
John
logan
Except for the artificial spirit of the "Pep Club" members—or banner girls or what have you—no one paid any attention. I know. Way back in high school I was one of the people on the sidelines who tried to stop them from doing it, but I didn't work them and it's not working now.
AS WILL be graphically demonstrated at this week's KU-KSU game, about the only cheers that get the crowd fired up are those with bawdy or downright flattery language.
For instance, the most popular KU cheer at the game will be the traditional response of "kiss me up," up KSU. "The response is not 'No you won't, we won't, we'll eat you.' but
Yet for the crudness of the words you'll find just about everyone in the stands, from sweet little freshness to elderly faculty members, on their feet scream the objections.
LIKEWIS, ONE of the most popular cheers of the spirit squad is one that concludes with an emphatic "Shove it," v. 41. He's on the sidelines in football team but the opposing fans as well.
It should be obvious that the good of high school type cheers just don't cut it at KU. Most of the fans just ignore them. What does he need to be clever cheers with veiled lewd meanings?
They don't have to be crude. Some cheers can be fine examples of the English language. For example, the KU Band's cheer of "emasculate them, emasculate them, relinquish the ball" is a rhetorical delicay that it conveys a clear and painful meaning.
College cheers are meant to be fun. They are supposed to make the game interesting for the fans, to fire them up to cheer their team. The most interesting part of the current bateh of cheers is I don't doing that.
And railroads probably will play an important part in our country's future, especially in light of today's rising energy costs—that is, if the railroads can survive.
The railroads have played a very important role in our country's past by helping to untie it and by making possible long distance travel and the transportation of
The railroads have been in the red for many years, and government officials are now beginning to have second thoughts about government regulation of them. They are realizing that the railroads might go gruff if their financial losses continue to grow.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BUT THE railroads can be an integral part of the country's future in terms of cheap transportation of people and goods. Railroads also situation intensifies, it will be more economical to transport people and goods by train rather than by airplane, automobile or road.
(SFNs 604-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Tuesday and June and July except Saturday, Sunday and July. Second-class postpaid mail at Lawrence. Kansas 6046. Subscriptions by mail are $6 per month for students and $7 per month for non-students. You are welcome to year outside the University for $12 per month, paid through the student activity fee.
the student activity for
the college's summer campings of address to the University Daily Kampan, Flint Hall, The University of
Kansas City, KS 69049
The poor financial footing that the railroad companies are standing on, however, is jeopardizing their future.
MARY HORTON
Managing Editor Nancy Drescher
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Managing Editor Sports Editor Mike Pile
Associate Sports Editor Sports Editor Chief Corp
Special Sessions Editor Mary Ware
Ware Editor
Extreme Editor Edition Educational Writers
Staff Writers
Photographers
Journalist
Management Manager
Editorial Editor Mary Kurtz
Mary Kurtz
Tun Sheehy
Paul Garcia
Lerli Lombardi
Brenda Beattie
Bill Franks
Pierce Pile
Mike Earle
Dana Ellen
Brent Schleder, Brenda Wilson
Sandy Kelly
Cainton Goodness
Tammy Turrney, Brenda Wilson
David Mann
Lyn Byrcykowski, Job Fisher
Lyn Byrcykowski, Job Fisher
David Eddie, David Hicklebill, Bill Raggen, Del Reichman
Jef Harring, Jeff Harper, Barkin Hill, Chris Todd
Many people say that the reason for the railroad's financial troubles is that the railroad has been so cheaply constructed more closely, he will see that governmental regulation of railroads is the real reason for its collapse.
Deregulation way to save railroads
THE RAILROADS are regulated by the Interstate Commerce Commission, which has much to do with how railroads will be, and are run.
Cynthia Kay
Retail Sales Manager
National Sales Manager
Assistant Customer Manager
Assistant Classified Manager
Campaign Sales Manager
Art Director and Marketing Manager
Staff Photographer
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Vincent Coulson
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Alben Noyle
Ken Riggs
Kent Geiger
Adyanna Scald
people and goods. For this reason the current situation with the railroads cannot be imminent.
Advertising Adviser Church Churches
TWO OF the main financial problems now facing the railroad system are the continued use of unprofitable branch lines and the four or five different railroad companies that needlessly serve the same area. Under private regulation, those companies would be able to operate.
But under the ICC, thousands of miles of unprofitable lines still are being used. As
And this ineffective bureaucratic regulation has led to the poor use of billions of dollars of taxpayers' money and the continued financial decline of railroads.
Deregulation would mean that railroads would be able to discontinue those lines that were not economically feasible without having to wait for years for outside approval. And the railroads could merge when they wanted to and with whom they wanted to.
For example, because of its hearing delays, the ICC caused money-losing runs by railroads to be continued for many years before they were finally terminated. And many mergers of railroad companies have been approved only after several years of trial.
Deregulation also would allow railroad companies to set their own freight and fare charges, and more than likely, service providers. This could be the mismanagement of taxxner's money.
John
COLUMNIST fischer
All of this leads to public and business upstream. The people do not want to use the technology. The people are unreliable, and businesses are less willing to invest in them to have goods transported abroad.
money is needlessly used to keep those lines money is needlessly used to keep those lines available for the purchase or delivery of equipment that could provide for better and faster service of those lines that are needed.
in the best interest of the country and its future, the government should deregulate the railways now so that the railways can provide a better back on their own two feet before it is too late.
The government annually spends about $1 billion on railroad subsidies. This money could be better used, as such by helping subsidize farmers for the cost of transporting their crops by truck rather than by train or of rail discontinuation to a farmer's town.
continue to be uselessly pumped into the railroad companies by government subsidies to keep them alive.
CONSEQUENTLY, AS the regulation continues, more money is wasted, and
Louis W. Meck, chairman of Burlington Northern says of the current situation, "If rail lines in the U.S. were to be completely nationalized, the cost running them would be four or five times greater than would be under a private, profit-motivated system."
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IN LIGHT of rising energy costs and scarcity of fuel, railroads can once again serve an important function in transporting
The circumstances surrounding the Wichita Gay Rights Ordinance is an excellent example of the need for education. The Wichita City Commission was well informed and sympathetic about the issues related to gay rights in the city and gay people. The general public was not well informed about the gay rights issue and was therefore an easy target for the propaganda
Too often the most visible forms of gay rights activism, as such as marches and parades, serve only to achieve visibility. This is desirable, but so is the public pressure of the social pressures and problems that cause the need for gay liberation.
THE 'GAY' Awareness Week will be held on Monday, June 15th one of the residence hall students at the GSKO Speakers Bureau will be present for open discussion and a question-and-answer session.
To the Editor:
After reading Thursday's column by the former Michelle Obama, we urge the liberation movement in Lawrence, we feel obligated to enlighten her about the direction and purpose of her work.
Another fact of our educational services is the upcoming Gay Awareness Week, which coincides with the Commission on the Status of Women and the Women's Caition. The purpose of the Gay Awareness Week is to make both the public and the students aware of the sensitive broad population in Lawrence and to educate the public about gay discrimination faced by gay people in Lawrence.
Gay rights activism is not declining at the University of Kansas. Gay Services of Kansas is better organized and more active than any other community and community programs than ever before.
KU gay activism organized, involved
Our counseling service is provided primarily for gay men and women who are unmarried, single, and unacquainted with sexuality. But it also provides counseling for anyone who may be having difficulty understanding or accepting a gay person, such as a friend, parent, sister or brother of a gay man.
THIS YEAR, the GSOK Speakers Bureau has spoken to several University classes and also at McCauley High School in Joplin, Mo.
Many of the programs in which GSOK currently is involved are inherently not very visible to the general public, such as our annual Summer Program, for the year, as last year, the primary focus has been on education, because we believe education to be the best method of fighting crime.
WE HAVE been educating ourselves, both by keeping abreast of the current research being published about gay people, and also by writing legal passions and past legal issues concerning gay rights.
The Speakers Bureau of Gay Services of Kansas was organized to provide a discussion panel of gay women and men to request one. The committee requested one. In the past, the Speakers Bureau has spoken to groups at Lawrence High School and the National Nursing School.
We have been educating the campus and community, primarily due to the efforts of our speakers bureau and our counseling service.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
campaign launched by the Concerned Citizens group of Wichita. The group was concerned primarily with perpetuating stereotypes and myths about gay people.
TOO MANY gay rights decisions have been reversed due to ignorance. Gay Services of Kansas is working to destroy that ignorance.
The Kinsey studies and several other more recent studies have established the following: The United States to be approximately 10 percent of the total population. That would make the estimated population of Japan to be approximately 2,620.
of those 2,629 people, only a small percent join Gay Services of Kansas, but we are not so well represented by the Constitution of the United States and the constitution of Kansas. As long as they are unmarried, it is possible such as the University of Kansas, or by any other means, Gay Services of Kansas will be open to all.
Todd Zwahl
Co-directors, Gay Services of Kansas
Gays should maintain political activism
To the Editor:
In recent years, gays have enjoyed more freedom than ever thought possible due to the efforts of that often blacklisted group of people we call activists. Activism was the first major struggle in which Anita was driving the holy stake through the hearts of gays and it was strong during four major anti-gay flare-ups (Eugene, St. Wichita, St. Wichita and Miami). After four major defeats, perhaps a rest was achieved in the gays are human and not totally inexhaustible.
Thursday's column, "Gays Director Mileasing," raises a question as to the presence of gay activism. This is an im-ning of the fact that Gay activists are asking and one that is difficult to answer.
Within this "rest period," in which many of us were trying to fight against passivity, resistance and anti-discrimination advocates that the work of our predecessors does not last forever are critical to our own responsibility. The contributions made by activists of the last generation need to be addressed.
IDELAY, discrimination sufferers
together as "aggressive against"
discrimination. In smaller,
smaller, less powerful groups. However,
this idealismorgs that there are assist
with discrimination.
With this in mind, people should at least stand up for what directly effects them, but not as a way to justify themselves (twists)? Obviously many are riding on contauts, enjoying the benefits, but can still be cruel.
For the person with the lame excuse, "I'm only one person," there are hundreds of other people who think a thing. A social function like an ASOR meeting or a political planning meeting draws no one.
I believe activism is once again growing in Lawrence. Gay Services has reliable, responsible directors. It just needs some leadership. And it must be for ASGOR being ineffective, I might add that the organization has a speakers' bureau, gives counseling, legal, and medical referrals, is involved in the escort service for LGBT people, is not ineffectiveness, it is just not political.
Chris Budd
Christ Budd
Lawrence Junior
To the Editor:
Political push needed to help Cambodians
Torn by long years of civil war and invasion, Cambodia has run out of time and resources, and the inevitable rounds of hostilities have become more frequent to attend every war and are dreadful enough in themselves. But the Cambodian situation is compounded by something far more than the weakness of the nation's passion and devastation of war: the opposing political powers, each trying to keep their enemies under the siege of hunger and disease, is hindering the distribution of aid.
The government now in power, the Vietnam-backed Democratic Republic of Kampuchea, is delaying acceptance of the old Polot regime. The government organizations, hoping to find a distribution scheme that will exclude backers of the old Polot regime. Both the DRK troops and the military have been supplied and waylay shipments meant for the civilian population. With rigid ideological idocy, the two armies are systematically exterminating the Cambodians.
THERE Is no possibility that Cambodia can help itself. Only 10 percent of the arable land was planted for the August harvest and 90 percent was used for money, food and medicine has been pledged
by outside sources; but unless the warring factions that are now using the Cambian people as political hostages can be persecuted, the people will die in the very near future. 2 million people will die by the end of the year. Many observers, including Swedish anthropologist Jan Myrdal, have said that this will mean the death of a large number of them has said simply. "All the children will die."
The sad fact is that generosity, although essential, is not sufficient. Aid can reach Cambodians only if the armies will allow it. The military power of the political pressure is brought to bear on the DRK government. The U.S. can add to that pressure, by withholding foreign aid to Vietnam, by working through diplomatic ties, by public outcry and international cooperation.
Write your congressmen. Ask them to do something more difficult than sending money or Marines. Ask them to provide an immediate non-political distribution of aid in Cambodia. Write, talk to anyone you can think of who can help in building this project.
The human race still has a chance to avert a great holocaust, the extinction of an entire race, if we work together. For God's sake, let us not delay. Anne Willeman Mauley
To the Editor
Useless photographs waste scarce space
Apparently, there is confusion in the minds of some students as to the purpose of a newspaper, which is to present a newspaper is just what it implies; a "news" paper, containing information to inform its readers.
Photographs in the newspaper should serve as a visual means of presenting that girl's hair blowing in the wind to be news. It is very difficult to look around to see if it was actually blowing.
Similarly, how newsworthy is a man on a bike riding through a sprinkler? Now, who is going to photograph me?
Let it be known by those unfamiliar with the practicum of photofournalism that the purpose of a photograph is to inform viewers about events, its purpose is not to take useful subjects or scenes and fill up valuable photographic space that could otherwise be lost.
Dreux DeMack
Olathe senior
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be addressed to the editor and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed as a candidate, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. You may also wish to right to edit letters for publication.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 30.1979
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
The Lawrence police investigated a burglar yesterday and a Lawrence man was injured in a motorcycle accident.
Stereo equipment, firefighters and a color television, valued at $2,300 were taken from an apartment in the 2000 block of West 28th on Sunday night, according to a police report.
The report said intruders entered the apartment by prying open a rear sliding glass door.
A 26-year-old Lawrence man was listed in satisfactory condition yesterday while
recovering from injuries he suffered when he lost control of his motorcycle on County Road 438 Saturday afternoon, according to a Douglas County sheriff's report.
The report said Schaulis suffered arm, back and head abrasions and lacerations
David E. Schauli, 1829 Powers, told
the driver was driving west when the
motorcycle he rode in control. He told officers he was thrown off the bike and rolled into a south emerald
Revisions in city's beer licensing to be discussed by commission
Revision to the city's cereal malt blend in September 2016 will be discussed at the Lawrence City Commission meeting a tighen on the fourth floor of the First National Bank Tower, 910
Other proposed changes will provide a license suspension system and will forbid gambling in taverns.
The changes in the ordinance were made in response to complaints from residents about the problems associated with crowds gathering outside taverns.
One of the key changes is a provision that will prohibit people from congregating outside tavernas while drinking beer.
The commissioners also will consider requests for sign variations from Kwik Shop, Sotheby's, and Barclays. W. 46th St. of Emerson City Antiques, 415 N. 2nd St., and Martin Real Estate, 13th and 14th St.
The city's sign ordinance, which controls such things as sign size and height, states that business must be in compliance with the law or must request a variance to keep the sign.
The commission also will consider a resolution on the city's risk management and tort liability policy. The resolution has
been written as a general policy to protect the city's liability in negligence cases, Mayor Barley Clark said. It would cover purchases for the city and city employees.
BOTH MEN said their primary goal in television production was entertainment. The majority of the characters were built around real issues and believable characters, instead of stereotypes or poor
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"We work on the idea that one and one makes three," Learn said. "We do some projects together as a team and some projects we do on our own."
Creators and producers of such television comedies as "All in the Family," "Good Times," "The Jeffersons," and "One Day at a Time" have been a team since the early 1950s.
"We don't just pick an issue," Yorkin said. "But if something is important and works with the series, we try to use it. We explore the popular trends of emptyillness."
Network television has begun to "carbon copy stillness," television and film producers Bud York and Norman Lear television and film students yesterday.
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Yorkin, Lear base comedies on real issues
In two separate question-and-answer sessions in Flint and Wescott hills, Yorkin and Lear shared recollections and opinions of television with about 300 students.
The producers made a three-hour stop at KU while on a business trix.
Now you have a chance to build a fraternity!
Alpha Epsilon Pi is reorganizing on the KU Campus by pledging men as brothers of the Kappa Upsilon Chapter, AEIH, a predominately Jewish fraternity, gives you the opportunity of building a strong bond of brotherhood. We want to offer you a life-time experience. AEIH will be holding meetings October 30, 31 and November 1. Alpha Epsilon Pi provides an opportunity to join a national fraternity with chapters throughout the United States. We are a member of the National Interfraternity Conference. Founded on November 7, 1913.
EVENTS:
Tuesday, October 30, Pine Room, Kansas Union, Orientation,
7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, October 31, Pine Room, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 1, Farlor C, Kansas Union, Pledging, 7:30 p.m.
For more information 843-9737
"The better-read, the better-educated you can be, the more doors will open for you," he said. "The other way is to knock down the door with persistence."
"Needs exist now in television that there are no ways to meet. You will be able to meet these needs in a few years and that, me," excitement." Yorkin said.
TO SUCCEED in cable or network television, would-be writers, directors and producers must have a good liberal education and determination. Yorkin said
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Lear said, "It is hard to get into the business. In the best of all possible worlds, it is hard. But that's no excuse; don't let anyone intimidate you."
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nude. They asked us to have the baby diapered on its stomach. We held out and, would you believe, a man diapered a 3-ton baby in one of the most and not one state seceded from the Union.
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GOD DRAMA or comedy does not please everybody, no matter how tasty it is. Learn, dear and television should not be a substitute for real life in an attempt to draw larger audiences.
Network television officials and regulations can be intimidating, according to Yorkn, but the team does not let network censorship become too large a problem.
The team usually refuses to give in to censors, but occasionally it will try to compromise.
"We did an episode of 'All in the Family'
and they did not want us to show a baby
At one point, Lear said, they tried writing shows for different audiences. They thought some wanted drama and issues while other audiences wanted only humor.
Yorkin and Lear answered questions about their careers and the ins and outs of television.
"Drama has no obligation to please everyone and it's in trouble when it tries. You can't do good material and please them. If you try, you get pahlum, 'Lear said.'
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"It that didn't work. There are not two separate audiences in this country. Everyone in this country has a sense of importance and most people care about things," he said.
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All the shows that Yorkin and Lear have written or produced have been done for a reason. They've been dealt with in their shows to add meaning and reality, not controversy, to the
Cable television, Yorkin said, has an unlimited potential for creativity and will provide jobs for many students now studying television and film.
THE TWO MEN met while working for the Colgate Comedy Hour 27 years ago, they said. Since then, they have written and produced television shows and movies. Their company, Tandem Corp., recently expanded into the field of cable television by purchasing Communications Services, a system City-based cable television system.
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"The first object of a writer is to entertain, but use meaningful material. I believe you laugh hardest when you care most," he said.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday. October 30. 1979
'Hawk JV loses
The Baker University junior varsity football team tailed to score three touchdowns in the fourth quarter toUPU's fifth victory over the Jayhawks' season with a 1-3 record.
The Jayhawks did all of their scoring in the second quarter after falling behind 3-0 on a 27-yard Baker field goal in the first quarter.
KU quarterback Steve Smith scored from one yard out with 12:31 left in the first half to put the Jayhawks ahead 6-3. Dee Munger's point after kick failed.
Less than seven minutes later, KU inside linebacker Bandyrell Dibarron intercepted a Baker pass and returned it 41 yards for a touchdown. A successful two-point conversion pass from tailback Tim Davis to Tim Press put KU on top 14-3 at halftime.
Aside from an apparent 70-ward score pass from Baker quarterback Chuck Erwin, the Lakers' offense back because of an illegal procedure offensive threat in the third quarter.
Controlling the ball most of the fourth quarter, Baker began its scoring spree with a 22-yard touchdown pass from Ervin to Jake and then to Zach Randolph in game Baker's successful point-after-flick.
touchdown kick reduced KU's lead to four points.
After a KU turnover, Baker scored again on a two-yard run by fullback Bean Williams with 7:04 left in the game. The PAT kick but Baker beaked 17:43.
KU's chances for a comeback faded minutes later when Karlton Ballard tumed a Baker punk inside KU's ten-yard line.
In KU's next series, a 38-yard run by Jordan Bicker scored a first goal, and Baker's defense held after three unsuccessful runs and a quarterback back on an attempted pass.
Taking advantage of the turnover, Baker punched in its final touchdown on Erwin's quarterback sneak with 0:18 left in the game. He returned to attempt a failed, trapped the final score 2-1.
Turnovers played a big part in the Jayhawks' loss. KU fumbled seven times during the game, losing four of them.
KU managed just 152 yards of total offense with only 92 yards rushing. Bamacerated 735 yards total offense, 203 of those coming on masses.
Smith completed seven of 11 passes for 45 yards to lead KU quarteterbacks. Davis was the leading Jayhawk rusher with 76 yards on 13 carries.
A fox leaping.
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"Everybody expects Billy to have that Oklahoma Coach Barry Swain of Sims Iowa State performance. 'He can't do it.' The coach was he healthy. Things went right for Billy."
It was the first 200-yard game of the season for the 1978 Heisman Trophy winner and the first time in three weeks he has topped 100 yards in a game. He had been one of the most automatic figure during each of the two previous weeks by Texas and Kansas State.
Memberships available at the door.
Sims has 778 yards this season but, with only four games remaining, he is well behind his torrid pace of 1978 when he led the nation with 1,762 yards.
Billy Sims didn't disappoint any of his large, local Oklahoma following Saturday with a 202-yard, four-touchdown per-game in the Sooners' 38-9 victory over Iowa State.
BE THERE!
Iowa State Coach Donnie Duncan said, "think Billy Sims is as great a back as he ever been. There's no better player in the country right now."
Sponsored by Board of Class Officers
Duncan coached the Oklahoma running backs under Switzer before accepting the host with the Cyclones this year.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NU, OU still in lead; the rest fight it out
Hermes will run through you and youarád them. Durham will aid you. Know all the things happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technology happen to it at Surfaced. You see technolog
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Duncan has had some problems of his own at tailback. His Cyclones are down to their 5. No tailback—freshman Ronnie Osborne—who started the season as a quarterback.
---
lowa State lost last both No. 1 tailback Rocky Gillis (knee) and No. 2 Danny Goodwin (broken ribs) in the second game of the season against Texas and No. 3 Victor Macker (ankle) in the third game. Lowa State lost No. 4 Mike Payne suffered a rib injury last Saturday against Oklahoma.
Freshman quarterback Darirell Dicke got the headline for Kansas State's stunning 194 upset of Missouri last weekend but the Knicks and father—Jim Dickey knows better.
"It's easy to play quarterback when you have a supporting cast that played as well." Duncan said of Hibbett's performance. "Roosevelt Duncan was back and Eddy Hibbett played his best game. He has that a big way to go before he accomplishes what he wants to accomplish as a college quarterback."
The victory against Missouri in Columbia was the triumph in six years and their first win over the Tigers in eight years. The Wildcats were 20-point underdogs for Missouri's home-state.
WZR
106
"The greatest thrill in this business is seeing the look in the kids' eyes when they've won a game as important as this one," said Jim Dickey.
Despite skiphipping Kansas 30-17, Oklahoma State left Lawrence with a number of favorable impressions of the Jayhawk offensive effort. Quarterback Brian Bettke caught three passes for 195 yards and Verse Irwin returned five fouls for 114 yards.
"Kansas has two or three players as good as we are we've faced," said Oklahoma State head coach Sean McDermott. "We have played the likes of Arkansas, South Carolina, Missouri and Nevada." Irwin is
Hill championships to be held Sunday
Two Greek and two independent intramural football teams will meet Nov. 4 in Memorial Stadium to play for the coveted Hill Championships.
The Gridiron Girls, 20-15 wins over On-
Loose, meet Bri Paeth B1, 7-0 wins over
Alpha Gamma Delta, in Memorial
tumor at 2.15 Sunday for the women's
game.
Two of the playoff games last Sunday brought out one fact in football: miracles don't often occur.
The men's championship will be a family affair, when the Frat champ, Beta Theta Pi joins against its brother team, the Beta Taupi, on their college League. The Beta play at 3:15.
Phi Delta Theta trailed the Betas 3-14 in the second half with three minutes remaining. It didn't appear that the Betas
were willing to let up until a clutch touch, but it would not have worked. Geohaeun made the score 14-10. But the Betas sat on the ball for the remainder of the game, taking a delay of a golf-game penalty and flipping.
The ending was no different in the Independent women's final, except that it took good defense and the psychological support to defeat the Gridder Girls to defeat On the Loose 28-15.
On-the-Lose trailed 8-20 with a minute and 16 seconds remaining. Mint Deal break a long run for a TD and a 15-28 score. On-the-Lose came up with a key interception with less than a minute left. On-the-Lose then had four chances to score from mid-field, but one near interception, two incomplete back later the season ended for On-the-Lose.
Sheldon resigns post for job on magazine
The assistant sports information director for KU athletics has resigned his position effective Nov. 3 to take a position as editor of the magazine, new magazine dealing with KU athletics.
The assistant director, Jim Sheldon, would he join LaTeen Enterprises in Kansas City. Mo. to begin publishing "Jayhawks in Kansas Athletics" in early December.
"The magazine will be published 20 times a year," Sheldon said. "It will come out weekly during football season and monthly."
Woodard and Valentine honored
KU basketball star Lynette Woodard is one of only 20 players to be invited to the final U.S. Olympic trials, which are scheduled to be held March 26-32.
Preliminary trials will be held early that week. Any woman with amateur status is eligible to participate.
The invitations to the finals were issued by members of the American Basketball Association-United States of America. Sue Gunter, women's basketball coach at Stephen F. Austin State University in Texas, is the U.S. Olympic coach.
Woodard, Wichita junior, led the nation in scoring last year with a 31-point average. After playing with the team last summer Woodard participated on the U.S. national team in the Spartacus sports festival in Russia. She also led the United States University Sports University Games in Mexico City.
Woodyard isn't the only KU basketball player to be recognized for outstanding achievement this fall. While most of the top 15 players in homecoming festivals, junior All-Bill Homecoming festivals, junior All-Bill Sports Illustrated magazine was posing for Sports Illustrated magazine was selected as one of the top defensive players at his position in the nation and will be in an article in one of Sports Illustrated's
This is the second year in a row Valentine has been showcased by Sports Illustrated for being one of the premier players in the nation.
Sheldon said he took the new position because it was an advancement, not because he was dissatisfied with KU.
the rest of the year. Let Du.books about 30 similar magazines at other schools. Most of the articles will be done by free-lance writers."
In last year's Sports Illustrated college basketball valentine, Valentine was featured along with several of his talented sophomore classmates, which included Nate Drease, who recently turned pro. Notre Dame's Kelly Triputca, and Iona's Jena Ruland.
Don Baker, KU sports information director, said he planned to interview candidates for Sheldon's position later this week to name a successor within two months.
"I have made some changes in the job offered to me, but the job are at us use of your college-level experience and a background in printing and publishing," Bucker said. "The salary is $190,000."
Sheldon said his current salary was $12,000 a year.
The assistant sports information director responsible for putting together all programs for the school and all other printed programs and all other printed materials. Baker said, which totals nearly $70,000 in sales.
HENRY'S
RESTAURANT
Baker also he anticipated some other changes within the sport information office concerning staff duties. The changes have not been made final yet, B Baker, said, but they will be made to help equalize the roles given to men's and women's sports.
Sheldon came to KU in January 1979, after working as a staff reporter for the Marietta Daily Times in Ohio. He is a 1974 graduate of KU and has won several awards for his work on gymnastics media guides from the College Sports Information Directors of America.
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B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation Presents Religion and Contemporary Views on Sexuality Sunday, November 4, 7-9 p.m., Parlors A & B, 5th floor, Kansas Union
- theses
• resumes
• reductions
• colored paper
• transparencies
copies til Oct. 31
Panel discussion with . . .
Daniel Breslauer, Department of Religious Studies
Yvonne Keefer, Baptist Student Union
Robert Matthews, Trinity Episcopal Church
Sandra Zimdars-Swartz, Department
of Religious Studies
Panel discussion with . . .
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 30. 1979
City hospice could help families enrich the lives of dying patients
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
For the terminally ill life's quality is often more important than its length.
That is why several Lawrence citizens are trying to form a hospice, a group of volunteers who care for dying people.
Carla Polasek, Independence, Kan,
senior, is interested in organizing a local hospice to make dying patients' last days as comfortable as possible.
"Modern society is so intent on being young and active that it activates the妙 and the dying," she said. "It doesn't want to be the terminally ill and the incurable."
Hospices just being formed are usually called hospices without walls, because volunteers go to the homes of patients who are hard for caring for people in one building.
POLasek said many dying people suffered from constant pain, and hospice volunteers tried to relieve that pain without drugs.
The HOSPISE philosophy says there is a point at which patients should be taken off machines and radiation or chemotherapy and life should be made as normal as possible.
"There comes a time when it of no use to continue the treatment," she said, "and it's far better to be allowed to live as normal a life as possible.
"For example, children who have leukemia have spinal taps and bone marrow treatments until the day they die.
"It's not doing them any good, but doctors and nurses can't deal with the decision of when to stop the treatment."
Hospice volunteers would not only care
for the dying patient, but also would help the family cope with his condition, she said.
"Many times, care needs to be provided around the clock," she said. "It's very difficult to provide 24-hour service."
"Think what a drain it would be on a spouse or parent to provide medical care for months and months."
A VOLUNTEER could care for the patient and give the family members time to run errands or simply to take a walk.
And the volunteers would continue to help the family after the patient died.
"We wouldn't just drop the family after someone died," Polasek said, "because so much of the dying experience remains with the living."
The hospice programme would have to go through a 20-hour training program, which is required by the national hospice program, and be supported by a volunteer for the Topka Hospice Association.
He said that after 18 months of planning and fund-raising, volunteers were being trained for the Toneka hospice.
The organization will accept patients next January, he said.
IN KANSAS CITY, Mo., about 70 volunteers work for a hospice without walls. Kevin Flattery, associate director, said about 15 patients were beaten cared for.
"The direct medical care has been left up to visiting nurses," he said.
The volunteers have been teaching family members how to do chores such as making the bed while the patient is still in it.
Flattery said, because the neopet is supported by private donations. His is the only paid position.
but when the patient is still in it.
Patients do not pay for the services.
"Overall, the support has come slowly—a new idea in a conservative element," he said. "The volunteer nature of the organization disturbs people."
Flattery said doctors had been supportive of the hospice. However, Patty Doria, a social worker helping organize a Lawrence hospital often were not supportive of hospices.
"The existing medical world doesn't deal well with death," she said. "If doctors were the superheroes we wanted to be, and they wanted to be, people would never die."
"When someone dies, it means doctors are failures."
ONE LOCAL DOCTOR, Laird Ingham, is supportive of the hospice, but he said other medical professionals in Lawrence had not been approached about a hospice.
Jan Jenkins, director of the Visiting Nurses Association, said that although the nurses visited patients in their homes, the service still had rans.
For example, she said, volunteers are needed to care for terminally ill patients and a program is needed to help the family after a patient dies.
POLASEk said interested persons would meet again Thursday to form a steering committee to investigate other health services in Lawrence, training programs, and course programs, legislative proposals and methods for educating the community.
Jenkins was one of about 25 people who attended an October meeting for organizing a hospice in Lawrence.
Darrel Stephens, Lawrence assistant police chief, announced yesterday that he had accepted a job to become the police chief of Largo, Fla.
Lawrence cop gets Florida job
Stephens told the Kansan that his resignation would be effective Nov. 30 and he would begin his new job Dec. 3.
"I had been interested in having my own department as a police chief for some time
"Besides, it's warm all year down there."
Stephens became assistant police chief in Lawrence in July 1976. He said he was offered the job by large City Manager Donald Herman yesterday after noon.
now," he said. "I felt over the past three years in Lawrence I have gained the experience I needed.
Stephens said he thought his experience in Lawrence, a community about the same size as large, and in Kusasia City. Mo., would be interesting to learning to Lawrence, help him get the job.
City Manager Buford Watson said the city hoped to decide by early December who will replace Stephens.
McGregor . . .
phased decontrol of all domestic crude oil prices, McGregor said, with a primary concern to eliminate America's reliance on foreign oil.
From page one
He said that more must be done to promote natural gas production, adding that
70's and eventually led to an emergency supply shortage in the winter of 1976-77.
But formulation of U.S. policy, particularly on natural gas, has been a difficult process, he said. He said curtishment of natural gas production began in the early
"These 18 months of debate in the House of Representatives were the most fiercely fought domestic battle in the House this century," McGregor said.
Train derailment public hearing is likely to be held in Lawrence
tax credits were a real possibility for stimulating production.
the first week of December, he said possibly on the KU campus.
Harold Stoley, the lead investigator for the TNS, said the hearing, which was originated in Kansas City area, might be held in Lawrence. Lawyers problems in finding Harold Stoley, Kansas City, Kan.
A representative of the National Transaction Safety Board said yesterday there was "a very good chance" the public would be involved in the derailment in law enforcement to help hold them.
He predicted a growth in the world natural gas market, and said the problem of furthering U.S. reliance on "far away, insecure" sources of natural gas remained.
Passengers, witnesses, Santa Fe and Amtrak officials and members of the train crew are expected to testify at the three-day hearing.
The hearing is tentatively scheduled for
Storey said investigators were studying documents and evidence they had collected from the building where things were supposed to work as opposed to how they did work." The dwelling left two children unattended.
Additions to natural gas reserves continue to decline, he said, thus reserves will "dip" for the first time since the early 60's.
McGregor advocated alternative energy sources. Demand must be clarified he said, the U.S. needs "meaningful and workable conservation."
But he stressed the need for increased communication between consumers, the oil and gas industry and the government, as well as between oil and gas producing nations.
"Make no mistake about it, any shortfall in meeting conservation means reliance on insecure foreign sources of energy," he said.
High prices for oil are a "very effective conservation measure," he said, and because oil companies are in business to profit the prices are on the way down.
"1979 is going to be a very good year for the oil companies." McGregor said.
The University Dailv
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten
10 words or fewer $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00
Each additional word $1.00
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
ERRORS
FOR SALE
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 UM business office at 443-458
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
The UDK will 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.
ig wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Also salted, and raw pulsas of the shell. Twelve variety of dry baked beans, a potato, honey, and soornam. Every Sunday.
PAPER BACK SALES are down 15% rationally
BLOOD BOOKLEVEL all of the 50,000 bookmarks are
price-year have been and always will be
Come. Come and learn at 1641 Mokum 10-31
Get a jump of the Wildcat. Come to the pre-race line and get the shirt. $30 FOR ALL FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS $20-$non-men. $10 men-employees. WHERE! Sponsored by Board of Class Officers
Watch for track pasted at 8th & Illinois. Home
watching of the Milwaukee store in the basement, holding up-bite in-the-hall selling fresh fruits and vegetables in the shell. Twelve varieties of dry beans, rice, potatoes, and corn are available every Sunday. (Credit: Mets)
ENTERTAINMENT
It's Tuesday and the Harbour Lites is still a first-class dive. Tonight's special is $1 picture books and bottles and bottles to 1-2 p.m. get on board at the Harbour Lights in Massachusetts.
10-30
TIMBER LEED APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
1 month rent free in 1 bedroom, 2
bedroom, large room with clean BEDROOM,
main room, large kitchen, closet. REBID
for a Floorplan call, 978-543-0444 or see
a Fronter phone call, 978-543-0444 or see
a Fronter phone call.
FOR RENT
DINCO TO GO: offer quality and reliability not only for forming room teams, but also for special Alice领会. Channel listening, and expound collections (room, office, county). Room rates include delivery, setup, room cleaning. Lawrence Klaas 100-765-4382. Kennedy Lawrence Klaas 100-765-4382. Kennedy Lawrence Klaas 100-765-4382. If you will be glad you did 10:31 clients you'll be glad you did 10:31
Pyramid Sounds and Owl Lighting; commercial dances and dances Experienced Dice Play with experienced Dice play in town. Sponsored by KLER and light show in town. Sponsored our company 141-836-7592 Give us a call at 841-1306.
1-3 bedroom apartment, houses, mobile homes
2-4 bedroom apartment, houses, mobile homes
Call 841-7592 or 845-6855 **10-31**
Naihatsu Hotel has a couple of openings for the
1-3 bedroom apartment business at 843-8592 or
1-4 bedroom apartment business at 843-8592
Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579.
All Frontier Ridge Apts 1.2 months rent free, $50 security on all 1 bedrooms
3 bedroom house, close to KU bus line. No pet Prefer 3 student or couple. B42-846, accrual 90%
1. room furnished apartment, private entrance,
430-901-2454 after 8 a.m.
2. utilities paid, close to campus
3. Spar available in home, 834 Ohio $47 mei
4. utilities CALL 841-9755
11-2
Lease 5 bdm. old house. South Macedonia. $390 month. avail. Nov. Iv. Call. 843-0570. 843-6011.
Beautiful 3 bedroom house available immediately,
with beautiful front yard, beautiful old
month, old 829,月历 842-0213 11-8
One bedroom apartment at Christmas
date. Reasonable rent and
phone: 447-7252 11-11
1 bedroom apt. close to campus. Call 842-0632
p.m.12-pm.14 or 843-2736. from 1 p.m.12-pm.14
For sublease. One bedroom apt, at Park 25. $215/
month - gas and electricity. On bus route. Call
842-3085. Keepying.
FOR SALE
SunSports—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF
Alternator, starter and generator specialties
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-509-2000 2000 w eh tn
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-509-2000 2000 w eh tn
WATERBED MATTERSIEES. $59.98 a year. Water-based Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make sense out of Western Civilization) Make senses
CHEAP TRANSFORATION! Puch Mopeds.
Rick's Bike Shop, 1035 Vermont. 841-642-64. TF
A real home for $1,600. central air, Danish
kitchen, sliding garage door, kitchen type,
lad sitting, hinged roof door, house type,
paneling, 4 paneling, 14 mobile home two
winterized, Contract possible, Realty Real
winterized, Contract possible, Realty Real
1971 Camaro~very nice, 350 auto, mag wheels.
reasonably priced. AT, PS, AC. 843-908-943
HOLAMES. 200 watt guitar amplifier, solidstate head with a 4"1 speaker box. 842-8501 ask for Pedro. 10-31
375 Acoustic Bass Amp with cabinet, $275, Gibson Triumph Bass Guitar, best offer, $240 Tape Deck. $600 Call 841-1818 after p. 13-01
V-W Rabbit- 76-58,000 miles with 2—snowties.
V260 K400K
1965 Triumph 500 motorcycle $20.00 A do-
tit 340 or 843-1731 easy-to-assemble 12-9
3940 or 843-1731
Michaela Tire Sale 20, 25, and 30% discount at
the Michaela Tire Store. The downsweep
with discount tire dept. 10-30
Beighten up your Sundays by having the Sun.
New York Times times to your home or
apartment. 841-5072. 10-30
ARC registered toy podsils Very small Cal.
887-6496 or 1-232-4549
10-30
$2600. 843-5187. 10-31
ASC registered toyoodles. Very small. Call.
WWW.SCAFE.COM
JVC JB-5201 receiver, JVC SK-700 speakers,
JVC QL-JAZ turntable,机械 M18-cabse
deck, after 7:00 p.m. p41-1378, best offer. Must
seek.
PSA BIOS 6000i amplifier 30 watt rms at 1m² like Newer, KOLM $10, two-way speakers 50 watt capacity, $4 for the pair. Buy amp and speakers together for $78, $124-128 or $86.15-115
Prostitute KL, medium women's upd. ski jacket
Will it as sell or make-ready. Abbey, 843-629-112.
1915 Camara LT, 57,000 miles, pb, mag white
and tire. Must welt, 843-787-511
11-2
70 Opel. 67 Changer, Brake. tires, green
Package deal. Gaskil. Call Mike. midnight
844-8531. Together makes dependable transport-
11-2
1973 Star Custom mobile home, 12 X 70. 3 bedrooms,
1¾ baths, skirted and 2 anchored. Call
842-3694 after 6 p.m.
One United Airlines 50% discount coupon. $40.00
Call 864-6039 or 842-3085. 11-2
ANTI-NUKE T-SHIFT, "STOP POPULATION GROWTH-SUPPORT NURTURE ENERGY"
NURTURE BASE, 35 postage. $M-L-XL; Central Box, 42 North Newton, KG 7711-15.
Kenwood amp. excellent condition $120 and
speakers "speaker 50" Call 843-6828 more info
12-5
Best offer Call, M45-5419-11-5
11-5
extra 1976 xerox Mobile machine jane 45-5419-11-5
fedot lot with carport, skirted, burlie-5830-
11-13
skirted, skirted, burlie-5830-11-13
One United Airlines half fare coupon for sale.
Best offer. Call Marv. 843-5419. 11-5
JBL SPEAKER$ 15" woofers, compression drivers,
in cabinets, perfect for PA, disco. $750.
(913) 423-5883. 11-5
Kenwood KR-9400 stereo receiver, excellent condition and specs. 843-3330. 11-1
Sony 15 inch color TV, remote control, excellent condition, only seven months old, 841-2034, 11-5
1979 Camaro Berlinetta. PS, PB, AC, AM-FM cassette, spoiler, post-trac, 4 speed. $8200; 6400; 60. Keep trying.
Female, grey striped tiger cat. 1 yr. old. White
Bull carcass. Call number: 849-62916. 10-91
FOUND
Found AM-FM portable radio near 19th and 2045. 765-3290
HELP WANTED
Calculator found near Mellott Hall. Call 842-
8584 to claim.
10-31
MEN* WOMEN* JOBS *CRUISHERS* SAILING EXPEDITIONS! Need experience. Good pay. Must be willing to apply for APPLICATION INFO JOBS to: CRUISE-WORLD 135, Box 6029, Sacramento, CA 85060
Civil Engineering Department of the University of Kansas is an assistant professor of civil engineering and teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses in the areas of civil engineering computer softw ard and use of higher level software supervision by his staff. Dr. Stanley Y. Nolle, a civil engineering finite element methods师, Send reqnstations to Dr. Stanley Y. Nolle, Department of Civil Engineering, Lawrence Kansas 60520. An amphitheater in Kansas, Lawrence Kansas 60520. An amphitheater in Kansas, Lawrence Kansas 60520.
Waitresses and waiters, full or part time position
Waitresses and waiters, apply in person. Country Room
1033 W. 227th St.
10-30
Need waitresses, 21 years of age. Full and part-time positions available. Knowledge of drinks preferred. Must be neat and like people. Call for apter. after 11 a.m., m43-9404. 10-31
Now hiring delivery drivers—full and part-time.
Apply in person at Gabriels, 2490 Iowa, Holiday Plaza.
10-30
Barmaid needed. 21 years of age. Experience preferred; but not necessary. Part-time help available. Call for appointment after 11 a.m. 843-9404 10-31
Married student wanted for part time help to change tires and deliver heavier appliances. Must be mastic appaiting and have mechanical agitation skills. Need *Shayne Beckett* at 821 MILLER LAWRENCE, KS.
Part-time student clinical worker to work with repair wires and do other related tasks. Travel required. Hauving House, Holding Maintenance, 864-305 or 200 W 13th Bld. bring classroom schedule equal to those of the job.
School Aid wanted to Assist quadrupole student School B aid needed 25 hours per week. Must be able to type with library work and have English language skills. Call 843-6423 or 843-1011. TAB: 843-6423 or 843-1011.
Burden of Child Research, University of Kansas
Duties include developing and evaluating administrative policies for a community program or initiative. Duties involve developing and evaluating administrative policies for a community program or initiative. Qualifications include bachelor's degree in psychology, sociology, sociology or related field or ability to work with other organizations and ability to work with other organizations and ability to work with other organizations.
Graduation training in behavioral sciences and occupational health will be required to travel between law and education. Applicants must be willing to travel between law and education.
Transportation salary: $125,000. Deposit amount: $8,000. Achievement Place Project: Burden of Child Research, University of Kansas (KU) 1933 M44; Madison Lawrence
Warehouse Assist, 7-20 to 11-26 a.m., Mon-Fri-Max
must drive st-shift truck and access work
50-25 lbs. IF work during shift
30-45 lbs. IF work during shift
Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer
1
LOST
Large male cat, beagle and lost baby tabby, red earl of with fraa tag, last near 19th and 39th. Much- loved friend, call before 9 or after 6 at 430-385.
Found a pair of gold metal rink prescription glasses between Porter's Lake and Potter parking lot. Wed. Oct. 24. Claim at Karsan Business 10-30
Ladies sold Omega watch missing since October 3, large reward. 864-1518, sentimental value. Please return. 11-2
REWARD. Please return the cauldron sauté containing my beets and broth, stolen from my 88-year-old grandmother. We bookmakers have been notified that we won't do good, but I really need them! 11-2 109.
MISCELLANEOUS
THESIS BINDING COPYING—The House of Ubik's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for thembinding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 888-MAR, or phone 842-306-7106.
NOTICE
TYPING
In order to test this贴 we are offering the following equipment and tools:
A manual automatic shuffle机 & digit board & wired keyboard & carved wood, compartment case, carved wood, 5-piece, hive & hood incl drawing hives and safety hive & hood incl hiving hives and safety hive
A carved wood, carved wood, TG $300 (USD), Check on Money & money box, TO $400 (USD), Check on Money & money box, TO $200 (USD), Off all catalog Cases Until 12-31-79.
PERSONAL
Arts and Craft Fair, Nov. 10, 10-4. Lawrence
Community Nursery School, 645 Alabama, 11:35
If you’re looking for a car with cheap best poolside parking, you’ll probably people like you the Harbour Life, an independent day and假日愉愉 for TCLF New York’s 10th Street. Our vehicle pairship at the Harbour Life, 100 Macy's Drive, New York, NY 10024.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-3564. **tf**
FOX HILL SUGERY CLINIC- antibodies up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment, Birth Control. For appointment: # AM to 5 p.m. 9211 N. 401st St. T, Overland Park, KS. 4801
ANTA SINGING TELEGRAMS songs for every occasion. Birthday Anniversary, Get Well, Secret Admiral 811-4513. 11-6
It's giving you notice in Colorado! With you were
already awaiting! waving to us!
Summit. Contact SUA at 864-3471, 11-2
Come to the all new MAD HATTER Happy Hour
4-9 p.m. Monday thru Friday, Open 7 nights a
week.
10-31
Ski the West—Ski Steamboat Spring Break!
$277, Contact SUA. Limited space sign up now.
10-36
Veterans for employment assistance contact Campus Veterans -118 BK Union, Union 4642-748.
*Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal A14-864-5044.
AETT gives you the chance to build a fraternity.
Don't miss your chance! 18-31
*Think Snow!* Ski Alpe, Copper Mountain or Breckenridge. Bail, Cad. 841-7053. 10-21
**GAY COUNSELING REPEARSALS** through Headquarters. 841-7053 and 841-7061.
GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through Head-
quarters, 841-235 and KU info., 843-306. . . . . . . . .
Want to have a ball? Just for fun—Cone play ping-pong at Robbinson on Thursday, Nov. 1 at 9:00—Tournament info also.
quaint 844-305-290 and RU info. 844-305-290
Want to have a ball? Just for fun—Come play
Give yourself for Christmas, a portrait from "Shooting Gallery." Shooting Gallery Photography. 841-269. E21 Connecticut. 11-9
TENNIS AND REQUESTETLB PLAYERS
Your requests ready for the indoor season? Call Season
And, singer KU variety tennis. Resume
able rates on good strings and grits. 11-9
Leon: What was that they say? You grow better with age? think they may he right. Vu 10-31
with age I think they may be right! Vern 10-21
improve your profits or improve your students.
We've got an IBM electric executive typewriter for $350. Call us: 814-6948. 11-9
for late for work, call now, etc.
Wanted: Responsible and liberal male or female
resume to take two bedrooms apartment.
Wanted: Bachelor's degree. Call 842-1391, keep trying.
Show KSU how to party with Boco at Sherani-
ganis-Friday. 10-30
SERVICES OFFERED
EXPERT TUTORING: MATH- 000-102 call 625
. 5783 MATHS 115-719 call 6240 STATISTICS
(call courses) 贝尔 943-0068 C.S. 100-606
(telephone) 贝尔 943-0068 C.S. 100-606
ENGLISH and SPANISH MATHS 843-7057
IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $10 for your 306-page catalog of college教材. 10,202 topics listed. BX 25097; Los Angeles, CA. ff (213) 477-8238.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM on Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday @ 88 Mast.
BUYING LIFE INSURANCE? Check our rates and values first. Call Wayne, 842-6044, 842-2092.
11-9
Women's Health Care Service Confidential health care for women with unexpected pregnancies Abortion Services to 20 weeks as an outpatient Womens Free pregnancy testing (SIF) 648-504-1088.
BANDS. SONGWRITERS record your songs at
Mariack Recordings Studio. Call 841-0923. 11-9
Canada's largest research service. Send now for our latest catalog. Thousands of paper on papers at our ESSAYS and EXAMINATIONS Envie Services. 67 Lorge St. Suite 254, Toronto, Ontario. Canada MSELBJ. (3) 465-659-8001
Examined Teacher of English As A Second Language would like to tutor foreign persons (any age) learning English Call 841-7249 11-11 4:00
TYPING
I do darned good typing Peegy. 842-476-496
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICED. 841-480-498
TPY Editor, IBM Pica Fileer Quality work,
code and testing w/ client systems welcoming
editable /layout, CMH Book 842-912-477
Journalism typographer. 20 years typing/typing experience. 4 years academic typing; thesis, dissertations for 10 universities. Latest Sectile equipment. 842-484. TF
Experienced tynist-Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 843-5910. TF
Experienced typist—those, dissertations, term
studies. Req. Master's or equiv in Electronics
861-318, evenings 862-2310.
Experimented Ttypit-term papers, thesus, mike,
electric IBM Selectric. Profeading spelling
corrected .843-9554 Mrs. Wright. TF
Repорта, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
Reports, dissertations, selective Corrective Catalogs 11-8
or Journal 641.1-2172
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Grammar corrected. Call 841-3387.
I do darned quick typing. Unner 30pp only.
Call Ruth, 843-643-8, after 5 p.m. 11-17
Qualify typing at competitive prices-no jobs too big or small. 842-2756. 10-30
4904. Evenings, 748-9818
Workforce: Well-responsible work with IBM Core
Systems. Referrals available, Sandy, 684-
2278.
I type term papers, thesis, dissertations, resumes,
letters etc. Reasonable rates. Call 842-3323 after
referral.
Will type papers and book reviews, etc. Call
841-6866 11-2
WANTED
TYPING- Quick, accurate, and cheap. Call 841-
7765 late夜esdays and 11-7
PSCYCHARTER AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICE
PSCUHISTRY OF HEALTH SERVICES
For a job with Pegery Harlan, Job Service Center,
W. 6th, Topkapa, KS. Phone: (312) 298-5150.
E-mail: job@pscuhistry.com. An equal opportunity employer.
ROOMMATES. Naimah Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8529 any time of the day. if
Wanted: Female roommate Nov. 1 to share co-
fortable upstairs apartment. Close to Campus and
Downtown, $85.00 mo. Util. pd. Call 842-6060.
Keep training
10-31
Cair Pool needed, desperate, any area of greater KC 373/257 after 5:00. Time flexible, Charlotte.
Needed immediately? Female roommate wanted to hire two bie n 24m, attached on bus line; share 1' units, reasonable rent. Call 841-8743, ask for Kay or Cindy. 10-30
Roommate to share excellent 3 bedroom duplex.
finished, heated A. fireplace, washer & dryer
Reasonable rep* and I/3 utilities. 14:52
81-866-7120
Female roommate wanted to share 4 bedrooms
housed. Located near campus and downtown.
$81.25 + 1½ utilities. $42-536, keep trying. (f
Female roommate wanted. Rent, $88.00 plus 1/3
utilities. Call Diane 841-6133. Heatherwood Ap-
partment. 11-2
Drivers wanted to deliver with your own two nights a week, good pay & benefits. 10-30 Christian female to share house with 3 other females. $5/month, *1/unit*. Call 832-490-4637.
Someone to do basic sewing at reasonable rates for senior business major. Call 841-5095. 10-31
Part-time teacher to work 3-4 hours evenings in youth program. Interested applicants contact Ballard Community Center. 842-0729. E.O.E. 11-2
Artist, desire character and/or portrait artist for work on weekends, needs sample of work and time required. 11-2
Customer service representatives, part-time,
must be able to work Saturdays and late afternoon
during the week. See Mr. Ripley, Lawrence
Cleaners, 1029 New Hamphire. 11-6
BROOKLYN
JUNE 10TH
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Store to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
AD DEADLINES
Monday 5pm
Mereday 4pm
Thursday 5pm
Friday 4pm
Wednesday 5pm
Thursday 5pm
Friday 5pm
15 words or less
RATES:
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here: ___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
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2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.03 .03 .04 .05
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1. Col x 1 lanch $3.50
DATES TO RUN: to
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
NAME: ___
KANSAM CLASSIFIEDS_EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
8
Tuesday, October 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Shop now at RAASCH SADDLE SHOP for the biggest Western wear selection
Tuesday Nights at the
at the Flamingo Club is Ladies Night
50° Drinks for ladies all day and night.
501 North 9th Open memberships available
Open 11 am-3 am
Special
T
15% off Mon Sac canvas artist portfolios
pen&,inc.
art supplies
933 vermont 841-1777
ACME cleaners 3 Convenient Locations
Malls
Hillcrest - 843-0928
Saturday Service - In by 9 - out by 4
Downtown - 843-5156
10% Discount
on Most Dry Cleaning
Items for Cash and Carry
MANE TAMERS
Puppy
10th and Mass.
THE MUSIC GROUP OF THE YEAR 1970'S
841-0906
Dee Williams hair design
Linda Berniece Hinkle Garber perms hair & design
highlighting
Western Store
Get Ready For Cold Weather!
Acme
Nocona
Texas
HAAS IMPORTS
BOOTS: Justin
New arrival of ladies satin western shirts.
Goose Down Vests by Comf
Down Vests by Lee & Wrangler
Quilted Flannel Shirts by Ely
Lightweight Jackets
Bring this coupon in for $2.00 off on all Wrangler and Lee jeans.
Men's and Ladies
---
Get A Bota!
Get A Bota!
Keep your favorite hot liquid or cold in one of these handy 2 liter Bots.
Good for ski trips, football games —anything! A great X-gim idea!
1029 Mass.
843-0871
Shop Now For Best Selection!!!
LAWRENCE STORE LAWRENCE
RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDGE SHOP
ENGLISH WEAR WESTERN WEAR HORSE AIDS
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa • Lawrence. Kansas 842-841
On thurs. at 8:30
Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence
THIS WEEK'S
1975 CELICA ST-SPEED
1976 CELICA GT-LIFRACER
1978 CELICA GT-LIFRACER AUTO
1978 CELICA GT-LIFRACER
--scientific and statistical functions
Lawrence Toyota Mazda
USED CARS
QUALITY
you expect it...
you get it!
THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
Baby Duck
robin's nest
Remember:
A 10% Discount
On Everything In Store
Discount Exclude Sales Item
Bath & Kitchen Shoppe
210F* W 25th 841-3330
Remember:
Discount Exclude Sales Items
Holiday Plaza
Next to General Jeans
841-3330
Mon-Sat 10:00-6:30
Thursday 10:00-8:30
A Pet Shop
"The first step to Pet Care" Tropical Domestic Exotic Pets
Grooming & Pet Care
Call for appointment & prices
711 W. 23rd 841-4300 Mon-Sat. 11-7.
Malls Shopping Center 12-5
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS GIVES YOU WHAT YOU WANT WHEN YOU NEED IT
The Texas Instruments TI-50
-2 continuous memories
—computes all data to 11 digits internally
— slimline and beautifully designed
T1-50
74
$40
YOUR KANSAS LUNION
BOOKSTORES
Available at the Kansas University Bookstores Kansas University and the Satellite Union We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students
LOVE
Rock, Disco, Jazz, etc.
Large Selection of Paraphernalia
Selected Songs 1/3 off
15 West 9th 842-3059
We Buy Records
RECORDS
Pizza
Pasta
Salad Bar
Campus
Hideaway
76 N. Park
Laurence, KS 66044 Est. 1957
842-0111
843-9111
New Members
Always Welcome
MEN'S NITE
BELLY
DANGER
Mon.-Fri. 4 p.m.-3 a.m.
Sat. 6 p.m.-3 a.m.
Sun. 6 p.m-1 a.m.
Mingles
Disco
An Intimate Environment
MINGLE TONIGHT!
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th
842-7030
---
Jane Doe
Halloween has eerie folklore
By ELLEN IWAMOTO Staff Reporter
When dusk desks upon the campus
and the Memorial Campanile
dofully lighten the sky for a night
hours, Halloween spirits will creep from
hidden nooks and crammes for a night of
The celebration of Halloween has a past as varied as the ghosts and goblins that will stalk the streets tonight performing tricks and seeking treats.
Hallowen has not always meant trick-or-treating, though. It used to be called All Hallow's Eve, a relic of pagan times. It was the eve of the New Year that was celebrated by the Celts, the first Aryan people from Asia to settle in Europe.
It was a fearful night for the Celtics because they believed that all witches, demons, hobgoblins, trills, and other evil nights could roam the earth on that night.
According to the Celt's beliefs, on the last night of the old year the souls of the dead were allowed to return to their homes and mingle with the living.
HALLOWEEN falls on the eve of All
Martin's Day. It was established early in the seventh century by Pope Boniface IV. The data originally
was for May 1, but was changed to
March 25, 1863.
See story page nine
An event similar to Halloween called Dead Man Day is celebrated in Mexico. At the end of October, pastry shops and bakeries stock items with the dead supposedly like to eat.
An old Scottish belief said that anyone born on All Saints's Eve would have "double sight" because he would be able to see clearly. He commanded have the eyes be wound over the scribes he saw.
ON THE EYE of All Saints' Day, the Druids lighted fires to protect themselves against evil spirits and wore protegue costumes so the spirits would stay afresh.
Many current Halloween traditions
one can be named to next European customs.
Bobbing for apples originated with the Romans, who honored Pomona, the goddess of orchards and particularly orchardials, during their pre-winter feast.
IRish children used to carve out and place candle inside large rutabagas, turnups and potatoes, much like children would jack-o'-lanterns out of pumpkins.
*"trick or treat" is a phrase that will be heard often tonight. Mischief Night, as Halloween used to be called, refers to the trick part.
KU IDs here at last; distribution date soon
By DAVID LEWIS
The new KU student identification cards arrived yesterday, according to Edward Julian, University director of special programs.
Staff Reporter
The IDs had been delayed several times since Sept. 15, the original arrival date because of defects in the cards.
Julian said he did not know the exact date of distribution, but said officials at admissions and records would announce distribution plans soon.
Julian said the cards would be distributed by KU's office of admissions and records after registration stickers were placed on the back of them.
Dyck said earlier that the IDs could be
Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, was not available yesterday for comment on the distribution of the cards.
distributed in two shifts at the Kansas Union, the Satellite University or Wocse Hall. Students who last names begin with a letter in the first half of the alphabet would pick up their cards the first day, and the students would pick up their cards the next day.
Julian said samples of the IDs were sent to Watson Library yesterday for final inspection.
Earlier ID samples could not be read properly by the Optical Character Recognition, a part of the Watson Library computerized check-out system.
The uniform IDs will be used to check out books in KU's new library system.
Temporary identification cards, which were issued at enrolment, expired Sept. 17. However, KU officials have said that the cards are not accurate because no replacements have been issued.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
free on campus
Wednesday, October 31, 1979
Vol. 90, No.48
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
KU to discuss custodians' charge with union representatives only
By PAM LANDON Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas will discuss custodial complaints only with the union that represents the custodians. Rodger Williams, director of support services, said yesterday.
Ogre said the union, Kansas Public Service Employees Union Local No. 1422, which serves the Lawrence campus, was the lawful representative of KU custodians.
"We must deal with the union on custodial matters because of a memorandum of agreement the University has with the union," he said.
The agreement said the union would be the sole bargaining agent for facilities operations employees, he said.
Oroke made the statement in response to two press conferences held by the Custodian Action Committee. The CAC, a group of 40 to 50 Lawrence campus custodians, has been meeting since August to research and document allegations of harassment of KU Management Services, a custodial management service based in Englewood, Colo.
AT THE PRESS CONFERENCES, the CAC expressed dissatisfaction with the AMS contract with the University. The CAC also
has expressed a desire to talk with University officials about the contract
Oroke said University officials would meet with local union officials today to discuss the custodians' complaints.
Gary Howe, assistant professor of sociology and a member of the CAC support group, said he was glad that the University had received it with the union about civil problems.
"However, we see no legal impediment to the University's sitting down and talking with concerned citizens and faculty members about the AMS contract," he said.
The AMS contract with the University comes up for renewal Dec. 1.
"WE FEEL WE have legitimate grounds for a meeting with the University because our issue is the AMS contract, not the union contract."
Members of the CAC's support group include social agencies, community service organizations, faculty and students.
The CAC has said that the contract the University has with AMS rewards AMS with higher profits if the firm releases custodial workers
The CAC also has alleged that AMS has harassed older and handicapped workers to get them to quit and that now few
custodians are doing more work than ever before.
Richard Mann, University director of informational systems, said he had statistics that showed that the custodians' work was more a shortage of workers were unabsented.
HOWEVER, Mann said he did not want to make the information nubile at this time.
"We want to meet with the union first and present this information to them. We owe it to the union to try to let them handle these questions." he said.
Mann said the University could not meet with the CAC.
"The union is their (CAC)'s bargaining agent whether they like it or not. If we tried to deal with these custodians outside of the union, we would be violating of the union agreement." he said.
Irving VanDuyne, CAC chairman and a KU custodian, said he thought the University should talk with the CAC.
"This claim that they can't talk to us because we're not the legal representative of the custodians is a maneuver they've used all along to ignore our complaints.
"THESE ARE COMPLIANTS we have wanted to air not as a bargaining unit but as citizens of the state of Kansas," he said.
Oroke said that he had confidence in AMS'
managerial ability, but that during the time of the contract with AMS the University had recognized some difficulties.
"Some of the buildings simply aren't a clean as we thought they would be," he said. He said he was not sure what needed to be done to improve building cleanliness.
"Perhaps we need improvement in employee attitudes. Perhaps we need improvement in employee training, I really don't know," he said.
Broke said that in response to some of these difficulties the University was looking at some contract revisions, which he did not want to specify.
Daniel Wildcat, vice president of the Lawrence chapter and at a press conference yesterday that the CAC would file a complaint with the state legal panel of the
The state legal panel of the ACLU com- tries six attorneys who decide which cases he ACLU will take.
AMS was hired by the University to improve efficiency in its housekeeping department. AMS began supervising custodians at the KU Medical Center in New York City and took over supervision of custodians on the Lawrence campus in December 1977.
Med students ask for new gym
Staff Reporter
By ROSEMARY INTFEN
Students at the University of Kansa-
Medical Center will lose the free use of
recreational facilities next year when the
Kansas Regents Center shuts its gymnasium.
The closing will add to the longtime problem the Med Center has had in supplying its students with a place for training. He said president at the Med Center, said yesterday.
The Regents Center, which allowed students to use its basketball and volleyball courts for three years, will close the gym Jan. 1 to remodel it in a library.
For four years the Med Center's student union has sought approval to build a recreational building on the Med Center campus. The campus has no such facilities now.
After being on a University capital improvement lists since 1975, the $7.8 million recreation building proposal reached the Board of Regents priority list last spring and was put out of 20. Allen Wiecht, University director of facilities planning, said yesterday.
ALTHOUGH THE PROPOSAL reached the Regerm, C章呐he does not think the building would be constructed. "The administration doesn't want it. If they did, they could have gotten it there a lot sooner." The police could have gotten it higher on the list."
David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for the College of Health Sciences and hospital, said the proposal had lain dormant for years because it was not a priority site.
"We try all the time to get it on the list, but
sometimes we get shot down. We hope we can move ahead with it now," he said.
Chernoff said the student union was seeking other methods to get the building constructed. "Our major frustration is that we don't want you we could up our own building," he said.
CHEMNOFF SAID that land surrounding the funded Center has used for the construction of a new facility owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association. A bond issue through the University has been approved.
Bond issues are granted through the Regents bond council. The council makes a bond prospectus that is submitted to a bond solicitor and awards bonds are then made available to the University.
Chernoff said the student union had approached the Endowment Association with
its proposal and the association said "it would be happy to give some land."
However, Chernoff said, the Med Center administration was keeping the Endowment Association from granting any land for that purpose.
Waxman said he had not heard of the student union's proposal to build on Endowment Association land.
CHERNOFF SAID the student union now offered a short-term program to provide students with recreational facilities.
"We set up a volleyball league, which is the first venture by the school in recreation. Before, everything was done by individuals," he said.
Chernoff said the large turnout in the volleyball league indicated the students interest in obtaining recreational facilities.
- Attach RECREATION to teams for
See RECREATION back page
By TONY WOOD
Staff Renorter
Carter, Bush to campaign in state
Kansas Secretary of State Jack Brier said last night that President Jimmy Carter and George Bush had confirmed that they would invite their parties' presidential nominations.
Brier wrote letters to three Democrate and eight Republican potential presidential candidates, he said, to explain Kanas' first presidential preference primary.
Of those who responded, Carter and Bush, a Republican and former CIA director, were the only candidates who said they intended to campaign in Kansas, Brier said.
Brier spoke last night to about 35 College Republicans about the presidential primary to be held April 1.
"The primary is an opportunity to shake hands with someone, to meet someone, who may well become the next president of the United States," he said.
However, there will not be a space in write-in candidates. Brier said, because the
Two persons already have flipped to their names placed on the ballots. They are R.W.Yeager, a Republican from Norton, and Robert Maddox from Hollowell, Florida.
Not many candidates have filed for the primary, Brier said, because it is too early in the campaign.
Brier said Kansas" primary would be "an opportunity to be a bellwetter to the nation, to express the mood and temperament of the area,"
"THE KENNEDY people want to have him filed very quickly, so he may be the first mayor or candidate to file," he said.
The first Tuesday in April was chosen as the date for the primary to save money, he said, because 54 school districts and cities also will hold elections that day.
However, the importance of the primary school in New York also will have primaries April 1. Brieer said the date for New York's primary might be changed because of a Jewish influence.
KANSANS WHO ARE registered voters and affiliated with the Republican or Democratic Party can vote for a candidate on the ballot for "none of the names shown."
procedures for filing are so simple. Candidates must pay $100 or submit 1,000 signatures from Kansas registered voters to have their names placed on the ballots.
The primary is expected to cost about $1.1 million.
"This could be an extremely expensive experiment," Brier said.
The 1979 Kansas Legislature voted to have a trial primary in April. Future primaries would require more legislative action.
Brier promised that there would never be another primary if cost more than $5 a
vote. he said he expected Kansas to set new records in voter participation.
BRERI SAID THERE were about 1.1 million registered voters in Kansas. Of those, 386,000 are registered Republican, 45,000 Democrats and 455,000 are unaffiliated.
"That means that 40 percent of all the people registered who have taken the time to vote have said they are unwilling to have them vote with do either major political party."
Brier urged the crowd to persuade voters
to affiliate with the Democratic or Republican Party so they could vote in the primary. A vote in a primary carries more votes than a vote in a general election, he said.
About 67,000 people voted for Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., in the Republican primary in 1978, he said.
"That means that less than 7 percent of the voters made the decision as to who the Republican nominee to the United States will be, a candidate who went on to be the senator."
BANDALE
Lasting laugh
Jack Brier, Kansas secretary of state, right, highlights a comment made by Randy Sheer, president of the College Republicans.
Brier spoke to the College Republicans about the Kansas presidential primary.
---
2
Wednesdav. October 31. 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Associated Press, United Press Internationa
Chrusler losses hit new low
DETROIT-HOUST Corp. said yesterday that it had lost $460, million in the third-quarter of this year. The single-quarter loss was larger than any reported decrease in earnings for the year.
The huge deficit, which had been expected by industry observers, may help the company's commission for financial help from the federal government.
In a letter to shareholders, Chrysler Board Chairman Lesa Jacobi said the company has made several developments that have serious possible consequences for the entire industry.
The third-quarter loss means that the No. 3 automaker has lost $721.5 million so far this year.
The worst previous financial performance in U.S. corporate history was in 1951 when Singer Co. reported $45.9 million in losses.
Leftists storm U.S. Embassu
SAN VALADOR, El Salvador—About 300 militant leftists attacked the U.S. military, firing guns and screaming "we will take the emblem," authorities reported.
The embassy was immediately closed and incoming telephone calls were not answered.
They said U.S. Marine guards and Salvadoran troops used tear gas to repel the invaders, who had climbed the embassy fence but were driven back before they could force their way into the building. Two Marines were reported to have been slightly injured.
The attack on the embassy followed reports from Washington, where U.S. officials said that Iran had been involved in a series of隐含 fear and other non-lethal weapons, to the new government of EI.
At least 24 persons were killed and 100 wounded Monday in gun battles between security forces and leftists in a street demonstration.
Birmingham elects black mayor
HIRMINGHAM, Alain—Richard Arrington, a black city councilman and educator, was elected mayor of this Southern industrial city yesterday.
Voter turnover was one of the heaviest ever as Arrington defeated Frank Parsons, a white attorney and businessman.
Arrington joins Ernest Morial of New Orleans and Maynard Jackson of Atlanta as black mavors of major southern cities.
Judge named to education post
WASHINGTON—President Carter nominated Shirley M. Hufstedler, a federal appeals court judge, to be the nation's first secretary of Education, but said yesterday that Hufstedler be named to the Supreme Court if a vacancy occurs there.
The president described Hufsteder, 54, as "one of the best minds in the country," and as someone "who could take a new, fresh look at the way we do business."
Carter decided on Hufsteder Monday after meeting her for the first time. Deputy White House press secretary Rex Granum said it was understood in that meeting that Hufsteder would not be precluded from consideration for a high court post.
There is no vacancy on the bench now, but Justice William J. Brennan Jr., 73, confirmed last week that he might retire in June or at the end of the court's current term. Hufstedfer then could become the first woman to sit on the Supreme Court.
Hufsteder lives in Pasadena, Calif., with her husband Seth Hufsteder, a prominent California attorney. She was appointed to the appeals court in 1989 by President Lyndon Johnson, becoming the second woman to be named to a circuit court position.
French official commits suicide
PARIS-French Labor Minister Robert Boulin, a leading contender for premier, was found dead yesterday, and authorities said he killed himself.
and and their friends said he killed himself.
His family blamed the suicide on a press expose of a real estate scandal in which Boulton allegedly was involved.
The silver-baired Gaillet, with 18 years service in various cabinet posts, was found by police in a shallow pool of water in Rambouillet forest, just southwest of Paris. An empty bottle of barbiturates lay nearby, and three handwritten suicide notes were discovered later, authorities said.
Medical investigators said their laboratory tests removed any doubt that the death was suicide.
General to head Korean CIA
SEOUL, South Korea—In a significant step to consolidate the new government's position, acting President Choi Ku-yuh named a new director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency yesterday to replace the man accused of assassinating President Park Chun-hoe.
Choi appointed vice army chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Lee Hui-sung acting KCIA chief, replacing Kim Jae-ku, who is under arrest for the slaying of the parker.
Sources said the appointment was an important move by Choi and the military leaders backing him to take over the now-disorganized secret police
Meanwhile, both the U.S. 7th fleet steamed toward the southern harbor of Pusan in a show-of-force warning to North Korea, and an official in Washington said Secretary of State Cyrus Vance would leave tomorrow to represent the United States at Park's funeral Saturday.
MNGAPORE—U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke said yesterday that more U.S. military supplies, being rushed to Thailand, would be delivered in August.
Holbrooke told a news conference that the United States was again getting involved in Southeast Asia by supporting the Association of Southeast Asian Nations—Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines—known as ASEAN.
Meanwhile, in Prague, Vietnam's defense chief was quoted in a Czechoslovakian newspaper as saying that the United States and China were fighting to overthrow the communist regime.
He also said that only the president could decide whether the United States would be militarily involved if Thailand were invaded.
Jeffries backs abortion letter
Hobroke said, "Thailand is the key to ASEAN and ASEAN is the key to Southeast Asia."
Warner reversed his position before a final vote on the measure. However, about 10,900 copies of the defties letter already had been mailed throughout 20
The letter, which was organized by Richard Viguro, a specialist in direct transmission of the law to the public, invited other students to join the bachio practice so it could pressure Morgan and other seminars to accept them.
Sen. Robert Morgan, D-N-C, who was among the senators criticized in the letter, asked for a list of his constituents who had received the letter.
The letter, mailed in September, criticized Warner and other senators for voting against restrictions of federal funding for abortions that were in an unregulated state.
Correction...
The Kansan incorrectly edited a letter by Dreux DeMack in the Oct. 30 Kansan. The second sentence of the third paragraph should have read, "Now, the Kansan's letter is very good."
WASHINGTON - A spokesman for Rep. Jim Jeffries said yesterday that the Kansas Republican was pleased to be issued an anti-abortion letter despite its support of the law.
Weather . . .
The National Weather Service predicted periods of rain and thunderstorms for today, with rain ending tonight. There is an 80 percent chance of rain today and a 60 percent chance tonight. Highs today will be in the 60s and lows will be in the 40s.
Temperatures tomorrow will be in the upper 40s. South winds will blow at 15 to 20 mph in the morning shifting to the southwest at 20 to 25 mph in the aftermath.
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
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IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS
Listings subject to change—call us for information.
OPERA HOUSE PRODUCTIONS
CONCERT
CALENDAR
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Wed 31 HALLOWEEN PARTY = Pat's Blue Ribbon Band and the Four Friends
7b 1 John Hammond and Pat x Blue Riddim
Band
Sat. 2 Billy Spears Reunion
sun 4 AAM recording artist The Police
Wed 4 Charlie Musselwhite
Wed 7 Charlie Musselwhite
Sat 10 The Secrets
Fri 16 Pete L. Pohr, P.K. and bean sand
Fri 23 Pat's Blue Riddim Band
Sat. 24 J'ai laue Robbin Band
Wed. 28 Eddie Harris w/the Jazz All-Stars
Fri. 30 Southern鼓
DECEMBER
West 5 The Burzocks and Ultravox
Herbs
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Call us at (612) 473-3900
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Call for concert info 842-6930
Granada Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
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Eves. 7.00 & 9.30 Sat Sun 2.00
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Make it happen at KU!
1979-80 Student Season Basketball Ticket Sale!
Tuesday, November 6 Friday, November 9 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. in the East Lobby of Allen Field House
If Season Tickets are still available after November 9 they may be purchased at the Athletic Ticket Office prior to first game.
Students eligible must be enrolled in a minimum of 7 hours.
KANSAS
40
25
KU vs. Yugoslavia Thursday, November 15, 7:30 p.m.
Student Tickets $1.00 Student Spouse $1.00
Yugoslavian game ticket not included in Season Ticket.
Tickets may be purchased at the Athletic Ticket Office,
Allen Field House beginning November 12.
NOTICE
Season Ticket is not good for spring semester unless accompanied by validated Spring I.D. at Student Gates.
TICKET INFORMATION
Season Tickets
Student Price (Students may purchase
only 1 ticket per person* $11.00
Student nouns* $11.00
*Identification required to purchase.
(KULD. required if issued)
**Spouse ticket may be purchased with Proof of Marriage
Student admittance to Women's Basketball games is free (except to double headers which is included in the Student Season Ticket price)
Single Game Tickets
Student Price $2.50
Student Spouse $3.00
Single game tickets will only be available if all seats are not sold on a season ticket basis.
Single game tickets may be purchased only on the business day preceding the game beginning at Noon.
1979-80 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
MEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULF
No. 15 (Tu) (Thu) "Yugoslavia-korean game" HOME
Dec 3 (W) Oakland Orioles Away HOME
Dec 4 (M) San Diego State Away HOME
Dec 6 (B) San Diego State Away HOME
Dec 8 (12) San Diego State Away HOME
Dec 10 (Wed) Kenyatta Away HOME
Dec 12 (Tue) Kenya Away HOME
Dec 17 (Tue) Peppino Away HOME
Dec 23 (Tue) Peppino Away HOME
Dec 31 (Mon) Arizona Away HOME
Dec 35 (Mon) Arizona Away HOME
Jan 9 (W) "Masaiou (TV)" 8:10 p.m. HOME
Jan 16 (W) "Nebaska (TV)" Away HOME
Jan 18 (W) "Nebaska (TV)" 8:10 p.m. HOME
Jan 23 (W) "Okatama" Away HOME
Jan 23 (W) "Okatama" Away HOME
Jan 30 (W) "Okatama State" Away HOME
Feb 5 (T) "Nebaska" HOME
Feb 7 (T) "Nebaska" HOME
Feb 9 (S) "Massauou (TV)" 140 p.m. Away
Feb 13 (S) Massauou (TV)" 140 p.m. Away
Feb 18 (S) "Kansas State (TV)" 100 p.m. Away
Feb 23 (S) "Okatama State" HOME
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
No. 18 (Sev)Philips Uwu (Bermingham) HOME
No. 19 (Fr)Phillipa Uwu (Bermingham) PLANEWEE
No. 23 (Fr)Queen's Cup Classic PLANEWEE Taxes
No. 24 (Tue)Queen's Cup Classic PLANEWEE Taxes
No. 27 (Tue)Grandview PLANEWEE
No. 4 (Tue)Cedar Rapids PLANEWEE
No. 4 (Tue)Cedar Rapids Center Missouri PLANEWEE
No. 12 (Wed)Central Missouri PLANEWEE
No. 12 (Wed)Northwestern Ohio State PLANEWEE
No. 29 (Sat)Drake Bowl Classic MAMIA, Florida
No. 29 (Sat)Drake Bowl Classic MAMIA, Florida
No. 3 (Th)Northeast Louisiana MAMIA, Florida
No. 3 (Th)Northeast Louisiana MAMIA, Florida
No. 9 (Wet)Indianapolis MAMIA, Florida
No. 9 (Wet)Indianapolis MAMIA, Florida
No. 17 (Th)Indianapolis MAMIA, Florida
No. 17 (Th)Big Bg Tournament COLUMBIA, Columbia
No. 18 (Fr)Big Bg Tournament COLUMBIA, Columbia
No. 22 (Tue)Wichita State 700 & 900 PLANEWEE
No. 22 (Tue)Wichita State 700 & 900 PLANEWEE
No. 26 (Se)Jawahar Classic MAMIA, Florida
No. 26 (Se)Jawahar Classic MAMIA, Florida
No. 7 (Feb)Minnesota HOMESCOUNTY, Minneapolis
No. 7 (Feb)Minnesota HOMESCOUNTY, Minneapolis
No. 9 (Feb)Duke University HOMESCOUNTY, Minneapolis
No. 15 (Fri)Missouri HOMESCOUNTY, Minneapolis
No. 15 (Fri)Missouri HOMESCOUNTY, Minneapolis
No. 22 (Fri)Nebraska HOMESCOUNTY, Nebraska
No. 22 (Fri)Nebraska HOMESCOUNTY, Nebraska
No. 7 (Feb)Missouri HOMESCOUNTY, Minneapolis
No. 7 (Feb)Missouri
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 31, 1979
3
Blizzards, twisters kill 6 in southern Plains
FROM THE KANSAN'S WIRE SERVICES
FROM THE KANANS' WIRE SERVICES
A fierce pre-winter storm pelted the town, causing a rainfall in the rain, gale-force winds and tornadoes yesterday killing six persons and injuring
The storm, stretching across parts of Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, resulted in at least four hurricanes, three severe wind failures and some heavy wind damage.
Up to four inches of snow were reported in extreme western Kansas last night as an intense low pressure system continues to lash the state.
The National Weather Service issued blizzard warnings for last night and today for extreme northwest and western Kansas.
Goodland, near the Colorado border,
reported four inches of snow at 6 p.m.
yesterday while Kanonor reported up to six
inches.
a tornado struck the small communities
of Newport and Woodford, about 10 miles apart in southern Oklahoma, destroying two mobile homes and several houses and businesses.
A FOUR-TRUCK crash on ice U.S. 40 at Wild Horse in east central Colorado killed three persons. Details of the crash were not immediately available.
IN NEWPORT, Okla., the twister smashed into a mobile home, killing two persons—a truck driver identified as a牢童 and another woman who flew debris, and Teresa Carroll, 59, who was inside the home. Three other persons in the trailer were injured, one of them
In Kansas, torrential rains and high winds lashed southcentral areas yesterday while the western part of the state braced for the storms and eastern Kansas was under a tornado watch.
THE RENO COUNTY sheriff's office said
only 50 percent of Hutchinson's streets were
passed yesterday afternoon after more
6 to 16 inches of rain fell on the city of 41,000
during a 16-hour period.
Goodland, near the Colorado border,
reported up to 4 inches of snow yesterday
afternoon, with double that amount forecast
by this morning. Winds gusting to 48 mph
whipped the snow and prompted blizzard
warnings from the National Weather Serv-
southwest of Wichita yesterday afternoon, injuring two persons.
Firemen were called to an industrial park east of the Hutchinson airport early in the morning, from under two natural gas lines and a gasoline line serving a Champlain Petroleum
in to see how the lines might be shored up above the swirling waters, which continued to undercut more of the pipe yesterday afternoon.
THE EROSION LEFT the 16- and 24-inch natural gas lines and the 6-inch gasline line suspended in air for a distance more than 100 feet. Construction workers were called
Fire Chief Dallas Jones expressed concern that a break in the line could cause an explosion or a dangerous gas leak.
WORKERS AT HALF a dozen nearby industries, including the huge Farmarid Industries grain elevator were evacuated. The facility was built mainly industrial, was sealed off by police.
"We've had two or three people leave who because of water see in their," sheffir's spokesman Barbara Armstrong said.
"We're advising people not to travel unless they have to. We are telling people they have to evacuate their homes call us or go to the sports arena. But I don't think
they could get there because of the condition of the streets."
EIGHT FAMILIES were evacuated from the Ninety Mile section, which is split by the Nineteenth River block section by the river along the downtown was sandbagged as a precaution.
Sedgwick County authorities reported a Western Electric plant near Goddard was evacuated because of a heavy water accumulation on the flat roof.
Several highways were closed in the Hutchinson area from high water of the Ninnescah and Arkansas rivers and Cow and Smoods creeks.
Water was running at least gutter-deep in many cities through southwestern Kansas, where roughly a half-foot of water came down in a deluge that started late Monday.
Celebrate HALLOWEEN at THE HARBOUR LITES
$1 Pitcher for
Anyone in Costume
Wednesday, October 31
7:00-Midnight
Show Us A Trick and
We'll Give You a Treat
The Harbour Lites A First-Class Dive 1031 Massachusetts
Animated art collection at Union
Bugs Bunny is their hottest selling item. But Daffy Kay and Wite E. Coyote are the stars of the new Gallery Lainberg, a Cedar Rapids, gallery that specializes in original art from museums.
A touring collection of the gallery's original "cels" is in the Kansas Union lobby today, with works on sale for $5 to $15.
"Cel" is short for Celluloid, a colorless material once used in animated film making that has since been replaced by plastic.
Cels are clear plastic sheets onto which a drawing has been hand inked. They were actually used in the making of films and are one-of-a-kind paintings, Rudman said.
Gallery Lainterb procreates the cels from animated film studios, such as Warner Bros. and Walt Disney Studios. The cells are then custom-matted at the gallery.
"We're a small but energetic organization," Rudman said.
WITH HER BUSHAND, Bert, Rudman began Laintung and animated art collecting four years ago. Since then they have added a mail-order catalog and the
traveling collection, which goes to colleges and universities throughout mid-America.
The KU sale was successful yesterday, the first day of the collection run, Barbara J. Grant, gallery representative said.
She said Bugs Bunny was the most popular item, not only at but also at other locations. The film was based here, Grant plays "Quasi at the Quackadera," an animated film by San Diego artist Mike Dell'Alba.
"It's a strange, not funny cartoon," she said. But she said that many people acquainted with animation were very interested in the film.
RUDMAN SAID THAT although animation hit its heyday in the late '30s and early 40s, there seemed to be a resurgence of interest in cartoons.
although Rudman said they had the finest collection in the United States.
Animation cell paintings are displayed in many galleries and museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Francisco Museum of Art, Rudman said the California Railroad Museum also had purchased some cuts of trains from the gallery.
"Animation is burgeoning. People are tired of watching Saturday morning television with its limited animation," she said.
GRANT SAID that the highest pried cell was a special limited edition painting by Chuck Jones, creator of Bugs Bunny, Diffy Duck, the Roadrunner and Pork Pie.
Gallery Lainzberg is not the only gallery involved in the business of animated art,
The $125 cel features the characters from the new Jones film, "The Return of Duck Doodlers in the 24th and a half Century," and is dated and signed by Jones.
Rudman said that she thought people were interested in purchasing cebes because they were colorful and dynamic and the cebes were valuable collectors' items.
"People can see the benefit of owning a signed seal," she said. "But I also think in people's conscience there's a certain affection for these cartoon characters."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the Kansan staff.
October 31, 1979
Contract needs work
The University should not sit idle much longer in the current flare-up between the Custodian Action Comptroller and the American Management Services.
The committee has alleged that the contract the University has with AMS encourages it to terminate workers, especially those who have seniority, receive the highest pay and are handicapped. The CAC says that by reducing the number of employees—sometimes by harassing the custodians to quit—the AMS has increased its profit margin.
The University has agreed to discuss custodial complaints with the union, Kansas Public Service Employees and the KU lawfully represents the KU custodians.
But this simply is not enough.
As Gary Howe, assistant professor of sociology and a member of the CAC support group, has pointed out, the problem with the United States' University, not the union contract.
Besides, the CAC has been in contact
with the union many times in the past months, especially through individual grievance procedures, with little more detail. With the union is examining the contract.
In fact, the CAC was formed last August to research and document allegations of harassment because the union was not moving quickly enough to block a new AMS contract with the University.
But even more important, questions have been raised by the custodial committee that go beyond union negotiations—questions that concern possible violations of constitutional rights in an organization or formation of an employee organization.
University officials must take the initiative now to meet with the custodial committee to consider a new AMS program before legal action becomes warranted.
Without these revisions, the AMS may come to renew its contract with the University Dec. I having lost the respect it needs to manage.
People in college get used to believing textbooks. We read them and for the most part accept their theories, especially in economics,
The relationship of supply and demand in any given market is clear, the textbooks tell us. Actility in one is always reflected in the other. It's simple.
Textbooks say tight credit is remedy
But that simplicity doesn't make the recent trends in loan interest rates any more palatable.
IN THE PAST three weeks, the prime lending rate for business loans has risen twice and rests temporarily at a record 15 percent.
And recent actions by a Kansas state legislative committee follow the action that the prime lending rate trends usually are visited upon consumer loan interest rates.
Since the beginning of October, the availability of credit has radically decreased for both consumers and corporations, thereby the purchase of a house or a new project.
The Committee on Commercial and Financial Institutions has just finished drafting a bill that would repeal the state's current ceiling of 11 percent on home loan to determine interest rate levels. The interest rates are expected to climb.
Theoretically, this move to repeal the ceiling is an attempt to deal with the money required by the public to own its own, rate fluctuations will stabilize more naturally and quickly than they would under a previous system.
THE STATE legislative committee and the banks that raised their prime lending rates on behalf of the Federal Reserve Board earlier in October. The Fed, also acting on theory, initiated a stringent set of constraints to make it more expensive to lend money.
NEW YORK—I thought it would be a good idea to ask some children what they thought about "their year"—the International Year of the Child, I began by asking them how they were fortunately they were all cute, white, middle-class Upper East Siders whose responses were fairly predictable. So one humdain day in late June I took my tape recorder and list of questions to Central in search of a cross section of city kids.
THOSE WON'T were on the tire swamps or climbing concrete pyramids are hovering around a fall, thin man with a long neck, fresh jeans and a clean yellow undershirt.
I started at a playground across from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and never go beyond it. Sprinkled among the narrow streets in bright French T-shirts was a group of kids who entered out of place, so they were dressed for dirt, scruffy and many of them scarred.
By PAMELA BLAFER LACK N.Y. Times Special Feature
"Yeah, they're their teacher," he told me. He is in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn on a rough neighborhood, very rough neighborhood. This is a special day for them. We're just here till 12:30 — then we're gone in park in the city. Then back to Bushwick.
Ghetto children call for peace hope for chance at good life
ERNESTINE, 13 years old.
"May I ask some of the kids what they think about the International Year of the Child?" I asked.
He chickened. "Yea, hum." You can ask them. But I doubt they ever heard of it, a time I took them off to a corner bench, and some of the things that I learned
Question: Do you know, Ernestine, that this is the International Year of the Child?
Answer: No
Q : What do you think that means?
A : I don't know.
Q: Well, it means that grown-ups all over the world are taking time out this
year to think about what can be done to help children. Now, can you tell me which children you think could use some help? Are there any kids you feel sorry for?
A. : my friends.
Q. : Your friends? Why?
A.: Cause their mothers abuse them
B.: Abuse them? In what way?
A. : Extension cords. Sticks. And tree branches.
Q. : WHAT DO your friends do to deserve this? Are they so bad?
A. : When they mother get angry, she takes it out on them.
A. : The girl's mother and father gets in a argument.
Q: Do you like where you're living?
A: No--too many things.
A. Yeah—yeah.
B. Do you know.
Q. : What's going on?
A. : No—too many things be goin' on around there.
A. : Shootin', trouble.
A. : Smooth , trouble.
Q. : What do you mean?
Q. : What do you mean?
A. Like with my friend
A.: LIKE WHAT I MY FRIEND?
Q.: YOUR FRIEND?
A : Well, my friend—her mother told her to go to the store about 10 a night and they were shootin' out—and she went outside and they shed him.
A: who shot her?
A: Some gangsters.
Q: Is she all right?
A: No--she got killed.
Q: What did that happen?
A: Couple a weeks ago.
Q: What was her name?
A: Christina.
Q: How old was she?
A: Thirteen.
**WHY DO you think there's so much trouble?**
A. : Really, if they would break up the gangsters there wouldn't be no trouble around where I live.
Q. : What kind of life do kids want to have?
Q: What's a nice life to you, Ernestine?
A: When you don't get killed. You could
A. : Anice life
go outside and don't be abuse by your parents.
Jerry 11 years old
Q: How are you enjoying your childhood?
the problem in Kansas will have similar stabilizing results; the textbook tells us so.
A: It's all right — like to have peace,
nausea, cause sometimes be a lot of killin'
around my block. Like somebody
gated hung yesterday around my block.
It may be perfectly logical to repeal ceilings on interest rates, at some point, people will have to take into account the next several months, loans will be increased to obtain, and if the Commercial and Financial Institutes Committee proposal is enacted into law, home loans for recent college students will be nearly impossible to obtain.
A: Yesh. He was gain' in a cellar and then some owner came and unm--hung him on a building. You could see him
A: Yes. I bee tell me his name is Mama. And he was close to me. And when I came downstairs I saw that he was hangin' on the bed. A lot of people a lot of people saw him in my building.
Q. : YOU SAW him? You saw him hanging there?
A. : Yeah. Everybody saw him. He in back a the building, I think they took him down.
Q. : You knew this man?
To tighten the money situation, the Fed has imposed higher reserve requirements on some liabilities and placed tighter controls on the growth of bank reserves.
But if the market readjusts itself and interest rates stabilize, then lending and housing restrictions will become easier to use as we hope that the textbooks aren't lying.
More attention, however, needs to be given to developing an automobile that is more energy efficient but no jeopard-
Q. : Do you think that things could be better?
A: Nope. Because—umm—we live in different directions and you don't know what can be 'built' on in another direction—or why, for instance, killin' around—the 'killin' where you go.
A. : Nah.
O. : No2
mellissa
thompson
This sounds very obscure and complicated to those of us with scant economic knowledge, but suffice it to say that the experts call it an anti-inflationary measure.
Q. : WHAT DO you hope for yourself, for your future?
Although some models such as the Ford Pinto offer relatively good mileage, they are not especially expensive. People are wary of buying these cars because they want a car that won't fail under heavy loads.
Greater emphasis should be placed on the production of cars that have better and
A. I hope that I get a better livin' than I am getting' now.
I thanked the kids, walked back home and sat for a long time. The Year of the Child—it means nothing to the kids from P.S. 147, and why should it? It isn't for them. Benefits won't be held in their honor. Funds won't be raised on their behalf. They won't need, neatly enough, "Third World" enough. I know they know it, and they're scared.
The Fed's rationale, say the experts, is to curb inflation by curbing the rapid ex-
pension or the basic money supply. Quick expansion of this basic money supply the company will cause it puts more money into circulation on its goods and services output can be a boost.
But even at the current mandated figure for American cars, the auto industry is up at arms saying that the goal can't be reached by 1885 because they need more time. But compensation that oil supplies are limited and construction is not doing so has granted without creating more problems.
In an attempt to force automakers to produce fuel-efficiency cars, Congress mandated that manufacturers had to make a minimum fuel rating of 7.5 miles per gallon by 1985.
As gasoline prices rise and oil reserves are drained changes will have to come to the fore in the short term, as well as economical. But the automobile industry still has on schedule the production of the liquids it needs — the laxures it tells us we can't live without, plus an increased 15 miles-per-gallon fuel rate.
THE FED'S rationale also is the state legislative committee's rationale.
dize the public well-being. And this attention needs to be given now.
Back then, that figure might have seemed exorbitantly high. But today, it seems almost too low.
Gas-guzzling cars should go
Pamela Blafer Lack, a writer and actress, will soon have her first child.
MANY FOREIGN automakers already have produced cars that get better than the gasoline-powered Volkswagen. The entire Volkswagen fleet has reached that goal already, with the diesel Rabbit getting a boost.
Most of the American public has come to realize that the country is faced with a serious energy crisis that will have a great impact on its way of life.
Apparently this tightening has been well-received so far by two economic markets. The market has had no adverse reaction to the bank's lending rate and traders on the usually capricious foreign exchange seem to have been excited as a sign of U.S. determination to fend off
In particular, the energy crush already has just hit the motorist. After a summer of warmer weather, consumers lines and higher prices, consumers are more aware of conservation, including ways to reduce carbon emissions.
Apparently the government and the public are willing to make some concessions and allow them to design their design. Now it is up to the automakers to take advantage of these challenges quickly and responsibly.
It is too bad that automakers are not following the consumers' lead.
Perhaps the legislators' attempts to fight
cleaner running engines, such as the diesel or steam engines, and that are more efficient to run, such as smaller and lighter engines.
"It's time for industry and government to stop butting heads on everything and to start working together for the future."
John COLUMNIST fischer
And the government is eager to work with the automakers to produce a more efficient car. For example, the government seems willing to relax some regulations so the automakers can concentrate their efforts on improving the safety rules rather than on meeting the regulations.
TRUE, MANY people are reluctant to buy a car without a comfortable and spacious interior or a gas-guzzling powerful engine, but you can afford it with just pay two or three dollars a gallon for gas.
Realizing the bleak future of the current inefficient car, Brock Adams, Secretary of Transportation dropped on the age of internal combustion engine, as is, and the fact is that we have
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Violators deserve fines
To the Editor·
I have just read John Logan's article in the I have just read John Logan's article in the 24. Kansan was titled "KU parking service losing popularity contest," and Paul Wren, who has been a resident of Kansan. A week or so ago, Bill Combs wrote a letter to the editors in which he expressed his anger about cars being ticketed on West Side streets.
The authors of both the article and the letters admit that cars are being parked in front of our homes, and anger because they need to get tickets. Do any of these people stop to think how we may purchase停车 permits to feel have to wait? Or overrun with cars that don't belong there?
But no matter how the controversy about ticketing revolves, the fact remains that issuing tickets does not solve the problem. I have a friend who is assigned to the Westcoast parking area. If cars were towed away, perhaps the people who park illegally would think twice about breaking rules in the future. One can be lifted off the ground and obeying other laws and regulations as well. Rules are made for everyone and I have no sympathy for the John Logans, Paul Passmans and Bill Combs of the world who because they are cracking these rules.
ANOTHER SUGGESTION would be to move the courtesy booth (no longer in use) from O Zone to the access road behind it. To do this, you must permit it if transportation by private vehicles is so essential. Perhaps if they had the experience not finding parking spaces in their assigned lots they would feel difficult to situation. The shoe would be on the other foot.
I work in Wesco Hall and have a blue park permit which should allow me to park immediately behind that building. I walk across the street at 1:00 p.m. is quite another matter. The stails (including the space reserved for the handicapped) more often than not are filled with cars that are illegally parked behind buildings, our trainers, I presume eat in the cafeteria.
Mr. Lagan is correct when he says that we are not a校校会 school… most of the time, it’s a competition. KU has an excellent bus system which serves the many apartment complexes in town and can also bike or bike to campus; they can buy bus passes (this could be cheaper than paying for a car).
TIME AFTER time I have phoned the Campus police to complain about this situation and have been told that they are waiting for me. My cars "right now". Mr. Combs would have us believe the police have converged on West Campus to ticket violators there before we were on their own backyard. This kind of aggression, not only is frustrating and aggravating, but the inconvenience of searching for an empty spot in an alternate blue zone causes me to go to the campus police point is that I have paid an outrageous amount for the privilege of parking in an authorized area, and that privilege is being ignored. I have no respect for rules and regulations.
Parking is on ongoing problem at KU and one that apparently is not resolvable. Some universities ford an student parking on the campus, and Parking areas several levels high. O Zone and X Zone areas would be ideal for this type of construction. Perhaps KU might
1
Barbara M. Paris
Barbara M. Parts Administrative Assistant Department of English
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Coverage welcomed but accuracy needed
To the Editor:
On behalf of the Libertarian Alliance, would like to thank you for your coverage of our Oct. 23 meeting with guest speaker Milton Mueller (Liberitarian condensation draft policy, Oct. 24). A budding political organization needs all the publicity it can get to grow and thrive and to attract those who reasoned and conscientious political alternative.
I'm sure no one, however, would regard a political philosophy as reasonable if it did not involve national defense. And so I was disappointed the article asserting that the group (Students for Israel) should be at Abbasian Armed Services Day. In fact, as part of its continuing opposition to the draft, SLS has set Nov. 15 "Abasian Service Day," a rather different proposition.
Libertarians hold, as their fundamental principle, that no person or agency has the right to initiate the use of physical force against anyone else. We cannot, try as we do, to govern ourselves. The government assuring enslavement of its own citizens (via the draft) as a protection against the possibility some other government might enslave them (via conquest). And so we, as libertarians, fight an all-out war, all of which brings me to my next point.
The Kansan also reported that "Mussel said an all-village army was not an equitable solution to the draft because it forced a disproportionate number of minorities and poor people to work in unreasonably high unemployment rates."
What Mr. Muller said in full context was that the present make-up of the all-volunteer army, in terms of ethnic groups, was not equitable, because government officials were forced to cause unemployment and so forced a disproportionate number of minority and
poor people to join the army as their only alternative. Given that your reporter believed Mr. Mueller favored abolishing the army, he was wrong. The quoted statement came out the way it did.
Also, Mr. Mueller did not say that "if the United States had not had all-volunteer armed services for the last four years, the United States would have intervened militarily in Nicaragua, and Angola." He said the United States might have so done to the situation that Mr. Mueller's sensible statement into a ridiculously presupose one.
Finally, on a more trivial level, the poor girl's name is Milton McUller, not Martin McUller. Her self-impression is not newnhatstanding. I would again like to thank her, on behalf of the Alliance, for you.
Mike Doffing Wichita Senior
Green Hall needs new statue, not old
To the Editor:
it seems that Elden Tefft '10-foot sculpture of Moses must not only inspire him but also show where he will look daily upon this magnum work of art, but might also simulate the School of Law people to consider complements to complement the new Green Hall
To this outsider, the whole controversy over whether to drape the present sculpture in gold has been long established and planned setting down the hill to the new building seems glaringly out of place.
Surrey the Law School and its farlanging and successful alumni could come up with a more creative plan than quietly waiting for the right opportunity to make the matter, so that on one dark night old Jimmy Green can be sneaked down the hill to see what happens if a duck in a desert in not of the building.
Rex R. Powell Route 5
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
**US/UK/Canada** Published by the University of New York August through May and December and thereafter from November through March. A fee of $40 per month is charged for six months or for six years ($30 per month) if you are a student outside the county. Student enrollments are $45 each and through June, fees are $100. For more information call 212-768-9000.
Postmaster: Send change of address to the University Daily Kanana, Flint Hall, The University of Kannan, Lawrence, KS 69049
Editor Mary Hoenk
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Retail Sales Manager
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Classified Manager
Classified Manager
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 31, 1979
'5
一
C
P
Cleo, a bassett hound puppy, is not in the mood to learn canine manners despite coaxing by his owner Gail VanLoenen. Cleo is in the puppy class at the Lawrence Kernel Club's obedience school.
Canine College
Photos by Barb Kinney Story by Kate Pound
Bob the dog
A Doberman pincher dog inquisitively sniffs at a chowchow pup.
CHAMPION
Linda Decelles commands her dog Sugarbear, an akita, into a show stance.
TRAINING
A miniature colle patiently awaits his owner's return.
By KATE POUND Staff Renorter
Vaguely resembling a tank with turl, one of the students greeted a visitor to the Lawrence Kennel Club's obedience class with a deen, room-filling "Woof!"
"Oh, don't worry. Sugarbear just has to say hello to everyone," Sugarbear's owner, Linda Decceles said.
"How can you tell that's hello and not 'get the hell out of here'?" the startled visitor replied.
Sugarbeer, an akita dog, bounded off to join her fellow classmates, who ranged from powder puff-sized Poodles to gangly Husky pups.
More than 80 dogs that came for classes during the evening were receiving training in the canine discipline to teach canine manners and skills to both owners and pets, said Karen Pelton, a dog trainer.
Many of the pet owners are students from University of Kansas, Felton said. The team's staff teach their pets to the classes because often students have ill-mannered pets that cannot be handled properly.
"We want the public and pet owners to be aware that dogs can be trained and can be fun," Felton said. "We want owners to become friends with their dogs."
The classes begin with the puppy section. Dogs from two to six months old are taught the basics of obedience, Felton said. Their parents teach them how to eat and the stores to own a well-behaved pet.
"Often, the dogs end up at the pound, but if the students learn that their dogs can behave, they can keep them," she said.
Around a ring made of rubber mats, the puppies and their owners walked. Stops were frequent, as pups passed to explore, rest and wrestle with their neighbors. Two husky pups took turns helping each other on the floor and chewing ears.
Dolores Justus led her Schnauzer pup, Baron, around the ring while maneuvering her wheelchair.
"He's the first dog I've ever had, and I
wanted to make sure he grew up well-mannered," Justus said.
Against the wall, a Chow pup, Skarre, watched her classmates. She seemed oblivious to the attention of the human world. A few hours later, she hought haughtily resembling a barrel with its horns.
In another ring, the novice I class, ganny, three-quarters grown dogs went through heeling and sitting exercises. Like children, they trained and played, ignoring their teacher.
In the center ring, a jubilant Great Dane pup lept into his owner's arms after having successfully completed a task.
Praise and petting are the training tools of the Kensal Club, Felton said. Instructors are required to complete several lessons on teaching to teach and all use affection as a reward.
"Good boy! Good fellow!" the owner lavishly praised his pet.
An advanced level Shelie sat anxiously in his owner's feet. When finally given the chance to fight, she slapped a barricade and retrieved a stick. He turned, left back over the barricade. He turned, right back over the barricade.
"That's the way baby," the woman whispered to her pet as it affectionately licked her face. "That's my good dog."
D
A labrador retriever is "dog tired" after an evening at obedience school.
6
Wednesday, October 31. 1979
University Daily Kansan
'Hawks shuffle line-up because of injuries
The KU football team practiced in Allen Field House yesterday because of the rain. Coach Dam Brabble said the Field House conditions certainly weren't the best.
"But we have to practice where we can," he said. 'I'm sure it's raining in Manhattan, too.'
On Monday, KU coaches had said some players were doubtful for Saturday's game against K-8. Offensive coordinator John
Hadi said that David Verser had suffered a head injury during the Oklahoma State game, and doubled for the K-State game. Fambrough said yesterday that Verser's condition had improved.
Hadl also that Walter Mack, running back, Jim Ragdale, guard, and Wayne Capers, running back, should be ready Saturday.
Defensive coordinator Tom Batta said that Jim Zimm, linebacker, and Charles Casey, tackle, should be ready.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports
Levy settles on Fuller
KANAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—For the fourth time this season, the Kansas City Chiefs are going to change starting quarterbacks. But this time it's for good.
Steve Fuller, Kansas City's firstround draft pick out of Clemson last June, will start at quarterback for the staggering day against the San Diego Chargers.
"We want Steve to step in now, with seven games left, and get the value of these games, to grow," said Kansas City Coach Marv Levy.
"It's a move we have to make at this time. We want to establish a sense of direction. We have a young team with a lot of promise. We have a team with a lot of promise to give with this young team."
Veteran Mike Livingston opened the 1979 season at quarterback but was replaced by Fuller in Game 3 against the Houston Oilers.
Fuller then guided Kansas City to three wins in its five games before being replaced by Livingston in Game 8 against the New York Giants.
KZR
106
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1021 MASS.
October Luncheon Special
offer good 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily
Soup and Salad bar Special $2^{25}
reg. price
sua films
Wednesday, October 31
THE THREE PENNY
OPERA
Directed by G.W. Pabst. This curious musical film combines music and sex in a satirical manner, based on the play by Bertil Brecht. Music by Kurt Weill. Geoffrey Lowe.
Thursday, November
Lina Wermuller:
LOVE AND ANARCHY
(1974)
Directed by Lina Wertmüller, with Bennett Hobson, Sara Bassett, Melato. A salty and awkward pearson goes to Rome in the 1930s where he joins a group of hooligans' opportunity in which to kill Benito Mussolini.
Friday & Saturday November 2-3 FOUL PLAY
Directed by Colin Hogan, with Chewy D.C. Hawn, and Burress Meredith Mereleh. D.W. Griffith's classic short, "The Wife," is a bit of the same - one of the first gangster films.
Midnight Movies
Midnight Movie COLLISIONS (1978)
an experimental science fiction "work-in-progress" about alien space travel with an open-ended story. Liz Stallym Lily Tommy, Dan Aykroyd and Glinda RADner; video work by EdEmsh-wiler and choreography by Louis Herman; short films. *Hardware Wars.*
Sunday, November 4
FANTASTIC ANIMATION
FESTIVAL
(1977)
A selection of 14 short works of comedy by a group winning TV, commercials, a 1941 Superman cartoon, films with scores and many stories, and Cat Screws, and much more.
Monday, November 5
A man in a suit and hat with a cigar.
Truffaut:
TWO ENGLISH GIRLS
at
Directed by Francois Truffaut, with Jean-Pierre Leaard Two of the novels are in love with the same man for seven years. Based on two novels by the same author, JULIE JETS AT LEMAN.
The Best in Live Entertainment comes to Lawrence
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
Weekends also in Woodruff at 3:00, 7:00, 8:30 or 12 midnight and Sun. at 2:00 p.m., unless otherwise given up to 1:50 admission. No Retirements.
G. P. Loyds West
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Oct. 31—Jasper
Nov. 2—Treat
Nov. 3—(after the Game) Treat
2 'Hawks lead league
KU's David Verser and Leroy Irvin are tops in two statistical categories in the Big Eight after seven weeks of play.
Verner lead the team in receiving with 16 catches for 398 yards. He already had 47 catches last season, recording record behind Emmet Edwards, who ended the 1972 season with 46 catches.
In the runback category, Leroy Irvin leads in pount returns with an average of 11.8 yards in 21 tries. Irvino returned five pouts for a career-high 120 yards in the 30-17 loss to Celtic, and he led the team to reclaim the league leadership in that department He also ranks 10th nationally.
Jarvis Redwine of Nebraska and Billy Sims of Oklahoma used 200-yard games last weekend to run away from the field in the Big Eight rushing competition.
Redwine used his 206-yard showing in Colorado to put up a fight. He used his 302-yard performance against Iowa State to increase his seven-game average to 111.
The next closest competitor is Redwine's Nebraska teammate I.M. Hipp, with an average of 79 yards.
Redwine also leads the conference in all-purpose rushing with an average of 13.5 yards per game. The Trophy winner Sims is the league leader in scoring with 96 more than 46 more than anyone else in the Big Eight.
KU women cagers scrimmage tonight
The KU women's basketball team will scrimmage Haskell Junior College today at 4:30 at Allen Field House.
Student Legal Services are Available . . .
1 Advice and consultation on any legal matter.
KU Coach Marian Washington said that the hawks had not had a chance to win yet, but that she would ask the Haskell team to set up some kind of zone in the scrimmage.
It will be the Jayhawks' second scrimmage. Last Saturday KU defeated Phillips University 129-76.
212 Carruth O'Leary phone for appointment 864-5665
Wednesday Night Walk In
2) Preparation, drafting and review of contracts, leases and other legal documents.
3) Correspondence and negotiation in an effort to settle cases short of litigation.
4) Incorporation of bonaffine non-profit student organizations.
5) Documents not tolerated.
212 Carruth-O'Leary
Student Senate Offices Student Union 105B (3rd Floor) Time 7:30-9:30 pm Paid for by student Activity fees
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
SUN TRAVEL
mark 9
a lift
waterfront
the charge
parking lot
blue car
shower room
bank entrance
beach bar
walker-edge
SKI THE SUMMIT
Your accommodations, bus transportation, lift tickets, and ski rental for five days are all included in the $250 package.
Can you get accommodations this close to the slopes during Christmas Break? SAU made reservations last May at 5 different condominiums within walking distance to Peak 9 and downstream Brickenbridge. For variety, you can take a shuttle to Copper Mountain, Keystone, or A-Basin.
Hurry in, the deadline is November 9. Avoid the making of hawk your own arrangement. Compare our location, price, and package. You'll skip with SUA.
Schneider Retail
Liquor Store
1610
W. 23rd
(Next to Pizza Hut on W. 23rd)
We now feature the most interesting selection of unusual and hard to get California Wines in the mid-west. Come in and see for yourself!
843-3212
Wednesday, October 31, 1979
Sellout expected Saturday
If you or your friends are planning to go to the KU-Kansas State game this Saturday, and if you don't have your tickets yet, you'd better hurry.
According to KU ticket manager Nancy Welsh, only a few tickets remain for the 77th clash between the two schools.
"We have a limited number of tickets left for the game," Weish said yesterday. "We're down to the low rows and the odds and ends.
"It will be a sellout crowd. We're still selling as long as people wish to purchase tickets."
"I can remember going back to the days of 1978 when I was in Manistan, and 29,000 to 30,000 fans in Lawrence." Fambrough said. "I grew through the years to be a real fan."
The largest crowd ever to see a game in Memorial Stadium was tied at 172,000. It was Game 5 of the Famthough coaching in his first stint at KU, the Jayhawks host the Wildcats 25-18 before
"I think the thing that I remember most about the games is how they have grown to be like these," he said. "We want good for the state. It's come down to where it is like both teams are playing for the state."
This year's game is as crucial as it is coincidental. Both teams are fighting for a
The upcoming contest looks to have the ingredients for a memorable game. Both teams are evenly matched, and both coaches preface a wide open offensive attack.
possible third-place league finish, and K-State Coach Jim Dickey was an assistant to Fambrough from 1971-74.
During Fambrough's 1917-14 reign as coach, his teams played three of the most exciting games between the schools in the 1970s.
After a 31-13 win over K-State in his first year in 1971, Fambridge lost 19-20 the following year despite David Jaynes' 233 yards passing.
In front of KU's largest single game crowd, the 1973 contest in Lawrence was the final game of the game. With the game at 18, defended lineman Dean Zook scored KSATE running Holmman his first collegiate kick. KU subsequently scored a touchdown, winning 25-10.
In Fambright's final year as coach, the 1974 confrontation is best remembered for K-State's impervious scoreboard clock. The team had a history of fans and fans were informed of the time remaining in the game by frequent announcements from the public address
University Daily Kansan
After taking a 20-13 lead on Laverne Smith's 51-yard touchdown run, K-State
On the final play of the game, KState quarterback Steve Grogan was stopped inches short of the goal line by KU safeties Kurt Kniff and Nolan Cromwell.
took control of the ball with 4:06 left in the game and drove to KU's two-yard line.
KU leads the series between the two schools 52-20-4.
Persons who want to play on the Robinson Gymnasium raquett ball courts will have to go through a new sigmip procedure starting at Robinson Gymnasium, said yesterday at Robinson Gymnasium, said yesterday.
New signup starts for racquetball courts
BALTIMORE(AP)--Mike Flanagan, a player with nine snails himself at a loss for words when he was tested that he had been voted the American league's Cy Young Award winner for 1985.
200
Raleigh Puch A.D.
Centurion Bicycles in Stock!
We Repair All Bikes
RICK'S
Bike Shop
(01) 347-8900
Students will have to provide their student numbers and show their ID cards when they sign up, and faculty and staff members will also provide their social security numbers.
But Flanagan, who had a 23-9 record and toped the major leagues in victories, won in a landslide in the balloting for the National Baseball Writers Association of America.
"I prepared myself for the unexpected," the 27-year-old left-hander of the Baltimore Orioles said. "I didn't want a big lewd if I didn't get it."
Ear Piercing
Special!
Of the 28 ballots cast, two from each league on city, Plantation and Rockaway were on the second one, two totaling 138 points under a system allow five points for first place, three for second and two for third.
Flanagan wins AL Cy Young
If you don't have pierced ears- or if you've been thinking about getting a "second pierce"-now's the time to do it! This week only-get your ears
pierced for only $10.50
NAIR LORDS
styling for men and women
1017 1/2 Mass
841-8276
open Mon-Thurs
till 9 by
appointment
New Members
Always
Welcome
Mingles
Disco
An
Intimate
Environment
MINGLE TONIGHT! HALLOWEEN PARTY & COSTUME CONTEST
Mon-Fri 4 pm - 3 am Sat 6 pm - 3 am
Sun 6 pm - 1 am
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th
Sponsored by Kappa Sigma - Gamma Phi Beta
KU OPEN BACKGAMMON CHAMPIONSHIP
Open to all KU Students
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12TH
SATURDAY NOV. 10 FINALS SUNDAY NOV. 11 at The Sanctuary
Tropies awarded to two four finalists
Tournament winner will receive donated BACKGAMMON BOARD and chance to play 1977 World Backgammon Champion BOB SPRERRY
Entry No. 0 $3.00 Entry Deadline Nov. 5
Only 1st 128 entries will be accented
Entry Fee - $8.00 - Entry Deadline Nov 3
All proceeds go to KU MOTOR DYSFUNCTION CLINIC
Serendipity
Special Sale
3 days only — Nov.1, 2 & 3
10% OFF all stock
Name: Phone:
20-60% OFF selected stock
new Arrivals • John Henry shirts, unusual colors & styles
• Dresses by "The Collection"
• Jumpers by "The Collection"
In the Marketplace
Name:
Sponsored by
8th & New Hampshire
843-5335
Holiday Plaza
**ENTRY FEE MUST ACCOMPANY ENTRY FORM.**
Hours
11-6 Tues-Sat
Board of Class Officers
GET A JUMP ON THE WILDCATS!
BEER
BE THERE!
POP
1:00-9:00
Come to the all campus pre-game party at Shenanigans.
Anniversary SALE
---
Friday, Nov. 2 2:30-5:30
RETURN TO BICE HAMILTON
1045 EMERY RD. 843-712-0
- Memberships available at the door.
FOR ALL SOPHOMORES, & JUNIORS
045 EMERY RD.
Dresses 25-50% off
Thursday, Nov. 1st Entire stock on sale
Tops and Shirts 20% off
Entire stock on sale
---
CLOTHES ENCOUNTER
Jeans 15% off
Blazers 15% off
10% off anything else in the store
CE
---
TAKE THEM SOMEPLACE FUN FOR A CHANGE!
MOOSE TROLLS
LIVE MUSIC IS BACK
WITH THE
AT BULLWINKLE'S
Thur. Nov. 1 through Sat. Nov. 3
MOFFET-BEERS BAND
SHOW STARTS AT 10:00 p.m.
NO RESERVED SEATING SO PLEASE COME EARLY!
TRICK OR TREAT DANCE!!! Kansas Union Ballroom
SAT. NOV.3
8PM TO 1AM
prizes for best
costumes
art
FEATURING:
A MONSTER OF A
SOUND SYSTEM
D*J.* TOM IRANZ*
$2.50
Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas
8
Wednesday, October 31, 1979
University Daily Kansan
No Nitrosamines in Coors Beer.
Recently developed laboratory techniques have found nitrosamines suspected cancer-causing agents-in some beers in minute amounts.
There are no detectable nitrosamines in Coors or Coors Light as determined by the United States Food and Drug Administration, using the most sophisticated analytic techniques.
Here's why: Some years ago, as part of a continuing effort to make the best beer possible, we instituted an unconventional malting process. This special process not only creates a better beer, it avoids the possibility of nitrosamines.
Coors has a tradition of bringing innovative methods to the brewing of beer. Always attempting to brew a better, finer, purer beer. Once more, Coors' dedication to brewing excellence has paid off.
Adolph Coors Company, Golden, Colorado. Brewers of Coors and Coors Light.
Wednesday, October 31. 1979
University Daily Kansan
9
Commission approves changes in beer rule
By ANN LANGENFELD
Staff Reporter
After a 2½-hour discussion, the Lawrence City Commission last night approved revisions to the city's cereal malt beverage licensing ordinance.
The discussion centered on refinements of the ordinance's wording and concerns about minors being present in tavernas.
Jim Rimsley, an attorney representing 14 innerv owners who worked with Comcast to assist the owners in asking that the ordinance have a provision that would allow minors to be in a lavern for the first time. Minors will be dances held at the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St., on Saturday after midnight.
The commissioners agreed that the ordinance should allow such events provided no beer was sold or served during the event.
The commissioners also agreed to allow minors without their parents or guardians in taverns at 8 p.m. some tavern owners would be permitted to eat food in their establishments as well as beer.
THE ORDINANCE WAS revised in response to complaints from residents that crowds were gathering outside of taverns
Darrell Stephens, assistant police chief, said he thought a tough ordinance was needed because police officers had no legal rights to arrest someone in the hands of tavern crowds and inmates in taurots.
and in public parking lots. Complaints also had been received saying that minors in taverns were presenting problems.
The city granted a sign variance for a new sign for Emerald City Antiques, 415 N. 2nd St., and vested against the variance because the municipality specifically stated that all new signs were
In other business, the commissioners granted a sign variance to the Magic Mist Car Wash. 1603 W. 6th St., for a sign that is not 8 feet above the ground.
THE VARIANCE WILL allow the sign to hang an extra 4 feet over an unused sidewalk.
Martin Real Estate, 13th and Massachusetts streets, was given a variance for a business sign in a residential building that is not allowed by the city's sign ordinance.
A request for a variance for a roof sign by Kwik Shop, 1714 W. 23rd St., was denied.
About 150 people, ranging from infants to parents, form a line inside the glass door. The crowd buzzes as the line slowly moved closer to the door.
Rv DAVE LEWIS
Beware of werewolf, Dracula
Staff Renorter
Three small children chant, "Haunted house, haunted house, haunted house." Laughter seems to bespinkle everyone's conversation.
Distant screams and strong gusts of wind can be heard along with chipping crickets as the visitor enters the "House."
An unwitting visitor is about to enter the Lawrence Jaycee's haunted house at the Hillcrest Shopping Center.
A thin, slim-lit corridor stretches 20 feet. Thick cardboard walls surround the so-to-be started visitor. At the end of the corridor is a sharp corner. Although it is possible to see beyond the corner, mind imagines a hideous creature lunging out.
But inside the door, the laughter quickly subsides. A chill of the spine and a sense of adventure replace sigging and gathing.
But this corridor is pitch black. Crowds platforms set up on an impossible-to-crawl roof. Guests clap cardboard walls. Groping with his hands, the victim struggles to maintain his
SURPRISINGLY, nothing awaits the helpless visitor except another corridor.
Black threads dangle in the visitor's face as he approaches a dimly lit room. A black tombstone with the inscription "Frankenstein" dominates the room.
As the victim nonchalantly leaves the room, a tall, green-faced creature with outstretched arms blocks the exit.
The creature remains expressiveness, with silver bolts gluing on each side of his neck. Luckily, the visitor dodges the climb, maintaining posture and rushes out of the room.
But little relief is in sight. Still another corridor, this one barricade enough to allow you to be the visitor to the flashing of a strobe light. As he approaches the corner, the flashes become more in-
Upon entering a second room, the victim gazes at crumpled autumn leaves and scattered twigs and branches. No one is in sight.
The visitor focuses his eves on the forest
display, trying to ignore the continual flashing. Suddenly a furry paw grabs him from behind.
THE VISITOR QUICKLY turns, only to find himself staring into a mouth full of sharp, ready-to-chow-down teeth.
This will kill.
The victim fails to catch a glimpse of the wreel's claws as he dashes to the adjoining room.
AFTER ANOTHER dark corridor, the visitor enters the lair of the giant snider.
There he finds an illuminated flight of stairs leading down.
In a cove to the visitor's right, a 10-legged black spider sprawls on its blood-soaked prey. The victim, a man, is trapped in a giant web.
A strobie light creates an illusion that initially fools the visitor into believing that the spider is moving toward him. But the spider is content with its meal.
The chirping crickets and the gusty wind pick up intensity as the visitor rushes out of the snider's lair.
THE BRISK AIR of the October night hits the visitor in the face as he heads down another corridor. The end! As he ap
proaches the open door, he reads a sign,
"Chicken's Way Out."
Like everyone else, the visor moves his mascotte tendencies and follows the blood red arrow indicating where the "brave" people should go.
The visitor enters the execution room. Man clad only in blue-demim shorts holds an ax. The visitor can see two bullying men inside the executioner's brown sack mask.
"GOOD EVENING," the European man says with a classic Transylvanian accent.
The visitor notices that the exit door is only a few feet away. The wind flutters the black cap of the creature, who reveals his protracting fangs.
Adjacent to the execution room is a room with nothing in it but an upright coffin. Inside the brown box, a wax figure motionless. Suddenly, a hand moves toward the visitor deemed maniac, is now full of life and begins to stalk its victim.
The vampire approaches the vampire Closer. And closer. The visitor has no crosses, garlic plants or wooden stakes at his disposal. Only the exit door.
The University Dailv
And the visitor does not hesitate to use it.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
1 dollar or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.50
an additional word $4.00 $4.25 $4.50 $4.75 $5.00 $5.25
---
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 9 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 9 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 9 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UB business office at 844-5368.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
lling wooden crates. Herb Altenbernd. tf
The Hole-in-the-Wall, selling fresh fruits and vegetables. Altoa untreated, and raw peanuts have a variety of dry beans, rice, yellow and white popcorn, honey, and sorghum. Every Sunday
ing wooden crates, Herb Altenbernd. If
SO YOU WANT TO
BE ON T.V. E.
There is a show at 11:30 p.m.
of JOHN HAMMond
at THE NIGHTHAWKS
Thursday night
Dancehouse at
8:00 - show at 9:00
Tower
Opera House
Call for concert info 842 9500
PAPR ACK SALES are down at 15% nationally
PAPR ACK SALES are too damn low at J. HODGEO
SOLDLEER
price always have been and always be
price always have been and always be
Come in and browse at 1601 Mass. 841-
Watch for truck parked at 9th & Indiana. Home
watchdog, 210-536-7588, watchdog.com.
Ice-cold in-the-wall, sink from fresh fruits and veg-
tables in the shell. Twelve Roast of yams on dry ban-
kard, in a pitcher. Pump up popcorn, honey, and surmum
every Sunday.
Students interested in study abroad in Israel,
meet with Professor Greenbaum of the Hebrew University for lunch, November 1, Kansas Union, 3rd floor, Cork II, noon-2 p.m.
Get a jump of the Wildcats. Come to the pregame show, "FOR ALL FRESHMAN, SOPPONIAMES FOR ALL FRESHMAN, SOPPONIAMES FOR ALL FRESHMAN," $10 members, $15 non-members, $18 members. CARE THAT! Sponsored by Board of Class Offenders! Sponsored by Board of Class Offenders!
FREE FILM, OCTOBER 31. 7:00 p.m. Dyche Audition,
"Princess Yang Kee Pet"—About a famous Chinese Princess. Sponsored 10:30-16:31
EASY EXTRA ENTRY $500/1000 stuffing envelopes-Guaranteed. Send Bend self, addressed stamped envelope To: DEXTER ENTERPRISES 3039 Shirne PI. LA. CA 90007 11:20
Employment Opportunities
ENTERTAINMENT
DISCO TO GO. offers quality and reliability not only found in mobile playback systems but also in portable lighting, and experienced djs jackets with national branding. Hotel rates include delivery, setup, and transportation. 101 Killeen Lawrence, Kansas 68444 With access to hundreds and hundreds of additional clients, you can deliver.
Pyramid Sounds and Owl Lighting; commercial lighting and dances Experienced Dj Jackie with the Experience DJ Jackie with the light show in town. Sponsored by KLZR and light show our competition Give us a mail at 841-1260.
Its Wednesday and Merryman's Dell Night at the lakes, there $1 pitches and $2 dress betw
7-10 p.m. Come in and join the parade, with the horses ship together at The Harbour in 10-31
101 Mass
TONIGHT in A hallway set with PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND and THE FOUR FRIENDS only $3.00 at the door
Wear a black upfit
Contume @ 80 show @ 9.00 and win.
Lawrence Opera House
Call for concert info 619 6930
FOR RENT
TIMBER LEDEG APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
1 bedroom, monthly rent of $235;
1 month rent free on 1 bedroom, 1
room apartment. Fully furnished.
KU, large window, double bath,
parking. Large w/outdoor patio.
Fare will apply. Fare will apply.
Fare will apply. Fare will apply.
For appointment call 824-4444 or see at
www.timberledeg.com
Rooms with private kitchens. To close
Phone 843-3579. ff
FOR SALE
Nainish Hall has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-659 any time of the day.
1-3 bedroom apartments, houses, mobile homes,
room near KU. Possible rent reduction for
labor. Call 841-6254 or 842-4865.
10-31
All Frontier Ridge Apts. 15%月 rent free. $50 security on all 1 bedrooms.
For nubilees. One bedroom, apt. at Park 25. $215/
month + gas and electricity. On bus route. Call
842-3085. Keep trying.
1 room furnished apartment, private entrance,
private bath, all utilities paid, close to campus.
463-501 after 5.
1 bedroom bed, close to campus. Call 845-702-
7 p.m.-12 p.m. or 843-2736, from 1 p.m.-10 p.m.
Lease 5 bbmr. older house. South Mass. $290
month, avail. 1st Call: 843-0570, 843-6011.
Space available in home. 824 Ohio $47 mo. + 1/2
utilities. Call 841-6755.
SunSpezs—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Max. 841-3770. TP
FOR SALE
Sublease efficiency apt. five min. from Union.
All utilities paid. Monthly spraying for insects.
$130/month. Call 841-0753 after six. 11-2
V-W Rabbit…76–56,000 miles with 2—anwetires,
$2600. 843-518-7
10-31
Alternator, starter and generator specialist,
Parts service, and exchange units, BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9600, 3900 W. ch. th.
WATERMATTER MATTENERS, $9.99 • 2 year guarantee.
MATTENER BASEMENTS, $14.99 • Western Civilian Notes. Now on Sale Make use of them to item them up! As study guide, 2 for Champlain Analyst of Western Civilian; available now at Art of Watermatter.
730 Acoustic Bass Amp with cabinet, $275; Gibson
Triumph Bass Guitar, bass set; TEAC 2340
Tape Deck, $60. Call 841-1816 for 5 p.m. 10-31
HOLMES, 200 watt guitar amplifier, solidstate head with 4 $10^{\circ}$ speaker box. 842-8501 ask for Pedro.
CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! Puch Mopeds. Rick's Bike Shop, 1033 Vermont. 841-6442. TF
Close to campus 2-bedroom apartment apartments at Stadium Apts. 11th and Indianapolis
A real bonus for $16,000, central air, Dashless
electric, dual-core pool heaters, bluetooth wipe-
ting, smart TV, WiFi hotspot, home theatre,
bedroom, home office, multi-family
bedrooms, two-bedroom apartments, home poly-
lithium bathrooms, one-bathroom apartment,
Ohio, 833-261 or evenings, 842-987 or $812-
950 or 161-987 or evenings, 842-987 or $812-
950.
1975 Chrysler Cordoba PS, PB, AC, crutcher leather interior, buckets, AM FM stereo, good gas mileage, great shape. Call 887-6232 or 887-12-
Frontline Kit, medium women's down ski jacket.
Will sell as or ready-made. Abbey, 843-2695, 11-2
1973 Canara LT, 5700 rules, ps, pb, mag wih
mires. Must sell. N48-7857. 11-2
JVC JR-SZ102 receiver, JVC SK-700 speakers,
JVC QAJ-AZT turblet, machine M-18 cassette deck, after 7:00 p.m. p41-1378, best offer. Must sell. 11-2
One United Airlines 50% discount coupon. $40.00
Call 864-6039 or 842-3185. 12-1
70 Opel, 67 Charger, Engine, engine tires good.
Package deal, $500. Call Mike after midnight
864-583. Together makes dependable transportation
11-2
Kennedy amp., excellent condition—$120 and
quality Lyric speakers—$80. Call 843-5086 for
more info. 11-2
1965 Triumph 500 motorcycle $200.00. A do-it-yourself kit in 1,000 easy-to-assemble parts. 864-
3940 or 842-1723. 11-9
PCA SA-6000i amplifier 30 watt rms at $1.5
lid. Like new, $80, KLH $2, two-way speakers
watts capacity for $6; the pair for Bamp and
speakers together for $83, KLH $128, or $84-127
1973 Star Custom mobile home, 12 X 70, 3 bedroom, 11; baths, skirted and 2 anchored. Call 842-3944 after 6 p.m. 11-1
HELP WANTED
ANTI-NUKE T-SHIRT, "STOP POPULATION GROWTH-SUPPORT NUCLEAR ENERGY"
High quality panels. Sensitive polymer, only polyurethane.
Boxes 492, North Newton, KC 61711-15, Alliance Box, 492, North Newton, KC 61711-15
One United Airlines half fare for sale.
Best offer. Call Mary, 843-5419. 11-5
Extra rate 1978 Bendix mobile home 14 X 60
Extra rate 1978 Bendix mobile home 14 X 60
carpartment, skirted 811-530-390
carpartment, skirted 811-530-390
JBL SPEAKER3 15" woofers, compression wiers,
in cabinets, perfect for PA. disco, $750.
(915) 423-6858.
Kenwood KR-9400 stereo receiver, excellent condition and spec. 843-3330. 11-1
Pioneer RT 707 reel to reel tape deck, 7 inch
cable, 12" x 6", Calipers, Best call Cover 84: 385-837, 14-6
control, only remote in control,
condition, only remote in control.
1979 Cauro Berlinetta, PS, PR, AC, ABM742
casette, spoker, poiler-trace, 4 speed $4700, 83-10
Keep trying.
Vamaha CR1021 receiver 100 watts per channel,
yr warranty. Ixce condition. Best offer. Dl-
84890356978028169887.
FOUND
United Airlines half-price ticket. Call 843-5277
after 7 p.m.
1980 Tranam-dealer deck, only 750 m², beautiful new color, completely loaded with T-top and performance pkg list $10,$18.22. will this week only $659.00. Phone $163.53-11-2
10 speed bike in excellent condition. Priced to
sell, call Bruce 842-8772. 11.6
Black and white 12" tv. good condition, good price. Call before 4 p.m. 843-4533. 11-2
HELP WANTED
MEN: WOMEN; JOBS: CRUSHERSII SAILING EXPEDitions! GOOD (experience) GOOD (good job)
FOR APPLICATION INFO-JOBS TO: CRUZERWORLD 135, Box 60129, San Diego, CA 95066.
Female, gray stripped tiger cat 1 yr. old. White ear, white mask. Elevated 82-88/30-31
Found AM-PM, Call and identify 841-239-269
Calculator found near Nailett Hall Call 841-239-269
Set of kgs, three weeks age. On leave. Ohio. Several set of car keys included. Call 841-239-269
Set of keys, three weeks ago. On lawn at 1419
of set of car keys included. Call
0654 to identify.
Bureau of Child Development. University of Kansas Duties involve developing and evaluating administrative policies for a community program Bachelor's degree in behavioral science, behavior therapy or education ability to work well in cooperation with others and experience in working with community programs travel between Lawrence and Kansas City and $1,000 depending on qualifications Contact Achievement Place Project. Bureau of Child Development. Kansas City (913) 844-3646. Deadline for application date November 15, 1979. Bureau of Child Development. University of Kansas Duties involve developing and evaluating administrative policies for a community program Bachelor's degree in behavioral science, behavior therapy or education ability to work well in cooperation with others and experience in working with community programs travel between Lawrence and Kansas City and $1,000 depending on qualifications Contact Achievement Place Project. Bureau of Child Development. Kansas City (913) 844-3646. Deadline for application date November 15, 1979. Bureau of Child Development. University of Kansas Duties involve developing and evaluating administrative policies for a community program Bachelor's degree in behavioral science, behavior therapy or education ability to work well in cooperation with others and experience in working with community programs travel between Lawrence and Kansas City and $1,000 depending on qualifications Contact Achievement Place Project
Civil Engineering Department of the University of Missouri, St. Louis as assistant professor of civil engineering and teach both undergraduate and graduate courses in the area of civil engineering computer软硬件 development on higher level software supervision, supervision, and dynamic finite element analysis in non-linear and dynamic finite element analysis, 1960 to 1980 to Dr. Stuart J. Kolek Department of Civil Engineering, Kansas University, Kansas City, Oklahoma. An affirmative action committee member.
旺 waitresses, 21 years of age. Full and part-time positions available. Knowledge of drinks preferred. Must be neat and like people. Call for app. after 11 a.m., 843-904. 10-31
Married student wanted for part time help to change tires and deliver heavy appliances. Must meet appraising and have mechanical aptitude. Apply at Ray Schoenke's 921-112- Lawrence, KS
Barmaid needed. 21 years of age. Experience preferred; but not necessary. Part-time help available. Call for appointment after 11 a.m.
843-904-96
10-31
School Aid wanted to Assist quadruple student
25 hours per week. Must be able to type
withdrawal with library work and have English
language proficiency. Call 843-1042 or 843-1011.
11-2
Part-time job for dependable person. Some me-
chanical knowledge helpful. A-1 Rental, 2900
Iowa.
Warehouse Assistance. 7-20-11-38 a.m. mon. Fri-Mon drive stick-tack shift or more heavy lifed, 50-15 bc. Off work if needed. Personal OIP Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer
NOTICE
LOST
Ladies gold Omega watch missing since October 3. large reward. 884-1518, sentimental value. Please return. 11-2
MISCELLANEOUS
THEISS BINDING COPYING - The House- on Ubica's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for thesis binding and copies in Lawrence. Let us at 838 Mab or phone 842-7610. To order, call 842-7610.
PERSONAL
Arts and Craft Fair, Nov. 10, 10-44. Lawrence Community Nursery School, 645 Alabama, 11-5
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5644.
If
If you're looking for a bar with cheap beef good potato soup, maybe you should probably people you like. The Harbour Lifetrain, a ship and pari ferries at TGIF, now serves up the best potato soup in Harbour. Get your ship together at The Harbour Get.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-anbsp; up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Specialized in pregnancy appointment: 9 am to 5 pm (132) 6432-4810. 10th St., Corkland Park, KS.
It's nowing today in Colorado! Wish you were there? Great skiing is awaiting for you at the Summit. Contact S.U.A. Travel, 864-3477 11-2
Come to the all new MAD HATTER Happy Hour
4 9 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Open 7 noon-11
pm.
Veterans for employment assistance contact Camp
pus Veterans--118 B Kaisan Union, 8644-4878.
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal
Aid--8644-5564.
Don't miss your chance!
Think Snow! Skis Alpine, Copper Mountain or
Bricklehead. Cail Brad, 841-6700 10-31
GCA COUNSELING ASSISTANTs through Head-
counting. Bricklehead, 841-6700
AETT gives you the chance to build a fraternity.
Don't miss your chance! in.31
If you have a local attorney, Call Legal Aid-864-5564.
Want to have a bally? Just for fun—Come play
Twelve. No tournament Thursday, Nov. 11-
90—Tournament info also.
Give yourself for Christmas, a portrait from
Shooting Gallery, Shooting Gallery Photographs.
TENNIS AND REQUESTBALL PLAYERS Are your requests ready for the indoor session Call David 646-282-3288 Member Professional Stilts players Reasonable on good rules and playtime Reasonable on good rules and playtime
It's term paper time. Do you know that the going rate for having a 50 page term paper typed is nearly $50? How many term papers will you have to turn in the next 14–19
Leon What was that they say? You grow better with age? I think they may be right. Yep! Okay.
GRIDDER `IRL'S` you were great. Let's do it again this Sunday Love, the Glitter Guts.
Impress your profs or impress your students.
We've got an IBM electric executive typewriter for $350. Call now, 914-658-194
Wanted. Responsible and liberal male or female roommate to share two bedroom apartments $80.00 until pdl, close to downsway and 11:5-6.
Call 842-1318, keep trying.
PERSONAL
Two bits, four bits, six bits, a buck. Wee like the GRIDDER GIRL'S 'cause they like to win.
11-2
MONSTER SOUND SYSTEM for monster dancer!
Gay Services presents the Trick or Treat Dancer!
Sale price: $9.95 p.m.-1 a.m., Kansas Union Ballet Theater for most outragent comedies. Dynamite music.
Get back to some good-time, hard-core rock-
n-tell with COBALT ROSE. Nov. 1. Off-the-Wall-
Hall, $1.
**GRIIDER GBLL:** You took the bolls by the horns and came into like sliding stars. More time, next Sunday in the stadium. Have you耐烦 for you. Let it Do. Leo COUD, GLI.
GAY SERVICES OF KANSAS General meeting on gays and lesbians treatment of the Kansas Union. Truck or Treat on recognition registration status; Campus Safety recognition registration work; wine and cheese party.
Halloween costume wigs for sale, one Dolly Party custom style, all real cheap. Call Sally 84+.
3284 10-11
Show your colors! KKK disco party at the Wheel. Bring your own cross J. Crow. 11-2
SERVICES OFFERED
IMPROVE YOUR GRAIDS! Send $10 for your 268-page catalog of college research. 10,202 facts first! BD 2093C; Los Angeles, CA. (2015). (213) 477-8232. ff
**EXPERT TUTORIALS** MATH 600-128* call 600-125. *MATH 115-700* call 600-126. *STATISTICS* (call courses) call 643-906-90 CIS 100-600 call 643-906-90 ENGLISH 100-600 ENGLISH and SPANISH call 833-707-707
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uhrer Quick Copy Center. Ali's availability from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 838 Mam.
BANDS, SONGWRITERS record your songs at
Mariack Record Studio. Call 841-9923. 11-9
BUYING LIFE INSURANCE? Check our rates and values first. Call Wayne, 842-6044, 842-2092
11-9
Experienced Teacher of English As A Second Language would like to tutor foreign persons (any age) learning English. Call 841-7249 11-11
**Women's Health Care Service Confidential health care for women with unexpected pregnancies** Allergy services to 20 weeks as an outpatient free pregnancy testing (Sherman 648-5108, Wishna
Classes really a pain in the neck? We give good backrubs. Cheap! Hyperspace, Ini. 841-382-11-2
Quality repair work performed on most types of consumer electronic equipment by experienced technicians. TV, tape player, cassette tapes. Fast reliable, reasonable rates. Call 843-1252, after 5:00.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF
I am familiar good typing. Peggy. 842-4766.
PROFESSIONAL TERMINAL SERVICE. M41-4980. TPK Editor Format. IBM Picka Teach. Quality work. Help with customer feedback when welcome editing, layout. John Bajer. 824-2172.
Journyman typographer. 20 years typing,typing experience. 4 years academic typing,disseminations for 10 universities.Latest Selective equipment. 84-1644.TP
Experienced typist - Quality work, reasonable rates. Call Beverly at 843-5010. TF
Experienced Tertm-term papers, theses, meishe,
spellings, corrections, and spelling spell-
corrected. 863-5554 Mrs. Wright.
Experienced盔钸–thesis, dissertations, term papers, mine. IBM correcting selectrice. Barb 864-3128, email 822-310.
I do darned quick typing. Unser 00pp only.
Call Ruth, 843-6438, after 5 p.m. 11:17
TYPING
MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, terga
graphics, editing, self-correct Selecteet. Call Elim or Jeannann. 841-2122. I-1-5
Experienced typist Quality work, IBM Correcting Selective Refferences available. Sandy. 864-4904. Evenings. tf8-8818.
Will type papers and book reviews, etc. Call
811-6846
11-2
TYPING- Quick, accurate, and cheap. Call 841-764 late days and weekends. 11-7
I type term papers, thesis, dissertations, resume,
letters, etc. Reasonable rates. Call 842-3322 11-5-
norms or evenings.
Quality typing at competitive prices—No job too big or too small. 842-2756. 11-6
WANTED
Wanted; Female roommate Nov. 1 to share comfortable upstairs apartment. Close to Campus and Downstream. $83.00 m. Util. pd. Call $42-0600 Keep trying.
ROOMMATES. Naismith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8593 any time of the day, ti
Roommate to share excellent 3 bedroom duplex
Finished basement, bakerstreet, waher & dryer
Reasonable rent and 1/3 utilities. Call 641-5829
**Primary roommate wanted to share 4 bedrooms**
Roommate will be a new resident of Burlington $81.25 + 1 utilities; Burlington $82.50 + 1 utilities; Burlington $82.50 + 1 utilities.
**Women roommate wanted Rent. $88.00 plus 1**
Roommate will be a new resident of Burlington $81.25 + 1 utilities; Burlington $82.50 + 1 utilities.
**Diane Dane $81.33 - Bishfield Heath Agreements**
PSCHAISTRHE AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICE
Pepa Health Center, 560 W. 38th St.
6th, 6th, Tampa, FL. KS Phone: (912) 293-5380
E-mail: pepahealth@ppeahealth.com. An equal opportunity employer.
for senior business major. Call 841-5595. 10-31
Part-time work to teach 2-4 weeks in youth program. Interested applicants contact Ballard Community Center, 842-7029. O.E. H-12
Christian female to share house with 3 other females. $94/month + 1/2 utilities. Call 843-3629
Roommate needed to share nice 2 bdm. duplex.
$130 per month plus %1 of low utilities. Call Lisa
at 864-4141 before 5:00 or 861-1709 after 5:00. 116-691-
Artist, desire character and/or portrait artist for work on weekends, needs sample of work and time required. 11-2
Roommate(s) Wanted Immediately! to share 2 bedrooms apt, own bedroom and bath. 1' rent + 1/3 utilities, close to campus. Call #82-2156. 11-6
Customer, service representatives, part-time,
must be able to work Saturdays and late afternoons during the week. See Mr. Ripley, Lawrence Cleaner, 129 New Hampshire. 11-6
Free room on Redhill Lane busine for evening babysitting/housekeeping for linguistics grad with 3 year old. No smokers, 842-1775. 11-2
I am broke! Need a 2nd and or 3rd roommate for Jayhawk Tower's att. $150.00 must be female. For more info, call auric Fiat at 843-8755. 11-7
Wanted immediately! Female roommate for nice
bath. bfm: admits; utilizes, rests, deposit $1500
Male roommate wanted for J.H. Towers, roommate got married, need replacement. Call 841-8156, 841-1688 11:6
Wanted to share duplex. Furnished, close to
pu rent, utilities. Call 841-4631. 11-13
YOUR TICKETS ARE ONLINE
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DONT.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail this form with check or card in order to Flint Hall. Use its below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Wednesday 5 pm
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
1
time
$2.00
.01
2
times
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.02
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:___
additional words
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3
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4 times
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DATES TO RUN;
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KANSAS CLASSIFIED EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
10
Wednesday, October 31, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Recreation ..
From page one
the league. The Johnson County Parks and Recreation Department has provided a junior high school gym to play in.
The Med Center student activities office also is searching for recreational facilities to replace the Regents Center.
"We are scraping for a place now and then, but we don't want to offer but we just not any place student can use on a regular basis." Dorothy Siebenlist, student activities secretary,
www.studentactivities.org
SIEBENLIST SAID students had been going to the local YMCAs to swim, but memberships were expensive.
'For $79 a year a student can swim once a week. And if they want to use the facilities
Students also were going to the Jewish Community Center and an area health space to use their facilities, she said.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
all the time it's $240 a year, which puts it out of range for most students," she said.
"We're having our best luck with the Johnson County Parks and Recreation Department and also the YMCA. Students in town because they are cheaper," she said.
Sebenlist said the problem with off-campus recreational facilities was one of inconvenience.
"We need somewhere that they can go to quickly because they just don't have all that much time and not everyone has a car," she said.
On Campus
TODAY: NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will hold a lunar event at the Kansas Union. WEDNESDAY FORUM presents Louis Dupee, American Universities Field Staff, at 11:45 a.m in the ECM Center, 1092 Owatonna College, LECTURE HALL, at 11:30 a.m. by 11:45 a.m. be present at 4 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. THE SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS will attend at 4:00 p.m. in Room 320. The Society of Physical Sciences on search on Crystals Using Optical Methods."
-KANSAN-
Police Beat
A FIRE BROKE OUT in a crush chute in the south wing of McColm Hall last night, according to a fire report. The fire, which was extinguished by the automatic sprinkler system by the time firefighters no longer had no damage, the report said. KU Police Call Mullens said a book of matches was found on the sixth floor near where the fire began.
TONIGHT: Albert Gerken will present a CARLILON RECITAL 7. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in the Union Hall, 8th Floor, Princeton University, titled, "An Analysis of Fictional Discourse," will be at 6 in the Room Forum of the Union. THE UNIVERSITY SINGERS will present their debut at 8 in Swarthout Rockle Hall in Murphy.
TOMORROW; The MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM at the University of Kansas College of Health Sciences will show a film, "In a Medical Environment," in the Auditorium Hawwell, AURH GENERAL ASSEMBLY will be on 7.15 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. The GAY SERVICES OF KANSAS will hold a general meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. THE GER-INCESS will住 at 4:30 p.m. in Wusco West.
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
THE POLICE ARE COMING
Lawrence Opera House Nov.4th Buy Your tickets now for this great Reggae-Rock Show
Dana's open at
8:00 o'clock with 9:00
am closing.
Tawnes House
Thursday night
MALE DANCER NIGHT
at
flamingo
The FLAMINGO
women only from 9pm-1am
cover charge $1 includes free beer until midnight
members & guests welcome
501 N9th
(memberships available)
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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HP-33E
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MPH 31E $41.95 MPH 38E $94.95
MPH 31E $57.95 MPH 38L $94.95
MPH 33E $72.95 MPH 38C $94.95
MPH 33C $98.95 MPH 67 299.95
MPH 33D $98.95 MPH 67 299.95
MPH 37E $98.95 MPH 92 299.95
MPH 37E $98.95 MPH 92 299.95
T1-25 Slim Scientific...$12.95
T1-35 Slim Scientific...$12.95
T1-Scient. 2 memories...31.95
T1-Scient. 2 memory...31.95
T1-SBC Advanced Programmable...94.95
T1-59 Card Programmable...219.95
PC-100C Primer for SBC-59...149.95
PC-100C Primer for SBC-59...149.95
Buns Analyst I Financial...174.95
Buns Analyst I Financial...174.95
Buns Analyst II Financial...35.95
MBA Advance Financial...57.95
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Also Cato, Sharp, Stainless Steel...94.95
HEWLETT-PACKARD
**FAST DELIVERY GUARANTEED.** Use canisters check or money order and we will ship you at 48 hours (subject to availability). Add $3.00 shipping charge. Call: residents add 6% tax. (Visa and MC accepted on all orders). Contact us for a new view in factory cartons, complete with standard accessories and locks.
Credit Card Buyers
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For technical college Sales*
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Mail orders to:
TAM'S Dept 147
3303 S. Hoover St
Los Angeles
California 90007
tam's INCORPORATED
(213) 744-1444
Serving Students' Needs Since 1946
Research awards give students chance to pursue their interests
By LYNN ANDERSON
James Thiele wanted to look at the uses of Velcro in hot air ballooning.
Staff Reporter
Juliha Wang saw a need to investigate cell migration in chick embryos.
Ian Armstrong was caught up in the stripe orientation of Japanese guillot
And Theresa Towner thought she might annotate the James Joyce collection at Spencer Library.
A broad spectrum of concerns, but one thread made kindred souls of the UK KU Undergraduate Research Awards Program (UGRA), which came up with money so the interest in balloons, embryos, quail and rabbits is a constructive use for the students and the upstarts.
UGRA WAS CONCEIVED in the 1890s to complement the National Science Foundation program, which promoted undergraduate research in the natural sciences. It was primarily in the fine arts, the humanities and the social sciences. When the NSP program ended, UGRA expanded, emancipated science of and科学 has fanned ever since.
Jack Weller, director of the College Honors Program and assistant professor of English at Mesa, said he succeeded "because undergraduate research at KU is a tradition, more so than a college."
Funded through the Greater University
Fund, UGRA must apply each fiscal year for its operating money.
Therefore, Weller said, "We must be able to justify the program as making a genuine contribution to the research mission of the university. We need to offer good educational experience. It must also turn out original, independent, high quality research that benefits the entire Universi-
RESEARCH, WELLER SAID, is broadly construed and any creative project can be funded if the student meets the application requirements and survives the stiff competition.
Research awards are made for the spring and summer terms. W winners of the summer awards work on their projects. They don't take classes or hold outside jobs. In return UGRA provides $800, given, according to Weller, "to buy the student's books, to invest in toward living expenses and any research supplies not available at KU, he said.
VIN
The spring awards are more modest because the winners continue to carry a class load and therefore undertake smaller-scale projects.
The competition is rigorous. In a typical summer, 48 students apply for 15 available awards. The job of picking out the best and brightest is in the hands of an ad hoc committee of faculty members. The committee consists of 16 candidates carefully selected to include the entire range of disciplines represented in the proposals, Weller said.
MEISNER -
MILSTEAD
RETAIL LIQUOR
FEATURING
FINE IMPORTED AND
CALIFORNIA WINES
AND
10 VARIETIES OF
COLD BEE'
842-4499
IN HOLIDAY PLAZA
(2 DOORS WEST OF KIEF'S)
Kick off with
CARLIN
POTTERS PAVILLION.
NOV. 3RD
(before the)
game
11-12:00
BAD FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEES
Julie's
ANY SPAGHETTI DINNER . . . $1.99
Julie's is offering a very generous helping of our famous spaghetti that we know will satisfy the heaviest of appetites. A complete Spaghetti Dinner or your own meal will be served at $30.
- Spaghetti with Meat Sauce Reg. $3.50. NOW $1.99
* Spaghetti with Marinara Sauce Reg. $1.09 NOW $1.99
a layer of Mozzarella Cheese Reg. $3.40...NOW $1.99
MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
Select Your Favorite
Spaghetti with Marinara Sauce covered with
Javadam Marinara Chocolate Cheese $19.90 - NOP $19.90
Julies
CHEMISTRY
AND CRAFTSMAN
WORKSHOP
Hours:
Monday to
Midnight
Monday to
Sunday
11 a.m. to 1 a.m.
Saturday
1 a.m. to
Sunday
11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Sunday
a layer of Mozzarella Cheese Reg. $3.40 . NOW
Julies
3218 Iowa, Lawrence Kansas
862 7170
© CLIF Region 1979
What is required is that each student *must* the backing of a sponsoring faculty member (the faculty in your blood that they're committed to overseeing the project and giving the necessary funding).
ALTHOUGH MOST AWARD winner does not stipulate that he not a stipulation of the program one recently did research in Europe on multinational corporations. Another did a research in the United States.
A valuable bonus to the awards is that winners often use their expertise as the basis of advanced study. Weller and his associates, Warmer Morse and Martha Gunzner, were petition winners. Many have attested that their UGRA research was "directly relevant" to master's or doctoral work. Often the researchers' reports are published in scholarly journals or their creative work. Others offer professional exhibits and performances.
applications will be available this week for the spring competition and early next semester for the summer competition. Information is available in 201 Nunakerem.
Artificial creation of life is no longer a matter of if, but when Only one question remains . . .
WHO SHOULD PLAY GOD?
NATIONAL GYMNASTIC
Ted Howard, co-author of the bestseller "Who Should Play God?" will speak on ethical, social and political problems raised by human genetic engineering.
7:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 5 Little Theater (GEB 217)
Johnson County Community College College Blvd. at Quivira Rd. Overland Park, KS. 66210
Tickets $2 in advance
$3 at door
Calf 888-8500, ext. 408
CCC
Interpreters will be available for the Hearing Impaired
STEREO EQUIPMENT
Discount on over 40 brands.
Full Warranty, Professional Consultation
and Free Set Up Service.
Call Ed 843-2315
KLZR
106
Celebrate HALLOWEEN
at
$1 Pitchers for
Anyone in Costume
Wednesday, October 31
7:00-Midnight
Show Us a Trick and
We'll Give You A Treat
Love a First-Class Dive
THE HARBOUR LITES
he Harbour Lites A First-Class Dive
VISIT YOUR CAMPUS GIFT SHOP
THE MUSEUM SHOP
SPECIAL!
Printing Plates—50* each
WeaverS gm
Look for us ...
In the Museum of Natural History next door to the Kansas Union
Open:
Mon-Sat 10am-5pm.
Sun & Holidays: 1:30pm-5pm
Serving Lawrence
Since 1857
Shop Thursday Til 8:30 P.M.
KU
LAYNHAVES
Show your KU pride—wear these 100% cotton straight leag jeans with KU JAY-5 in crimson jay-on blue blazer. Rumble Seat signature on back. Sizes 3 to 15.
NEW ARRIVALS!
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