I will do it THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. 90. No.104 Both basketball teams fall flat The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, March 3. 1980 See stories and pictures back page KAKI BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff Telephone line KANU's 7th annual Campaign for Excellence ended late Saturday night after a week of seeking contributions from the station's listeners. Frank Baxter, Topka junior, plugs an ear in order to hear a contributor other noise in the room. The fund drive. conducted to help finance the purchase of special equipment for the station, easily surpassed its $30,000 goal, according to Richard Stuck, director of development for the station. See related story, page eight. SenEx urges tightening of financial aid standards By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter Expressing concern that the office of financial was not enduring some illegally required changes, Senate executive committee Friday forwarded tightier financial and standards to the agency. The report from the Committee on Financial Aid to students said that the 150 student teachers and 80 semester students was lower than the standard set for admission of juniors in the program. The standards, proposed by the Senate, require students to be proficient in math and would require most students receiving financial aid to have a cumulative 2.0 grade point average after their fourth semester at the university. The current standards, which allow students nine semesters to achieve a cumulative 2.0 grade point average, were optimized by SenEx members as being too low. "It is a bloody disgrace that the standards have been so low," John Bremner, SenEx secretary, said. "It seems strange we would have had no nurses who have 24 hours and only a 12-hour nurse." than the 2.0 grade point average required for junior standing in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the report said. Beginning in August, it will also be lower "I'm worried about problems students face," he said, "Coming here is a big change for a lot of students." But Evelyn Swartz, SenEx member, said the tighter standards might be just what some students needed. maybe a little pressure on them to produce would be good," she said. The School of Journalism and the School of Education require a cumulative 2.2 grade point average for admission. The School of Education requires a cumulative 2.5 grade point average in its major courses. Students who do not meet the grade standards set by the office of financial aid face possible termination of their aid. The report from the Committee on Financial Aid to Students said that the office of the Department of Education screen out ineligible students before the students received aid for the following reasons: SenEx passed a motion expressing its dissatisfaction with this situation. SenEx members also expressed concern that students on academic probation for low grades were still receiving financial aid in some cases. In other business, SenEx forwarded to the University Council a request by the Homecoming Committee for early class meetings and discussed long-range University planning. The KU Homecoming Committee requested that classes on Oct. 17 be dismissed at 2:30 p.m so that students could participate in Homecoming activities. A SexEx subcommittee presented its three-paragraph preamble on long-range University planning proposals. Washburn Student Senate votes to stop ASK dues The preamble said that a committee should be given the task of monitoring the University planning process. Bv SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Reporter Membership dues for the Associated Students of Kansas were eliminated Thursday night at Washburn University, and Friday evening at Ridgeman 14-10 Washburn Student Senate vote. "It is a money issue," Libby Ragadale, Washburn University student body president, said. "But if the Senate thought it would be better for funding cut would it have been considered." ASK, a student lobby organization of which KU is a member, was founded at Washburn University in 1948 as executive offices in the Washburn Student Union. The Washburn Senate voted to approve the establishment. "The $2,000 in ASK funding could be spread around campus programs. We appointed the campus director at the beginning of the year, and we usually never heard Washburn student fees this year WASHUBUR UNIVERSITY has 5,000 students and paid a $2,250 membership fee. Every other ASK member school pays a membership fee of 25 cents per enrolled student. At 25 cents a person. Washubur University has a membership fee of any members dues or a $1,000 fee reduction. "We've always been told the flat fee is to give us a break because we donated the office space, "Ragdale said. "I suppose it was negative." We negate it. We've basically negating now. generated $8,000 less than last year because of an enrollment decrease, according to Ragsdale. Ragadale said that there had been a month's worth of work in more than 10 hours, although there was a part-time enrollment. The student activity fee of $10 was not collected from students. "They always paid a flat rate over what they needed to pay, and picked up the office rent," Tempelton said. "The whole problem is based on money." CRAIG TEMPLETON, chairman of the ASK board of directors, said money was at the root of the Washburn problem. Although the Senate does not pay rent for the ASK office space. Raudszal estimated the value of the space to be between $1,500 and $2,500 per year. The Washburn Union was paid for with student fees. Templeton said, "I'd hate to consider waxhamp allother, they need us and we need them. The indication is that we have a good chance ofumping it if they don't see us at a high priority." Templeton said the ASK executive board would be working on other methods of collecting membership dues from Washburn. ASK had been on the edge of a funding at Washburn for several years, Ragsdale said. For the last two years the vote for cutting membership was close. "This year it finally went in the other direction," Rauddale said. "A lot of senators felt that ASK was geared toward state schools. ASK began at Washburn and it doesn't have to overlook Washburn." WASHBURN IS UNIQUE among ASK schools because it is not a Rebutts school. Kelly Langdon, Washburn ASK campus director, said that it was easy for those not involved in ASK to overlook ASK contributions to Washburn. She said, for example, that three bills relating to the ASK program were introduced in the Kansas Senate and House. A bill in the Senate Ways and Means Committee would raise the state aid for graduate credit hours from $11 to $21, bringing it even with undergraduate state Another bill before the committee would raise both graduate and undergraduate funding per credit hour to $24. In the House Education Committee a similar bill to raise state aid to $2,50 is pending. Langdon said Bob Bingaman, ASK executive director, said he would testify in favor of the bills. Lucy Smith, ASK legislative director, said she didn't have enough personal contact with Washburn to comment on the legitimacy of their complaints about ASK. HOWEVER, SHE SAID, if Washburn dropped out of ASK, it would detract from the organization. Ragsdale said, "The ASK executive director, Bob Bingaman, said he would work specifically for Washburn but that didn't appease too many people." Farmers say low-flying balloons rattle cattle By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter Some Kansas farmers have been angered recently by hot air balloonists who evidently have no regard for the feelings of udders. They've been angered so much that a bill has been introduced in the Kansas House of Representatives that would impose altitude minipumps for hot air balloons. Tom Slattery, R-Topeka, introduced the hill after constituents complained that lowlying balloonists were scaring cattle and costing farmers both time and money. A HOUSE COMMITTEE, however, has decided to try to solve the problem through letters. The committee will send letters to be sent to balloon-related organizations are expected to be approved. "Balloonists sometimes fly too low over pastures, and when they have to regain altitude they propane gas burners make a difference." But balloonists are around and hear this noise and look up, you see this huge thing making all this noise. It has a tendenza to scare them." Martin Smith, a Shawnee County dairy farmer, said that during the past few summers his cows had been terrified by lowly balloons. "I've never seen cat spooked by anything like they are by these hot air balloons," Smith said. "It puts real fear into them." SMITH SAID that dairy cow's that had been frightened by balloons would often not produce much milk for the rest of the day, that there had been even worse consequences. "A neighbor of mine had his cows start to run after a really low-flying balloonist came over, and they ran right over some freshly- "I know a farmer who had a 2,800-pound buck break down a fire and hearing one of these things." Smith said, "and after a bull gets through beamed skin, he gets mad." There have been other times when farmers have lost money from balloon-induced damage, he said. bulldozed materials," he said. "They tore their udders and lose, and up selling them for market because they weren't good for milking anymore." However, such udder destruction is not as widespread as some farmers make it seem, according to Alan Miller of the Lawrence BalloonPort. "We've only had three complaints in the last three years, none of them serious." The Milwaukee police avoid an area if we know a particular farmer is irritable toward balloons. It really isn't. WHATEVER PROBLEMS there are usually can be traced to one inconsiderate balloonist, Miller said. Ted McAnally, operators inspector for the Federal Aviation Administration office in Kansas City, Mo., agreed that most livestock owners are not responsible for livestock problems. "One bad balloonist can cause a lot of problems." he said. percentage of the total who are making problems for everyone." McAnally said. The proposed Kansas bill would prohibit balloons from flying lower than 500 feet above the ground in rural areas, unless they were taking off or landing. McAally said. In congested areas, that limit would be raised to 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within 2,000 feet of the balloon. "We're talking about just a few, a small THEOSE RESTRICTIONS, however, would virtually duplicate existing federal aviation laws. Miller and McAnally said. "The Kansas bill is basically the same as our regulations." McAnally said. "It's kind of frightening," Miller said. "The bill could run the sport for all balloonists. After all, the fun of ballooning is not reaching 3,000 feet and then just The difference between the two, he said, is that the Kansas provision species livestock can be managed in small rural areas. FAA regulations, he said, mandate a minimum 300 feet above ground. Chess concentration See COWS page eight Syavash Khajje, (right) Shirza, Iranophom婆, ponders his whole walk while Neale Ekgren, Parkville Village junior, watches and waits. Khajje, a member of the KU Chess Club, took part in a simulational exhibition in the main lobby of the union Saturday evening. The team also introduced two new members, pitched a club member against up to seven opponents at the same time. Brown's supporters starting slowly here By SCOTT FAUST Staff Reporter They waited patiently yesterday morning for the start of a 9:30 organizational meeting for Brown's Lawrence supporters. The meeting was to be. Hamill, Charles Benjamin, Brown's Kansas coordinator and a political science professor at Bethel College, and Vic Phillipson, Topека campaign coordinator, had planned to meet with interested Lawrence people to discuss their candidate In the living room of the Delta Ch fraternity house sat three Jerry Brown campaign coordinators. Nearby, a table with slacks of stickers and literature. This was grass roots politics in its seedling stage. None of the five people invited by Brown's Lawrence coordinator Chris Hamill. Collys nonmonore showed us. Benjamin said Brown's strategy after his poor showings in the Maine and Iowa But the three were undaunted by the non meeting. Sen. Edward Kennedy, who began the campaign ahead of a rapidly rising Carter, is now expected to be predicted that low voter counts for him in Illinois and New York in a couple weeks are up. caucasus and a 10 percent share in the New Hampshire primary last Tuesday was to hang back and wait for the April Western primaries. But, he said, Carter has been saved by "mama from heaven" in the form of an Iranian crisis that has swelled American patriotism. BOTH THE KANSAS and Wisconsin presidential primaries are April 1. "If Kennedy drops out of this thing, and leaves it to Brown," Benjamin said, "it could get really interesting." Benjamin said Kennedy had been urged to enter the campaign because many Democrats had thought Brown could successfully challenge Carter "Kennedy's expectations upon entering See BROWN page eight Owl Society votes to admit women Members of the Owl Society, a junior men's honor society, voted unanimously yesterday to change their constitution. The Owl Society, according to John Rogers, president "We changed the constitution to read 'students' instead of 'men,'" he said. Under Title IX a couple years ago, the Overseas Educational Operation of the University and we decided we wanted to operate within the university because there are some advantages." TITLE IX requirements state that a university cannot give "significant support to organizations that are not co-educational." In 1977, the Owl Society drew criticism when it voted not to become co-eed and lost its privilege to a faculty advisor; office space and Student Senate罢免. Rogers said the society now would be eligible for a faculty adviser from a university or an external services. He did not think the society would receive an office or Senate support. Shelter's lesbian contacts debated Rv ANN SHIELDS Staff Reporter Because of a promise of confidentiality, city commissioners may have to decide whether to approve city funds for a local project. If so, they can simply by choosing whose star to believe. The Kaw Valley Pro-Family Forum, formerly Citizens Against ERA, has acclaimed its support of the Service of offering lesbian counseling, but WTCS officials have said they were only serving as a go-between for a group of lesbians who did not want to announce their WTCS coordinator Pam Johnston said she would not release names unless the lesbians approved. "The women who are leading that group have asked to remain anonymous," Johnston said. "That was the whole point, and we intend to respect that wish." THE FORUM is trying to block a WTCS request for $50,000 in community development funds with what Johnston called slanderous and libelous accusations. Jan Hoover, a member of the forum, said she thought the lesbians could have advertised their own phone numbers. "There's clearly no valid reason for such an organization to go through WTCS," Hoover said. Johnston disagreed. **FOUR WOMEN will testify on behalf of the forum 7 p.m. Tuesday in the city commission meeting room, 900 Massachusetts, and another meeting rooms whether to annotate the WOUM testifies.** Homosexuals would only encourage this negative attitude, she said. But Johnston said she did not think a volunteer's sexual preference affected her work. SHE SAID THE CENTER could remain Hoover said she thought lesbians could not effectively counsel battered women. "When someone is in trouble, especially a woman who has been battered or who is going through a messy divorce, her first boss is there, and she that is hates men," she said. "We don't believe it should be tax-funded because I don't believe this is the type of lifestyle Lawrence citizens would promote." Barbara Hanna, forum member, said. open even if funding, which would be used to renovate care center, were denied. Hover said she did not want to close the home, but would rather have it managed by the Salvation Army, the Douglas County Department or a group of local churches. "The shelter house is an important service," she said, "and we need to preserve it. "But I think it could be better handled in someone else's hands." JOHNSTON SAID the shelter, which has been in Lawrence about four years, had兵役 and received donations from the First Presbyterian and Plymouth Congregational. Three of its more than 30 workers are paid. Hover said she also thought the center should have professional counselors and an age limit for women it would counsel. Even if the city approves funding for WTCS, Hoover said, the controversy is important because it calls attention to the center. "Before, probably 99.9 percent of the city did not know about WTCs," she said, "but everyone needs to because it's an important service for the community." --- 2 Monday, March 3. 1980 University Daily Kansan Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Budget cuts deemed necessary WASHINGTON—As federal agency heads struggled to meet administration orders for billions of dollars in budget cuts, two key senators and two economists agreed yesterday that government spending must be slashed to fight inflation. Sen. Lloyd Bentz, D-Texas, chairman of Congress's Joint Economic Senate, said he would "be like the Press" getting Congress to agree to be like the press to be "like aULLinex test." Walter Heller and Alan Greenspan, both former chairman of the president's board, are among the many experts who they agreed in principle about the need for lower spending. Greenspan ad- Sen. Russell Long, D-LA., chairman of the tax-writing Senate Committee, estimated on CDTs "Five" the Face the Nation that $3 billion could be cut in federal spending. A White House spokesman termed a Washington Post report yesterday that the administration had ordered federal agencies to find at least $2 billion in unsecured loans. Colombian militants release 5 BOGOTA, Colombia—Leftist militants at the Dominican Republic Emissary gathered five of their estimated 41 hostages yesterday after their negotiators escaped with little damage. *annasauroso Diego C. Asenio and 15 other foreign envoys were still here, and an official at the U.S. Embassy said the leftists, "They'll keep the big ones.* It was not immediately clear when the talks would resume, or whether any other hostages would be released soon. A Colombian Foreign Ministry source said, "The government's proposition is that only the diplomats and Foreign Ministry officials who were attending the party when the embassy was taken by assault should remain" while negotiations are being conducted. The five hostages freed yesterday were taken from the embassy in an ambulance and a military vehicle shortly after noon, little more than an hour after the end of the negotiating session held in a van in front of the embassy. Police officers tried to arrest one and the other four as waiters working at the embassy when the takeover occurred. Release is not soon. Iran saus Iranian President Abdollahhani Bami-Sadr indicated yesterday that the 50 American captives will not be freed and charged that the United States is still at war with Iran. Iranian leader Ayatollah Rubalshah Khomeini left the Tehran hospital where he was held, and his family were transported to a medical center, he made no mention of the Americans, spending their 120th day in Iran. A U.N. spokesman in Tehran said that negotiations be conducted to arrange a meeting between the U.N. commission and the American hostages at the U.S. Embassy had reached a sensitive stage, but another day passed and no date of the meeting was announced. U. N. headquarters in New York said Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghota-zadeh visited the five U.N. panel members at their hotel. Vote on registration funds set WASHINGTON - A House Committee will cast a critical vote on President Carter's draft restoration plan, a loser in its first Congressional test. The question is whether the 94-member House Appropriations Committee will approve the money the administration needs to begin registration this summer. In a related issue, the House Armed Services Personnel subcommittee is expected to fulfill the prophecy of House leaders and vote overwhelmingly to reinstate The outcome of the dispute over funds to register men seems less certain, however. "We will not allow the president to be embarrassed," House Majority Leader Jim Wright, D-Texas, vowed last week. Rep. G.V. Montgomery, D-Miss., a leading proponent of registration, antedged, however, that the vote would be close. Last week, a subcommittee approved only enough money to form a standby system in which registration would not start until the president ordered it. Oilmen to protest windfall tax ORLAGHA CITY—Hundreds of independent oil producers and refiners plan to invade Washington Saturday with heavy drilling rigs and intensive lobbying. The silhouin, copying the tractorcade techniques of disgruntled farmers professing low crop prices, plan to haul a 60-foot-derrick and as many as 50 acres. The caravan is scheduled to leave Oklahoma City Wednesday. The protest idea was sparked by Sen. Henry Bellmon, R-Oka, an unabashed toe of the wind profit fafs tax and long-time friend of the independent oil Among the first to pledge equipment for the caravan was Charles Morgan, an independent oil producer from Prague, Oklawan, and the owner of the Oklahoma Although Bellmon did not seem concerned about the oilmen's image, Morgan was. "Leave the alligator boots and mink coats at home," Morgan said. "We want to see hard hats and coveralls. We want to make a point—we're not out there for them." Ford attacks Reagan, may run Gerald Ford said Ronald Regan could not win November's presidential election because he had no experience, otherwise, and suggested that the former president campaign for the Republican Party. In an interview published in the Sunday New York Times, Ford said he would decide by April 1 whether to enter the Republican presidential race. Reagan, in Massachusetts to campaign for that state's primary tomorrow, said. "Well, we'd like all to see Ford pack his long and long come on here" George Bush, also campaigning in Massachusetts yesterday, agreed with Ford that Reagan could not win, but said he, not Ford, was the answer. Ford said in the Times story, "I hear more and more often that we don't want, can't afford, to have a replay of 1864." In that year, the Republican party chose conservative Sen Harry Goldwater as the nominee for vice president. Ronald Reagan, Scranton Governor, was badly defeated by incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson. Reagan pointed to his successful California gubernatorial campaigns as proof he can win against Democrats. China rejects Afghan neutralitu PEKING—A Chinese commentary yesterday rejected international proposals to create a neutral Afghanistan, saying "one is in a position to interfere with Afghan affairs, which can be handled by the Afghan people." The article appeared in the People's Daily in Peking, the official Communist Party newspaper. It was signed by a "commentator," which usually means a reporter. It also repeated Chinese demands that the Soviets withdraw their troops from the Central Asian nation. President Carter has said the United States would join in guaranteeing Afghanistan's neutrality if Soviet troops were withdrawn. Weather The People's Daily said it was impracticable for the superpowers or Afghanistan's neighbors to provide such a guarantee. Skiers will be cloudy today with a 30 percent chance of rain, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high will be in the mid to upper 40s. Rain changing to snow tonight will accompany temperatures in the mid to upper 20s. A chance of snow will continue tomorrow with the high in the mid to upper 20s. Most students excluded from energy survey Students who are looking for their Project Conservare surveys may not receive them, so they need to be aware of the project's limited scope, according to the project's coordinator. It depends on the kind of project they want. Staff Reporter By LYNN ANDERSON Project Conserve is a voluntary home energy survey intended to help Lawrence residents discover the major sources of energy in their homes and suggest ways to stop the loss. On Feb. 15 about 11,000 questionaires were mailed to residents of single-family dwellings, Allen Loyd, city management analyst, said last week. Most students, because they live in residence halls, apartments, dorms, did not receive the surveys, he said THE SURVEYS ask detailed questions regarding housing structure and energy habits, such as number and type of windows, the attic space and normal thermostat set. The completed surveys will be analyzed by a computer that is equipped to translate the survey responses into tips for energy saving. But the computer, Loyd said, is equipped to analyze only single-family residences. Multiple-unit dwellings were excluded from the survey, Loyd said, because they would have created confusion. Which residents in an apartment should fill out the reservation form? Or would a apartment should the responders apply to? Loyd also said apartments, which have "common walls" shared by more than one living unit, often require less heat than single-room bathrooms. The common walls are usually fire-rated. THE COMPUTER, Loyd said, would therefore have trouble analyzing heat needs in apartments. Loyd said that if students living in single-unit homes had not received questionnaires, they should ask their landlords to contact Loyd. Responses to the survey have been arriving in Loyd's office for seven days and they already number about 2,400, or 23 percent of the total mailed. "We have already received more responses than some cities received during their whole project period." I loved said. Project Conserve, which is funded by the Kansas Energy Office, has been attempted in other Kansas cities during the past three years. Loyd said the energy office considered a response of greater than 15 percent to be successful, but said he had set his own goal of 30 percent. CATHERINE DALTON Have your hair professionally styled before Spring Break at Gentleman's Quarters. Haircuts are only $10. GO Holiday Plaza 2120 C W. 25th 843-2138 Improve Your Grades SCHAUM'S OUTLINE SERIES Each outline includes basic theory, definitions and hundreds of carefully solved problems and supplementary problems with answers ACCOUNTING, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Accounting I ... 4.95 Accounting H ... 4.95 Marketing ... 4.95 Bookkeeping & Accounting ... 4.95 Introduction to business ... 4.95 Human Science ... 4.95 College Business Law ... 4.95 Career Opportunities ... 4.95 Development Economics ... 4.95 Intermediate Accounting ... 4.95 Intermediate Finance ... 4.95 Macroeconic Theory ... 4.95 Mathematics of Finance ... 4.95 Mathematics of Finance ... 4.95 Microeconic Theory ... 4.95 Microeconic Theory ... 4.95 Personal Finance & Consumer Economics ... 3.95 Quantitative Methods in Management ... 3.95 BIOLOGY CHEMISTRY Genetics $5.95 College Chemistry, 6th Ed. $5.95 Organic Chemistry $7.95 Physical Chemistry $7.95 Heat Transfer Lagrangean Complexes 86.95 Mathematica Design 86.95 Mechanical Vibrations 86.95 Mechanical Simulations 86.95 Material and Fabrication of Structures 86.95 Space State & Linear Systems 86.95 2nd Ed. 87.00 Structural Analysis 87.95 Theoretical Mechanics 87.95 Thermodynamics 87.95 COMPUTERS EDUCATION, PSYCHILOGY & SOCIALOLOGY Child Psychology Introduction to Psychology $4.95 Introduction to Psychiatry $4.95 Test Items & Education $4.95 $4.95 Boston Algebra $\\$9.55 Computer Science $\\$9.55 Digital Photography $\\$9.55 Discrete Mathematics $\\$4.95 Programming with Basic $\\$4.95 Programming in BASIC $\\$4.95 Basic Artisan $\\$4.95 ELECTRONICS & ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Electric Circuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.95 Electronic Circuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.95 Electronic Circuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.95 Electronic Functions and Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.95 Foxconn and System Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.95 Foxconn Transformers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.95 JUCATION, PSYCHOLOGY & SOCIOLOGY ENGLISH ENGINEERING FOREIGN LANGUAGE Acoustics . . . . . ENGINEERING French Grammar $3.95 German Grammar $3.95 Spanish Grammar, 2nd Ed. $3.95 ENGLISH **English Grammar** $3.95 **Punctuation, Capitalization, & Soellino** $3.95 MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS Advanced Calculus . . . . . The sole object of the survey, Lloyd said, are students to see how vents that could save fuel were used in their homes more comfortable. He stressed that the questionnaires were strictly confined to private use. PHYSICS & PHYSICAL SCIENCE Apologia Physics $59.92$ College Physics 7th EG $39.92$ Earth Science $39.92$ Modern Physics $58.95$ Optics $49.95$ Physical Science $49.95$ "Things are happening in the area of energy, and they are going to happen more rapidly in the future." Loved said. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 KU KU M-F 8:00-5:00 Sat 10-4 Temperature and lighting regulations in public buildings, he said, were examples of increasing federal and state energy regulation. Check-out policy debated Friday "I think people will hear more and more about energy," he said. "But this type of voluntary thing probably won't happen again for a while." The KU libraries' decision to standardize extended check-out privileges was discussed at the Senate Libraries Committee meeting last Friday. The branch science library recently conformed to these standards, prompting criticism from some graduate students who The KU libraries allow Ph.D. students and faculty members four-month check-out periods. All other library users are allowed one month. had received extended privileges there in the past. A graduate student at the meeting said that graduate students needed extended check-out privileges as much as Ph.D. courses use of the long-term nature of graduate work. Cliff Haka, circulation librarian, said the branch library had conformed to standardize the library systems check-out policy. 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The seven other delegates will be chosen randomly from self-nominations. - Delegates from all 50 states will attend the conference July 11 and 12 in Washington, D.C. The conference will focus on concerns of the American family. HANNA SAID she thought some Kansas government officials were using the White House conference to show public support for their programs even though the public was not. However, Robin Salem, aide to Carlin, said the guidelines for delegate selection were approved by the White House. $n$ state steering committee has been ormet to select Kansas representatives to the conference and to help develop a platform of state goals for the conference. "We want to represent what Kansas families are, and they certainly don't fit into one category," Salem said. Hanna said she was worried because she thought most of the members of the state steering committee worked for the government. HOWEVER, NELL RICHMOND, secretary for first lady Ramona Carlin, said that only five of the 39 committee members were state employees. "It's a diversified and well-balanced committee," she said. Professors, doctors, ministers, and representatives of children's services organizations were chosen from several hundred applicants, she said. Smith said, "If the members of the committee support those issues it is a matter of individual conscience. "They certainly weren't quizzed about their point of view before they were chosen." Hanna said she thought the delegates would support programs, such as national health insurance and increased control of day care centers, that would increase government spending. "Over-taxation is one of the major problems facing today's families," she said. "We don't want things supported by government agencies to be rumbled through." However, Christopher Smith, aide to the Secretary of Social and Rehabilitation Services, said government issues could not be so easily defined. "Those certainly aren't issues that are supported by a majority of the people in the government of Kansas," he said. THE FORUM HAS TAKEN 10 positions that will be voted on by those who attend, in addition to the unanimous outlawing abortion, support of a balanced federal budget and an increase in national spending. Hanna said that all Kansas citizens were invited to the forum's delegate elections March 14 and 15 in Salina. "Families should never be extended to include homosexuals or non-married couples. It is important in family roles: the father is the head of the family, the mother is the heart of the family." K K J ♥ J old to win The Swaestepets may be entered as many times as desired, but only once per day the Swaestepets are audited. Each player can play cards from any Auditionist. 4. 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SONY LNX-90 CASSETTES Buy Two Save..25% AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN IMPRECHIVE OPEN School FIRST DAY OF KINDERGARTEN? Your child is going off to kindergarten next year, and you both are a little excited and nervous. At the Lawrence Open School, we believe that the attitudes developed during these first days will influence children all through elementary school. Lawrence Open School. We're a private, cooperatively owned, fully-accredited elementary school. K-5. We are located at 14th and Monterey Way (3-10 mile west of Kasol). Curious? That's why we begin Open Education in kindergarten. So children can develop independence, self-direction, and love of learning — from the first day. Then call us at 841-1669 so that we can give you more information and arrange a visit. We are now enrolling for the fall semester. Equal opportunity. Scholarships available. Sliding scale tuition. TEACHING STAFF: Mr. Michael Bryant, M.A., Educational Coordinator Ms. Amanda Vanhoozier, B.A., Teaching Coordinator Ms. Paula Whicker, B.A., Kindergarten Coordinator A STATE ACCREDITED PROGRAM Steering Committee: Dr. Sandra Crepther Dr. Frances Horowitz Mr. Jeffery Davis Ms. Karen Jeltz Dr. Thomas Erb Ms. Robin Naramore Dr. Karl Edwards Dr. Gene Ramp Advisory Board: Dr. William Baifour Dr. Paul Friedman Ms. Deb Holmes Ms. Molly Vantee Ms. Flora Wyatt However, Hanna said that people with other opinions were welcome. "It's not that I just want my viewpoint expressed," she said. "I want all citizens to have a say." The group also opposes teaching of evolution. Where children learn how to learn. call us at 841-1669 14th and Monterey Way Members of the Salina conference also will vote on education issues, including a reaffirmation of the mission of prayer, an objection to what is called the Department of Education's interference in school governance. Police Beat Two Topeka women are being held in connection with a murder of a Lawrence man last week in Topeka. The body of Henry Davis, 22, was found Thursday in a ditch in southwest Topeka. He reportedly had been shot once in the head. (AP) — You may not yet determined Davis' Lawrence address. The women, Ramona Moon, 26, and Kathleen Cobb, 22, were arrested Frivday by Cobb is a former Lawrence resident and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Cobb. Robert Cobb is the dean of the College of Business and Sciences at the University of Kansas. Shawnee County authorities on charges of first-degree murder. A spokesman for the Shawnee County jail said that he expected charges had been dropped, that formal charges had not yet been filed. BUY ONE... HOT C'HAM GET ONE FREE LIMIT ONE W/COUPON WHEN YOU PRESENT THIS COUPON AT YOUR LOCAL VISTA RESTAURANT. REGULAR PRICE $1.30 Vista RESTAURANTS Great Food. Great Service. Vitae Valuable. 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You get all of this & more for $90⁽ᵗ⁾ KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES With two locations to serve you Main Store, Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop, Satellite Union We are the Only Bookstores to share profits with KU students BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editor's staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editorial team. March 3.1980 Self-help bill needed A House committee of the *Kansas Legislature* has voiced its approval of a revised self-help bill designed to amend the Landlord-Lennert Act and to establish a legal tool for making repairs when negligent landlords refuse to do so. The bill first was proposed last year by Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, and will die if the full House does not act on it during this session. The revised version of the bill, among other things, restricts the cases covered by the self-help amendment to those that threaten the health and safety of tenants. Another revision of the bill requires the tenant to present a written estimate of needed repairs to the landlord before the work is done. The House committee approved this revised bill 10-6, and Solbach says the revisions should improve the chances of success. The House would -if it ever makes a rise to the floor- The House majority leadership decides which bills are to be brought to the floor for debate. Robert Frey, R-N.Y., was elected mayor of a landlord, Lords including, Frey have expressed opposition to the bill. They say the self-help amendment discriminates against them and heavily favors tenants. If Lawrence landlords want to continue attracting and contracting tenants, this bill must be passed. Even in its newly restricted version, the bill would be the first step toward permanently repairing not only dilapidated dwellings but also a perpetual gap in communication and cooperation between landlords and tenants. It also would be a firm foundation on which to build future landlord-tenant legislation. Sobach has followed his bill painstakingly through the ponderous legislative process. With hammer in one hand and nails in the other, he has pushed the opposition and consistently construct a convincing case for his bill. It is time for other members of the House to buttress the bulwark Solbach has raised in an effort to keep tenants' houses and apartments from becoming unwilling to live in a rented dwelling should not have to be like living in a house of cards. Coverage of primary was plenty of nothing Anyone who isn't already up to the gills of the media reports and 'analyzes' its "living proof of the media moguls" haughty assumption that American viewers have straw polls for And this is just the beginning. The New Hampshire primary paved the way for the inevitable spawn of late-night special reports on political contests. Why do these events have been deliberately fashioned to resemble off-track-betting for the racewounds? As for the night of the New Hampisher primary, punch-drunk anchormen and weary correspondents bungled their way through a disjointed series of slip-ups COLUMNIST susana redundancies, linguistic atrocities and inside jokes. And this, my friends, is serious political commentary. **ABC's New Hampshire correspondent—deceptively larger than-life over that tricky monitor—miraculously kept a poker face when he carefully enunciated that Ronald Sanders "shellacking." The image of a shiny, shellacked Bush, although oddly appealing, stuck out like a sore thumble in a supposedly official report on the results of a presidential primary. But then again, the official correspondent was once a sports announcer. AFTER THE REPORT, ABC anchorman Frank Reynolds - whose taut smirk defied the correspondent's deadpan expression—says "gentlemen to 'go inside' and 'get warm.'" Reynolds was in fine form that night. He went on to describe his work with video of a Bask post-primary address to New Hampshire supporters was abruptly followed by a string of similar scenes of all his peers. The latter took place in The unruffled anemonomic aumini shorter-than-four domeeam was offset by his ability to proclaim, for example, that ABC was engaging in a broad-brain practice of analyzing not only why the winning candidate won the election, but also voted for them votes for them. To this worthy end, another in the swelling sea of candidates costing voters as they emerged from the privacy of their poisoned boots. The result was a notable addition to the biased body of voting data. ABC'S SURVEY of 1,800 voters claimed. among other nuggets, that: New Hampshire thinks Jimmy Carter is more honest and moral than Edward Kennedy; New Hampshire thinks Ronald Reagan is more leadership capabilities; New Hampshire thinks Reagan has a winning smile and would forge foreign policy and tame domestic issues more effectively than Ronald Reagan. New Hampshire's better than 2-41 totraining of Bush. the night wore on, the commentators' glibness wore off. In a sober tate-a-tate with Reynolds, ABC's political director Jillian Ferguson accused the的政治 machine of being Reagan's to master New Hampshire. But the Bush machine had been stiff at the joints. That's why the good ambassador had lost. And the government, was why the old governor had won. BUT OUR BRADCAST brother are never content to just tell us the way it was and the way it is. They insist on donning the ill-fitting role of political soothers. Thus we are able to speak primarily alternately echoed with predictions of doom and blazed with visions of glory. Whatever became of originality? The networks' tiresome analyses played like broken records. Kenny won his win the home game, but he also predicted. But Carter is the pollster's choice in Pennsylvania, Illinois, South Carolina, and Florida. He probably will lag behind in those primaries. And if Kennedy loses, lo and behold, Carter will win. Here lies sophistication, subtly shifting the focus. AS A FITTING cap to an exhilarating event, Barbara Walters popped out from the office and said she was wise to wink her off her million-dollar anchor. Her coining contribution was an 'analysis' of the unlucky candidates' prospects for jobs when they dropped out of school. Her warbled, slap-dash insights seemed to suggest she'd had a dawn or two to drink her own bernedow. She marveled that the girl was so inexperienced tering" a course to a safe harbor, and she mourned for those hapless candidates who didn't have a safe Senate set of a lucrative position. And when it was all over-thank good-weight-Reynolds turned to Walters and calmly her of having been idle on that fiftieth night. "I guess they'll just have to find something else to do." she commiserated. "I'll make up for it next time," she retreated apologetically. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN In fact, the entire motley crew did much too much of nothing. (1079-5468980) Purchased at the University of Rokana daily August through May and Thursday and Monday (June 25 - July 31) for $39,500. The purchase price is based on the cost of delivery to the student institution or £5 per student. Student publications are paid as a credit through this payment and the fee is used to cover the costs of publication. Students should be aware that a credit will be applied through this payment. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanaan, Flint Hall. The University of Kanaan, Lawrence, KS 60045 Editor James Anthony Fitts Managing Editor Dan Miller Dana Miller Campus Editor Carol Beiser Associate Campus Editor Justin Woodburn Assistant Campus Editors Amy Holloway, Ellen Traviso Art Director Business Manager Vincent Coultis Retail Sales Manager Elaine Straber Campus Sales Manager Dean Tovell Advertising Makeup Manager Mike Pachete General Manager Advertising Manager Stock Manager Check Osmann Yugoslavia no Soviet pushover It's time to worry about Yugoslavia. That's what those dedicated doom diviners—they call themselves political wolves, calling us in solemn columns and interviews. Surely we have enough to worry about already. There's Afghanistan, the hostages, and the Taliban, the more superficial concerns of the and more superficial concerns of the beach free of oil and people for spring break. No, the punits say, Yugoslavia is at the heart of the struggle among abysse or some other metaphorical position "Yugoslavia after Tito" has become a fruitful subject for both well-informed and less well-informed readers. Although Yugoslavia won't be the same without Tito, it may not be all that different either. After all, its imminent disintegration has been forecast ever since the country MARTIN 2015 david COLUMNIST mould was unified. But it hasn't broken up, the economy is in good shape, and the people are probably better off than ever before. THE COUNTRY isn't without problems. It was forged from a number of independent and semi-autonomous states; it is a nation of minorities. The languages and traditions of these people didn't disappear when they were survived, and have caused internal tensions. Some years ago, a fellow student haplessly described Alsace-Lorraine—the two provinces located by France and the Mediterranean filling between two hostile slices of bread." Yugoslavia is out of the heat and con- struction that has defined the most prosperous of the Baltic countries by modernizing its agriculture, investing in industrial plant and expanding its tourist ITS A MISTAKE to call Yugoslavia a communist country, if by that description, it is not. The Czechoslovakia, East Germany and Bulgaria. Yugoslavia *l* was lined up with Croatia. Yugoslavia *l* was lined up with Croatia. Yugoslavia *l* was lined up with Croatia. There's a similar analogy for Vugelakia. There's a similar analogy for Vugelakia. There is kind of hamburger. The cooks hoped the diverse ingredients would blend well, but couldn't be sure until it came out of the oven. Ugoslavia is no pushover. It has prospered as a non-aligned nation, and its people know enough about life in Soviet-era countries to know that it's not what they want. Rumania, which is not among the Kremlin cheerleaders these days. and, under Tito, has firmly resisted Soviet courtship and threats. A major part of Yugoslavia's economy conforms to the socialist model; workers live in slums and have no own cooperatives. But the system is decentralized, with economic and political control vested in the regions, not in the city. SocialismIt's a far cry from totalitarianism. There's a growing private sector too. Some Yugasakis—for example, those in the tourist trade—own their businesses. The city's retail sector is stocked with consumer goods. On television, there are American cop shows and commercials. YOU DON'T NEED a visa to travel to Yugoslavia; sometimes they don't even check your passport at the border. Compare that to East Germany where visitors are required to change a specified amount of money for each day of their stay. Yugoslavians often spend abroad and many live in France and Germany, returning home for vacations. While Yugoslavia faces an uncertain political future, it's not on the verge of collapse. If the Russians want to take over the country, first they'll have to roll through And they have a long tradition of resisting foreign domination. Austria-Hungary never suppressed it, and has been an effective guerrilla war against the Germans. The people of Yugoslavia will fight again if they have to. Or, perhaps the pandals are wrong about Yugoslavia, after all? Prof distorts Catholic doctrine To the Editor: In a letter to the editor in appearances of the Feb. 21 Kansan Dennis B. Quinn, professor of English, correctly asserts that the death of Mr. Quinn is not merely a possibility of a just war. While he does state, "It is not my intention here to justify or to spell out in detail the position of the deceased." He continues by information, beyond the assertion that "no pope and no council has said that there can be no just war," would have given a truer impression of the position of the Catholic Church. To quote from The Documents of Vatican II, "As long as the danger of war remains and there is no competent and sufficiently KANSAN letters powerful authority at the international level, governments cannot be denied the right to legitimate defense ONCE ever that HAS BEEN EXHAUSTED^(p. 293, emphasis mine). Legitimate defense has limitations. The Council goes on to state that it is not obligatory for the destruction of entire cities or of extensive areas along with their populations is a crime against God and man himself. It is abusive and unrestilitating condemination. After discussing the Catholic Church's affirmation of the possibility of a just war Quinn moves into a discussion of the concessional objective and concludes his letter to the members of the House of Representatives Catholic Epicopoly article previously cited asserts Catholic teaching to be that for Catholics 'conscionious objection is not required' (quoted in the paraphrase Parope Pux IIX, who reaffirmed the right of the state to arm itself for self defense and to oblige citizens to enter military service." I found this statement important because it made statement earlier in the letter, "Since the Catholic Church has great influence not only among its millions of members but also among the general public, it is important that this major issue be corrected." First, the writer of the article in the New Catholic Encyclopedia does not claim to be representing the official teaching of the church; it does not mention what the article clearly points out; that the assertion "for Catholics 'conscionentious objection is morally intransitive' to the exercise of the government, the democratic openness of its decisions, and the extremity of the historic necessity for making such defense measures would be adequate in the circumstance." provided, however, that they accept some other form of service to the human community." This shows the statement to be less categorical than I believe Quinn represents. It is too vague, and the inconsistent objection for Catholics is difficult to reconcile with the statement of the case. If it seems right that laws make human provisions for the case of those who for some reason do not support them, I believe that Quinn's neglecting to mention the requirements of a just war and his selective edith of his quoted material has led him to a belligerent light than is warranted and boarders on academic dishonesty. It is of little concern to me if he wishes to undermine my manner. However, to do so while claiming to represent the teaching of the Catholic Church and to thereby undermine its scholarship as well, I do most strongly object. Alan Ruda Graduate student in religious studies Non-religious given CO status by Court Dennis Quinn writes in his Feb. 21 letter that conscientious objector status is granted "only to those who belong to religions that forbid military service." It should be obvious that the First Amendment does not allow the Congress to grant liberty of conscience on a sectarian basis. This point was made explicit in "Guerer" (1968), who ruled in 1965, which was strengthened and expanded by dozens of federal decisions. Notably, "Schaefer", 1968, uphold the conscientious objector status of a drafter who refused to affirm a belief in God and engaged in religious practice of any kind. Kemp Houck Associate professor of English Kemp Houck Survey submitted as rough idea of views To the Editor: I would like to thank Eric Kirkendall for expressing his concern about the issue of reinstatement of draft resituation. In his Feb. 22 letter to the editor, however, he made several assertions that are based on a misunderstanding of my participation in a recent Washington conference of leaders. Registration and the draft were major topics of discussion at the conference. Because results from an opinion poll on the Student Senate election ballot were the only available indication of KU student opinion, 47 percent voted to the White House staff as a rough idea of KU student opinion. The results were 47 percent against registration and 53 percent in favor; only 27 percent of those voting in the draft, while 73 percent opposed it. Kirendan objected to my having submitted these poll results, stating that they were not taken from a random sample, and that I did not accurately reflect student sentiment. I wholeheartedly agree with Mr. Kirkendall that these poll results do not provide the accuracy of a random sample. When I submitted the results to the White House staff, however, I qualified them by I also would like to remind K.irkendall that the statements, "Registration could prevent the draft," and "Registration is a requirement of the job." I do not and my own. I do not recall issuing my personal opinion on the matter to any reporters from the Journal-World or the Newsroom. reporting that they stemmed from an opinion poll in a Student Senate election between Democrats and Republicans, stated out of total electorate of 23,000, who qualified such as these, it was understood that these survey could not be the last word on KU student sentiment. I do find it interesting, however, that the Journal-World's coverage of the Washington conference made it appear that I had "completely bought the Carter line," while the next day the Kansan's coverage of the conference was just a campaign tactic, and that I wasn't about to be convinced of the White House's stand on registration. It's little wonder Mr. Kirkendall misunderstood the facts. Margaret Berlin Former student body president Bill will determine the prairie's future To the Editor: A recent Kansan editorial concludes that a Midwest prairie park is unnecessary. The author was absolutely correct in stating that the presence of a land departure in tactics that is more responsive to landowners' fears of land condemnation, 2) it may take years, even decades to acquire the land, if ever, and 3) the average size of a prairie park will be her or her land. Indeed, the best prairie land IS the ranchers' land, and so it will continue to be, regardless of whether the bill is passed. A ALL of the Filt Hills remained in the prairies, and there would be neither the possibility of acquiring the first acre of a park under this bilion nor the need to do so, because it would not come up for either sale or review for it. This would be the best all possible words. But let's remove the rosy, homeowner glasses. Ask any opponent whether he can maintain the quality of prairie grassland in the overall area by using percentages of native grass cover, animal or plant diversity, population stability, or plant or land succession and accelerating入侵物种. You should expect an affirmative answer in light of overgrazing, predator control policies, juniper succession and accelerating invasion. Ask whether the rates of water and erosion, stream silting and land mining are serious. Ask whether such opportunities are viable. Ask whether such opportunities provide statistics suggesting that the majority of land owners increasingly favors vegetation that can be compared, by analogy, whether the opponents of wagging regulation are the exponents of savanna just. Just who is running scared and why. To be sure, the vast majority of ranchers in the Flint Hills have continued an admirable tradition of land stewardship, which will continue uninterrupted even if bill is passed. The county's contractual grants with landowners and conservation districts for land restoration and construction, extra-high voltage power lines and residential subdivisions will be forbidden, though these presently contribute to the development of landscapes in casional incidents of land management, "development," selling-out to corporations or foreign investors, overgranting and Corp. transfers that prevented ONLY by passage of this bill, through a review process by a committee of economists, citizens and legislators. Each case of prairie loss, no matter how infrequent, is a cumulative, irreversible division of both the aesthetic and ecological integrity of the last great tallowgrass prairie known on Earth—the very last. If a more extreme case of prairie loss can be devised, i.e., national grassland, state regional zoning, etc., then let's hear it. Until then, this prairie preservation bill is all that stands between prairie integrity and the irresistible forces that doom all lands. This month, complete version of this bill, see Vol. 5, No. 1 of the Ozark and Prairie Caller). Jim Cane Lawrence graduate student Kansan should not favor Bell Company To the Editor: Your "Bell rates justified" editorial, Feb. 25, left me somewhat disappointed with your editorial description. I feel the Kanas should address larger social concerns—speaking for those who are fearful of being pressured, disease and tyranny—the speaking on behalf of Southern Belt, which can very easily speak for itself without being protected and high profitable interests. Edwin P. Acoba Guimba, Nueva Ecija, Philippines Graduate student Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters must be in English and not exceed 100 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after publication, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position; and they should also right to edit letters for publication. --- University Daily Kansan Mondav. March 3.1980 5 Anderson support increasing locally 1.1.1.1 Rep. John Anderson, R-III, has never lost an election. And if local support is any indication, he may not this year. Anderson's campaign for the university began barely under way here, but in the week since KU student for Anderson formed, 35 students have volunteered to help his campaign. "It's been fantastic," she said. And Mary Lupe Humphrey, a Lawrence homemaker and chairman of Kansans for Anderson, said yesterday that an adult woman residents had volunteered their services. "It's een tastantac, she said. Kansas' first presidential primary is April 1. Anderson is one of 12 candidates on the GOP ballot. Anderson, 58, a 20-year veteran of Congress, is the first major candidate to announce that he will appear at KU. He will also appear at Woodford Auditorium. His stop will be part of a statewide campaign swing including a speech at Kansas State University that night. In their local campaign efforts, Anderson volunteers have announced that an Anderson for President office will open today in the second floor of a building at 927½ Massachusetts St. They also will have tables in the Kansas Union today, tomorrow and Thursday, handing out Anderson butchers' meals and serving literature and enlisting volunteers. Jeff Miller, Overland Park senior and a coordinator of KU students for Anderson, said workers would increase their efforts after spring break. "Break has definitely come at an awkward time," Miller said. "We'll definitely have more things when we come back." Anderson finished fourth in last Tuesday's New Hampshire primary, winning two delegates after receiving 10 percent of the Republican vote. Local supporters, however, are predicting a second or third place showing in tomorrow's Massachusetts primary. "I think he's going to surprise a lot of people as time goes on," Humphrey said. There are a lot of disenchanted Republicans and independents as well as Republican's. Aluminum recycling drive begins By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Reporter Two environmental groups announced plans yesterday for a campus-wide aluminum can recycling project, after the University-scale recycling project at Hassinger Hall. The recycling drive will be sponsored jointly by the KU Ecology Club and the Appropriate Technology Resource Center 110% Massachusetts. "We're mostly concerned with not stepping on the jantiers' toes," Hyde said. "We talked to a few jantiers and they didn't. We couldn't be sure they weren't making enough for it to matter. "All we're really interested in is recycling, we're not out to make a whole lot of profits." In about two weeks, 10-9g gallon barrels will be placed in key buildings on campus, according to Carla Hye, KU Ecologgy Club president. She said the project may, run into some resistance from juntors who collect the cans for pocket money. REYNOLDS ALUMINUM CO. of, Lena has agreed to pick up the cans at 23 cents a pound of aluminum. There were 106,464 beverage containers sold on campus and in college halls during January, according to data provided by Recycling, recycling these cups would earn $1,228. $X$ The profits would be channelled back into recycling advertising and program expansion. Hyde said. Once the program is affloat financially, she said, members will investigate the possibility of a city-wide recycling center for paper, aluminum and glass. "Right now we're worried about getting this project off the ground," Hydre said. "We have 15 to 18 people who are really gungo here." We have been meeting nearly every week. IT WAS ESTIMATED that 5,300 cans are purchased every day with a possible recycling value of $80. However, about 20 cents more are needed and thus non-recable, according to Hyde. "Eventually, we want all cans on campus to be aluminum," Hyde said. "Right now you don't know what kind of can you're going to get." Hyde said the group planned to work with distributors on changing the policy of stocking steel cans. She said "Hawaiian Punch" was the only brand exclusively distributed in steel cans. Steel cans are identifiable because they have seams. Can collection may present some other problems. "It is fine if people start taking the cans out of the barrels, just so they get recycled," Hyde said. "But if we start going under eventually then we might have to change that." The barrels will tentatively be in the Kansas Union, the Satellite Union, Strong Hall, Wescoe Hall. Alen Field House, the Horton Hall and Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall. KATHY DOUGHTY, Llagrange, ill., New York. After recovering recycled 96 percent of the energy needed to make new metal from bauxite, three billion pounds of metal are thrown into the ocean. The Department of Budgets has predicted the national deficit of aluminum will be higher than that of oil in 1980. A complete conversion to returnable beverage containers would reduce the demand for energy and soft drink industry by 35 percent. "We want to do the project to recycle, not just to get the money," Doughty said. "Recycling will be essential to our economy in the future." Doughty and her roommate, Vanessa Verkade, Plymouth, Mass., freshman, were the brains behind the campus-wide recycling project. They said an open house at Hassinger's residence hall and project at Hassinger's residence hall. "we became aware of all the waste going on inside the dorm," she said, "but because it is on such a large scale it is hard to cut down. "WE WERE WORKING in a structure that wasn't very flexible. You just can't change attitudes." She said that the recycling project was comparatively easy to implement because "it wasn't really taking or changing anything." The pair took their recycling proposal to the Hashminah Hall government, approved it and supplied boxes and bags. The recycling brings in about 50 a month, according to Verkade. She estimated that about 90 percent of the cans were recycled. "Just because we're in a dorm doesn't mean we're sheltered from real world," Verkade said. Verkade said people should start paying more attention to their environment. "Why continue to waste resources when they can be recycled?" We're already abusing resources too much, we have to start somewhere," she said. Schubert to be lecture subject The life and music of Franz Schubert will be the topics of a lecture by Viennese scholar Eva Badr-Skoda at 3.0pm. Eva Badr-Skoda swishtoot Rial Hall in Murphy Hall. Badura-Skoda is working on a book title "Schubert Studies: Studies on Style and Chronology" to be published by the Cambridge University Press. ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL Born in Munich, Germany, Badura-Sakra was educated in the Austrian cities of Stuttgart and Innsbruck. She has taught at the Stella and Imabach Music School and the Music in Vienna and the Vienna Conservatory of Music. She is currently a student at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 843-2931 2340 ALABAMA Auto Rental is our business. Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints Foreign & Domestic Parts DON CHICK AUTO PARTS Part Store 1209 East 73rd 841-2390 IF YOU HAVE RENTED A VEHICLE BEFORE, THANKS. IF NOT, PLEASE COMPARE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER - Free Snow Tires or Front Wheel Drive * Free Pickup and Delivery in Lennox City Limits * Low Prices . . . 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REPORT on Trinity Lutheran Hospital Kansas City, Missouri An acute care hospital whose record reads EXCELLENT - CARIOVASCULAR CARE: more than 250 open hours a year. * Cariovascular rehab program - MICROVASCULAR SURGERY: only hospital in do replantations and revascularizations. - MEDICAL SPECIALTIES: psychiatry, ophthalmology; pediatrics, ology, oncology - CANCER CARE: only private hospital in Kansas City area with comprehensive cancer treatment center and an outpatient clinic serving more than 450 outpatients. - PHARM.D.SPECIALIST first private hospital in area to have full-time Pharm. D. on staff. - KANSAS CITY: the culture of art, music, dance; competitive professional sports; the sophisticated Country Club Plaza; the beauty of parks, boulevards and fountains. For nursing opportunities in medical-surgical, cardiovascular, oncology, orthopedics, psychiatric, anesthesiology, pediatric and pediatric nursing contact. Fair Good Excellent Denise Barsh, R.N. Nurse Recruiter Kansas City, MO 64108 Collect 816 753-6030, ext. 256 Call collect 816 753-4600, ext. 256 AMERICAN LEGION OF SCIENCE WOMEN Photos by David Bernstein Photography... will make your formals picture perfect. 1920 CANDY AND JOHN 1976 A year ago, eight fraternities and sororites had their party and formal dance pictures shot by David Bernstein Photography — the party picture professionals. Last semester, 20 out of the 35 Houses on campus had their party picture sessions. The group was thanked than all the other photographers combined! Here are the reasons for this dramatic increase: a choice of two sizes for your party pictures, 3" x 5" and 4" x 7", bigger titles and crests; sixteen award-winning photographers, using Nikon, Canon, and Pentax equipment; borderless prints, so the action is bigger and more dynamic; and for your own prints will be done before finals are over! If you haven't used our services before... isn't it time you did? Call us today. DAVID BERNSTEIN photography PROFESSIONALS 842-6135 p. o.box 3681, LAWRENCE, ks. 66044 --- 6 Monday, March 3. 1980 University Daily Kansan Kits still missing "Survival kits" filled with goodies to help students through long nights of studying for finals have been the source for several KU students lately. The kits, containing crackers, cheese and cookies, were to have arrived in time for finals last December, but the Student Council insisted which supplied the kits, ran out of them. The kits are purchased by parents of students for $7.98, and Student Services Company sends them to the students, and Teacher as treasurer of the company, said last week. "We have nationwide lists of students, and we solicit business through their parents," he said. "They have the kits their sons and daughters at school." Corvine said his company had sent notices to those who did not receive the kits to tell them they would receive them for spring finals. "Either the kits were lost in the mail or in delivery," Corvine said, "or the notices were lost." However, Corvine said he had received 5 calls from KU students who did not receive the kits or the notices. Clyde Chapman, administrative coordinator for the Lawrence Consumer Bank, who had also received several complaints during the past month from students who were inexperienced with credit. Corvine said students could get a refund for the kits by writing to his company. He will continue to look for the reason for the confusion, he said. 1230 Summer Employment Directory Where the jobs are & how to get them Want a fun summer job? We list 50,000 of them in the 1980 Summer Employment directory of the United States Congress and commercial resorts, summer theater, amusement parks and more! Paperback, 208 pages, $6.95 - Get a copy today from your campus bookstore, or write to DEC CA Writers' Biggest Books 9933 Alliance Road, Cincinnati. OH 45242 (include $1.25 for shipping and handling) Pirates capture Rock Chalk loot By EVIE LAZZARINO Kansan Reviewer The strains of a tartan-clad bäuppe began an evening of four skirts that reflected the glamour of Rihanna's world the world of the future as KU saw its 2018 Rock Chalk Revue last weekend in Hoch The skirts were written around this year's theme, "The Times They Are a Change," in an effort to engage the Lawrence junior, and Business Manager John Campbell, Leawood junior. And a myriad of enjoyable acts helped to keep the time needed to calculate the judges' scores. THE WINNERS were the Beta Theta Pit and Kappa Kappa Gamma production, "Till the Tide Turns," and "To Beee or Not to Beee." The Kappa Kappa Lambda and Alba Kappa Gamma Delta. "Till the Tide Turns," the Beta Theta Pikia Kanna Kanna Gamma skit, was selected as the Best Overall Production, and deservedly so. Their skit about a group of chavinistic pirates and the prim, pinaforeed schoolgirls is one of the most energetic and well-paced effort. The production number, *Lusty, Crusty* *Biodiversity Production*, for Biodiversity *Production*, Number of teams that swaggering pirates in an upbeat, disco- inspired opening scene. It was the most popular movie of 2013. "Till the Tide Turns" was best. Best Actor, Alaska also named. Best Anchorage, Alaska also named. Best Actor, Martine Dreher, Merriam sophomore, best Actor, Greg Davall, Overland Park again. "To Bee or not to Bee" won two awards for the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity, which includes most high people and an ingenious set featuring a town made of a Band-Aid box and beer can wine giant foot wearing appleside, which threatens to smash them as it plops onsite, provided one of the evening's sunset moments. The skit, about the townsphere's eventual independence from a "Bee Say Toy," that guides their lives, also won Best Original Script. THE TWO OTHER SKILTS selected for the reweve "Charge it, Please," presented by Tau Kappa Epsilon and Alpha Delta Phi. Ward was 2001, by Dela Chi and Alpha Phi. Review "Charge it, Please," directed by Madeleine Pickard and Paul T. Worley, explored the year 1990 and the use of electromagnetism in his work. Was 2001," directed by Chris Hammill and Anne Harrison, was a love story between wax museum figures of the West Wild and East Wild. More than in previous years, however, the most consistent and professional entreatement came from Beverard and in Between Aces. Dr. advised by Beauland K. Woods and Mark Teoben, Ralston, Neb. sensor, and charm of the In Between Aces entertainment never "Macho Man" and Donna Summers" Bad Girls" were highlights of the between act numbers. Maupintour travel service Also giving memorable performances were Anne Meeker, Leaeworth senior, and Jeff Martin, Merriam freshman, who performed a guitar and voiced duet of Dan Fogelberg's 'Loner.' Accompanied by the drummer Charlie Terry, the Southern, Wiltshire, Ill., sophore, the duet was perhaps the loveliest song of the evening. THE EVENING's most touching moment was the award presentation to Joe Smith, a graduate student and owner of Joe's Bakery, 618 E.inth. Smith and his wife, Ramona, were brought onstage in appreciation of their three decades of students. They were given a standing ovation. A MEDLEY of songs from the Fats Walker tribute "Ain't Mischebavin," and amazingly accurate renditions of the Village People's AIRLINE TICKETS BOTH RESERVATIONS EURAIL RAPIDS EUROPEAL TICKETS ESCORTED TOURS MEN'S ravel service 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 This year's rewere seemed to be a return to the variety show hodge-pod of student entertainment rather than slick professionalism. Chancellor Archer R. Dykes was introduced from his chair and was given the task of creating a pirate was told by his wiscreaking Jayhawk sidekick that he looked like Student Body President Greg Snacken. SPRING CALL TODAY! While waiting for the judges' decisions in what has usually been a strictly tense atmosphere, the crowd listened happily to jazz selections from the orchestra. The crowd had fun and relaxed. And that's what Rock Chalk is about. FORMAL RUSH March 21 22 23 For KU: Freshmen Sophomores Juniors Contact Interfraternity Council at 864-3559 REGISTER NOW! 2nd Senior "Farewell to Bars" Tues., March 4, 8-12 p.m. Johnny's Tavern Donation for class gift $1 from class members $2 from non-class members (memberships available) SENIOR FAREWELL MOVIE will continue filming Take advantage of our offer, it's precisely what you need. A precision haircut with shampoo and blow-dry costs just fourteen dollars for guys or gals, less 10% of course. We also offer permanent waves. We are also providing conditioning. No appointment needed, just come in. Phone: 843-3985 23rd & Iowa in the South West Plaza Precision haircutting is our technique for cutting the hair in harmony with the way it grows. So as it grows it does not lose its shape. Your hairstyle will good after five days as it does after five minutes. 55 Command Performance Precision At A Discount. JB's BIG BOY FAMILY RESTAURANTS 740 IOWA Come in and try our new CHICKEN FILET SANDWICH on a sesame seed bun, with mayonnaise, pickles, and lettuce. ONLY $1.89 (For students only.) 1970S M-F: 9-8 Come by for a special student discount card. It's good for a whole year, and entitles you to 10% off any Command Performance service. Including our precision haircut. Sun: 12:5 Sat: 9-6 ti Texas Instruments pre inventory calculator sale MEMORY CARD MICRO SD SDHC UHS-I U3 V3.0 16GB 256GB 512GB 1TB T1 58C t $130⁰⁰ $99⁹⁵ $295⁰⁰ $239⁰⁰ TI 59 - User flags, labels and subroutines - T1 Prog 58C W/ up to 480 program steps - TI Prog 59 W/ up to 960 program steps - Plug-in, prerecorded modules. Choose from 14 different modules in stock - Complete editing ability 1420 Crescent KU Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent 8-5 M-F 10-4 Sat The ONLY bookstore striving to save you money at the cash register at the cash register TX JB's ku TX Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra Presented by the University of Kansas Concert Series 8:00 p.m. Thursday, March 6, 1980 Hoch Auditorium Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office KU Students: $1.50/$1.00 A Mid-America Arts Alliance project V A University Daily Kansan Monday. March 3. 1980 7 Learning is healthy experience at elementary school By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter If elementary school children were allowed to plan their own school lunches, would they be eating pizza, ice cream and cake? The children at Trailwalk Elementary School in Overland Park had just such an opportunity, but their lunch were nutritious and balanced by their own choice. All 450 kids at Trailward are involved in the Sunflower School Health Education project, the brachialet of Wayne Ossen, and the annual Girl Scout camp and recreation at the University of Kansas. The project, in the last year of a three-year study, found that the lifestyle of the students—and through them, their parents—for protection against such diseases as heart disease, respiratory infections. THE PROGRAM includes emphasis on studying and experimenting with aerobic activity, nutrition, cardiac health, motor development and personal health education. The goals of the project are to teach the children fundamental health and physical fitness, the children about nutrition and their diet, and to give them a positive experience life and to give them a positive experien- associated with physical activity and health. Onness said the program had been highly successful in making the children, their families and their bodies and general health and how they could maintain this awareness after they completed it. "We're doing extensive evaluations on 43 different parameters." he said. These include pre-course and post-course physiological studies in areas such as blood pressure measurements, fitness, posture abilities and nutrition and health knowledge. "We do a lot of follow-up to the tests," Osness said. "We'll do activities to learn about nutrition, for example, then give the students a chance to make up their own school lunches. "DIFFERENT CLASSES select the lunches. One child from a class is selected to a school lunch board to discuss and decide on the school lunch with the people who Ossess said the children on this board were given the opportunity to see how the lunches were made to give them an idea of work went into their preparation. "Sometimes the kids will learn about a different vegetable in class," he said, "how it grows, the vitamins it contains, and then have a day for at lunch. "They had a cauliflower day, for example. It was prepared in different ways, and the kids could take as much as they wanted. "Sometimes what the kids take is contrary to what you might think." Ossess said that during the time the children planned their lunches, the number of Trailwool children eating a school lunch rose from 38 percent to 70 percent. "If the kids make a certain decision to do something with the lunches," he said, "they must explain why to the others." "They banned all carbonated beverages from the lunches. If a principal did this he would have gotten stoned." OSNESS SAID the children learned more by actually performing activities such as planning their lunches and explaining their choices to the other students. Another important part of the program, physical fitness was presented as a practical activity to encourage students' physical activity by the children, and others involving conventional study. But none of these activities were effective. "These involve no competition and anyone can do it and get the same physical satisfaction as the others." "There are no recesses at Trailwood," Osness said. "There are fitness breaks." During fitness breaks the children participate in aerobic exercises for a 20-minute period. Another aspect of the fitness break is the vita park, a course set up in the school yard with several physical activity stations for fitness testing and strength building. Omiss said the fitness breaks and wain park were designed so that all of the students, regardless of their physical abilities, could walk without embarrassment or self-consciousness. "WE HAD ONE PARENT who didn't want her daughter to participate because she was overweight," he said. "The goal of this girl's class was to go through the vauk park without stopping, but she could not for a while, and did make it, it was really something to see." "Her classmates all were alurging her on, and leading her along by the hand when she had to slow down. Because of the program we have now, you are receiving positive feedback from anything physical." Osness said Trailwood teachers and parents were involved in the program through the children. "There is an aerobic rhythms class for teachers after school," he said, "so the teachers can better relate to what the kids learn. We also feel the teacher is sharing the experience." PARENTS WERE ENCOURAGED to run with their children through a "om-sible" camp, and with their teacher. Miles logged by parents running with their children went included in the study. "They mapped a cross country run from Oregon to New York by charting the miles they had run on a map of the country," he said. "The kids logged miles from Oregon to Colorado, and we were too cold in New York, so when they got where the decided to run down to Florida." Parents were kept informed about the program in a monthly information sheet, 'Sunflower Signals', "Osness said. They also sent their children early through early morning and PTA meetings." The project, begun in 1976, has been nationally publicized through articles in various journals and in a Public Broadcast program, "Off Your Duff," which awarded yearly. OSNESS SAID he had heard of similar Icefishing, traveling one man's life By GREG SACKUVICH Staff Reporter It was a bitterly cold, blustery morning and the two old men were hunched over in defense against the wind. Earlier they had tried to capture the frozen pond and lowered their fishing lines. For two hours they had hardy a nibble, when a young boy arrived, armed only with a hatchet, some string and a safety pin. But until the girl reached for a millstone was milking fish off her tongue. Finally, the old men approached the boy and one asked, "How are you catching all of those fish?" "Mghikmn." the boy replied. The boy reached into his mouth and pulling out a slimy, squiggy blob said, "Keep your worms warm." "Excuse me son, but I'm hard of hearing What did you say?" the other man asked. Sitting in the cold on a frozen pond may not sound like fun to most people, but to Wilits, it's heaven. Recounting this fish yarn yesterday at frozen Perry Lake, one of the old men, Jim Wilkins, said he learned long ago the importance of keeping the worms warm. "It sure beats working for a living and it keeps me from going crazy sometimes," he said. "I don't just sit out here on this ice for fish. I can go to a store for that. The outdoors is my life." Wilts was reared in Hibbing, Minn., where camping and fishing were year-round activities for boys, he said. But as the other schools are in these activities, Wilts' interest greets 'When we were kids we kept warm with a fire. When the other guys got older they used a girl to keep them warm. I stuck with the fire," he said. "Now, 50 years later, those guys have them women nagging at them and I've still got my fish and my fire. I used to think I was the crazy one, no I'm not so sure." Jim Wilits has been living as a fisherman and camper since the Depression in the 1930s. At first it was out of necessity. "My family didn't have any money and so I just began going off on my own when times got rough," he said. "Now I never get back there." "I only worked once in a while then, and I never do now. I like to keep on moving." International Talent Show Tonite 7:00 Bring your special brand of talent to a receptive international audience. No entry fee, advance registration. Instrumental and vocal performance, dancing, story telling. at the Center 1629 W.19th (1 block west of Oliver Hall on 19th) Operation Friendship Building Bridges Between Cultures And about keeping those worms warm? "That kid ain't as dumb as you think," he said. Partially funded By Student Senate "I've lived most of my life outdoors and that's just as soon where I'd die." And Willits, in his battered old Chevy pickup truck, looks the part of the drifter. "I've been everywhere from Argentina to Chile," he said. "I work around, I worked on a couple of beads, but now I finally got my pick. I even rode a dogged in the Northwest Territories." "I'm getting a little old to be running around all over the place. I’ve been thinking of going back to Minnesota, drawing my camps and camping and fishing up there," he said. His weather-beaten face looks tired as he scans the frozen lake. The KU Pre-dental Club is sponsoring a panel discussion on Dentistry as a career at 7:30 on Tuesday, March 4 in the Kansas Room of the Union. Featured Dean Robert Adams, Dean of L&A & Dr. Richard Land, Municipal School for Students from UMCK Department of Education by Student Activity Fefer sua films Double Feature THE GUN THAT WON THE WEST! THE GUN THAT MOVES THE WEST! James Shelley STEWART • WINTERS WINCHESTER '73 Dan DURYEA - Stephen McMALLY James Shalley STEWART - WINTERS WINCHESTER '73 Dan DURTEY - Staples McMALLY THE GUN THAT WON THE WEST! James Shelley STEWART · WINTERS WINCHESTER '73 Dan BURYEA · Stephen McNALLY —Plus BURT LANCASTER LEE MARYIN · ROBERT RYAN JACK PALANCE · RALPH BELLAMY —The PROFESSIONALS CLAUDIA CARDINALE PRESENTED BY TECHNOLOGY CENTER & ALUMNI FROM THE WEST (1) - Plus BURT LAMCASTER LEE MARVIN - ROBERT YERAN JACK PALANCE - RALPH BELLAMY "In The PROFESSIONALS" ... CLAUDIA CARDINALE PRACTICE TECHNICIAN Tuesday, March 4 Woodruff Auditorium 7:30 pm [No refreshments allowed] $1.00 IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MASS. 8:30-8:00 M-S Thure. ill 8:30 p.m. NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN Tonite Featuring • Homemade CONCHIGLIONI Gentens serving of Conciliata pasta filled with Mozzarella, provolone, parmesan, and ricotta cheese on a bed of one onion sauce. It's super. $4.25 Dinner includes entree, garlic toast, crisp tossed green salad coffee or tea programs, but none as comprehensive as the "Sunflower School" project. Special good tonite ONLY — 5:30-8:20 "We hope to follow up for five to ten years on these children," he said. Ossess said the program was originally set up in only six months, and has since met with "absolutely no resistance" from any quarter. “This is very strange,” he said, “but if something’s successful and successfully its willing to work on it, then it will work and it can get people to work together. "It takes a great personal commitment from teachers after school." (1938) The project is o-sponsored by the Kansas affiliates of the America Heart and Lung Association, and the KU department of health, physical education and recreation and the University Health Center. Monday, March 3 THE LADY VANISHES Ossess said the project was operating only at Trailwood because it was a demonstration program. He compared it to a control school in an experiment. sua films Dir. Alfred Hitchcock, with Dame May Whitty, Whitney, Redgrave, Margaret Lockwood. Hitchcock's skilful blend of comedy, drama and mystery come together in this story of a doldy old amnesiac on a transcontinental train. Tuesday, March 4 Two Action Westernes WINCHESTER '73 (1950) With Dr. Anthony Mann, with James Stewart, Shelley Winters, Dan Duryea. Excellent story of a prized job. He makes many changes of ownership. THE PROFESSIONALS Wednesday, March 5 GREED (1925) Dir. Erich von Stroheim, with Jean Hersholt,莎尔 Pilsen, Gibson law. A masterpiece of the silent film, where people whose values become distorted when faced with a passion for money. Based on Frank Nicks' naturalism. Thursday, March 6 A HOUSE OF GEISHA (1956) Mike D. Mirarose, with itsuz Yamada, Hideko Takamine, Kiyanoko Tanaka, Aya Kodao's original story of gena hana is published in the East East Asian Studies. Japanese/juilibertz Unless otherwise noted; all will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R bills are $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00. $1.50 and $1.50 start at 7:30 a.m. & 7:00 and midnight on Fri. & Sat., and at 2:00 on Sunday. Tickets available at the SUA Office, Union S 9th Level. Smoking is prohibited on smoking or refreshments allowed. LUNCH: Light?or Lively! Served Monday-Friday, 11:30 am to 1:30 pm. Salad Bar $1.50 The right price on a light lunch..Build your own! The Buffet Line $2.50 Choose from fried chicken or any of our lively entrees! Choose your own vegetable...build your own salad! Holiday Inn 23rd & Iowa Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843 - 9100 Hawaiian Trees National Park Hawaii 23rd & Iowa Jayhawk West CALL 942-4444 APARTMENTS Everything You Want- Private Bus Service Indoor Pool 24 Hr. Security 24 Hr. Maintenance Walk-In Closets 2 Laundry Rooms Ample Parking Friendly Staff KU Bus Route Lease Flexibility At Jayhawk Leasing now and for fall! Call 842-4444 APARTMENTS West Don't wait for Spring! Get the look and feel of Spring today at . . . hair lorDS styling for men and women 1017 1/2 Mass 841-8276 REDKEN open Mon.-Thurs. til 9 by appointment: Fri. & Sat 11:30 a a --- 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 3, 1980 Rape victim service sees big job ahead It took nine years of struggling for funds to establish the Lawrence Rape Victim Supply Center, the organization still has a lot of ground to cover. Jo Bryant, co-directed by RVSAD, said. "Attitudes have improved." Bryant said, "but it's still not widely accepted that an assault is the responsibility of an assailant. "A rape victim may make an error of judgment, but 'that in no way makes her responsible for the assault." Changing public attitudes is difficult, but the Court has made clear that Lawrence district judge to grant probation to a convicted rapist reprimals old ways of thinking and could keep rapists victims from being prosecuted. Judge Ralph M. King Jr, recently placed 19-year-old Robert Winston Brown and 20-year-old Rondell S. Southard on probation for five years. BROWN WAS CONVICTED by a jury in August for the May 19, 1979, kidnapping and rape of a Lawrence woman. He was sent to notless than five years in prison. Southard, who was originally charged with kidnapping and rape, pleaded guilty to a charge of attempted aggravated sodomy sentenced to one to five years in prison. JUDGE KING placed both men on probation for five years after they were evaluated over a three-month period by psychiatric in Toeika. Some RVSS members said they hoped the decision was not an indication of lenency by the courts toward rape suspects. "Our style has never been to right out there and fight everyone in sight," Bryant said. We do want to hear his (Judge King's) viewpoint and he hears ouroes. Years ago, the court system was not as receptive to ideas about supporting rape victims. AFTER A LAWRENCE WOMAN was appicted in court to be questioned what to do with the injured friend of course and harah questioning by a defense attorney, she set out to organize a group of people. The woman, Pat Henry, who is now the acting assistant director of KU Affirmative Action Center in frontcoming police, doctors and district attorneys about their behavior toward rape. Two years later the office of the dean of women at the University of Kansas became known as the Women's Institute about 20 sexual assaults were committed against local women, many of whom were in jail. IN 1973 RVSS received a grant from the Governor's Commission for Criminal Administration. The grant provided financial stability and also allowed her to prevent Pre-Noat Pat Answer. "A state-wide conference also was held to help women in other communities learn how to start their own rao support services. The grant was renewed after one year." Since then the group has been supported by the United Way and the KU Student Senate. About two-thirds of the group's staff are on campus, and Fund and the rest from the Student Senate. An RVSS volunteer is on call 24 hours a day to provide support for rape victims. The volunteers must give two educational programs a month. The programs explain self-defense techniques and try to educate people about my concerning rape. we have drawing tables! COASTAL TRANSPORTS pen &, inc. keeps in stock a large selection of Pickett and Saxon-American drafting tables. Prices range from $76-$120. pen&,inc. art supplies 623 vermont 841-1777 Slattery said his proposal's basic thrust was to give local officials enforcement power over balloonists. "I ask understand it, if you want to register a complaint about a balloon incident, you've got to tell someone else," he said in Kansas City. "Slatter said, 'That distance constitutes an impediment to any investigation.'" major change hovering there until you’re ready to come down. It could destroy the fun of the snort. Cows... open 9-5:30 Mon-Sat INCIDENTS OF reported damage to livestock have been few, McAnaily said. From page one Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, Frances Horwitz, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, Michael Chang for East Asian studies will accompany Shankel. The KU group, which is making the trip at the invitation of officials from Nankai University in Tianjin, China, plan to leave on Monday and visit the trip app come from private sources. But according to Smith, the angered farmers might not wait for legislative action. Del Shankar, executive vice chancellor, will lead the university delegation to meet with students of People's Republic to discuss a possible student-faculty exchange program with two universities V754 During their two-week visit in China, the group will visit National University. Nanjing University will send a representative University to 'get an idea of those who'll profit from study there.' Shankel said last week. Balloonists who are caught violating FAA altitude regulations can be fined or have their flight certificates suspended or revoked, he said. But the Council for International York-based group, has made arrangement number of other student exchange programs between American and Chinese students. "We've had some problem in out Garden, and a little incident last year in Johnson County with a livestock owner, but not much else." McAnally said. McAnally also said that even if Kansas pass its own regulations, the FAA still would be required to investigate any reported incidents. KU has never participated in exchange programs with universities in China, although some students and faculty members have made private trips. Participants in two China Study tours sponsored by the council, which begin June 13 and 29, will visit a half dozen Chinese cities, educational institutions, communities and factories. The programs cost about $350. This includes travel from the West Coast. Shankel to lead KU China trip LETTERS TO BE SENT to the FAA and the Balloon Federation of America will request their cooperation in solving the problem by capturing their own balloons, Dierkard so. "You'll see farmers get together on this and take down balloon numbers and all," Smith said. "If the Legislature won't do it, you have to action on the troopers themselves." adequately enforce attitude levels helped the committee decide to seek outside help in solving the problems, according to Arden Bicknell, the chairman of the Transportation committee. If the problems show no sign of correction by the next legislative session, he said, the committee probably would recommend that such a bill be passed. The question of whether the state could - apartments - studios TRAILRIDGE - townhouses Miller said it was possible that balloonists from across the state could get together and talk about their experiences in a troubled spot before, but that such action would probably be taken only if the balloon had crashed. 843-7333 2500 W. 6th 843-4255 1. Barefoot Sandals 2. Flip-Flop Sandals 3. Cross-Strap Sandals 4. Stiletto Sandals Slide into the Sun with Bass royal college shop eight thirty-seven massachusetts KANSAN On Campus TODAY: THE HEART OF AMERICA DEBATE TOURNAMENT will be all day in the Kansas Union. Pairings are posted in the Council Room and semifinals are at 1:30 p.m. A table for the presidential candidate, will be on the third floor in the Union all day. The GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP meets for lunch at noun in Cork Room 1 in the Union A PUBLIC political science at Haifa (Israel) University, on the topic, "New Realities in the Middle East," will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Union. The president will meet at 3:30 p.m. in Room 1 Fraser. Radiothon a success KANU FM-92's "Campaign for Excellence" reached its goal of $30,000 in pledges this weekend, according to program director Richard Stuck. The "Campaign for Excellence," KANU's eighth annual, was a week long radiohythm to raise money for the station's operation. KANU is a public radio station and cannot solicite advertisements, but does receive funding from the state, the Public Broadcasting Corporation and private uni- "Our listeners are the best around," Stuck said. "They really came through for us." Although the radiation reached its $30,000 goal, surpassing last year's $29,000, Stuck According to Stuck, the success of the "Campaign for Excellence" makes it the largest Public Broadcasting fundraiser in the area. Stuck said that he hoped to raise even more money from people who did not call in a pledge, but would send money in the mail. stressed that this was just money pledged, and not all had been collected. KANU, which specializes in classical, jazz and blackgrass music and news, received pledges from all over KANSAS and from as many as KANSAS, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma. TOMORROW: THE SMALL GROUP CAREER COUNSELING WORKSHOPS will meet from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in room 238 and will meet at 4 p.m. in the Form Room in the Union. The BLACK STUDENT UNION will hold chair practices at 3:30 in room 238 in Murray, the CAREER FORAGE FUND at 3:30 in room 209, 232 and 233 in Haworth. KU-Y will present a PUBLIC TALK by Joseph H. Beesley, executive director and chief executive of Operation PUSH, on the chapter of Operation PUSH, on "Why Jesse Jackson went to South Africa," at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room in the Union. The KU RADIENTAL CLUB will hold a meeting at 7:30 in room 3 at the WESTERN CVILIZATION FILM, "The Hero as Artist," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3 in Old Green Hall. A MAKEUP ASSISTANT will be presented by Gimmy Gordy, assistant instructor of linguistics at 7:30 in Room 201 in Blake. CAMPUS MONTMORTY will begin an open forum on "The Drift." An Issue Board will meet at 6 p.m. in Room 194 in New Green Hall. THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES From nage one Brown's position on those two issues, along with an anti-inflation program which includes balancing the budget, should appeal to Kansans, Benjamin said. Granada Downtown 843-5788 Brown ... Kramer vs. Kramer And students, "the first to go if things worse," are ready to hear Brown's criticism of draft registration and his concern about military spending. Benjamin said. BENJAMIN ACCUSED Kennedy of trying to outflank Brown on the nuclear energy and draft registration issues by taking similar narrative stands on both. an underdog from the beginning. "He knew it was going to be a long haul." Staring Dustin Haskell and Meryl Sleep Eve, 7:30 and 9:40 Sat, and Sun, mat. 2:30 Benjamin said Brown's "Governor Moonbeam" reputation was damaging. were high," Benjamin said, "but Brown was an underdog from the beginning. Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 "Brown's problem to a certain extent is that he's ahead of his time." 1. Foxes Submission R Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:00 1. FOXES 2. The Fog Starring Janet Leigh and Hal Holbrook Fat. 7:45 and 9:45 Sat. and Sun.mat. Varsity Downtown 843-1065 3. "10" Staring B.Oerek and Dudley Moore Eve 7.15 and 9.30 Sat and Sun, mat. 2:01 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 2. Last Married Couple in BENJAMIN SAID Brown's call for a renewed U.S. commitment to the space program was a necessary reaction to in- 1. The Fifth Floor T. THE HILL HOUSE A Eve. 7.30 and 9.30 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1.30 Eve. 7:40 and 9:40 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1:45 Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 America R Benjamin said that he was unsure whether Brown would visit Kansas before the primary here, but that he already had four or two-three-day visits by the candidate. He said there were Brown coordinators in Maitchon, Manhattan and Salina. In addition to those coordinating people are encouraging voter registration in their areas before the March 11 registration day. Benjamin said he was on his way to Lyon for an anti-nuclear dump rally and planned trips soon to Chanute, Pittsburg and Humboldt. creating emphasis on space technology in France, West Germany and Japan. But even if Brown's issues interest Kansans, Benjamin said, his campaign is still loosely organized. If Brown does visit, he said, stops would include Wichita, Towera, Lawrence, Kansas City and possibly Manhattan, Salina and Hutchinson. : By Crazy Horse Available in hearts, whales, stars, tulips, apples and strawberries. Selfportraits sol: 9-5 821 Mass. 842-5200 Have a Whale of a Spring Break! Novelty Turtlenecks . . . Seilgers 5th By Lanford Wilson 8 p.m. Inge Theatre/Murphy Hall February 24-27 & March 2-6, 1980 Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office 5th of JULY Tuxes on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general admission $17.50 KU students free, for reservations call: 933/644-2983 $ $ $ NEED MONEY? $ $ $ NOW THAT I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION,BUDGET HEARINGS FOR THE STUDENT SENATE ARE APPROACHING. REPRESENTATIVES OF GROUPS PLANNINGTO REQUEST FUNDING FOR FISCAL 1981 NEED TO COME BY THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, B105 KS UNION AND PICK UP A REQUEST APPLICATION. THE DEADLINE FOR REQUESTS IS MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1980. PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE. Soup and Salad Bar Special Soup and Salad Bar Special $1.95 reg. price $2.25 NEW YORKER 1021 Mass. Offer good 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. | Mon.-Fri. till March 28 --- Monday, March 3, 1980 9 Field set for NCAA tournament MISSION, Kan. (UPI)-DePaul and Notre Dame, the only team to defeat the top-ranked Blue Demons, highlighted the list of games that were played at the violations by the NCAA yesterday. The atlargest berries completed the 48-team field, largest ever, for the 2nd annual basketball game. DePaul has been ranked No. 1 for the past eight weeks and suffered its first loss only last Wednesday night, on the road to Notre Dame in double overtime, 76-74. The Blue Demons will still carry the best record of the 48 teams into the tournament at 26-1. It marks the eighth time coach Ray Meyer will lead his DePaul team into the NCAA tournament, including the last three consecutive years. His Blue Demons reached the Final Four for the first time in his 37 seasons last season, and they are now in a national round to Indiana State by two points. Defaul was awarded the top seed in the West Regional. No. 13 Notre Dame was issued the No. 4 seed in the Midwest Regional. At-large berths were also extended to No. 3 Kentucky, No. 7 Maryland and No. 9 Missouri—all regular season conference champions that lost the right to represent the N.C. Hornets in the season tournament play. Kentucky fell in the SEC title game to LSU, Maryland lost out in the ACC journey to Duke and Missouri was a semifinal loser to Kansas in the Big Eight tournament. No. 2 ranked Syracuse, a later tobest 28-ranked Georgetown in the Big East title game, is out of the door behind. No 8. St John's, another looser to Georgetown in the Big East tournament, is out of the door behind. The expanded field-up from the 40 teams in the NCAA allowed the NCAA to lift the lid on the number representatives each conference could send. The previous ceiling had been dropped. 1980 NCAA Basketball Tournament Purdue (18-9) vs. LaSalle (22-8) Seeds preceding school name; records in parentheses. At Greenlee, N.C. (18) Iowa vs. Virginia Commonwealth (18-11) Missouri vs. Tampa Bay (24-6) March 13 College Carolina State (20-7) vs. Iowa Wolverine Corn winnings winner Tennessee Tornanwifer winner At Prestwick, N.C. (18) Missouri Villanova (22)-vs.Marquette (18-14) Iowa (24)-vs.Holy Cross (19) Missouri Syracuse (25)-vs.Vilano Wolverine winnings winner Mideast March 7 Friday, March 7, 2016 Monday, March 8, 2016 Tuesday, March 9, 2016 Wednesday, March 10, 2016 Thursday, March 11, 2016 Friday, March 12, 2016 Saturday, March 13, 2016 Sunday, March 14, 2016 4-Dude (2:0) vs. Washington State-Ivy League winner 3-Sl. John's (2:4) vs. Purdue-LaSalle winner At Bowling Green, KY Florida State (12-8) vs. Mid-American Conferenc champion Alcorn State (27-1) vs. South Alabama (23-6) Texas A-M (24-7) vs. Bradley (23-9) Washington State (22-5) vs. Ivy League champion University Daily Kansan 2-Indiana (20-7) vs. Virginia Tech-Western Kentucky winner Virginia Tech (26) vs. Western Kentucky (21) March 9 Aclareau, New March 6 4-Netro (22-3) vs. Missouri-San Jose State winner 16-louisville (18-3) vs. Kansas State-Akansas winner Mississippi 72-5 Fla. San Jose State (17-1) Kansas State (21-8) vs. Arkansas (21-7) At Lincoln, Neb. marcela 4-Notre Dame (2-5) vs. Missouri-San Jose State winner March 9 1-4 SUI (24-1) vs. Alcorn State-South Alabama winner 3-North Carolina (21-7) vs. Texas A-M-Bradley winner Brigham Young (22-4) vs. Clemson-Utah State winner Gorean-Boston (28-1) vs. Weber State-Lamar winner At Ogden, Utah Region State 24:GTVs. Weber State-Lamar winner At Tempe, Ariz. March 7 The return of winter to Lawrence last Friday forced a delay in the opening of the 1980 Kansas baseball season. The Jayhawks had been scheduled to play William Jewell Field, but Quigley Field Saturday afternoon, and the games were postponed because of snow. Baseball opener postponed Arizona State (21-6) vs. Loyola Marymount (14-13) March 9 Floyd Temple, KU baseball coach, said yesterday that he didn't know when the game would make up. The Jayhawks not be able to play at home leaving on their annual spring trip Friday. "We can't do anything until we see the Oklahoma State (20-7) vs. Arizona State-Loyola Marymount winner field," Temple said. "We'll just have to go day by day and see how it looks. If we don't get to play before we leave, it's no big deal. It helps a little, but it's really no big deal. Temple said that tomorrow would probably be the only chance for the Jayhawks to play. William Jewell is going to play another game Wednesday. He also said that he doubted whether any other area team would be able to be scheduled for this week. KU plays Oral Roles in Tuska, Oka. Friday. KU's Halcyon McKnight long jumped 18-7 and Linda Newell throw the 44-3 Friday night at the Kansas National Preparation Meet to qualify for next KU qualifies two for nationals weekend's AIAW National Women's Indoor Track meet. Ross leads KU with four firsts KU faced Kansas State and Wichita State in the Allen Field House meet Washburn won the team title with 122 points. Sports Writer Emperor State finished second in the four-team field with 111.5 points followed by Fort Hays State with 105.6. By TRACEE HAMILTON KU's Kathy Ross swept all four individual events on her way to winning the all-around title at the Kansas State Invitation game, where Robinson gymnasium Saturday afternoon. KU was out of the race for the team crown because they had only three competing gymnasts and at least four were required to participate, while 30 did keep an unofficial score, 95.9 Ross' four first gave her a 34.3 all-around score. She tailed an 8.25 on the balance beam and unenebars, an 8.75 in vaulting and a 9.05 in the floor exercise. Teammate Kim Danlew was second on the uneven bars with an 8.05. Bucky's 5 Cheeseburgers --for only $2.25 with coupon SAPHA meeting March 3 7:00 p.m. Forum Room. Friday, March 4 from 12:00-5:00 p.m. Artificial入侵 interested One coupon per customer Want to Buy- Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please ball 864-0123 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 The University Dailv KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one tie, two weps $2.25 $2.30 $2.75 $4.00 $4.50 $5.25 $6.00 $9.00 $10.00 12 ties or fewer $1.25 $1.50 $2.75 $4.00 $4.50 $5.25 $6.00 $9.00 $10.00 12 ties or fewer AD DEADLINES 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 Kansan 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 or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be shown on computers or mobile phones by the Kruger's business department at BLAVAK ANNOUNCEMENTS "Religious Conversion" Waters for trunk cake at 9th and Illinois, 10th and Iowa. Cakes with The Hole-In-The-Wall. Fresh brings fruits (raspberries, apples, pears) to the jams in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are used. Sour and sorghum. Every Sunday. Also selling wine. Rabbi Fred Reiner K.U. Hillel presents Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Lead by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes $35.847-7010. 3-6 --the new and contemporary lowes arehes in the neighborhood. The property is located on a quiet street and downstairs. Starting at $839 per month, plus all appliances and covers with copier. All appliances will be covered with copier. Private parking call 812-4555 or 812-4525 for private parking. JOSEPH BEASLEY executive director Operation Push of K.C. --the new and contemporary lowes arehes in the neighborhood. The property is located on a quiet street and downstairs. Starting at $839 per month, plus all appliances and covers with copier. All appliances will be covered with copier. Private parking call 812-4555 or 812-4525 for private parking. - "Why Jesse Jackson went to South Africa" Tues. Mar. 4 7:00 pm Room 209 recruitment reception following up This semiannual hs is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in areas of academic excellence, and campus facilities. Applications are available in 216 Stirling day, March 7 at 5:00 p.m. RetURN all application form to the official transcript to 216 Stirling day. Mount Blue Slis Hall is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Inter Pratership Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUMI March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 361-5530 The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 to 10, in Green Hall, room 104. Panel includes Prof. Cari Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118. Strong secretaries. 3-7 Ronalsa the Oasis, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write; Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 ENTERTAINMENT FOR RENT For your entertainment needs, the band will be available for party and club. Now take booking for March 8 to May 81. Very reasonable prices. See website at bertle.net/84-328 or bertle.net/84-7527. Small efficiency apc. Close to campus. Utilizes Reasonably priced resource. Reasonably priced. B4-8547-09 or 82-183-25 Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9679 or 842-1485. Apts. and zoons for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D Wappliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843- NANSMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. Jajhawk West Apts. New Renting: 1 & 2 bk hwack furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment calls 812-4444 or see at 524 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell E., Telf. uf Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, $329! M2s. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 909 sq. ft. Contact 832-1043 or 804-fft. ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within a wide distance of the KU campus and downstream. For more information, visit 842-9411. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-0579. ff Need to suburban 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnished 2O-street parking. Fullly equipped, cable TV, Acv. New show and refrigerator, kitchen, storage room, and store run on 3-7. Call 841-691-891. Lage 2-barn house, 1½ bath; close to campus. awarded $250 + utilizes $82-685 or $41- 7027. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and fenced off to campus, on bus line, 824-446-918 or 841-301-88. Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this super 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 study rooms. recreation. 1 bathroom. 3 baths. reference, pet needs, 842-0221. 3-19 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING 2 bedroom apartment. Modrm, slug, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00 mw 841-3168. 3-4 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-0579. ff Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make use of these notes to use them 1) At study guide. 2) For class analysis of Western Civilization now available Analysis of Western Civilization also available in Class Crit, Mall Books Store and Oread Book list. FOR SALE Sublease 2 HR apt, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5609. Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. on 9th St, & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0696 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mat, bed pillow, mattress pad, Lifetime Furniture 120w New York St. NJ-83228. 12f Furniture 120w New York St. NJ-83228. 12f Alternator, starter and generator specialist MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-608-2900, W9, 810, q4, 843-608-2900, W9, 810, q4 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $95.95 Rides Bike Shop 103. Vermont 841-664-724. www.ricksbikes.com WATERED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarant. WHITE LIGHT, T4 Mass., 1838-1880. Kennedo DX Storco Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally equipped. Excellent condition. 841-3554 call anytime. 3-4 SunSpees~Sun glasses are our specialty, especially for the older adult. Reasonable selection, no FEF. 1021 MISS. 841-737-200 Pioneer's KPRG, her best cassette car stereo, 30Wpe, Dolby, Loudness, base, treble, with Jen- en Trullazes, trialized three months, new $275 sell $175. 843-9268. McIntosh C-28 preamp, MC-2505 poweramp, with walnut cases and speaker control relay $80. B and O 4002 turntable $400. B42-6362. 3-3 Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a Loin 2000 AMP. Good condition plays like new. Call 843-672-9511 3-5 Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cullas, red back, top interior; PS/ PB, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road. Craig. 842-513-5 3-6 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 843-7310. 3-4 Antiques are always in, see and buy one year or two. The National School of Jewelry, 7 and 8th Friday-Saturday to 9 to 11th Sunday. Club of Lawyers, the A. National Guard Arm Association, Good all three days. Refreshments with this ad. Good all three days. Refreshments with this ad. 1928 Trans-Am special edition 24, 600 miles. New aircraft, no wrecks 400 gwd. barrel carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7170 or 842-5575. Ask for Mkt. Serious injuries only. 72 Dodge Challenge-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 81.000 PHI. 841-8154 1972 Datsum 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpg—W/A/C. Overhauled, new- tires, dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2516 after 2 p.m. FOUND Cubb-Nelson Grand piano, excellent & 4 condition. dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Piano. jd yrs. TS8 4. Speakers. still warranted. dark-canvas Guitar. Wurlitzer BEd-3 & 742-8420 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise 814-2750. 3-6 2 weeks ago, found orthodontic retainer on third floor of Wesley. on trial at 3116 Wesley. 3-4 Wristwatch—Found on Weco Beach Wednesday Attendance—Call and照看. Slide #843-867. Keys at key holes of Alumun Place parking Call: 843-8654 for mark for Room 8 to Room 9. TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER, ORDERS: Wish you share your work experience with our One-Week Nurse Training Program. Karmis for fire help and help in organization on nursing home conditions and help in organization on nursing home conditions. candidates. All names and correspondence will be included in the application (between time of first wife or first wife) and KINR# 9216. Black cat in area of 9th & Emery Rd. Call 842- 2782 or 864-2203. 3-5 HELP WANTED 1 Navy blue mitten with 2 gold stripes on the left wrist. 14 at 11:30 am. Call 864-1720 to claim 684-1720 to claim Found a calculator in Wescoe Hall. Call 1-(818)-753-7530 evenings & ask, *Bak for Bikers* 3-5 Summer Job for Student Counsel I am looking for a full-time counselor to keep and maintain an alumni home base. For the summer job, I will need the August Salary; $125 weekly for couple. Preference given to those with college and great opportunities for swimming, canine training, and be sure to give names of sponsors for you Write COOPANT, 1000 Stark Street, NYC 10036. Part-time, day-time dishwasher must be able to work from 10:30 to 3:00 Monday through Friday. Apply in person only at Border Bandido. 1528 W. 3-6 23rd Street. Midwestern Carpenters of the University of Kansas have a long history of providing students and adults should have experience with junior and senior carpentry. We also have experienced Henrys, Bennie, John, and Bradley in both graduate campuses or 34 Murray Call call me. Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place has a position to provide research training in data position available. Salary ranges from $25,000 to $40,000 per year with comprehensive observations and treatment opportunities. Position requires travel and have flexible schedule for afternoons, travel and have flexible schedule for afternoons skills exercise applications. Application deadline Mar. 31st. Contact Mildred Doyle, 811-798-6242. Contact Mildred Doyle, 811-798-6242. Summer Junker all at Camp near Ottawa, Kansas. Director, Counselor, litterage, nurse. cook. June 1- July 19. Santa Trail Council of Girl Scouts. City of Kawartha, Kansas. City, Kansas 64513. 812-287-623. Now taking applications for door/door and wallraces. Must be 21. Apply at the Sanctuary, 1401 W. 7th after 8:30 p.m. Ask for Shelley, if it is necessary. $180 (lsoand for envelopes you mail Postage Rates in the U.S.) R.S. 3-4 196P, Cd d'auréne, Idaho $184 Typist—half or full time should be able to type at least 60wpm. Excellent pay and superb work environment. 842-201-98 CLIENTSUSPENSION/SAILING EXPEDITIONS=SAIL- MENTS USPENSION/SAILING EXPEDITIONS= NATIONWIDE, NATIONWIDE, SENIOR = APPICATION INFO REFERRALS, to NATIONWIDE WORK BOX 0029, Sarasatec, 00580 00580 If you need any extra cash, with work for a few weeks, call 612-590-3842 or Lawrence KS 60044 1821 HW 28th, Jr. Lawrence KS 60044 FINDING, TEACHING POSITIONS- INFORMATION from private education fellowship from school administrators professionals, instructional dentists, teachers, nurses, docu- rators, nurses, teachers, interviewing, marc- tering, mentoring. TEACHING - 13, 168 Derferhaven, BALCO Teaching - 13, 168 Derferhaven, BALCO LOST Lost. A brown Irish cap in or between Haworth and O-Zone. Reward offered. Call 842-1629 after the purchase. NOTICE Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Springs area, students work with children in a camp setting and participate in many other programs. Write now, include in your resume Western Westem Camps, Parkside Colorado, 80116. THE DAM RUN IS COMING Additional Info. 864-3546 Recreation Services 大 Enroll now! ! In Lawrence Drive School: Receive drivers license without Highway Parkway Test; Transportation provided; Drive now, pay later! 842-6015. 3-4 PERSONAL VOYAGERS-Fellowship-Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd, 9:30 a.m., 845-417-11, tf ATHLETIC SHOES. Running, tennis, basketball, soccer. Said up to $10.50 on name brands. Mark Hughes. 48 hours. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-aborted up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Childbirth. Obstetrics and gynecology, appointment. q AM to PM at $ 913 (MIS) 481. WT: 109h. St. Overland Park, KS. Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tt The Time is Now! The Time is Now! We need the guts, the leadership and the ex- presentation skills that help us to reach new help you can help us any way, even by just waking a button, or if you need more info to reach you. Buzzy Eagle 843 5060 or Jeff Miller 841 8907 We need ANDERSON for PRESIDENT Paid for by Karen for Anderson The Harbour Lite is where it’s at for cold beer, pool, pinball and unique liqueries. Color TV and screen for the Hawks are away. You can watch them on iPhone or 1031 Man. A first-class dive. GY CAUSELEING REFERERS through Headquarters, 614-238 and KU info, 864-2506. **POETRY WANTED for Anthology. Include stamped envelope. Literary Arts Paper 132 Nanotechnology.** Interested in learning how to read Hebrew, only. Class beginning Thursday, March 6th at 7:30 at the L.J.C.C. For more information call 864-2948. Female nursing student wanted to share apartment near Med Center next fall. 864-1640. 3-6 INTERESTED IN FRATERNITIES? Participate in men's spring formal rush. March 21, 22, 23. To register, contact Inter-Fraternity Council Office at 864-3559. 3-21 TENNIS PLAYERS. Planning to play during the championship weekend, Call David 864-230-9688. Member Professional String-Tennis rates on good string and play 5-7. Tournament rates on good string and play 5-7. GRAMS ATSTA ASTA SINGLES TENNIS GRAMS 120-230-9688 Confused and frustrated about taxes or-out-of-state income? Call Rick 842-4650 for tax planning as well as preparing. 3-7 The Corps is coming! The Corps is coming! 3-7 To Roger S., my roommate. You're always steering me. We first, you **j** — on my pillow—oh. Then call me a glove. And for this aid now you'll probably use me. 3-3 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear MEN'S CLOTHING? Transvestite cross dresses because their heterosexual women's clothing. Many transvestites are women who wear clothes that规定 women wear clothes as an assumption. Women are too parochial to parody the traditional women's role in society, so they vote to rule that question. Do some people abstain when questioned about what men should wear? GAY SERVICES IN KAISAN ARE SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICES IN KAISAN Are there jobs after receiving a BA in Psychology? Come to the Psi Chi Psychology club meet Mar. Mon, March 3, 1pm room 4 Fraser Hall. Wanted: Intellectual attractive woman to teach camel secret to attractive in blood-blooded body. Skilled and charming. Serious inquiries only. All held in street clothes. Suit, dress, and well-fix you up. 3-4 days in roommates and well fix you up. 3-4 days in roommates and well fix you up. INTERNATIONAL 'PARENT NETWORK', at OPENING CEREMONY, will present INTERNATIONAL EXPOSURE for your special brand and skill (taming, dancing, story-telling, cooking, entertaining), at 10am. The street scene (5 blocks west of Oliver Halton on 34) You don't have to walk alone on campus or Call Campus Safety Services at 844-6484 for an escort team. The escort services is available 1 p.m. to 1 a.m., Sunday through Thursdays. SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102-104 call 5785. MATH 115-711 call: 800-734 STATISTICS 5786. MATH 115-711 call: 800-734 STATISTICS 5785. PHYSICS 100-500 call: 800-734 ENGLISH and SPANISH call: 843-702-705 PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Usher Quick Copy Center Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday 4 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 838 Ms. For legal assistance, including Municipal court filings and mediation, call 800-723-5144; for tax returns consult DAVID & LAKES & EAST 2nd Street, D.C. 21037; for bankruptcy cases, call 3543 collection; Call 641-843-7900; they are 3:30 - 6:00, Monday through Friday. We will be available on Tuesdays. IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $10 for your 308-page catalog of college衍展. 10:25 topics listed. BOOK 20957G; Los Angeles, CA. 90025, (213) 477-8286. I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TF Experienced typist—Dueses, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correcting selective. Burke After 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf Why cuss about typing? Experienced civil servant secretary does professional typing. Betty Grannier. 812-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. Accurate, experienced typist, IBM correcting Soliditec, Call Domna, 842-2744. [f] MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Grammar corrected. Call 841-3287. Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Threes, dissertations welcome; edit layout. Contact J炉 842-917. TF Experienced Typist—manuscripts, papers, threes Scientific and technical experience. IBM Corrent- ing Selectric. 811-4228. Experienced Tystad—term papers, thesis, misc. electric IBM S.Ilectronic. Proofreading, spelling corrected 843-954, Mrs. Wright. Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selector Quality work. Referencess available. Sandy,终 eing & weekends. 745-9818. Neat, easy typing, IBM electronic, deliver, 3-6 pick-up on campus. 842-3521; after 6.00. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing. Self-correcting Selective Calc. Ellen or Jeannan 841-2122. 3-7 ROOMMATES. Naismith Hall has a couple of spaces for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. If WANTED PSCHATRIST AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES Psychiatric AIDS to Topper State Hospital, apply to Preggy State Hospital, W 26, Wm. Tokpura, KS Phone: (913) 292-580- apply to Anwil, apply to Anwil, apply to Anwil, employer. Female roommate; age 23-30, trailer house, $100, 1'2 utilities, private room, washer, dryer, dish- ware, $42-$589. Female roommate for spacious housekeeping, living, nice neighbor, Fireplace, garage, Gauze, snorkel; $110 < 1.2 utilities; 842-406. Keep trying. Don't pass this up. ♥ March rent paid. Own widened bedroom. Only $110 per mo. ♥ utilities. Call 843-0522. ♥ 3-6 Male to share spacious unfurnished apartment $170 includes utilities, $30 deposit. Call Steve 843-4299. 3-5 Wanted: On!好-humored, responsible roommate through May. Own room. $115 a month. Javhawk West. Call 841-0683. 3-5 Garage space for car, 864-4072, before 9 a.m. 3-6 Male roommate to share spacious two-bedroom apartment from spring break until the end of amsterdam $120 monthly plus ½ electric. Call after 3 p.m. p84-1526 Roommate to share 2 bedroom apt. $195.50 util. Call 843-6849 Artist KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! If you've got it, Kansar If you've got it, Kanana Classified sells it. Just mall in this form with check or cash. Or call Hall. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it Selling Power. AD DEADLINES to run Tuesday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Wednesday ... Friday 5 pm Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm 1 time $2.25 .02 CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write ad here: ___ RATES: 15 words or less 3 times $2.75 .04 DATES TO RUN: CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 4 times $3.00 .05 ADDRESS: PHONE: KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS EVERYTIME THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD. --- 10 Monday. March 3. 1980 University Daily Kansan Magic of Kemper Arena disappears for Kansas By GENEMYERS KANSA CITY, Mo.-The Kemper magic disappeared one game too early. Kemper Arena, with its new top, brought out the best in the Kansas Jayhawks Friday night against Missouri. But one night later the Jayhawks immedately closed up the Kansas State playoff bound and KU homeward bound. Friday night the magic was there. David Magley, ili his teammate and bit hit 16 and rebounded six rebounds. Kelly King, this year'sMagley, scoring 10 points and clamping off Missouri's Steve Slipovich, the bottom line was that he scored 23. BUT SATURDAY NIGHT almost nothing could have baited out KU. The 'Hawks drag an early and permanent breeze by missing 10 of their first 12 field goals, and they eight-eight minute span, there also were four turnovers. K-State eventually coasted to a 79-88 triumph to qualify for the NCAA Tournament. After spending the entire championship, by one point, but, according to KU coach Ted Owens, Saturday's game was decided warm-up time. OWENS SAID THE game was a disappointment, but he wasn't surprised. The entire 19-14 KU season had turned into an overtime battle. "Maybe, I thought, we'd have to something early to get out of the flattening. You go out and talk to them," she said. "I'll give you a phone." "We were really flat tonight. I sensed it when warming up and tried to do something to bring about a change and get them going," Owens said. "I waited until they came in, and you could tell they were just emotionally right. The Jayhawks played like wosters beaters some of the time and like their own worst enemies at others. Few players had ever nationally ranked Missouri, but Saturday they could not get untracked. Instead, the Hawks got routed for the first time. "I can't account for our poor start," Owens said. "I don't know if it was coming down on an emotional high or what. I was disappointed it ended like this, because I'm very proud. "The team battled back to place them one step away from an NCAA bid. I was disappointed it had to happen." BUT THE MISSOURI victory wasn't a complete waste for Kansas. The Jaquawks ontoured the tour-game and the only other team that toured them. The last game was regional Thursday in the 48 team NCAA playoffs. There, Missouri will face San Jose State in a "unroutine" match of playing Notre Dame Saturday. Kansas State, 21-8, also must play a preliminary game. The Wildcats meet Arkansas, who they beat once this season, the same night in Lincoln. The winner scores Louisville. Nebraska, which lost to K-State Friday night because of Roland Blackman's last minute heroics, received a bite to the 32-game National Invitational miss, and the other Big Eight teams, received nothing. THERE WAS NOTHING disappointing, however, about Friday's triumph for KU. The 'Hawks led by eight at the half, 40-32, and repeatedly held on after the Bengals won 9th by United Press International and IIBs. They closed the score to 59-48 with 12-57 left, but John Crawford sank a dunk, Knight hit a 9-foot, Dearborn Valentine carried two free throws, Knight hit a layup and lost a 10-foot 8-foot and a free throw to push the lead to 65-49. Missouri pressed from the seven-minute mark on but never inched closer than five points. Stiponville, the Big Eight newcomer of the year, finished with a score of 6-2 and a high-29 against KU FI. 9 scored one in the first half. "Even when we were only five behind after that lance run, we didn't play it like a machine; the mistakes we made were offensive mistakes. My MU coach Norm Stewart said. "I haven't seen them play this has迪而 the opening game of the comeback." IN THE CONFERENCE opener Jan. 9, KU won Missouri in Lawrence 69-66. The Missouri standout to score was Daniel Bentley, 70-61. MISSION: Berry was injured entering the game Friday and didn't start. But he was forced to leave for good after undercutting Valentine at the 9:36 mark of the second half. behind 54-64; pursued. Both crashed under the basket, and fell to the ground, plowed into the basket support, landing in the basket support, lying on the body on the wooden court and the upper half on the floor. In this week we repair damaged auralite in his knee. Valentine stole the ball and Berry, with Missouri K-STATE ALSO HAS been bothered by injuries. Entering the tournament, the 'Cats had dropped four straight. The streak started after Tyrone Adams fractured a finger and wrist. But Blackman, the wire service player of the year, scored twice for Nebraska in second mark against Nebraska and then blocked Andre Smith's shot at the buzzer for a 60-59 victory. Neely had 18 shots in the one and 17 against Blackman and Nealy joined Valentine, K-State's Jari Wills and Nebraska's Jack Moore on the all-tournament team. It was Valentine's third straight appearance on the team. "That was a beautiful basketball game," KState coach Jack Hartman said. "It was a pleasure to watch. I thought we played extremely well from start to finish." Magley FG FT REB PF TP Crawford 3-10 6-10 2-10 10 Crawford 3-10 6-10 2-10 10 Valentine 3-10 0-4 5 2 Guy 2-4 2-2 0 5 Douglas 1-4 2-0 0 6 Rogers 4-1 0-4 2 4 Ogden 4-11 1-12 3 8 Honey 1-12 1-12 2 2 Giles 1-1 0-4 2 0 Carroll 1-1 0-4 2 1 Temps 14-19 10-12 30 7 Total 14-19 10-12 30 7 Nealy FG PT IT REB TP TF Willis 9-13 6-10 3 1 3 17 Wills 9-13 6-10 3 1 3 17 Marshall 12 6-0 4 4 3 2 Blackman -714 8-11 1 1 12 2 Jayko -714 8-11 1 1 12 2 Jayko -714 8-11 1 1 12 2 Levens 0-1 0-2 2 0 0 0 Douglas 1-2 0-2 2 1 4 4 Galbad 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 0 Hayward 0-0 0-0 1 1 0 0 Total 29-58 21-49 39 12 75 79 KANANS 77 21 - 58 KANANS STATE 40 28 - 78 Officelle-Bain, Clymer Officele-Bain, Clymer 25 STATE JEFF HARRING/Kansan staff Talented twosome Davalline Nellart glides past Kansas State in Rolaño Blackman for a layup in the finals of the post-season tournament while Glen Marshall (left) attempts to draw a charge. Valentine scored on the play, but KU came up short against the Wildcats at 7-8 sigh. Valentine and Blackman were named to the post-season tournament team along with Ed Neally and Jill Worms of Kansas State and Jack Moore of Nebraska. MANSA 49 KANSAS 13 JEFF HARRING/Kansan stat Stuffed star John Crawford (left) and Chester Giles team up to reject a hit by Missouri center Steve Stipinow with post-season tournament action Friday night. Stipinow, who scored career-high 29 points against KU when the teams met in Columbia earlier this season, was held to one point in the first half and finished the game with 13 points. Men's track team wins Big 8 title Snorts Writer The KU men's track team had little trouble living up to its advance billing as the team to beat. The Jayhawks captured their first indoor Championship over the weekend. Sparked by a meet record in the 440-yard dash by Lester Mickens and Mike Rick's record-tying 600-yard run, Kansas rolled up 121 points. The Jayhawks won seven individual titles to easily outdistribute second place teams, which scored 80 team points. The victorious team was in coach Bobby Tommings 15 years at KU. THE FIRST KU points come Friday night when senior Jay Reason丹 the long jump with a loop of 24-9.% he effort nipponed State's Kevin Slaan by one-quarter maze. Before the victory, Reardon's best championship effort was a third place finish in the long jump his freshman year. Friday night's action also set the stage for what was to follow Saturday. Mickens, a two-time indoor champion in the 600, elected to run in the 440. In his preliminary heat, he set a meet record with a time of 47.95. RICKS TOOK OVER in the 600 with a 1.002 clocking, his best run ever The 'Hawks also received some bad news Friday. Stan Whitaker suffered a hamstring strain that pulled him out of all competition. But on Saturday, Mickens and Ricks But on Saturday, Mickens and Ricks picked up where they left Friday. Mickens, who likes to run in the outlands,网扮的 fastest 400 time any U.S. tracker, ran at a pace of 125 miles per trailing in the race. Mickens easily whipped Iowa State's Kevin Kecui and shattered the world record by 6 minutes. "I finally got to start in the fourth lane," Mickens said. "That's where I run the best." RICKS ALSO BETTERED his Friday time in winning the 600-yard run. The junior held off a late charge by Nebraska's Everton Davon C to meet the record held by Mickens. The record was the second fastest time ever in the event by a collegiate athlete. "I think I could have run even faster if I was pushed by tougher competition," Ricks said. And again, like Friday night, the Hawks received bad news Saturday when sophomore speedster Dean Hogan withdrew from events because of a pulled barnstorm. Timmons said the team took Hogan's injury hard. "It turned out to be a tough meet right from the beginning," Timmons said. "I think a lot of our guys were down in the dumps about麻麻, but we kept it gone." The 'Hawks especially kept it going in the meet's last five events. TIM TAYS DEFEATED favorite Erin Rankin of Oklahoma in the two-mile run with a time of 8:51.54. Rick Ensez, KU's most consistent distance runner this season, won the 1,000-yard run by more than a second over Iowa State's Bob Verbeek. Ensz clocked in 2:11.48. A makeshift mile relay team of Warren Wibote, Bullock Rodney, Ricks and Mckens proved too much for the rest of the Mackens to victory with a winning time of 3.12.99. But it was the field events that were the showstoppers. In the high jump, Missouri's Nat Page defeated KU's Joel Light on misses. Both jumpers cleared 7-1/4, but Light took two extra jumps at 6-10. In the continuing battle of triple jumpers Sanya Owolabi and Vince Parnette, it was KState's Parrot flying above all. On his first jump of the day,帕reette uncoached a 55-10 12 flight, the second best indoor jump in U.S. history.帕reette might have been the record, but he started his landing too soon. "I was so excited after the step, I couldn't wait to get to the pit." Parrete said. "I didn't concentrate and let my feet fall when I landed." PARRETTIE'S EFFORT broke the Big Eight record by more than two and a half feet. Despite his record-shattering leap, it was Oklahoma State's James Butler that was named the team's outstanding performer. He sprinted to the nation's best collegiate 60-yard dash and a conference record with a 6.41 electronic clocking. He broke that record with a hand-clocked time of 24.2. Hand-held times at 24 seconds slower than electronic times. Birdsong, Wedman lead Kings past Rockets HOUSTON (UP1) - Usa Birdsong and Scott Wedman each scored 24 points and a total of 57 shots for Houston Rockets to four field goals in the second quarter of a 9-48 Kings victory. Rick Bairy's three-point goal with four seconds left made the score 92-91 for the Kings. After Robinizme's free throws, after Alen Leavell was long with a half-court shot. Bill Robinize's two free throws with three seconds remaining insured the King's straight victory after the Rockets, which 12:39 to 1:29, railed to pull within one point. Rockets center Moses Malone scored a game-high 29 points and grabbed 15 rebounds as the Rockets depended on him offensively in the absence of injured guard Calvin Murphy. Kings guard Birdson, Phil Ford and Billy McKinney went virtually unchecked by the Rockets backup guards McKinney in 10 points and Ford had seven assists. Houston, 33-44, lost its second straight game. The Rockets led by two points early in the second quarter but a tough Kings offense kept City move to a five-point lead by the half. Robinize chipped in 16 points for the Kings. For the Rockets, Leavell scored 21, and Barry added 14 Eastern Conference Atlantic Division NAME URBAN NAME URBAN NAME URBAN NAME URBAN NAME Boston 10 12 Pct. GB Philadelphia 9 17 New York 33 48 Houston 33 48 New Jersey 38 49 Central Division Atlanta 180 384 612 8 Houston 224 354 693 – Indiana 21 36 463 10 Indiana 21 36 463 10 Cleveland 13 34 391 10 Michigan 13 34 391 10 Western Conference Midwest Division Kansas City 42 27 609 — Milwaukee 42 27 609 — Denver 25 43 368 128 Oakland 23 43 368 128 Utah 21 43 368 128 Pacific Coast 18 Seattle 47 20 706 - - Los Angeles 47 20 706 - Portland 31 38 463 18% San Diego 31 38 463 18% Denver 40 38 463 18% Saturday's Games New York 115, New Jersey 108 Yesterday's Games Alabama 108, Derby V96 Atlanta 104, Burrow State 99 Washington 128, Indiana 104 Houston 105, Derby 115 Boston 107, Derby 113 Michigan 94, City State 91 Kansas City 94, City State 91 Portland 110, Chicago 107 Portland 110, Chicago 107 Milwaukee 101, San Diego 98 Today's Games Numerous scheduled 'Hawks fall flat at sub-regional tourney Sports Writer By PAM CLARK Friday night in the semi-finals, KU lost to Kansas State for the third time last season, 79-74. The following night in the consolation game, Kansas State defeated three times this season, 77-73. PITTSBURG--The climb to success can be long and hard and the fail from the top abrupt and fast, as the KU women's basketball team has found. The Jayhawks went into their sub-regional tournament at Pittsburgh State this weekend as the 1. seed. They had a 24 record and were ranked 10th in the nation. CUPLED WITH LAST year's loss to KState, the Jayhawks have lost three consecutive games. The last time KU lost three straight was in March 1978. The losses hurt the 'Hawk's chance for a good seed in the Region VI tournament in Des Moines, Iowa. That tournament begins Thursday. also were awarded and that is how Kansas backed into the regional. But it didn't turn out quite as she had planned. KU must face Central Missouri State in the first round of regionals. The state had decided seventh, while the Jenaes are Nq. 11. KU coach Marian Washington said before the tournament that the sub-regional was only important for seeding purposes. She was correct. THE JENNIES, BEHIND their two high-scoring seniors, Kathy Anderson and Marigle Nelsen, had little trouble sweeping sub-regulation championship this weekend. The top three teams in the north and south sub-regions received automatic bids to the regional tournament. Two at-large berths Kansas now faces a must-win situation at regions. The team is 2/5 and is likely to drop several places in the top twenty poll, possibly even out of the poll. After regionals come sectionsal. The top teams in each regional automatically, along with eight at-large selections, go to selection. The winners then advance to the Final Four. The two other teams in KU's bracket are Missouri and Nebraska. If KU had won its sub-regional but not its regional, the odds were the Hawks still would have received an at-large berth into the sectional round. But now with seven defeats, the 'Hawks' chances of an at-large berth are lessened considerably. They need to repeat as Region VI win. The Rockets themselves a position in the section round THE TEAM SHOULD have guessed that it was going to be one of those weekends when everything went wrong. But based on their performances this past weekend, this could be a formidable task Three minutes into their game against K-State, the vapor lights dimmed and the game had to be stopped for about five minutes. Washington would have preferred to continue the contest. But when the officials asked KShate coach Lynn Hickey, she said she would wait for the lights to return to full strength. It proved to be a smart move for K-State. At the time, KU had the momentum and led 9-2. When the game resumed, KU stretched to lead eight points, 14, with 13:34 In the first three minutes of the second half, KU stretched its 34-31 halftime lead to 10 points and led 41-31. But Feeeney and Tammie Romstad brought the Wildcats back and K-State took its first lead of the game, 62-60, with 6-49 left. The lead grew to three points, 64- IN THE SECOND HALF, Mizzou put together strings of 11 and nine points to break open the game. In the consolation final, Missouri came out sizzling from the opening tip-down. Dana Supakis hit 18 of her 24 points in the first most of which came from the 18-foot-9 range. remaining in the half. The 'Hawks maintained that bulge for about three minutes. BUT KU'S DEFENSE crumpled and K-State went on a 134 scoring binge in the three and one-half minutes to sew up the victory. Sports Writer KU coach Mark Hosking said he scheduled the exhibition match to give his team playing experience. Kansas has posted because of snow last month. David Theis led the KU onslaught by After weeks of anticipation and day-to-day preparation, the team teamkicked off its 1980 season with 8-3 victory over top tennis professionals from around the world at the match Friday in Kuala Lumpur City. "Our practices were getting very stable and we needed to play against someone else in the league, so we moved into the regular season." Hosking said. "This material helped us tremendously. We learned that you can play different styles and different styles but also gave us a chance to look at our own games and look for opportunities." Rv JIM SMALL Men netters start year with exhibition victory defeating Bill McGowan in 1. Singles, 6-2, 6-4, 7-6. Ironically, McGowan almost had been 'Their' coach this year. McGowan had verbally agreed to take the team from Tom Kivisto as the head coach at KU, but turned out of the deal earlier this semester. Kivisto is now working for the Koch Oil Refinery in Wichita. Chet Collier, No. 3, singles; Ricz Wertz, No. 5, Wayne Swall, No. 6, Ed Bolen, No. 7 and Dave Willingham, No. 8 also won their matches. Bill Krizman, No. 2 and John Runnels, No. 4. singles, lost their matches The No. 1 doubles combination of Calder and Krizman was beaten by the No. 2 double, all of the other double matches. These and Runnels beat Kirkland Gates, former KU coach, and Andy Scott. Wertz and Sewall beat Keegan and Grege Bulle in No. 3 doubles. --- SNOW THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. 90, No.105 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Tuesday, March 4.1980 Ted Owens to keep job See story back page Bottoms up It's warm-up time for Wee Wiggins, a Lawrence Parks and Recreation class for three- to five-year-olds. Jud, practicing the first step of somersaulting, puts intense effort into getting his up over head. To his Women's home drops request for city development funding Staff Reporter By ANN SHIELDS To protect its workers from personal attacks, the Women's Transitional Care Services, a shelter home for battered women, will withdraw its request to Pam Johnston, WTCS coordinator, said yesterday. The Kaw Valley Pro-Family Form, formerly Lawrence Cities Against ERA, had accused the center of offering homosexual counseling and had asked the city commission to reject a WTCs request for $30,000 in community development funds. The city would have gown before the commission toughed. WTCS officials have denied the forum's charges, saying they were only acting as a be-between for members of a lesbian support group who did not want to advertise their names. However, Johnston said that because the commission had no rules for presenting evidence and hearing testimony, its meetings could not fairly resolve the forum's charges. LAWRENCE MAYBarkey Clark said he also was afraid that forum members would make perk actions. "I didn't want to see this turn a mudbling contest," he said. "WTSC provides a valuable service to this community, and I don't want to see it slandered in any way." However, Jan Hoover, a forum member, said she had not named any WTCS workers in the chairs. have been called by WrestleMania contagues. "This is not a personal vendetta." Hoover said. "It's a request for some information and truth." She said she was more concerned that the shelter ... request for some information and truth. She said she was more concerned that the shelter See related story page five could be offering lesbian counseling while operating without professional counselors. OHOVER SAID that allbuthe she did not think the shelter's decision to drop the funding request was an admission of guilt, she was afraid that other Lawrence citizens would. "I just think WTCS is afraid to get into it," she said. Johnston said the shelter would remain open without the community development funds. "It just means we won't be moving into a bigger house, which we could have," she said. "We'll just move to the suburb." The SHELTER had planned to use the $30,000 to renovate the Bert Nash house at Fourth and Maine Clark said he thought the commission would approve the money to improve the house. The house's occupants probably will be named before summer, he said. The commission must hold public hearings to determine which group will occupy the house, арефікуєм на оцінку у навчальніх випадоків. "We have a predeceit for fixing up an old building and using it for a social service with the Senior Center," he said, "so this is an extension of that idea." She said she did not think the controversy would hurt future WTTS chances for city funding. "Their request was not refused this time." Francisco said. BUT HOVER said the forum would continue working against WTCS and hoped to present its case in a final draft. "We are going to the meeting prepared as if nothing had happened," she said. "I don't want this to happen." If there's a problem, we need to solve it. And if there isn't, we need to know how we can stop walking. However said she would ask the commission to use the Bert Nash house as a shelter to be run by another organization, such as the Red Cross, the Army or the Douglas County Health Department. Tighter aid policy problems foreseen By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter A proposal that would reduce the time between students' failure to achieve "reasonable academic progress" could help create problems for many students, Jerry Rogers, director of the office financial aid, said. Most financial aid is now awarded on a yearly basis, Rogers said, and a student who did not maintain academic eligibility during the fall semester could still receive aid in the spring. "Once the award is made," he said, theoretically, student could not poverty in the first semester. "You don't know how to pay." "We're looking at it as a commitment for a full year." The committee proposed that the office of financial and device a procedure for "cutting off aid to ineligible students immediately following the announcement" to maintain reasonable academic progress." A proposal from the University Senate Committee on Financial Aid to Students recommends that students' academic progress be monitored on a semester basis. IN A REPORT to the Senate executive committee, the committee said that although aid was awarded on a yearly basis, payment of the second semester was limited, and no deficient semester violated eligible requirements. Rogers said this could cause problems for students. "There are a lot of kids who can turn it around in a semester," he said. "I'm worried about students with year-long commitments, like residence hall contracts." Rogers also said some students could not be notified about their aid termination in time to make "What about a guy who lives in Baltimore, Md." he said. "He might have already left to come here and he might not find out on his aid but he gets all the way out here. The time frame should be considered." The office of financial aid also may not have enough time to evaluate eligibility between the time grades are issued and the time students returned, Roens said. "If they think we have time, we'll try," Rogers said. IN THE ACADEMIC year 1976-1977 the office of financial and student salts 91 students of aid termination for academic reasons, Rogers said. In that year, 5,718 students requested aid and 3,000 repaid. Rogers said that although 91 notice were some, were overturned on appeal because of ex- "I imagine the percentages are higher now," he said. The office of financial aid does not keep separate records of students who receive aid while in school. The Committee on Financial Aid to Students suggested in its report to SenEx that each school supply a listing of all students on academic records to the office of financial aid to refer to at enrollment. The LST would be used to determine students' mellel for financial aid, even though the student was already enrolled. Rogers said that grade reports and student transcripts were consulted when determining and eligibility before the beginning of the academic year. Students newly admitted to the University were eligible for aid, he said, because admission to the University was considered reasonable academic progress. Staff Reporter By BLAKE GUMPRECHT TOPEAK-State Sen. Charlie Angell no longer has much hope for a bill he cosponsored that could cut in-state student fees (mostly in half). All it took was an afternoon in which almost everyone at a Senate Education Committee proposal, introduced by Angell, R-Plains, and State Elen. Elwane Pomeroy, R- "Realistically," Angell said after the hearing, "I don't think it has much chance of becoming law this year." The bill calls for a significant change in the method for funding higher education in Kansas, instituting a voucher system similar to the GI Bill for state residents. KU students who live in-state pay an annual tuition of $716.20. IF THE BILL were in effect, the students could be responsible for only about $450. The state would pay the remainder through the voucher system. Full-time students pay about $23 a credit hour. If the bill becomes law, the rate may be increased to $60 a credit hour, because its general fund allotment would be reduced. But students would be responsible for only $15 of the $20 charged a credit hour because of a $35 voucher supplied by the state. Subcommittee to examine Med Center funds request If enacted, the bill would make higher education funding more dependent on year-to-year enrollment. Accordingly, higher education funding would be more responsive to students. Almost everyone at the Education Committee hearing liked the basic principle behind the proposal, calling it a "bright idea" and a "fresh approach." By STEVE MAUN NEVERTHELESS. ONLY the vice Members of a Kansas Senate Ways and Means subcommittee will visit the University of Kansas Medical Center to discuss the Center's budget requests to discuss the Med Center's budget requests. Staff Kenorter The subcommittee members will investigate the Med Centers' requests for additional faculty in the School of Nursing, funds to replace the expiring federal support for the School of Medicine, and support the family practice and outreach programs. According to Tom Greeseon, associate director of business and fiscal affairs, the Med Center may have a problem paying for services. The government eliminates $850,000 in funds. President Carter has proposed cutting funds, which are part of the 1979 Health and Manpower Capitation Act that rewarded medical schools with financial aid for increasing the size of their entering classes each year. embodiment The Kansas House Ways and Means committee has funded the report on the hospital's efforts to expand its meandling $700,000 to renovate hospital rooms in the old hospital which would increase its staffing. Carlin did not recommend any capital improvements for the Med Center although funds to renovate the old hospital were requested. The University has requested replacement money for the federal funds from the Kansas Legislature. The House subcommittee also recommended cutting Carlin's recommendation for eight additional nursing faculty positions and reducing $30,000 from the family practice program. The Med Center's budget proposal will be decided by the Kansas Legislature before July1. Simpson airs views at forum By JON BLONGEWICZ Staff Reporter John Simpson, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, touched all political bases yesterday when he spoke before a group of former law school's Noon Forum in Green Hall. Simpson, former Salina state senator who is seeking Robert Tolet's Senate seat, sent a letter to Sen. John Lennon that windfall profits tax, gas rationing and solar energy, while opposing the draft and impeachment. In a talk sponsored by the newly formed Kansas University Democratic Law Students, Simpson said that there were two primary issues of economy and the character of the candidate. Simpson, a KU business and law school graduate, concentrated his economic discussions on energy and a balanced federal budget. "I think the federal budget needs to be balanced," he said. "But everyone is kidding themselves if they think it will help us go along to solve all our problems. It is not." SIMPSON, A Republican turned Democrat, said that many things must be considered when discussing improvement in the job market. A policy, tax cuts and especially energy. "We can reduce the dependence on foreign oil," Simpson said. "Our government must promote an energy policy of energy self-sufficiency, what we have in an intelligent manner." Nuclear power is not the answer, according to Simpson. He said that he had to be careful not to expand the United States should not expand in nuclear energy. He called it too expensive. He said that economists did not agree on many things, but that they did agree that a solid energy policy was a starting point. "I'm sorry we've gone this far," Simpson said. He said the controversial Wolf Creek nuclear reactor near Burlingen, should be converted into a coal plant. However, he was against dismantling nuclear plants already in operation. ONE ANSWER to the energy problem, Simpson said, is the windfall profits tax now being debated in Congress. Simpson criticized the committee debating the tax, saying that it was considering using the money to give tax cuts that would "fan the flames of inflation." "The windfall profits tax will help the conservation program," he said. Instead, he said, the money should be used for energy research and alternate sources of energy, such as solar power. He said that Dole supported the altered version of the windfall profits tax because of his involvement in special interests. "They are committing too much money to tax relief and not enough on the development of a good energy policy," Simsman said. "We need a strong windfall profits tax, not one like Bob Dole wants," he said. 5 John Simpson SIMPSON ALSO said there was little doubt that oil company profits were too high. fe "There is too much concentration of economic power in too few places in this country," he said. Simpson said oil company involvement in the coal and uranium industries was something that needed to be guarded against. He suggested gas rationing as another possible solution to the energy problem. He said that he did not advocate rationing and that it may not be far from having to ration gas. Simpson said that gas rationing could come in several forms, but that it was a better solution than a 50 cent per gallon tax imposed by some presidential candidates. He opposed the draft and registration. "The draft is something for a time of war," Simpson said. "We are not in a time of war." Simpson said registration was of little value and the time saved in gathering an army was minimal. According to Simpson, the money used for registration could be used to improve the present voluntary forces and to strengthen the reserves. SIMPSON CRITICIZED Dole for his "special interests," "broken promises" and use of his Senate seat to advance his political ambitions. "Dole received more than $10,000 from 'Oil and gas interests for his presidential campaign.' It is too early to determine. Legislature shows that I am not for special interests," he said. "I've made enemies of the oil industry." "One problem with my campaign is that special interests are not contributing to the campaign." Simpson said Dole broke promises when he became the ranking minority member on the Senate Agricultural Committee and then quit to join the Finance Committee. Simpson said that Dole used the Finance Department to advance his own political ambitions. Simpson said that after Dole's attempt at the presidency, Dole was coming back to Kansas to campain for his Senate seat. "He is treating the Kansas Senate seat as a consolation prize," he said. "Kansas deserves better." --- 2 2 Tuesday, March 4, 1980 University Daily Kansan NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Iran to let panel see hostages Iran's ruler Revolutionary Council decided unanimously yesterday that a five-man United Nations commission in Tehran would meet with all the U.S. No time for the meeting between commission members and the approximately 50 hostages being held by militants at the embassy was revealed by U.N. spokesman Samir Sanar. But he told reporters that Foreign Ministry officials were discussing final arrangements with the commission. Iranian President Abbaslah Bani-Sadr was quoted as saying the militants "have nothing to decide" on the hostages' fate, and 'they have only to obey.' The embassy militants again refused publicly to endorse a meeting between the hostages and the commission. A militant spokesman said yesterday that the group had no knowledge of the council's decision and that militants had not yet given permission for the visit. A West German magazine, Stern, quared Bani-Sadr as saying Thursday that they "cannot resist an entire people," if a decision is made to set the prisoners Council member Hashemi Rafsanjani was quoted by Tehran Radio as saying a meeting between the commission and the hostages hung on cooperation by Rafsanjiani said that if the members of the commission promised to obtain testimony from the hostages who were spies and agreed to testify, they might be freed. The Carter administration has condemned the taking of testimony from the hostages, but endorsed a possible visit by the commission. Carter rejects Israel statement WASHINGTON(AP)--President Carter said last night that the United States' approval of a UN's resistance against Israeli settlements in occupied Arab territories is "a big disappointment." "The United States vote in the United Nations was approved with the understanding that all references to Jerusalem would be deleted," the president said in a written statement. "The failure to communicate this clearly resulted in a vote in favor of the resolution rather than abstention." The resolution, unanimously approved by the U.N. Security Council Saturation, calls for Israel to dismantle all settlements it occupied after the 1967 War. It immediately raised questions about a possible shift in U.S. policy, although Carter denied there had been any change. In a statement issued late yesterday evening clarifying the U.S. position, the president said: 'This call for dismantling was neither proper nor practical. We believe that the future disposition of existing settlements must be determined during the process of dismantling.' Muqabe wins Rhodesian vote SALISBURY, Rhodesia - Marxist guerrilla leader Robert Mugabe clinched a victory in Ribau elections and will become prime minister as the country's leader. The interim British governor, Lord Soames, was scheduled to announce today the official results of last week's voting. A specksmaker for Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union, Justin Nyoka, said Mugabe would try to form a coalition government with Joshua Nkosmio, his co-leader in the Patriotic Front guerrilla alliance. Nkosmio was said to be in a position to move second place with Abel Mozwera, the pro-Western prime minister. In earlier voting, the party of former Prime Minister Ian Smith won all 20 parliamentary seats reserved for whites. Smith led Rhodesia to unilaterally declare independence from Britain in 1965 to avoid rule by the black majority that makes up 6.5 million of the 7.2 million population. More than 20,000 people were killed in the subsequent guerrilla war, which officially was ended by a cease-fire signed in December. According to the negotiated settlement, Rhodesia temporarily became a British colony again, but it will become the independent nation of Zimbabwe under the new government. First Abscam charge made NEW YORK—The first indictment resulting from the FBI's Abscam investigation was announced yesterday—against a U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service employee charged with taking a bribe from an undercover FBI agent to secure permanent resident status for an alien. Alexander A. Alexandro Jr., 30, of Commack, N.Y., an INS criminal investigator, was charged in the federal indictment with conspiracy to commit bribery, and were charged in the federal indictment with conspiracy to commit bribery, Carpentier, not further identified, was accused of aiding and abetting Alexandro. FBI finds syndicate informants ST. LAUIS - The FBI now has infornants in all of the nation's 25 organized St. Louis police departments, and is sending a syndicate, the St. Louis Post-Datam报载 reported yesterday in a copyrighted article. The actual number of informants is a closely guarded secret, but the fact that the FB has penetrated every one of the 25 criminal groups is considered a major threat to national security. Although the FBI has failed in an effort to place its agents in the families in the guise of criminals, the newspaper said, it has had great success in finding them. Member informants are bona fide members of crime families who are persuaded to furnish information to the FBI. The Post-Dispatch quoted a source as saying that when the FBI began its efforts to persuade members of crime families to turn informant, it was widely regarded as an ineffective tool. "I thought it would fail because of omerta (the vow of silence in the crime families)," the source said, "but I was amazed at how successful it was." Boy tells details of kidnapping said Merced police chief Harold Kubert. "We're not absolutely sure of that." Kenneth Parnell, a 48-year-old woman of Amarillo, Tex., was arrested at the hotel where he had worked for four months as a night clerk. He was booked for investigation of the kidnapping of a 5-year-old Ukiah boy and was held in lieu of bond. UKIAH, Calif. — Seven Stayer, reunited with his parents after seven years, said yesterday that more than one man was involved in his kidnapping. "We're investigating the possibility of a second individual be involved," said Meredged police chief Harold Kullett. "We're not absolutely sure of that." For more than seven years, Steven and the man authorities kidnapped him on December 4, 1972, wandered northern northern California, finally winding up at a hotel in Los Angeles. For the past few weeks, according to police, they shared the shack with 5-year-old Timmy White of Ukiah, who was kidnapped on Valentine's Day. Their story came to light Sunday when Steven showed up with Timmy at a police station in this coastal town. Steven had told police he brought Timmy back because he didn't want him to be separated from his family as he had been. Weather... There is a 90 percent chance of snow today, possibly heavy at times, accounting for the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high will be in the mid-20s. There is a chance of more snow tomorrow with the high in the mid-20s. Primary vital for Bush, Kennedy BOSTON (AP)—Sen. Edward M. Kenny, campaigned in Pennsylvania's western counties, yesterday called Massachusetts voters "I have come home to ask how your负负负负负负负负负负 Republican George Bush sought a comeback against Ronald Reagan and said he was making election-eve蹋 For Bush, as for Kennedy, the electorate was decisive. The election was crucial. Once was the runaway leader in polls of Republican opinion, but a final survey by the Boston pollsters showed it to be true. MASSACHUSETTS AND Vernon, which was voted into the state, has to overtake the former California governor before the campaign moves to the South. The South is likely to be one of its strongest states. In the final hours before the balloting, Bush said the Massachusetts trend was turning his way. "Our support has firmed up," he said. Shaking hands with commuters at Boston's North Station, Bush said Reagan was conservative for the taste of the voters. "The question is who can beat Dimmy Carter in the fall," the former U.N. ambassador said. KENNEDY LOST to Carter in their first four contests, two in nearby New England states. But Kennedy ranks a firm favorite in surveys of the voters who have lost to Carter. Kennedy said if Democrats didn't rally to his cause and deny Carter renomination for the presidency, a Republican would win the general election in November. An upset at home would effectively end his presidential campaign, and because he J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! sua films Tuesday, March 4 Two Action Westerns: WINCHESTER 73 (1950) Dir. Helen Trotter. Stewart, Shelley, Winters. Durinea. Excellent story of a prized rife and its many changes of owner. THE PROFESSIONALS (1966) Dir. Richard Brooks, with Burt兰- tard McCormick and Bill兰- Claudia Cardinale, Woolie. Four men, each a specialist in a form of weaponry, are hired to go to Mex- ico for the mission of描描 woman her wealthy husband. is expected to win easily, anything short of a landslide over Carter would gain him little. Wednesday, March 5 GRÉED (1925) Dir. Erich von Strohman, with Jean Hersholt, Zaits Puits, Gibson Howe and Nigel Greed. GRED is a powerful study of three people whose values become distorted when faced with a passion for nature. Noris naturalist novel MTEAGEU. A HOUSE OF GEISHA (1958) Dr. Mike Naurase, with Isaum Yadaime. Mr. Akiko Kondo, with Aya Koda's original story of geisha life. Co-possessed with the Center for Japanese Culture. Thursday. March 6 **ANIMATION** (1909) Our animation course is the 18 of an introducted film which reflect some of the most inventive techniques and artistry in animation today. The selections are chosen around the world by Film Wright. Friday, March 7 THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF Monday, March 17 NOTORIOUS Still, it would end the shutout and Kennedy time for a push against Carter in states such as Illinois, which holds a primary election March 18, and New York one week later. Kennedy has written off Georgia, Georgia and Alabama and Florida. (1946) Dir. Alr. Hitchcock, with Cary Grant, ingenuity and wit, makes his most romantic films, NOTORIOUS has a US agent forcing a woman to spy on a German soldier. WHILE KENNETH declined to forecast the outcome in Massachusetts, Speaker Robert Menino said that he had talked with expected the senator to win by a margin of between 8 and 18 percent. Unless otherwise noted: all film will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-RT竿 are $1.50 each; S-T竿 are $1.75 and $1.50 start at 3:00, 7:00 and 8:30, and midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday, tickets available at the SAU Office, Union 5th Lev. Room 425, no smoking or refreshments allowed. Kennedy did his election-eve campaign in familiar territory, the Boston wards where he began 18 years ago in his first Senate campaign. He went to Overseer, to In a five-minute television commercial, he said Massachusetts voters inspired him to run for president in the first place. Roxbury, to the waterfront, to a factory gate in Lynn, to Worcester, then home to Hyannisport. THE CARTER campaign is largely an organizational effort. But the president has some allies in Kennedy country, including Democratic Gov. Edward J. King. The primary will award 111 Democratic convention delegates in proportion to popular vote showings. There are 1.4 million registered Democrats, fewer than 432,000 Republicans and 1.2 million independents who can vote in either party primary. California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. also is on the Democratic ballot, but he dropped his Massachusetts campaign and said his next stand would be in Wisconsin on April1. THE REPUBLICAN competition is for 42 presidential nominating votes. There are nine names on the ballot, with Heagan and Riggs among them. John B. Anderson and bishop to push pass Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee for third place. The opponent he claimed has a chance to finish second. In Vermont, the Democratic contest is purely for show, binding no delegates. The Republican primary there will award 10 nominating votes to the winner, provided he at least 40 percent of the popular vote. So the delegates will be uncommitted. Swimsuit Options Are Here! Our collection of famous label swimmers include styles that let you opt for bare or a little more cover. Choose from one or two-piece swimmers from Elisabeth Stewart, Calef of California, Sea Fashions or Sassafras. In marvelous solid colors, prints and novelties. Jr. and Misses Sizes. From 17.00 Swim Wear—2nd Floor SANDY RUSSELL 9 STREET MASSACHUSETTS WeaverS Inc. Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857 Shop Thursday Til 8:30 P.M. Spring Break (and After) Fashions Shapely Shirts The classic of shirts . . done in easy care 65% polyester and 35% cotton . . for comfort and great looks. Long sleeves, button-down collar Blue or white. Misses Sizes. 18.00 Gloria Vanderbilt for Murjani The elements of style. High fashion, innovative design, superb Vanderbilt fit, its fashion at its best. Quality jeans of 100% cotton. 36. 00 Sportswear—1st Floor Patronize Kansan Advertisers --- Tuesday. March 4. 1980 3 KU percussion ensemble to perform recital tonight By KEVIN MILLS Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Three exotic percussion compositions by Lou Harrison is the accompaniment to the KU Percussion Ensemble at 8 tonight at Swartbock Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. George Bober, professor of music performance and director of the 10-member ensemble, said Harrison's music utilized his passion and exotic percussion instruments. The great bells, a站-toured series of metal pipes, were made by Art Keller, Sr. of Boom Springs. Keller is the father of Keller Springs freshman, an exemplary member. Several of the ensemble's instruments were handcrafted especially for this concert. Bohmer made two of the ensemble's instruments, a sweet jangle and a pak. The other instrument consists of a pak, a Korean instrument consists of a series of hard wood strips that are skipped PERCUSSION STUDENTS also made a set of wood drums, substituting wood for the skin heads of a trivial drum. "Song of Quetzacoat" will be the first of three Harrison coasts performed. Based on Afric melodies, its persistent rhythm provides a tense contrast to the flowing folk melodies. Cancille No. 3 features folk melodies that are first stated by an ocarina and then imitated by the percussion instruments. The second emphasizes the harmonic instrument that resembles the rite. Donna Whited, visiting assistant professor of organ, will be the guest solist in the evening's final selection, "Concerto for Organ." He was a music critic for the New York Herald Tribune. He has written two operas, and several scores for symphonies, orchestras and ballets. A piano, clockwise, vibraphone, elastie and tube chimes bridge the sustaining organ notes with the sharp percussive rhythms, according to Harrison's program note HARRISON WAS born in Portland, Ore., in 1917, and studied at San Francisco State College with composer Henry Cowell and studied Los Angeles with composer Arthur C. "Harrison was one of the composers on the West Coast who organized the writing of percussion ensemble music," Robert said. The concert is the only scheduled performance by the percussion ensemble this semester. It is free to the public. Compiled by Jennifer Robles A Lawrence man was shot outside a rural Douglas County farmhouse early yesterday morning. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat Ron Beauchamp, 813 E. Ishl st., underwent surgery yesterday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital for wounds received after he was shot at about 2.4 m. yesterday. A KU POLICE CAR was struck by pellet gun fire early early morning in front of Ellsworth Hall. Damage to the car was slight. The pellet struck the car's roof, near the emergency lights. Capt. John Millems the officer occurred at about 12:45 a.m. Saturday. Another Lawrence man, William Norris, £2N. Third St. was taken into custody by the police after he had not been formally charged in connection with the shooting, but other warrants in the county call for his arrest. Some of the warrants include traffic violations, parole violations and other offences. Douglas County officials said the shooting occurred behind a farmhouse about six miles north of Lawrence. A weapon was (found at) the scene. It was the third consecutive weekend that patrol cars or students' cars have been shot at. Mullets said detectives are examining evidence of shooting, but that by reviewing the trajectory of the pellets a floor or room in Ellsworth could be identified as the pellets' starting point. TWO WOMEN remained in custody in a Snivance WOMEN last jail last in lieu of a ROMAN WOMEN last jail last in lieu of a Rhamon Moon, are being held in connection with the murder of a Lawrence woman. The delay in filing charges against the woman was not unusual, a spokesman for the district attorney's office in Toeka said. The man, Henry Davis, was found in a ditch southwest of Topeka. He was shod once in the head, according to the Shawnee county coroner. "The investigation has not been completed," he said. "There's still a lot we don't know yet. It can't speculate any further." University Daily Kansan Team from Harvard University wins finals of debate tournament By RICK HELLMAN Staff Reporter The debaters had been at it all weekend, and looked worse for the wear. It was the final round of the 24th annual Heart of America debate tournament, which was won yesterday by a team from Harvard University. By Monday afternoon ties had loosened and hairdies had been forgotten as the contestants furiously riffled through their 3-rings. The judges penned clenched tightly between their teeth. Harvard met West Georgia College in the final round of the tournament yesterday in the Kansas Union. The two sides hauled their information to the head table in briefcases and file boxes of every description, and then began. In a cadence remarkably similar to that of an auctioneer, John Bredeboff of Harvard launched into an affirmation of the debate topic: that the federal government should regulate the regulation of mass media of communications. Back and forth they went, from point to sub-point to cross-examination and back again. When it was all over, the judges awarded first place to Bredehoft and his partner Bill Foutz. Bredhoft also won the KU annual tournament last year for his school. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON CHICK AUTO PARTS Port St. Louis 1098 East 23rd 841-2200 NOTICE: TO ALL COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES STUDENTS AND TO ALL STUDENTS TAKING LIBERAL ARTS COURSES. The withdrawal policy of the College states that the period to withdraw from spring semester classes and receive a W instead of a letter grade ends Wednesday, March 5, 1980 at 5:00 p.m. Thereafter, withdrawal petitions must be submitted and approved by the College. To received additional information, please call 864-3661. RICKY ROGERS Pat Metheny . . . " . . . A simply overpowering performer . . . " " . . . A humbly fluid style, rich with resonance . . . spiced with warm lyric melodies and gently soaring harmonies." "IF YOU GO OUT ONLY ONE TIME IN MARCH . . . GO OUT FOR PAT METHENY!" Opera House Productions Presentes . . ECM Recording Artists The Pat Metheny Group In Concert Thursday March 13th Two shows at 7:30 & 10:45 --for madras shirts, izods, swimwear, white topsiders, knitshirts Buy your tickets NOW at Keif's, Better Days, and the 7th Club Spirit only $7.50 in advance Don't miss your only chance to see Pat Metheny in Lawrence. Where Else But The . . Lawrence Opera House Lawrence Opera 7 Spirit House 7th & Mass. Where the stars are 842-6930 Call for concert info. BLAKE ROBERTS AUTHORIZED EDITION L Spring break '80 starts at Mister Guy ... hours m t w f sat 10-6 th 10-9 sun 1-5 MISTER GUY 920 massachusotts Gabriel's Luncheon Buffet $1.99 Heavenly pizza at a heavenly price. All the heavenly pizza you can eat. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Monday-Friday Gabriel's Pizza and Pasta Restaurant 25th & Iowa 842-5824 --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorslal Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kan斯 Signed columns represent the views of only the writers March 4.1980 Ford wants top spot Guess who crawled out of the Republican woodwork during the weekend? Gerald R. Ford-38th president of the United States and the biggest non-candidate candidate in the 1980 presidential campaign since Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. In a New York Times interview with Ford Saturday, the former president said Ronald Reagan, former California governor, could not win the presidential general election. Reagan, he said, was thought of as a very conservative Republican and a very conservative Republican could not win a national election. Reagan's decisive victory over George Bush in the New Hampshire primary re-established him as the Republican front-runner in the presidential race, Ford said. "We don't want—we can't afford to have a-replay of 1984." In 1964, Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, a very conservative Republican, was sorely defeated by President Lyndon Johnson. Ford said requests that he enter the race were increasing but he was not sure whether the requests represented a widely held feeling. Nevertheless, he cautiously has invited his party to ask him to join the race. Ford said he was not "scherling or convining" to capture the Republican presidential nomination, but it is evident that he has, to some extent, considered his options carefully and calculatingly. He knows he must defend by April 2014 whether he in turn by May 4 would be reductive delegates to the Republican National Convention in Detroit would still be unbound. The convention is in July. Ford also said he could want to "roll the dice in Detroit," hoping the other candidates would deadlock and be away with his party's nomination. Despite his talk of enjoying a relaxed retirement, Ford wants to be the 40th president of the United States—not desperately enough to go out and pump hands for the position just yet, but he doesn't need them. The predictions about the present front-runner's ultimate defeat and to outline his possibilities in the race. Death bill is doomed Although some legislators call it a hoax when others content it is needed to protect society, a bill to reinstate capital punishment in Kansas is on its way. The House has passed the Legislature. The House last week gave the bill its final approval, 80-43. The bill would allow a death sentence to be issued as punishment for all premeditated murders as well as for killings committed under seven specific instances: by an inmate; for hire of a witness; in multiple murder; in abusive or nuking; in abdapping; in commission of rape or sodomy; and in an escape attempt. seems predestined to come to an end under the veto of Gov. John Carlin- if the Senate does not put it out of misery first. This is the sixth consecutive year that a bill calling for reinstatement of the death penalty has been introduced in the Legislature. At least 18 similar bills died or were defeated in the last five legislative sessions. This bill, too, Carlin already has vetoed one death penalty bill during his term. The one climbing the legislative ladder to his office now differs from the one he held in 2014. He will be for a death sentence in cases of murders committed during a felony. The House representatives debated alternatives to the death penalty, including a 30-year minimum sentence for serious crimes, before finally approving it. However, the extent of their debate must be questioned in resulting results. Did they exhaustively consider ALL the alternatives? Carlin is certain to ask the same question when he sends the bill back to them—and tells them to think again. Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should be typed in the home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. Letters can be submitted by e-mail to the Kansan newsroom, 121 Flint Hall. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS6049 Editor James Anthony Fitts **USPS 6044-481**: Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and during June and July at expect Excitation, Sunday and holiday. Second-class postpaid card at Lawrence. Kansas 60468. Subjects by mail are $15 for six months or $12 in Douglas County. You may visit your state university. Student subscriptions are a $2 semester, paid through the student activity fee. James Anthony Pitts Managing Editor Joe Doleman Campus Editors Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Associate Campus Editors Director Art Director Art Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor City Staff Wire Editors Markup Editors Markup Editors Senior Staff Writer Senior Staff Writer Photographers Editorial Caratterists Edward Caratterists James Anthony Pitts Editorial Editor Brenda Watson Gene Beiner Judson Wooden Amy Holloway and Emily Cahill Cary Hughes Gen Meyer Gene May Mary Joe Howard Rhonda Holliday and Elizabeth Lowe Lou Jackson Tet Locking, Rusten Project Pamela London, Bob Pattison David Powell, David Powell Bob Pattison, Sussan Nannum Felda Staff Writers Chief Photographer Jeff Harring Benigator, Dan Martin Jeb Barbier, Dan Martin Mahmoud Hammurian and Markle Business Manages Vincent Coultis Retail Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Campus Management Manager Classified Representatives Network Manager Marketing Manager Skill Photographer Skill Artist Tournament Manager GradeAssistant Sales Executive Sales Associate Bart Light, Karen Hartley, Hope Rhebdarger, Sheila Heyde, Rosana Hargrave, Sue Barnes Kevin Koster, Candy Price, Mike Rosnthai, Paul Winer, William Bart Light, Karen Hartley, Hope Rhebdarger, Sheila Heyde, Rosana Hargrave, Sue Barnes Advertising Manager Chris Warner Tourney's format should be changed The format of the Big exam post-season basketball tournament is as rotten as a year-old pumpkin. And although the 1980 post-season tournament is history and gives an interesting look, the officials should seriously consider scraping the format of the tournament. The glaring weakness of the post-season "classic" is that first-round games are held on campus sites. The conference's first four finishers play at home against the last four winners. The winners of these contests advance to Kansas City for the semifinals and finals. The games held at the campus sites consistently have been boring financial disasters. KU's game against Colorado last Tuesday is the best example yet. Even though KU won 6-1, the Bucks have a per game for conference battles, its first-round game against the Buffalo drew a messy $3.00. A team with a 0-26 record lost in a shootout is especially for a post-season tournament game. 7930 Jayhawk roller coaster Special COLUMNIST david lewis The other Big Eight schools who played at Gate are the 10-team gate, the gate Kansas State where home basketball games and sellouts are synonymous, attracted only 5,000 fans to its games. MISSUOURI, THE regular season champion, managed to draw almost 8,000. However, that was the second lowest crowd the Tigers had all season. Most of the crowds at the first-round tournament games represent seasonal lows in attendance at a time when fans should be packing the arenas. More often than not, the four top finishers are not known until the last day of the regular season, only three days before the tournament's first-round games. This year, KU did not know whether it would play at home until after the dayhawks won their conference game. Three days is not adequate notice for most fans. And three days is not nearly enough time to organize a game or attendance figures reflect that very fact. But the fans and the teams are not to blame—the format of the tournament brings about these paltry attendance figures. THE OBVIOUS SOLUTION is to hold the tournament, including the first-round matches, in Kansas City. In the past, Kansas City has been very supportive of the Big Eight conference. Look at the now defunct Big Eight Holiday Tentement, which was canceled after the postponement. Its existence. In its last year, the holiday tentement ban all of its attendance For years, Kansas Citizens fanatically supported a tournament that was meaningless as far as conference standings were concerned. It is obvious that they also would support another eight-tournament. And remember, this tournament is the most important tournament of the year for the NCAA tournament or teams qualify for the NCAA tournament. HAVING ALL eight teams in Kansas City would create an exciting atmosphere and give the tournament as well as the conference more stature. The Big Eight has lacked basketball tradition since the conference's inception. As opposed to having a team, it was made up of all eight teams in Kansas City would give the tournament some desperately needed With all the teams advance to Kansas City, we have a few extra days to prepare for. And every year, the fans would know where their teams were going to play. This certainly works. Moreover, each team could have a better chance of winning the tournament because all of the tournament's games would be played on a neutral court. A neutral court is also safer for fans who have attended first-round games at campus sites could have pillows to more comfortably watch one sleepy romp after another. THIS YEAR, the closest game was seven points—Nebraska over Oklahoma. But the score was misleading; Oklahoma was never in the game. In four years, only one visiting team has won a first-round tournament game. Having first-round games at campus sites has been a waste of time. As it stands now, Big Ten teams have not won any top-tier games in the top four teams to Kansas City and just foretelling about the first-round games. As fans who attended the jam-packed Kemper arena this weekend would attest, a host of other teams will be tournament. But for now, the overall tournament is only second-rate. The hoopla has been squashed by bending first-round games to be exciting as watching wet cement dry Self-help bill needs student support By DAVID C. HENRY Guest Columnist Many times we students feel as if we are being acted upon by outside forces over which we have little or no control. We often consider ourselves victimized by decisions that affect our health and safety, our ability to play in sports and football games. In view of such attitudes, it is encouraging to learn of decisions where we can affect the outcome. For the past two years I have been involved with the Associated Students of Kansas, the statewide student lobby for the interests and needs of Kansas Regents schools. I have seen how legislation can be affected by our voice in Topela. If I also realized that in many instances our voices can be even stronger with your help. ASK is attempting to secure passage of the so-called "Self-Armament" to the 1975 Landlord-Tenant Act and, thus far, I'm pleased to say we have been successful. The bill would give tenants a legal procedure to make home repairs necessary for reasons of health and safety. THE BILL was passed in the House Judiciary Committee early in February by a large margin, only to be returned to the Senate for a second revision of the language. This provided landlords with a sterling opportunity to gather their forces in an attempt to kill the lobbying groups. Although they failed to defeat it, the vote last week, 10-6, was considerably closer than the first vote. Further, key votes were obtained via the lobbying of landlords' representatives. Rep. Joe Hangland from Overland Park, N.J., said he had now oppose the bill after being impressed by the speed with which the landlords "came out of the woodwork" when the bill passed. perant members of the House are also opposed. Despite this, we do have a good chance of winning passage. YOU CAN BE certain that legislators will be hearing from the landlords and their representatives in the next few weeks. They will be told that the bill tips the balance in favor of the landlords, and tenants will abuse the bill and that landlords will be forced to raise rents to compensate accordingly. They will be told to vote for the bill, which provides people who can be helpful in an election year. Therefore it is imperative that these same legislators hear from tenants such as yourself. You need to tell your legislator how you want your tenants to be 250. You can tell them that this bill is needed to protect the rights and needs of tenants. Tell them that landlords will be under no more financial obligations; in other words, they must be responsible landlord anything extra. You can tell them of problems you may have had with getting a landlord to remedy a problem. You can tell them, for example, if you couldn't get a broken wind door [fixed]. I cannot stress enough the impact that such a call or letter has on influencing the behavior of our students. We need your help at this crucial time to get this bill through the House of Representatives you will call to represent yourself and your student Senate office at 864-3710 or by dugging 1058 Kansas Union. We'll give you their name, address, and phone number. Someone will also help you figure out how to cover concerns the bill or how to write your representative. This won't take more than a day, but it can be worth it because the benefit is well worth the effort. Please help ASK help you in Topeka. David C. Henry is an Overland Park junior majoring in architecture and is a member of ASK at the University of Kansas. To the Editor: Editorial on Joe's displays lack of taste We are writing this letter in shocked mood, a year after the storm that struck Thursday's Kansas, "Say it isn't so, Joe." We refer specifically to where the sadly mastaken, or deranged, author, says "The rain was very heavy." Now, be serious. What red-blooded Jayhawk can deny the oral satisfaction derived from a Joe's doughnut? Obviously, the author knows nothing about good eating. The Kansan has in the past been accused of faulty reporting, but this editorial shows no taste. Mindy Levinson Toledo, Ohio junior Becky Lilienkamp St. Louis sophomore Rene G Stutzman Halstead junior Afghanistan column farcical, lacks basis To the Editor: I don't know where the Kanasan found Ron B. It was one of them, who contributed his surgical story titled *Overcareer ingestion to Afghan occupation*." (Feb. 25). It's obvious that the Kanasan was hurriedly brought in. Having called President Carter's reaction to the commie takeover of Afghanistan "knee-jerk" and dangerous to this country, Furthermore, Afghanistan was not already under the official Soviet control that Bain would have as believe. This guy thinks Carter "has brought the world to the edge of Europe," and says even Eain supports mass killing by the Soviets. One day the Reds went to Kerala, 115 miles north of Kabul, and shot up a village—leaving 1,000 innocent, shell-bounded people in their heyday. Even today, Soviet tanks roam the streets of Kabul, murdering people. Bain displays his ignorance of foreign affairs. Bain contends that most Americans don't support Carter—I'd be interested in doing a clinical research left him to such a conclusion. Beyond the issue of human rights, the United States has vital interests in the Persian Gulf that the Soviets could threaten, and Russia wants to realize that our economy would crumble like crackers if we suddenly lost half of our oil supply? He thinks we can switch over to a cleaner energy source sounds like a loany Jerry Brown. Bain says 'Energy abundances in this country, in the crops and forests, in the sunlight and the sky, are changing.' These lines would make a great poem, but only a fool would believe we can suddenly rely on corn and air for our vital energy supply. But Bain wasn't yet born when the Arab oil embargo sent the United States a frenzy. By reminding the Soviet Union that we, as UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN Bain concludes that public criticism of the Carter Doctrine has been rare, most of it coming from Senator Edward Kennedy, D-Missouri, who said few who find fault with Carter says a lot. they, have a vast magazine of nuclear weapons, by sending troops to the Persian Gulf, by boycoting the Olympics, and by getting tough. Mr. Carter fell short of laying out the red carpet on which the Soviets could win. They did so and bring devastation to the U.S. economy. David Kersley Ottawa freshman then anything else is personnel. I, for one, think that I shouldn't have to BUY my freedom from military service. Peace should be anti-draft motivation The waging of any war is a violation of the way of peace. The authority of the people to make decisions about government. When our government violates our standards, we must work to change it so we can live in a just and peaceful society. Strife and wars are born of the selfishness and greed of individuals, groups and organizations, who hope that Kansas Anti-Draft Organization will deter the individual who wrote that letter. It was with disappointment and dismay that I read Eric Kirkendall's letter to the Kanass, apparently on behalf of the Kansas Department of Agriculture, much opposed to the return of registration and the draft. But my opposition grows out of his insistence, not just an aversion toward beaten drafts. To the Editor: Mr. Kirkendall seems to feel that the way to "keep our military forces strong" is to pay higher wages. Is he willing to pay higher taxes in order to keep from being drained? We already spend so much on military purchases, and support ourselves in consumer goods, and of all the splendid things the military does with that money, the they spend more on Matt Bartel Matt Burter Hesston junior Registration of guns Big Brother tactic To the Editor: In reference to the editorial about gun control in the Feb. 29th Kansan, I have one question to ask Susan Nammum. Have you ever heard of Afghanistan? If you have, you probably also have heard that the Soviets are confiscating all firearms there. And we have been so much easier for the Soviets if all these firearms had been registered? Personally, I am tired of the "Big Brother" mentality that stifles freedom and takes away rights. As this letter is being mailed to a is check = the NRA! Kevin Maxon Lawrence sophomore Tuesday, March 4. 1980 University Daily Kansan 5 Commission will review old,new emotional issues By LYNN ANDERSON and STEVE YOUNG Staff Reporters Tenight's city commission meeting promises to be a concoction of new and old items spiced with a hefty dash of emotion. At the top of the agenda are discussions of the Community Development budget request and the proposed individual townhouse units and a new proposal for a transient taxes' tax on the property. The CD budget, which includes requests for funding from Lawrence neighborhood neighbors and other community miscellaneous community renovation projects, will be accepted or rejected as a result. The commission will first hear comments from supporters and opponents of the requests. They can then accept, reject or modify each request individually. A number of the requests are being doubted whether they would be appropriated by CD funds, which are intended for low- to moderate-income residents and groups. ONE OF THE MOST controversial CD requests would have been that of the Women's Transitional Care Services, a program designed to help women. WTCS had requested $30,000 to move the operation into the building at Bert Nash Mental Health Center. However, WTCS withdrew its request for CD funds last night. Commissioner Don Binns said he hoped the commission would deal with the use of the Bert Nash house and the funding of WTCS separately. He said the sentiment he had heard from the commission and Lawrence residents, including police and local cities, including the police and local churches, could meet the needs WTCS was trying to address. BINNS ALSO he was unaware of the effectiveness of WTCS. He said he had heard that about 75 percent of the women who used a toilet house returned to their husband. Commissioner Bob Schumm, who said he was very much in favor of WTCS, said he expected the commission to allocate the $30,000 for renovation of the Bert Nash house, but to postpone a decision on who would use the building. The commission will also vote on a request to rezone approximately five acres in an area north of Sixth and Iowa streets known as the Bluffs. The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last week recommended acceptance of the rezoning request. The area's residents have said they want the Buffs to remain a single-family residential area, but developers want it to be able to hold offices of offices and multi-family dwellings. MEMBERS OF OREAD Neighborhood Association last night passed a resolution opposing rezoning of the Bluffs. Trom Gleason, ONA president, said the proposed rezoned affecting Oread residents even though the area was part of the Pinkney neighborhood. If "it is going to be this easy to supercharge the neighborhood plans at the request of the developer, there's no point in having them come up," said much as affected as Pinckney, he said. The Pinckney neighborhood plan, one of several in Lawrence that are designed as guidelines for neighborhood maintenance and repair, has said only in residences the Bluffs, he said. ANOTHER ITEM that has sparked commission meetings in the past few weeks would allow the sale of townhouse units without replacing the land they stand on. Some Lawrence residents have said this situation will be abandoned land and issue control over it. The plan planned commission last week recommended that its ordinance also be ac- Wilden said the tax, which could be any amount up to 2 percent, had been tried successfully in other Kansas towns. The transient guest tax proposal, acco- management manager, is intended to raise money to support the promotion of tourism in Lawrence and to attract conventions to the Schumm said although he seldom favored taxes, he supported the hotel/motel tax because it would "present a benefit to the community as an end result." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus **TODAY:** THE SMALL GROUP CARERÉ CounselING WORKSHIPS will meet from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., in the Strong Hall. The COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. The BLACK STUDENT UNION will meet at 5:30 p.m. in room 328. Murh宝 Hall. TONIGHT: THE CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRISTMAS at 6:15 p.m., Hall H, Hall H. The CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 8:36 p.m., in Dundee Chapel, Church of the Holy Trinity. "Why Jesse Jackson went to South Africa," at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The CAMPUS CHRISTMAS will meet at 7 p.m. in Paradors A and B of the Union. THE CHRISTMAS WILL be taught. The White Leaf at Robinson. The KU PRENT-DENTAL CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union. A WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM, "The Hero as Artist," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3 of Lipinghall Court. LINCOLN COLLAGE with Gimmy Gatherer of KU at 7:30 p.m. in Duke Hall. Thriving humanities journal nurtured at KU By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter Few KU students consider the University of Oklahoma as a place of American, to be a purveyor of international culture. But at least one University publication, circulated widely throughout the country, calls it "boring." Res Pública Litterarum, published annually in the Spanish language in the Western tradition. It contains research in each field connected with the classical traditions, including its development. the journal, which receives contributions from scholars all over the world and is distributed in the United States, Japan, Libya and 13 European countries. "Scolars need as much help as students in doing research and getting it published," Prete said yesterday. PRETE, WHO also is president of the national organization or Humanitarian Studies, is now councillor for European scholarships. He makes on one or two trips to Europe every year to keep in touch with his family. "Almost every collaborative I have in education is a part of the course or the director at a university, and I have been a university professor." Prete said. "We have many problems and issues we have understood." Supported by the Faculty Senate Committee on Scholarly Publications, Res Pubica Literum first was published in 1978. It is currently in its second volume. BEGINNING WITH Volume II, the journal has authored a third one—three in the United States, Prete said. Articles now are written in English, German, French, Italian and Spanish. Volume I was 300 pages long and all its articles were printed in English. It sold more than 100 copies. As a measure of the journal's growing popularity, Prete said he had to solicit contributions for Volume I, but had to reject more than 38 articles for Volume III. Sesto Prete, professor of classics, edits Prete said he conceived the idea of compiling an international journal after been encouraged by some of his colleagues overseas. Salad Bar Special $1.95 reg. price $3.00 NEW YORKER 1021 Mass. Salad Bar Special $1.95 reg. price $3.00 NEW YORKER 1021 Mass. TABLE OF TREATS Offer good 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mon.-Fri. till March 28 Plan for the future. View: Take your pick! Closets: 11 feet wide, dresser built in. Two Sinks: No waiting for your roommate! Walls: Solid, rich brick. Bath Bedroom 140 square feet Bedroom 140 square feet Big Picture Windows Location: On campus, on bus route. Thermostat: You set the temperature. we pay the bills. Living Room 240 square feet Cable TV Hookup: Point Just plug in your set. Private Entrance: Super locks on doors. Carpet: Wall to wall, several colors. Leasing now for summer and fall. jayhawker towers apartments 4603 w. fifteenth 843-4993 Miller Hoot Lite Now Comes Miller time TONIGHT, Tuesday, March 4 Dozens of T-Shirts and Beer Signs Will be Given Away During the Evening! MILLER or LITE Bottles Only 50¢ (Reg. 75¢) Lowenbrau 65¢ Come Early to Get a Seatl It Could Only Happen at . . . THE HAWK 1340 OHIO Step Into Spring with Bass Sunjuns® You'll know you've found the real thing. The label says Bass. The quality says Bass. There's no comparison. Come see for yourself. You won't have to look any further for your favorite spring and summer sandal. Because if it's Bass, It's for real. Bass® Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Massachusetts 843-3470 EAGLE Dozens of T-Shirts and Beer Signs Will be Given Away During the Evening! Step with Bass Sunje... You'll know you've found the real thing. The label says Bass. The qual says Bass. The comparison. Come see for yourself. You won't have to look any further for your favorite spring and summer sandal. Because if it's Bass, It's for real. Bass® Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Massachusetts 843-3470 --- 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 4.1980 Voucher... From page one president of Washburn University, Merle Hull, came in support to the proposal. Five others who testified expressed significant concerns about parts of the bill. Even the Association of Independent Colleges of Kansas, which represents 20 private schools that stand to benefit most if the bill is enacted, did not approve the bill. Four-year independent schools would gain 99 percent more state aid through the voucher system. "We like the concept, but some of the mechanics need work." Raymond J. Davenport, president of the association, said. This one subsidizes the rich and poor alike. IF ENACTED, the state's tuition grant program for independent colleges, which is based on need, will be repealed. The state's tuition grants are for students of the Associated Students of Kansas, the student lobbying group which represents six universities in Washburn, did not take a position on the bill. "We have some problems with it," Bob Bingaman, ASK executive director, said. One of Bingamana's arguments contested a part of the bill that proposed to raise the residency requirement at the state's community colleges from six months to a The program annually would cost the state an additional $9.3 million based on 1980 estimates. ANOTHER CRITICISM by committee members and those testifying was that the bill would increase and to non-state schools their rate than to state-supported schools. "I don't see how the voucher system would do much good for state schools," State Sen. Bert Chaney, D-Hutchinson, said. "It's hard to imagine an officialistic about the future's chances." Many had expected the proposal's chances to be slim this session. The program does not exist elsewhere in the country. Committee chosen to find new business dean A 10-member search committee has been chosen to find a replacement for Joseph A. Pichler, outgoing dean of the School of Business. Allen Ford, professor of business and chairman of the committee, said a nationwide search is underway for a replacement for Pecker, who resigned in April. The company owns Dillon Companies, Inc. in Hutchinson. The deadline for applications is March 15 25c Just one sandwich...it's that good! 25c Schlotzsky's NOW OFFERS BEER With this coupon, the bearer is welcome to enjoy the world's finest sandwich AND 23rd & Iowa 11-9 Mon.-Thurs. 11-11 Fri.Sat. 12-9 Sun. ONE 25c DRAW Good through Thurs 3/6/80 Schlatzos and carry out 29. Sun. Schlotzsky's francis f sporting goods 843-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 sleek and sizzling SPEEDO swim suits Skeek fabrics for water-tight fit, uninhibited freedom and racing strokes. Lighten-menting fabric is often used by young adults, you through adult. And sizeing SPEEDO styles to be worn with smug looks. And more: - nose plugs * swim caps * SPEEDO swim bags * eat plugs * goggles * SPEEDO swim towels Pot study bill dies in committee The Kansas Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday killed a bill that would have established a program to research marijuana's therapeutic effects on cancer chemotherapy and glaucoma patients at the University of Kansas Medical Center program. By SCOTT FAUST Staff Reporter "Sporty things for sporty people." research, their physicians and registered pharmacists. State Sen. Wes Sowers, R-Wichita, Judiciary committee chairman, said the House "apparently didn't research the case before approving his in its 1975 session." Marijuana acquired by the committee from the Federal Drug Administration and used in research would have been legal for chemotherapy patients to use. The bill would have established a Therapeutic Research Control Committee to certify patients participating in the NEW MEXICO, Louisiana, Florida and Illinois already have legalized special uses of marijuana. The program that committee members felt would be duplicated was begun a year and a half ago at the Med Center. The program studies the effects of antibiotics on the growth ingredient in marijuana, in easing nausea and vomiting in chemotherapy patients. Decorator firm back to normal High turnover in salesmen recently has caused problems for the Maricac Corporation, an apartment living sales company, based in Indianapolis, Ind., but service for Lawrence has returned to his old job as attorney for the company, said last week. During the past few months, a salesman had been called Lawrence residents, setting up apartment decorating parties and then failing to show up. Officials said that the man who实习 was no longer employed by the company. "Each of our salesmen has his own expense account, like an Avon lady, and we can help," Whitinger said. "Not everybody can succeed in this kind of situation, so we have to rely." Mariac salesmen are in business for themselves and are paid on the basis of sales, not by the hour, Whittinger said. "Things like the Reimer incident are expected." The person who was the Kansas City Lawrence area representative when Heimer was making his unauthorized phone call to the company, according to Marta officials. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT in Overland Park & Topeka Bossler Temporary Help Available For TYPISTS • STENOGRAPHERS • FILE CLERKS KEYPUNCH OPERATORS • BOOKKEEPERS NO FEES In overland Park contact: Ann Duwe Boscoe annexel 6405 Metcalf Overland Park 913/628-8622 913/628-8623 In Tapeke Contact: Doree Derrington Bobbi Sillian 1035.5 TokeA Penka 1035.5 TokeA McGill 913234-5624 913234-5624 new life forum a film & lecture series - The Great Dinosaur Mystery * Cities, Cities - Empty Cities new life forum a film & lecture series SCIENCE Archaeology-Bible FILM SERIES: - The World That Perished 7:00 Tues. Mar.4-$2.00 Forum Room.Ks.Union $$ NEED MONEY? $ $$ COMING EVENT: Lecture-Gary Parker Mar. 25 Ks. Union tery NOW THAT I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION,BUDGET HEARINGS FOR THE STUDENT SENATE ARE REPRESENTATIVES OF GROUPS PLANNING TO REQUEST FUNDING FOR FISCAL 1981 NEED TO COME BY THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, B105 KS UNION AND PICK UP A REQUEST APPLICATION. THE DEADLINE FOR REQUEST IS MONDAY, JANUARY 23. APPROACHING. PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE. THE DEADLINE FOR REQUESTS IS MONDAY, MARCH 10.1980. Because neither he nor the patients know what their tablets contain, Stephens said, no preliminary results are available. Donald Stephens, co-director of oncology at the Med Center and head of the research program, said that 40 chemotherapy treatments were required in milligrams of HCl in tablet form, a tablet of a standard nausea reliever, or a combo of both. The second dose after receiving chemotherapy treatment. He said the research would be completed within six months to a year. THE USED is obtained from the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs by applying to the FDA, Stephens said. The bill killed yesterday would have provided for a committee to review the needs of individual patients and provided the legal means to meet those needs, he said. The bill also would have provided the legal means for marijuana research. There now is no legal way for a chemotherapy patient to obtain marijuana other than the Med Center's program, Stephens said. Data gathered by other studies "show marijuana has a clear-cut superiority over nothing" for relieving nausea, Stephens said. *Some studies show marijuan has clear superiority over the placebo, but the Mayo Clinic study did not suggest that it was superior to the standard agent*, he said. He said the Legislature's exploration of marijuana's therapeutic uses did not indicate a trend toward decriminalization of recreational use of marijuana. SOWERS SAID that if research in the state showed marijuana had substantial positive effects for some patients, the law should make it a legal prescription drug. "Sometimes it's easier for a physician to go to a committee than to the government directly," he said. "I don't see this as opening the door at all." Sowers said. Data gathered on the subject indicate that marijuana relieves the pressure on the eye caused by glaucoma for only a short time, he said. Stephens said he knew of no program in Kansas to research marijuana's therapeutic effects on glaucoma patients. Campus escort service revived, but more volunteers are needed The hours for the service are 5 p. to 1. m. Sunday through Thursday 3 to 4 p. on Friday, Saturday and Monday to help have volunteers on call from 1 a.m. to 8 a.m., but this idea has been dropped about An escort service for KU students in the campus area started again last month with the addition of a number of volunteers, Kasey Ward, president of Campus Safety Services, said. "We are not having volunteers on call from 1 a.m. to 8 a.m. for now, but I am not sure about the future," Ward said. The escort committee had also planned to Jo Shalinsky, executive secretary of the state Board of Pharmacy, who testified before the judiciary committee, said the state Board's recommendation it might make marijuana research easier. operate the service seven days a week, but this has been reduced to five days a week. Excort requests are made to the base stations in Hashinger and Gertrude Sellars. Pennerson-Corbin Halls. Excorts are sent to the base stations and callers are taken to their destinations. Tonite Featuring * Homemade WHITE LASAGNA Dinner includes entree, garlic toast, crisp tossed green salad, coffee or tea $4.25 Requests can be made by calling 804-4688. The service area includes the square between Nath and 19th streets and between Tennessee and a street areas and includes Stewart Avenue. Ward said the service was operating with approximately 50 volunteers. Special good tonite ONLY — 5:30-8:30 NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN "We could always use more volunteers. We are hoping we can recruit more after the service goes going," she said. Lasagna noodles layered high with seasoned ground beef in white wine cream sauce with mozzerelle, gouda cheddar, ricotta, and other cheeses. Baked golden THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Kramer vs. Kramer Starring Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep Eve. 7:30 and 9:40 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:30 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 F. FOXES Feb 7, 2016 and 840 Sat and Sun mat 3/15 2. The Fog Starting Jane Leigh and Hal Holbrook Eve 7.45 and 9.45 Sat. mat 2:17 3. "10" Staring Be Derek and Dudley Moore Eve 7.15 and 9.30 Sat and Sun mat: 2.00 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. The Fifth Floor Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1:30 2. Last Married Couple in America Eve. 7:40 and 9:40 Sat. and Sun. mat. Varsity Downtown B43-1065 Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:1 Submission 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 We'll give you hair you can flaunt. Anytime, anywhere, anyway. FILM STUDIO ALEXANDER MALIK Does your hair always look as beautiful as you like? All kinds of ways! It can with the help of our styling experts and the new Dekka Deka into Nightwear collection, for your hair can flare up its call us now. CXGALIBUR Of Westminster Moisture Controlling Permanent Wave Hair Cutting For Men And Women (1) Pattern Recording 2711 W. 6th, Suite D (913) 841-7667 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 4, 1980 7 jeff Mike isn't sure he takes to the idea of string painting as he watches Kelly, under Carmen's patient encouragement, drag her pieces of yarn into a glow- in-the-wire! Tots wiggle through active class By LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter Being part of a circle is no simple matter if you're and a half years old. It isn't always easy if you can't keep it up. It means being able to see where there is an empty space between two other kids. Being bold enough to walk right up and take a strange hand. Being able to follow instructions. No easy matter. But the circle is the point of beginning and end in a one-hour class each Monday, Wednesday and Friday for a group of tots known as the Wee Wizulers. The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department dreamed up Wee Wilgins as a service to mothers who take a morning exercise class at the Community Building. The women leave their little ones in the教室, teachers Dekwyn Kawks, Ruth Dickey and Carmen McGraw at the next hour, their children will be happy and happy. ITS FRIDAY, creative movement day. Beeky arrives in the spacious, orange-carpeted playroom and gears herself up psychologically, planning to get out. "Stop . . . Go!" calculated to drain off excess water. After shedding parkas and boots, the wigglers—winter morning comfort personnel in flannel sleepwear—grab their sticks. "Okay, now run as fast as you can all over the room," they're told. "don't just stumble in anyone At the "G" go声 they're off like wind-up toys, ratually zooming in all directions, making soundless noise. At the "stop" signal they freeze, look at each other, giggle by how silly and clever they are. THEY ITS' time to pretend, time to let the creative juices flow without anyone telling you to So Becky tells the wigglers to be a butterfly—not to act like one, but to be one. Eight delicate, graceful butterflies take to the sky. "Now, let's be boiling water." And the room is awash with lacey, foamine, bubbler children. "Now, let's be cars," Aah, a chance to beep and vroomm, screech and reel. But there is a casualty. Rebecca is hit by another car-child and becomes a properly comforted she is whole and new again. The wighters become crabs, on the crab legs backward around the floor. And bears, on the crab legs, are crawling. TIME TO GET back in the circle, but watt! Wike is still a butterfly, clinging to the pillar in the center of the room, watching. With urging, the last but closest to being aware who are now just Matthew Ernn, Bill Just kills. To wind down, a story. Ruth holds the book so everyone can see it and Ready键s the wigglers gather. Silly hammers, too, and the circle gets to know all the animals that animals are born and butterfly metamorphose. The lesson is punctuated by an occasional whisper: "Well, I've seen that when my Finally a pair of mom-eyes pee through the door, a winger lights the eyes, and is over for the dress. MONDAY, TUMBLING. The wiggers today get control of their muscle on control a soft sheath and blue-black strap. But first, into the circle for warm-ups as the band sings "I'm here," the knees. Bibs like him with his pug legs so he can feel these old good knees. Brian is distracted by a fine-looking Spiderman shirt, almost as nice as his own hair. then, down to business. At a time the wiggiers make their way across the mat doing what they do in the wilderness. along, four somersaults in a row and even dizzy. But some wiggle need a gentle. Firm shave to be smooth. Kelly, arms glued to her sides and clenched knuckles turning white, hats meticulously from one beige stripe to another, careful not to fall in the river by stepping on a blue stripe. She makes it. And with each success, grins of unabashed self- delight bloom. WEDNESDAY, ART. Big, old tables, it doesn't matter if anything spills. Plain tablecloth. blouse of the day. In smokes, oversized T-shirts and aprons, the wigglers learn about string painting. Carman, who has spent his life drawing with supportive commentary, when David hops on on his chair and waves his bright, dripping picture for all to see. One wiggle draws a rainbow and raindrops catch on, springing up all around. In a solitary mood, clings to his purple crayon and covers sheets of purple with circle purple and azure Aztec designs. AS THE WICGLERS finish their works (and they work) they take them to futh to hung. They watch with pride and poke a tack in now and then to the back in hand in every place. They head for the back in hand in every place. S little bodies huddle around the conveniently low sink, scrubbing hard in the soothing warm water and with the big pink soap bar, pulling rough brown tweets from the enormous roll on the wall. It's such fun for these wigglers return to their cabin, where their fingers until spotted and "forced" to wash again. A week with the Wee Wigglers. They have used their muscles, their voices, their minds, and maybe even honed their social skills. Best of all, their mothers have had the chance to do the same. ... The day closes with the wiggers taken in the wonders of baby animal growth as Ruth holds a picture book and Becky reads. Young faces mirror the awe and disbelief new friends learn. Mike finds tumbling and creative movement boring, but soft brushes and pot of color make him blossom. Here he turns out the first in a series of bright work that will soon Photos by WES ORZECHOWSKI Wedding Reception? Cal The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints The KU Pre-dental Club is sponsoring a panel discussion on Dentistry as a career at 7:30 on Tuesday, March 4 in the Kansas Room of the Union. Featuring Dean Robert Adams, Dean of LA&S Dr. Richard Land, Featured Dean Robert Adams, Dean of LA&S Dr. Richard Land, UNMK Dental School. Funded by Student Activity Fees MOTOBECANE M FRANCE 1339 Massachusetts Mick's Bicycle Shop 842-3131 BAHA'I FIRESIDE World Peace KU Baha'i Club in the International Room of the Kansas Union. will meet on Tuesday, March 4th at 7:30 P.M. Everyone is welcome. TIME OUT Beat the Tuesday Blues and get there early or you'll lose. Terrible Tuesday SPECIAL PITCHER PRICES TONIGHT 6 - 7 p.m. 75¹ 8 - 9 p.m. $1.25 7 - 8 p.m. $1.00 9 - 10 p.m. $1.25 10 - 12 p.m. $1.75 take TIME OUT 2408 IOWA 843-2931 not a sideline. 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CLAUDIA CARDIMALE MARK LENNARD Tuesday, March 4 Woodruff Auditorium 7:30 pm —No refreshments allowed— $1.00 --- 8 Tuesday, March 4, 1980 University Daily Kansan Big 8 basketball reputation shaky Prospects don't look good for Kansas State and Missouri in the opening rounds of the NCAA basketball tournament. It could be argued that both teams have somewhat of a home-court advantage because they have played Nebraska in Lincoln at the Bob Devaney Sports Compete. But the advantage of playing in the backyard is negated by the formidable opposition both teams have to face. The two participating coaches, Norm Stewart of Missouri and Jack Hartman of Kansas are unhappy about their first-round selections. Missouri, 23-5, should defeat San Jose State, 17-11, in the open round. but the Ifters get past San Jose State, they will face Nebraska, 24-8, in the power forward Notre Dame, 23-5. And with power forward Curtis Berry out to torn cartellage in his knee, the Tigers will need the luck of the draw. It won't get any easier for the Tigers if they upset the Fighting Irish. Missouri would more than likely face powerful LSU in the semi-finals of the regional. STEWART HAS COMPLAINED that STEWART's 23-2 record and No. 11 national ranking warranted a first-round bye, but the pairing a committee didn't see it that way. Hartman and his team has an even more formidable task ahead of them. The Wildcats, 21-8, defeated their first-round game, Arkansas, earlier this season but the Razorbacks have overcome injuries and appear to be peaking for post-season play. Should the Wildcats get past Arkansas, they would face No. 4 Louisville. The Cardinals, who defeated K-State by 12 earlier this season, have had an outstanding season since their first start in 2013, recorded his 200th career victory in only his ninth year of coaching, Louisville, which has compiled a 28-3 record against some of the top teams in the nation, is lead by the "Doctor of Dunk," Darrrell Griffith, a 6-3 winner. They are the first-count of the upcoming NBA draft. Missouri's and Kansas State's seeds point out the lack of national respect for the Big Eight team to reach the Final Four of the NCAA tournament was Kansas in 1914. This year, the NCAA team will compete in a ference comprise more than 28 percent of the 48-team field and received seven of the 32 first-round picks. IT TAKES A lot of talent and a little luck to reach the Final Four. Lady Jack may smile on both Big Eight representatives, but their talent to go all the way is suspect, consequently, another year of early college may be in store for Big Eight representatives. But imagine what kind of a team could be fielded from the Big Eight if its top 10 players could have somehow been recruited at the same school. Combined, the players would have been the University Daily Kansan sports editors have picked a team of Big Eight players that we think could hold its own in the NCAA. Our picks for the dream team's starting guards are KU's Darnell Valentine and Colorado's Jalo Hunter. Valentine was selected All-Big Eight by out on **mike** a limb **earle** United Press International this season, but was demoted to the second team by the All-Star game. The strange turn of events, considering that the Big Air Fight-Decade team was named to the Big Air Fight-Decade team. IT WAS WRITTEN that Valentine had an off-year, but the press and fans have tended to believe it. The team lost more than Valentine's accomplishments. Despite playing in the land of the giants at the high post position on offense for the first time at home, they did not score in a team score scoring with a 16-point average. He leagued in steals with 64 and averaged 30 points in statistics for a player said to be in a slump. Hunter, Valentine's backcourt mate on our dream team, was mainly responsible for Colorado's best league finish in years. A transfer from Maryland, Hunter averaged 14 points a game for the Bufalores, and was personally responsible for five saves in this season by hitting at the shooters. First Round March 6 & 7 Second Round March 8 & 9 Regionals National Championship Villanova (22-7) 8 East Marquette (18-8) 9 Syracuse (25-3) 1 Iowa (19-8) 5 Virginia Commonwealth (18-11) 12 N.C. State (20-7) 4 Iona (26-4) 1 N.C. State (20-7) 4 Holy Cross (19-10) 11 Georgetown (24-5) 3 Tennessee (17-10) 7 Maryland (23-6) 2 Furman (23-6) 10 Alcorn (27-1) 8 Midwest Indianapolis March 22 S. Alabama (23-5) 9 LSU (24-5) 1 Missouri (23-5) 5 LSU (24-5) 1 San Jose (17-11) 12 Notre Dame (22-5) 4 Texas A&M (24-7) 6 Houston March 14-16 Bradley (23-9) 11 North Carolina (21-7) 3 Kansas State (21-8) 7 Louisville (28-3) 2 Arkansas (21-7) 10 Louisville (28-3) 2 Florida State (21-8) 8 Mideast Indianapolis March 24 Toledo (23-5) 9 Kentucky (28-5) 1 Waltham, State (22-5) 5 Kentucky (28-5) 1 Pinnacle (15-14) or Penn (15-11) 12 Duke (22-8) 4 Purdue (18-9) 6 Lexington, Ky. March 13-15 LaSalle (22-8) 11 St. John's (24-4) 3 Va. Tech (20-7) 7 Va. Tech (20-7) 10 W. Kentucky (21-7) 2 Indiana (20-7) UCLA (17-9) 8 West Indianapolis March 22 Old Dominion (25-4) 9 De Paul (26-1) 1 Arizona State (21-6) 5 DePaul (26-1) 1 Loyola Marymont (14-13) 12 Ohio State (20-7) 4 Clemson (20-8) 6 Ohio State (20-7) 4 Utah State (19-7) 11 Brigham Young (22-4) 3 Weber State (26-2) 7 Lamar (20-10) 10 Oregon State (26-3) 2 NCAA 80 AT THE FORWARD position comes Rolando Blackman, the winner play in the Big Eight and has had an incredible season, averaging 18 points a game on 55 percent scoring from the field. He has provided lategame leadership, including more than one occasion. The most recent Blackman heroics include scoring the first two goals in the semi-finals of the Big Eight's post-season tournament and blocking Andre Smith's last-second shot to eliminate the Cornerbacks. If he was healthy, Missouri's Curtis Berry would be the power forward on the dream team. At 6-4 and 230 pounds, Berry is an intimidating force on the boards, yet he possesses the ability to score. He finished with a 15-7 win over San Diego goal percentage, making 61 percent of his scores. Berry averaged 14 points and seven rebounds a game. 1980 National Collegiate Basketball Championship EDGING SMITH of Nebraska for the center spot was Steve Stinovich, also of Missouri. The 6-11, 240-pound has proved to be a great skill with play for the three more years in Big East football. Depth wins championships. So the guards that round out the Kansas's dream team are Larry Drew of Missouri and Ed Odom of Oklahoma State. Like Berry, Stipanovich shot 61 percent from the field this season and pulled down seven rebounds a game. If Notre Dame and Missouri meet, Stipanovich might live up to the expectations of Irish coach Digger who has earned him and referred to him as "all-world." BACKING UP BLACKMAN and Berry at the forward spots are Ed Nealy of Kansas State and Terry Sottis of Oklahoma. Coaching the Kaman dream team is Nebraska's first job for the man who was each of the four services. He stepped into a difficult position this season to replace the ailing Joe Lowe. THERE IT IS. A team of Big Eight players that could hold their own in any conference and possibly reach the Final Four. Combined, it has the ingredients of an MVP. The game was scattered throughout the league, there is no team with the capability to all the way. Your guess is as good as ours what teams will make it to the Final Four. But it's safe to predict Kansas State and Missouri won't be in Indiana, when they have the ticket KANSAS STATE Rolando Blackman Rising cost of collegiate athletics may usher in era of club sports Sports Writer Rv KEN DAVIS the year is 1990. It's homecoming weekend at the University of Kansas. Alumni from all over the country have joined them and are to see the Jawshaws play football. DOES THAT SOUND far-fetched or even impossible? Does it sound like something straight out of "Brave New World?" Maybe so. But it could happen. Inflation has hit the heart of intercollegiate athletics and a trend is under way that could change the entire concept of college sports. The athletes are now referred to as non-revenue sports into club sports that are separated from the athletic departments at some major colleges. Brinkman, dean of the KU School of Journalism and chairman of the Kansas Athletic Board, says the trend is gaining momentum. The modern facing intercollegiate athletics today. "EVENTALLY THINGS" are going to change, "Brinnman said. I believe that could very well be the case unless football Football is really the even revenue sport." And when football fails to bring in money, as it did last year at KU, then the problems begin. The answer looming in the future is the elimination of the non-revenue sports. "They would stay around, but they would be club sports," Brinman said. And maybe the it happens, the better it would be for everyone. "Why not just call it the University of Kansas professional football team? Then you could admit it and really go after it." BOB MARCUM, KU athletic director, agrees that the world of intercollegiate athletics today soon will be a thing of the past. "I don't go as far as brinkman predicts." "I hope it doesn't reach that point," Marcum said. "I hope the University will tell that it is of value to the University. But if it we're going to keep all of these sports, we're going to need assistance. Whether that comes from student fees or state funding, I don't know. We need some kind of help. "Where we get the money right now is pretty well identified. There are basically three ways to do it—games, games, and contributions. And when it comes to gate receipts, you get to be a part of it." BUT EVEN THOSE that do win are experiencing the same problem. Note Dreame is seriously considering the club sports concept. So is Oklahoma. Southern Methodus is dropping its baseball program. Alabama and Georgia are dropping wrestling. "It's already there," Marcia said of the trend. "If those people are adjusting their programs with the amount of money they bring in, there must be a problem." "But what are you supposed to do if you don't have the dollars, but the interest is still there?" Then you have club sports. But even that might not be enough to stop the trend which is picking up momentum all the time. There may not be a professional event, but there will be one, and it might be here much sooner than that. Twin Bridges CANOE RENTAL 725 ROW RIVER BLVD. WEST PLAINS, MO 65775 417-256-7507 INDIVIDUAL BANKING CANOEING ON ONE OF MISSOURI'S MOST BEAUTIFUL OZARK STREAMS. NORTH FORK RIVER - MARK TWIN FOREST CANOES - KAYAKS CAMPING - FISHING - RELAXING Izod Shirts Largest Selection in Town Men's and Women's We also carry Izods with the Jayhawk Emblem $14.00 Starting at: $18.00 Maupintour travel service ARLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL BUILT-IN PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 - townhouses 843-7333 2500 W.6th - apartments Ken Roper's Golf Shop Lawrence Country Club 400 Country Club Terr. 843-2938 TRAILRIDGE - studios Advertise in the Kansan god made me god doesn't make junk You have something to share with the people of the rural South and Appalachia yourself. Find out how you can be on, as a Catered Custodian. Ask your host. Your request will be treated confidentially. I'd like information about I'd like information about opportunities with the Glennary Missioners and the free poster. "I can't say," Marcum said. "With the way inflation is increasing . . . But I do see that sometime down the road people are going to have to come to grips with this." I'd like a free copy of the poster only. Room 7 Box 46404 Cincinnati. Ohio 45246 Name Glenmary Missioners Address City State Zip Age IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MASSE. 9-30-6:00 M-9 Thursday 9:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES Museum of Natural History HABITAT A PLACE FOR WILDLIFE AND MAN $1.50 $1.50 March 5 7:30 p.m. --- Tuesday. March 4. 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KENDAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't 800 Kansas baseball season got off to an unofficial start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandpit. There was no winner or loser, but no score was kept. In fact, there were never even any bases. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and we got a call back. We were excited to be Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports University Daily Kansan forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 11, but weather might be a problem again. Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Chlyton Flemire, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it would be a great day. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- tics and had a pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Ijayhaws are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mick Lubin would share the plining choirs. KU's already sparse roster is two players, Jared Niemann and Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go in an inning or not." Women drop in basketball poll **Top Twenty Wearers** college basketball teams in the National League and the Pac-10 league and ranked on the ballballs of 40 women's coaches. 2. Louisiana Tech (11) ... 36 3. Texas A&M (10) ... 36 4. Stanford (9) ... 34 5. Hudgers ... 25 6. South Carolina ... 24 7. N Carolina St ... 24 8. Colorado St ... 24 9. Chewy St ... 24 10. Kansas St ... 24 11. Kansas St ... 24 12. San Francisco ... 24 13. AMARA ... 24 14. Chiconion ... 24 15. Chiconion ... 24 16. Nevada - Las Vegas ... 27 17. Cincinnati St ... 27 18. Detroit ... 27 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UPITop Twenty The United Press International week, Board of Cups top 20 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 6, in parentheses. 1. Defau (30) ... 26.14 2. Louisiana State ... 26.15 3. Kentucky (1) ... 26.16 4. Louisiana (1) ... 26.16 5. Oregon State ... 26.17 6. Florida ... 26.18 7. Indiana ... 26.19 8. Maryland ... 26.20 9. Ohio State ... 26.21 10. Georgia State ... 26.22 11. Notre Dame ... 26.23 12. Benjamin Young ... 26.24 13. North Carolina ... 26.25 14. Duke ... 26.26 15. Michigan ... 26.27 16. Duke ... 26.28 17. Michigan ... 26.28 18. Texas A&M ... 26.29 19. Arizona State ... 26.30 20. Minnesota State ... 26.31 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 13 words or fewer $2.25 $2.30 $2.40 $2.50 $2.60 $2.70 $2.80 $2.90 13 words or fewer $2.25 $2.30 $2.40 $2.50 $2.60 $2.70 $2.80 $2.90 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday 5 p.m. Thursday 2 p.m. Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday 2 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Monday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Monday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kanaan 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 in person or simply by calling the Kansan business店 at 864-158. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4328 Watch for truss treaked at 9th and Illinois, 10th. Use a large net or plastic bag with the (Two Hei-ho) to the-Wall. Sell fresh fruits and peaches in the shell. Flatten oven of dry pans in the shell. Flatten Eleven varieties of dry pans in the shell. Reheat to 450°F and sorghum. Kever Sunday. Also selling wood dishes. VISA BREAKAWAY This senior hourman is now accepting app- plications to become a student. This honorary recognition will be held academic excellence, and campus involvement. The application deadline is 258 Strong. The application deadline is Friday, March 7 at 5:00 a.m. RetURN all ap- plication with an official透传 to 268 Strong OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blue Blu Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10, Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes. $35. 842-7210. 3-6 BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Open out side selection at colorful opening pants, Great gift option. Main卖点 to choose Music options at colorful opening pants, this and more --have to walk alone on campus at MAGAZINE RANGE WITHIN CLOTHING ARE FOR YOU DVALE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WACFACE LOVE PAM Prater Fraternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 64-3539 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95. Rickie Bicks Lake. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 to 10, in Green Hall, Room 164. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. K65-7319 3-4 Antonies are always in love, and buy one you like. 7 and 8 on Friday at 11 a.m., or 9 on Sunday 11 7 and 8 on Friday at 11 a.m., or 9 on Sunday 11 7 and 8 on Friday at 11 a.m., or 9 on Sunday 7 and 8 on Friday at 11 a.m., or 9 on Sunday 7 and 8 on Friday at 11 a.m., or 9 on Sunday 7 and 8 on Friday at 11 a.m., or 9 on Sunday 7 and 8 on Friday at 11 a.m., or 9 on Sunday **Note:** Good all three days refreshments with this aid. Want to Built-Motorcycle 125-175 Endure. Please kill 164.8229. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118. Seventy-seven of it will be held. 72 Dodge Challenger- 318 2 Bbl. AT, PS, AC- $1,000 PHI. 841-8154 3-5 1873 Datsun 240 Z. Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. 3-3 98 Old Dids Dallas 88, Clean, good condition, excellent merit. mets. 8653, 8644-0123 before 9 a.m. 13:47 1872 Cellei ST, 25 mm. W-AC. Overhauled, new. treasured. Mint sell. Mollit. Mike B44-2246. Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition. dark-natural finish Winters Electric Piano. 10 in. TSR 4. Speakers, still warranted. dark-coupled guitar. Walt Disney Bed & 7-3/4. 842-4270 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 or best offer. Call Denise 812-2750 3-6 Renault's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bill, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone; for information, write: Harper, Kansas C0388 44 Rosignal Salomon skis $120, 69 VW $250, roller skis 9.11; oak pew $100, 842-8422 or 842-6900. Loast: Keys with a piece of leather and Dine- stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR Nikon 89-200mm zoom lens $350 Call 811-6072 after 6.00 p.m. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? A. women are more enjoyable white wear; sexual activities are more enjoyable white wear; married and have children A. minority of gay men sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory or to parody the traditional women's role in society; B. dem question why women wear men clothing, despite a long history of women being an article of women's clothing THIS INNOVATION IS SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANRAN FOR RENT NOTICE Jenson 500 3 way speakers. 15 woofers w/ fre- e controls. Excellent condition. Call 3-212 - 2167 --have to walk alone on campus at LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . On campus, 2 BR apartments Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 NEED CASH To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kananan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-572-3-17 842-9737 or 841-7476 IMPROVE YOUR GRADE$1 Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of college supplies. 10:20AM, notice. LBOX 2009G7; Los Angeles, CA. 90252. (417) 872-4828. tf For legal assistance, including Municipal Court, the City of New York will accept tax returns David Daller & Lester Jr. East 82nd St. and 94th St. for $360. 3243 collection Call 841-5817 late eavesdropping. Office hours are 9:30 a.m.-10:00 Monday through Friday. We do not accept cash. CALL NOW! PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House ofusher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88% Mint. --have to walk alone on campus at Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs area, where students working with children in a camp setting will win while engaging in many other programs at the Colorado Western Camps. Paddle Colorado, 805-691-7240. EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 845785. MATH 115-103 call 842411. STATISTICS 100-600 call 842931. PHYSICS 100-600 call 842931. PHYSICS 100-600 call 842931. ENGLISH 100-600 call 842931. SPANISH call 843-7057. FOUND TYPING Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities Required. Reasonably pricei Call 843-9079 or 842-1485 SERVICES OFFERED I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TH Lovely new 2 br, townhouse and apt. next to Rosemont. Call 843-8579 or 842-4185. Reasonably priced. Call 843-8579 or 842-4185. Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers. misc. IBM correcting selecric. Barb After 5 p.m. 842-3210. tf Why case about typing? Experienced civil service secretary, door professional, typing贝. Brit Grammner. 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m., and on weekends tf PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127. New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843-9579. tf Jayhawk West Apts. New Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 to 254 Fronter Room, Next door to Russell's East. **tf** NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terril, 841-7266 or 841-7476. 3-1 A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Office space for rent now at the area 1 business ... 3231. Mass; The office can be changed to fit needs. Up and lower or upper seats 728 ft. or 890 ft. Contact 8244-2034 or 8347-0177. MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, acco- nicent. Snelling. grammar corrected. Call ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower Houset—a 30 number student cooperative within walkway distance of the KU campus and down- stairs. For more information, even if 842-9421. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make their own book! Study guide for use in them- tion 17-As study guide. By Jillian Hunt. Analysis of Western Civilization available at Town Creek, Mall Bookstore and Oread Book HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING FOR SALE 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. $15.00 per mile. 841-3168. 3-4 These all new and contemporary loungewear are designed to provide comfort from KU and downstairs. Starking at 3 blues from KU and downtown at 12 on the upper level with study area, 14 baths, bars& chairs with spacer, 20 bedrooms, private baths, private kitchen, private bath, private private bathroom Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. ff Professor having house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this superb house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 study rooms. recreation room. 1 bedroom. 3 bedrooms. 5 reference, referral. keys. referral. keys. referral. 84-0221. 3-19 Need to unibuild 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnished. Off-street parking. Full carriage. New store and refrigerator. Furniture, water heater, and slave room. Call 891-641 891-7. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4611 or 841-3018. 3-5 Must sublet-2 bedroom furnished apartment included in rent. Next street. S411-845-7200 square miles. B411-845-7200 WATERBED MATTETNESS, $58.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 643-188-79 New excellent quality bedding -orthoderm matte leather cover for Winston Furniture, 201 New York St. #8323F, if you are looking for Sublease 2 BR apt. w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699. 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BRurn. apt. A/C and pool. $185pm. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496 3-7 Alternator, starter and generator specialists MOTOR MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 842-560-3900. 920 W. 40H. MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 842-560-3900. 920 W. 40H. SunSpects=Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- conductive. Reasonable, reasonable, 1021 Mesh. Bax 841-5700. Cabin fahren? Try a T-Port Cullman, black top interior, PB-RB, air, cruise. AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Chr. 443-5321 Kennedy DC Starre Integrated amplifier. Kennedy DC Starre professionally performed with Excellent condition. 841-359-8880. Must sell-Electric Ephone guitar and iPhone. MDM Good condition plays like new. 843-672-8800. 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 22,400 carb. New carpet, no wrecks; 40w/4 wheel carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 811-7812 or 872- 837. Ask for Silvery Serious impurities. 3-4 correcting SPORTS BULLETIN THE MILLER GUIDE TO INTERCOLLEGIATE SPORTS/SPRING 1980 Pro-Con: Training Foreign Athletes page 3 Collegians' Quest For Gold page 10 Caught in A Squeeze Play page 14 Soccer: The New Game in Town page 21 BIG EIGHT EDITION A Pole Vaulter's Nightmare / 5 Women Go Pro / 6. A Coaching Legend / 8. Gymnast Bart Connor / 17. Spring Wrap-Up / 19 Hurdler Renaldo Nehemiah One pair cinnamon eglagues, fourth floor Weree If found, please call 644-8593. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain Says 'available'. Reward 824. Vaccine 103. caramel secrets to mastery. Blaidy blue, easy-yet gorgeous male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. Call 1-800-417-4927. For one of Lance's rooms and well fit up your 3. SERVICE e Hospital ce Center, ) 296-5180. opportunity. house. Snip. dish,饭- 4-13 ouse living. house. Keep try. 3-7 paid. Own mo. no. J apartment. Cali St. 586 double room. a mansion. 9 wee 9 a.m. two-bedroom. three-bedroom. Cali St. 476 $109.50 EDS PLUS DON'T. TO SOLD 1. Tuesday. March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KENDAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't too harsh, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unstoppable start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandpit. There was no winner or loser, but the team was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and they said, 'We're going to the Floyd Temple, KU coach,' we really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports forced the games to be postponed, Temple hopes to play games today at 10 a.m., but weather might be a problem again. Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings of the game. Culley worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Touple Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it might be worth checking out. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left- center field in the final inning. University Daily Kansan "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innings ball game. It just was under some unusual circlus. He was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Hawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching choles. KU's always sparse roster is two left-handed pitcher. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "MrMcintosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "MrMcintosh might be able to go in an innerved or not." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams in the country, ranked by the Greater Greenville of the Philadelphia College and the ballets of the 40 women's coaches. 1. Louisiana Tech (1) ... 26-2 2. Texas ... 26-2 3. Texas F. Austin ... 25-3 4. Hudgery ... 25-3 5. South Carolina ... 26-6 6. N. Carolina St. ... 26-6 7. North Carolina St. ... 25-7 8. Chewy St. ... 25-7 9. Kansas St. ... 25-7 10. San Francisco ... 26-3 11. Miami ... 26-3 12. Cleveland ... 26-3 13. New Orleans ... 25-7 14. Nevada - Las Vegas ... 25-7 15. Carlstadt Missouri St. ... 20-7 16. Detroit ... 24-6 Other teams named on at least 10 balloons, alphabetically; Jackson St., Mercer, Oregon, Queens. Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UP1Top Twenty The United Press International weekly, Board of Coachs top 3 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, parents. 1. Defiant (30) ... 26.1 2. Louisiana State ... 26.4 3. Louisiana (1) ... 28.3 4. Oregon State ... 28.3 5. Syracuse ... 28.4 6. Tulsa ... 29.1 7. Maryland ... 29.3 8. Ohio State ... 29.7 9. Georgia State ... 29.7 10. Notre Dame ... 25.4 11. Notre Dame ... 25.4 12. Vanderbilt ... 24.4 13. John's (N.Y.) ... 24.4 14. Missouri ... 23.4 15. Texas Gulf Coast ... 24.4 16. Duke ... 28.4 17. West Virginia ... 26.1 18. Texas A&M ... 26.1 19. Kansas State ... 26.1 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight ten $15 worth of twenty $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $10 worth of twenty $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 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 Kanaan 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 Foid items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in new cases by calling the business offering at 844-836-1212. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for Frisk parked at 9th and Illinois, 10th and Minnesota. Watch the Rolls-on-Walls. Sell fresh fruits (apples, oranges, pears) in the shell. Five varieties of dye were used for coatings and soothe. Fry Sunday. Also selling wood stoves. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value 1. Inspew wide side view of colorful spring pants 2. Great Combustion 3. Many sizes to choose 4. Also inspect our colorful spring print shirts Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10, Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes $35. 842-7010. 3-6 LITWINS VISA OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior honors年 is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in various disciplines and campus areas, academic excellence, and campus commitment. Applications are available in 268 Short Day (34 hours) or 275 Long Day (47 hours) on March 4 at 5:00 p.m. Return all application materials to an official transcript to 268 Strong Mount Blu Blii SKI Resort is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3860. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM Inter Friaternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL HUSBY MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Law- rence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 64-3539. K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy- Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro Please call 864-6123. 3-4 By higher proclamation this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secure. The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 p.m. in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande Linda Thurson and Ron Kubby. 3-4 Roach's Hall, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 FOR RENT ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95 Ricks Bike Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-6642. t ricksbikes.com 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good con- fidence Call 645-7210 3-4 Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilityless Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-8579 or 842-4185. tf Antiques are in, see in, and buy on tour 7 and 8, and 10 fridays-Saturday 11 to 9 Sunday 11. Lawn Service is on Friday from 11 am to 4 pm. Court of Lawice, the AT National Guard Armory, is open with this aid. Good all three days. Refreshments with this aid. Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to Park Avenue, near Union Station. Please occasionally priced. Call 843-9579 or 848-4185. T2 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bll, AT, PS, AC- 1.000 KPH .841-8154 3-5 Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5600. TF 1973 Datum 240 Z. Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-6566 3-5 90 Old Dilton 83.68 Clear, good condition, excellent merit. 9005. 844-6027 9:ear 9 a.m. 1972 Celtic St. 25, pigm W-AC Overhaired, new manicure. Must sell. Call Mike. 844-6027 Cablen-Cordon Nigel Plano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Walters Electric Plano, 10 yrs TS4 *Speakers*, still warmer, durable Guitar, Walton Bed & Dress 824-4270 New 2 bed townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 88-7 9379. NASIMH HALAH has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 83-859 any time of the day. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise B41-2750. 3-6 Jiahawk West Apts. Now Resting; 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 242 Fronter Road, Next door to Russell's East. If A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tt Rossignol: Salomon skis $120, 69 VW $200, roller skees 9:11 oak pkw $100, 840 $17, 3-17 or 3-17 ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstream. For more information, event details: 845-9421. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6075 after 6.00 p.m. HANOVER PLACI NOW LEASING Professor having house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this appt 2 year old house in April, 8 students, recreation center, library. need 315 students, pks, reference needed, 842-0221. 39-10 Need to sublease 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnish, 0F street parking. Fully carpeted, eaked TV, AG, New stove and refrigerator. Available on sale and above. Price on Sale $419. Call 801-641-811. 2 bdroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $1.00/mo. 841-3168. 3-4 Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 3021* Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 900 sq. ft. Contact 8214-3024 or 804-0777. FOR SALE One and two bldroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus; on bus route. 842-4641 or 841-3018. 3-5 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. ff Must subunit-2 bed furnished apartment included in rent. Next to stadium 811-4250. ELECTIVE exchange units. BELL AUTO- ELECTIVE exchange units. NEW Male on Sale Western Christian Notes. New male on Sale to use them! -1 as study guide 24 for Lesa from Duncan's Study Guide and Read at Town Cree, Mall Bookstore and Oread Bookstore Subluate 2 hpr iat w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 811-5699 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available Airtel. For more information call Terril. 841-7267 or 841-7476. 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. a/c A/P and pool must be on 9th St. & bus route 842-250 or 843-409 Jenson 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- ourney controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 Kenwood DC Starco Integrated amplifier, model KA7190, 89 watts, professionally used. Excellent sound quality. Must kill-Electronic Raphne guitar and a "killer" Good condition plays like new. 843-6723 SunSports - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-perscription glasses. Selection, reduction, 1021 Mass. 841-779-3750 WATERBED MATTERNESS, $38.98, 3 year warranty. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mm., 843-38-16. New excellent quality bedding—orthodemic mattens set; we check on stock. Pedra's is 24-hour service. Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cullas, red with black top; interior PS/PA, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road舱. Car 842-3123. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 850-296-9900, W. 800, UF 10. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dw stamped on it. $2 reward. Call 844-2830. 3-7 NOTICE 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 22 600 miles. no crews no wrecks, 90 w/w barrel car T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7130 or 82-657. Ask for Mart. Serious inquiries. LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus. 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs area. Participate in children working with children in a camp setting and attend programs at many other programs. Witness the impact of Western Education, Camp Rock, Colorado 88168. --don't ___ to walk alone on campus at Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Most women are more enjoyable white women as sexual activities are more common than married and have children. A majority of gay men sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory, but to parody the traditional woman's role in marriage, they wear women's men's clothing. How question why women wear men's clothing. What an article of women's clothing. THE IN-NOUGH SPOONED BY GAY SERVICES OF KANASI To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I'M READY TO DAUGHTER 541.8437.327 GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . FOUND NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 XXXXXXXXXX IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $10 to us. 308-page catalog of collectible books. 10,209 titles littled. BOX 25097C; Los Angeles, CA 92015. (213) 477-8726. I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 - call 842-7585. MATH 115-700 - call 842-7584. STATISTICS MATH 931-600 - call 842-7584. PHYSICS MATH 931-600 - call 842-7585. PHYSICS 109-500 - call 842-9036. ENGLISH TF and SPANISH TF 843-7057. SERVICES OFFERED For legal assistance, including Municipal court tourism, call 843-625-3000. For tax returns consult Dawn & Latter, 19 East 20t St, Suite 470, 710-269-4900. 3434 sellage Call 843-625-3000 late eavesdropping. Office address Monday through Friday at 10am, accessed on Master Charge Monday through Friday at 11am. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Heri Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 MW TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4950. TF Why cuss about typing? Experienced civil service secretary? does professional typing. Betty Gramerm. 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf 1 Navy blue cat in round Call 864-1320 Black cat in 2782 or 864-2 Wristwatch-Fr- attemoon, Calm Mice, keys at 843-ida 843-ida 2 weeks ago of water Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mite, IBM correcting electronic. Bath After 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf Typist, Editor, IBM Pica/Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127. TF Found a calce 753-7530 ever Found—small long tall. We work 842-255 MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accc. Snelling. grammar corrected. Call THE MOST POPULAR SIGNS IN BASEBALL. Whitey Herzog and Dick Williams, Famous Baseball Managers "BUNT" "STEAL" “GIMME A LITE” LITE BEER FROM MILLER. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS. One pair minelite eyeglasses, fourth floor Wessex. If found, please call 864-6859. 3-7 Lot—set of keys on brakes rectangular key chain. Says "available." Hewlett-Brown 852-4274. 4-274 business services business management business marketing business sales must be a male with a minor in a field of confidence (no to speak). 811-242-7655. Ask for our phone number. MARSAH CLASSEMENTS - EXPLAINING THE TO --- couple of r. Contact the day, if SERVICE e Hospital, ee Center, 296-5180. opportunity. mouse, $100, rish, dish, 4-13 ouse living, mare. Now. Keep try. 3-7 paid. Own mo. + 3-6 I. apartment. Call Store 315. nine-mobile: 1 a.m.-midnight 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Call Store 315. Call Store 109.50 EDS PLUS DON'T. Tuesday, March 4, 1980 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud 9 By KEN DAVIS Snorts Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't unfair. The 1980 Kansan baseball season got off to an unfair start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhaws and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstret. There was no winner or winner who had been kept. In fact, there were never even any baja runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and they were in the hall." Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." University Daily Kansan The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 13:08, but weather might be a problem Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. It wasn't hard to see. Tower worker three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clyton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jimm Phillips worked three inning innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it would be a great day. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left- center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual curtain, and I was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhaws are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chicks. KU's already sparse roster is two players on offense. Pitcher Rands McIntosh and David Hickes are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go into an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams 1. Kentucky (7) 36.2 2. Louisiana Tech (11) 36.2 3. Texas 36.2 4. Stephenville F. Austin 35.6 5. Ruggers 35.6 6. South Carolina 35.6 7. N. Carolina St. 35.6 8. Carolina St. 35.6 9. Chewy St. 35.7 10. Kansas St. 35.7 11. Kansas St. 35.7 12. San Francisco 36.3 13. MA NEWS 36.3 14. Clemmon 36.3 15. Northwestern 36.3 16. New Jersey Las Vegas 36.3 17. Missouri State 36.3 18. Purdue 36.3 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International week, Board of Cupaes top 20 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday. March 1, in parentheses. UPITop Twenty 1. Defiand (30) ... 26.4 2. Louisiana State ... 26.5 3. Kentucky (1) ... 26.4 4. Louisville (1) ... 26.5 5. Oregon State ... 26.5 6. Oregon ... 26.5 7. Indiana ... 26.4 8. Maryland ... 26.7 9. Ohio State ... 26.4 10. Oregon State ... 26.4 11. Notre Dame ... 26.4 12. Brigham Young ... 26.4 13. Missouri ... 21.5 14. North Carolina ... 21.4 15. Duke ... 21.4 16. West Virginia ... 26.4 17. Texas A&M ... 26.4 18. Arizona State ... 26.4 19. Kansas State ... 26.4 The University Dailv KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one ten dollar two five three four five six seven eight nine ten twelve worth or less $2.25 $3.00 $3.75 $4.50 $5.25 $6.00 $6.75 $7.50 $8.25 $9.00 $10.00 ten worth or less $10.25 $10.50 $10.75 $11.25 $11.50 $11.75 $12.00 $12.25 $12.50 ERRORS AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 3 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 3 p.m. Friday Wednesday 3 p.m. The Kanana 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 in inconvenient locations, but called the *more business* offer at 6A48N. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for trussed part at 3th and Illinois, Bombardier at 4th and Illinois, The Holiday at the-Walks; Fresh fruits from Florida; peanuts in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available from orchard. Kerry Sunday. All selling watermelon. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Extra one size selection of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort More great comfort Above our colorful pants! Discount More at LUWINS WHERE FLOORS ARE FORNIC LITWINS WHERE CLOTHING IS FORTY V75A Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10 852 - 742-810 Dharma Teacher Barbara Barko 852 - 742-810 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blue Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 This senior homeroom is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in areas of academic excellence, and campus life, academic excellence, and campus life. 216 Strong. The application deadline is Friday, March 7 at 5:00 a.m. Return all applications on an official transcript to 216 Strong. DAVID HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM 侵ater Pratimunity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawnery campus students. Contact IFC Office at 641-359-7800 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Endure. Purchase 864-6122. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual barrars event for room 118. Seventh-seventy-four barrars. The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 to 10, in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. Rosalie's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 76058 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quit and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 834-9572 or 842-1485. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to Bryant's house. Available. No reason. If you owe scried. Call 843-5079 or 842-4185. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 844-756-3020 NAIMISH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. Jawhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bd room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-4443 or see at 254 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's East. tf A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tt ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, event number 842-9421 Office space for rent now at the area building, 922% Mass! The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Up and lower or lower seats 282 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 82403 or 84377-077. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. ff Need to sublease 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Full carriage wagon. New store and refrigerator. Furniture. Kitchen and slave room on 2-7. Call 801-641-0019. Professor leaving house for 2 years need qualified tenant to rent this super 4 year old house in April, 4 bedrooms, 2 studyrooms, recreation, dining room, balcony, references, pcs. references, aged 48-2021. 3-19 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-464) or 841-301. 3-5 Antiquities are always in use, and buy one you like. The Library of Congress is on 7, 8 and 9th Friday at 10 a.m., 9th Sunday at 11 a.m., 12 noon and 1 p.m. of Claremont Law School. At the National Guard Air Force Museum, good all three days. Refreshments with this aid. Good all three days. Refreshments with this aid. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.05. Rickie Bks Lose. 1033 Vermont. 841-6624. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sales Make sure you have received the book or use them **1-**. At study guide, 2. For class analysis, 3. For class discussion, 4. Analyze *Western Civilization* now available from Fowler, Mills Bookshelf and Read Bookstore. FOR SALE Sublease 2 BR api, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. M1-569. 3-7 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 842-7310. 3-4 Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $150m. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496. 3-7 must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available Airtel. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476 3-7 1973 Datum 240 Z. Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. Kerwood, DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 90 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition-4-34. 841-5841 call anytime. lent touch. $865. 864-4072 before 9 a.m. 1972 CELITa St. 25 mw.-AG W. Overhauled, very dependant. Must deal W. Mate. #854-21864 72 Dodge Challenger—318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $1.000 PHI 841-8154. Cabern fowen Try A-Top Culling, AT black top, interior PS, PB, ari, cruise AM-FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Cruise 842-313-31 Cable-Nile Ultra Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Piano. 10 yrs TS4 3 Speakers, still warranted. ColorGuard, Walnut Guitar, Width & Depth 824-8270. SunSpecs= Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-7770. TF **WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 843-1986.** **TP** new excellent bed quality - bedroom lighting sets be sure to check on prices. Lodges) furniture. 1209 New York St. 843-3228.** tff** Must sell=Electric Epiphone guitar and a 'i' on 803-6572. Good condition plays like new. Ca. 3-5 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold - 24,00 cups. New carpets, no wrecks 400 w/4 barrel carc. T-top. Power everything. Call 811-8710 or 872- 857. Ask for Mart. Serious inquiries only. 3-4 and can only be used in the same manner. Rossignol Salomon skis $120, 98 WV $250, roller skates 9.11 oak pew $100, 842-8422 or 842- 6900. 3-17 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $25 or best offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 Pl Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350 Call 811-6072 after 6.00 p.m. 3-7 Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ freu- nency control. Excellent condition. Call John. 841-2182. NOTICE Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dum stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 842-2830. 3-7 FOUND LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments Furnished or unfurnished. Lost: and O 6. One pal If found --- with all utilities paid with all utilities paid. TO STUD LIWS; WI us, as a p prove of help and residents kept con mass. Mass Jayhawker Tower Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 + Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs, a rural community doing work with children in a camp setting. Backpacking horse riding, wildlife, ecology, and mountain biking from Western Camps, Fairfield, Colorado. Internship with Western Camps, Fairfield, Colorado. Lost—says 'a' Write-address: attention C. Misc. keys: identify D. 2 work(s) 1 Navbw B. Call 8441. Black cat 62 or 353-1539 Found-at work 842. Work-ware To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens last seen at Alnfield Field House or the Kanzan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 641-5275. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? A. women are more enjoyable white wear; sexual activities are more enjoyable white wear; married and have children; a family sometimes wear women's clothing as an assignment or to parody the traditional women's role in society; dom question why women wear women's clothing, dom question why women wear men's clothing, dom question why women wear men's clothing; an article of women's clothing THIS INNOVATION SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICES OF KANAS --for legal assistance, including Municipal court inquiries for domestic births and late deliveries. 10 East Street, New York, NY 10017. Tax returns consult Dault & Lauter. 10 East St. 3253 Chelsea Ave. New York, NY 10017. 2834 collect Call 848-5055; law office, Office of the Chief Counsel, Monday through Friday 10am- to5pm Master Change NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 --for legal assistance, including Municipal court inquiries for domestic births and late deliveries. 10 East Street, New York, NY 10017. Tax returns consult Dault & Lauter. 10 East St. 3253 Chelsea Ave. New York, NY 10017. 2834 collect Call 848-5055; law office, Office of the Chief Counsel, Monday through Friday 10am- to5pm Master Change You don't have to walk alone on campus at night. Cell Campus Safety Services at 864-4858 SERVICES OFFERED **EXPERT TUTORING:** MATH: 600-102 call 624-5785. MATH: 115-731 call 624-5785. **STATISTICS** **PHYSICS** 900-743 call 900-743. **PHYSICS** 100-509 call 943-803. **ENGLISH** and **SPANISH** call 843-707. IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of college-level research. 10-20 tonies listed. HOX 25907G; Los Angeles, CA. tfz (41) 273-8728. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIL is available with Alice at the House of Upper Quick Copy Center. 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OREIGN students have been eligible to participate in U.S. intercollegiate athletics—especially in the "i-spirit" soccer and track—ever since the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) was established. In recent years, however, foreign athletes have begun to dominate NCAA championship competition in these two sports, and they increasingly bitter controversy among coaches that encompasses such issues as recruiting policies, coaching philosophy, and winning in college sports. The storm over foreign athletes began brewing in 1973 the year the NCAA first slapped a track and soccer scholarships member institutions could do out. (The ceiling was lowered to its present total dollar equiv of $84 million) races in 'soccer and 14 in track.) With fewer scholarships at their disposal, many track and soccer teams afford to take on each more "hopeful"—athletes who showed potential but might not pan out. In 2015 the competition for proven cream of the crop athletes became more fierce—and some coaches began to look for more athletes that were a relatively unattached pool of talented prospects, many of whom were eager for the opportunities, brain, compete and get an education in the United States. Before long,some of the "importing" institutions had put 271 and class distance runner Henry Rono (shown here in the steeplechase) trains at West State. The coaches at schools using foreign athletes see nothing importing. But those at the schools don't like it one bit. The NCAA, sitting calmly in dorm, prefers to remain aloof. Two schools that have had notable success with foreign players and are now Texas at El Paso and the University of San Francisco. Since 1975, UTEP—with teams made even more famous by either won or placed second in every NCAA indoor and outdoor track championship. And the team has started line-up seldom including more than one American, has captured the NCAA Divisional crown for the last five years. "Foreign students are defi- tely a growing influence in schools and universities NCAA spokesman. "You're be- ginning an eye to it in swimming "But from our standpoint, "it isn't really a valid is-identification unaccompanied to discriminate in students in any way, and we are simply not concerned with the nationalities of student athletics." PRO The Sports Bulletin solicited coach and team coach, a soccer coach and one team coach, each side of the athlete-athlete controversy. All four are quite smooth. together outstanding soccer and track teams. Other col- ments would make a name for themselves by achieving athletic success, began to shop in the foreign market, and infused had begun in earnest. TED BANKS University of Texas-El Paso/Track Coach: "It's undoubtedly true that giving scholarships to foreigners takes them away from Americans. And it's true that the foreign athletes tend to be older and more experiential. I don't get paid to train Americans." I get paid to provide the university with the best track team I can, I've got a limited recruiting budget, and I simply can't get many top Americans. I don't have the resources. UCSF: I must to look elsewhere. "Some coaches are vicious to them. They try to bribe us or intimidate us into going for second- (continued on page 4) column 1 JIM BUSn JIM BUSH University of California-Los Angeles/Track Coach; CON "Secondly, it's hurting the de- development of our athletics. Many of these foreigners are 23 to 25 years old as freshmen. They've already proven, world-class studies. How is an 18-year-old American? How is an 18-year-old Frenchman? How are new top athletes now being shut out of college (Continued on page 4, column 3) "My main objection to the use of foreign athletes is that Americans promote promising young athletes, many whom can't afford it to go to college without a scholarship, are losing money," the offers are going to foreigners. SPORTS BULLETIN 3 --- correcting i. mis- celling en- joyment Sectile, ever, ever ii. theses I Correct ii. al foam, cellul Caff deliver & 8-6 | SERVICE | | :--- | | office center, | | opportunity, | | day if. | | service $100, | | renter. Non- | | own one living | | angle. Non- | | own two. | | Own one | | two. | | Call Street | | call Street | | 5 a month | | 9 a.m. to | | 3 p.m. | | two-bedroom | | the end of | | C call after. | | 10:50 + / | DS LUS N'T. --- Tuesday, March 4. 1980 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud 9 By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were 'the best and the rules weren't too hard' but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an uneven start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandlot. There was no winner or loser, because no score was kept. In fact, there were never even won. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and we had a practice and he said, 'We're Floridetown, KU coach, said.' We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a doubleheader Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN University Daily Kansan Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. (John Brennan/AP) Sports forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 11, 30, but weather might a problem again. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Cayton Fleton, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound, " Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was going to be a big thing. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- tures that were pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." TempleJaws are able to play William Jewell today. The Templejaws that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chions. KU's always sparse roster is two players, Pitcher Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McInlott has the flu and Hicks has an infection" Temple said. "McInlott might be able to go in naming or dealing with it." Women drop in basketball poll The top 12 women's college basketball teams of the season. The Governor of the State are ranked based on the ballots of 9 women in cus- tumes and the ballots of the 8 men in cus- tumes. 1. Louisiana Tech (1) 26.2 2. Tulsa 26.2 3. Fresno 25.3 4. Stephen F. Austin 25.3 5. Burguer 25.3 6. South Carolina 25.3 7. N. Carolina St. 25.4 8. Louisiana St. 25.4 9. Chewy St. 25.5 10. Kansas St. 25.7 11. Miami 25.7 12. San Francisco 26.3 13. Arizona St. 26.3 14. Chennon 26.0 15. New Jersey 26.0 16. Nevada - Las Vegas 25.7 17. Cleveland Minnesota St. 26.4 18. Detroit 26.4 Other teams named on at least 10 hallots, alphabetically: Jackson St., Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International weekly board of Cupes top 20 college basketball ratings with first- place voter and records through games of Sunday, March 6, in parentheses. UPI Top Twenty 1. Peleliu (38) ... 261 2. Louisiana State ... 261 3. Louisiana (1) ... 263 4. Tennessee (1) ... 263 5. Purple State ... 263 6. Syracuse ... 263 7. Idaho ... 263 8. Maryland ... 261 9. Ohio State ... 267 10. Oregon ... 267 11. Notre Dame ... 253 12. Pittsburgh ... 254 13. St. John's (N.Y.) ... 254 14. Missouri ... 254 15. North Carolina ... 254 16. West Carolina ... 254 17. West State ... 254 18. Texas & M&T ... 261 19. Arizona State ... 264 20. Missouri State ... 264 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen sixty seventy eighty nine ten eleven十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三十二十四五十六十七八十九十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三十四五十六十七八十九十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三十四五十六十七八十九十一十二十三十四第五十六七十八十九十一 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. The Kanas 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 viewed in coral or menus by calling the Business office at 84348. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for trail parked at 9th and illumination, two 10ft wide tables with The Hot-Off-the-Wall*鲜榨 fruits dry pineapple in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry pineapple are in the shelf. Also selling wooden Sundries. Sunday. All selling wood products. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS New only $11.99 Upgrade to the latest edition on colourful spring panties Great comfort Main sizes to browse More sizes for coloured spring print shirts Italian Made LTWINS LITWIN'S VISA eaton change Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. 843-720-5652 Dharma Teacher Barbara Ratha 843-720-5652 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior honorary is now accepting appl- ings from qualified junior students. This homecoming event, which are academic excellence, and campus affiliations, are available in 216 Strong. The day is: March 7 at 5:00 a.m. Return all appli- ances or an official transcript to 216 Strong Mount Bleu Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3400. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --prior Praternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 844-359-3081 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reinen Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Want to Buy - Motorecycle 125-137 Enduro. Please call 664-6125. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secret-3 Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union The Drift: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 to 10, in Green Hall, Room 104. Pane! Perform Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 Rosaala's hostel, the Oasis of the Bib-It is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No hibernation, for information; writer, Harper, Kansas 67038 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-3575 or 842-4185. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Equipped equipped kitchen. reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no phone. Pebs 811-5600. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 848 5079 NASIMH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. **tf** Jayhawk West Apts. Now Benting: & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 341 Fronter Room. Next door to Rustell's East. If A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 922*M; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to 61 needs. Wet and/or lower 282 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact A8244 or A8347-077. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. bath and elec. Save $15.00/mi. 841-3168. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579 ff Need to suburban 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Full carpany furnished. New store and refrigerator cash register, beater, and stove on gas: $20 Car 841-041-991. universities are always in, see and buy one year 8 and 9th Friday-Saturday at 9 10am Sunday 16th of Lawn School at IA National Guard Arm Station. Attend this event. Good all three days. Refreshen your appl. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted on AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 Sublease 2 bwpr apt w option for next year. Ready to lease 24 bwpr allowed view. Closed, pets allowed. 841-569-66 974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good con- trol. Call 845-7310. 3-4 FOR SALE 1973 Daisun 240 Z Michelin Badials. AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. ROLLER SKATES Indoor, outdoor. from $29.95. Ricks Kike Shop 103. Vermont. 841-6642. Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watt, professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-3594 call anytime. 3-4 98 Olds Delta. 88, Clean. good condition, excellent embellishment. $655. 804-4072 before 9 a.m. 3-6 Western Civilization Notes. New on Sahk Makes sense out of Western Civilization makes sense out of preparation. 2) For exam preparation. New on preparation. 3) For exam preparation. New on Town Clerk. Makes Bookstore and Oread Book. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-7- Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $153pm, on 9th St. & bus route: 842-2500 or 843-0496. 3-7 Must sublet - 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Room included in rent. Next to staircase. 841-4250. 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpq-WAC. Overhauled, new tires, dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2516 after 2 p.m. T2 Dodge Challenger- 318 2 Bbl. AT, PS, AC- $1.000 PHI. 841-8154. 3-5 WATERBED MATTRESSES. $36.98, 3 year guaranty. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-138, TUFEE. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-806-9000, 300 W, 80 H, 1F (25 A). SunSPEes~Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- tempered. 1021 Masonry. 841-5770. Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cushion, AMF cam- back black interior; BP-PA, air car, AMF FM casette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Crane 482-5313 Must sell-Electric Epiphone guitar and a "in" Must sell-Poem Good condition plays like new. Cm- 843-6727 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 or best offer. Call Denise 614-2750. 3-6 Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric琴, 10 yrs TST 4 Speakers, still warranted, color guitar. Wurlitzer Bed & Dress-842-4700 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat- bedding for two adults or twice as price. Ledon - Furniture. 109 New York, NY. 415-827-6800. 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 22,000 pounds. New carpets, no wrecks, 400 w/4 barrel carb T-10p. Power everything. Call 811-7819 or 812-9537. Ask for Matt! Serious ingroutions only. 3-4 Rossignol. Salomon skis $120, 690 VW $200, roller 690; 9.11 oak peek $100, 842 WO 3- or 3-7 690. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 844-2830. 3-7 Jensen 509 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! FOUND On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains, backpacking, rock climbing, wildlife monitoring, work with children in a camp setting Backpacking, rock climbing, wildlife observation, garden internships on Western Forests, Flatiron Valley, and more. To whomever found, borrowed or burgled mp Olympus camera and 42mm lens, last seen at Ain Field House or the Kanaan Photo Lab: CALL ME I READY TO DEAD 841-7525 3-7-7 Q. WHY DO MEN WEAR WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Most women have more active sexual activities are more enjoyable while wearing women's clothing. Many transvestites are married and have had sex with their women sometimes wear women's clothing as an assent to parody the traditional women's role in society, or TO STUI LIWS; us, as a Our con prove of help and your opls residents, between Mass. St. --play no matter where they come from. If there were atlent basketball or football players overseas, they would be right up by American colleges. NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR CLASS RINGS... GOLD, DIAMONDS. Wristwake afternoon. Mice,钥 lot Call identify 2 weeks in floor of V 1 Navvy 1 cuff. FUF Cell 864-1 SERVICES OFFERED CALL NOW! Black cat 2782 or 8 Found a 753-7530 Found a long tail. worl 842 842-9737 or 841-7476 PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of "Other Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 Manor EXPERT TUORING: MATH 600-102 call 648-5785. MATH 115-750 call 648-3715. STATISTICS survies call 685-918 CIS 100-640 call 685-918 STATISTICS survies call 685-918 ENGLISH, SPANISH and SPANISH 685-7057 IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 30-page catalog of collectible books, 10.250 tomes listed. BOOK 2059X7 Los Angeles, CA. 90025, (213) 477-8228. For local assistance, including Municipal court work and legal aid, call 212-365-4800 or visit tax return consult Davis & Laster Jr East 21st Street for assistance. Reasonable fees: Call 2432 collection Call 644 7233 or visit www.wa.gov/refresher/discounts 3:00-9:00, Monday through Friday I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TH TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4986, TF PROFESSIONAL TIPING SERVICE, 814-796-3990 Experienced typet-writer, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectic. Barf After $5 p.m. 842-231-89 I did damned good typing. Peggy. 812-447-69 Why cuss about tips? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty. Number: 812-469-710 at 3.5 p.m. on and on weekends. PRO Typid/ Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, knowledge of HTML5. Welcome to JVEM.com.签订/layout. Call Doom 841-9217 T. 100 9 Ted Banks "I don't get paid to train Americans, or a certain age group. I get paid to provide the university with the best track team I can." (Continued from page 3, column 2) Class American. But we got to go back and see how the line is to win. More and more. We were ready. Just look at the route. Just look at the route. PETER J. CAMPBELL "I also think the presence of an outstanding athlete raises the standard of motivation for force. It doesn't matter who comes from what country. Once you get out on that track to do something, you are national and nationality. If anything, having foreigners stimulates international cooperation, which boosts the image of America. "A lot of people argue that foreign athletes take their U.S. training back home and beat us in sports, well, this is valid. Well, the 's valid charge. But, again, I'm not here to train Olympians. My university doesn't teach me how to play well they care about how our well轨团队 represents the school. When the day comes that the Olympic team be my philosophy will change." STEPHEN NEOESCO University of San Francisco Soccer Coach: Lost: g d 0 "I'm tired of being naked over the cools for foreign players in foreign countries. But we have to get to be All-America, Breakfast-champs. It's ridiculous. The challenge is to serve the ceremony. Students have a right." "Naturally I'm concerned with raising the standard of soccer played in this country. Foreign players do just that." -Stephen Negoesco "Naturally I'm concerned with raising the standard of soccer played in the stadium, just that. The Indians and the Illinois would not have any incentive to improve if there weren't a lot of players lended when they play us, not when they play a poor team. If you only know how to beat Mackie Mouse CON 4 SPORTS BULLETIN "And what does it matter how old a kid is?" I could field a team of 17-year-old foreign players and still win. American players just want to play the ball, and Midwest they are more advanced, because they have had a good youth soccer program there. But still, those teams rely less on skill than on the NCAA rules to substitute more freely. "If I had more money for schoolships and recruiting, I'd be glamorous. Americans make bankleaders and I simply don't have the time or money to go back East to recruit West. West isn't plentiful enough. In six or seven years that may be different, and you'll see more American on campus than you do overnight. Right now, I've got to go for the best team I can. I'm judged by results, and I don't want to. And I've got not dough." TRACK Jim Bush "Even our top athletes are now being shut out of college championship competition—in their own country. It's just not fair." "Of course, it has hurt our program here at UCLA. I refuse to give scholarships to foreigners. We have a problem, but we can't win the nationals. People say I'm just crying because of that. But I think too many coaches are binge sight of the team they want to want to win; they feel no obligation to the young people of their own country. This attitude really is a result of the system of administration coaches to have winning teams. (Continued from page 3, column 4)4 championship competition in their own country. It destroys their motivation, and it's not fair. "I think the NCAA championship should be an American event. People who need foreigners would be discriminated — don't buy that argument. They don't pay taxes or fight our wars. You here come, train under a university, build facilities — then go home after the season to compete for their own countries' national teams. It's the real reason they're being discriminated against." JERRY YEAGLEY Indiana University Soccer Coach; One pair twin eyeglasses, four厚 nose wears. If found, please call 844-6595. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on braces rectangular key chain Says available. Reward 842-4274. 3-7 It's important that the foreign player be given credit where credit is due. Soccer is the national sport of most other nations, and foreign players often rely on this influence on the development of the sport in U.S. colleges. They "What bothers me is when a coach relies exclusively on foreigners, and recruits foreign players who are older and more experienced." -Jerry Yeagley "The problem is that some coaches feel they can't win with native talent. I think the fact that these coaches are two of the last three years with only one foreigner disproves that. But what these coaches want is assured success, an 'instant winner.' So they go to foreign players. that's why we're still using philosophy. As a coach, I wouldn't derive much personal satisfaction from being a manager of a team of individuals who are already acclaimed as champions more concerned with developing players and teaching soccer skills. Fast, accu- srected. Call "What bothers me is when a coach relies exclusively on foreigners who are older and more experienced. That what's has been happening at some schools, and there's a cope with it. I think today's American players their own with foreigners of the same age, but you can't expect a younger American to match the more experienced foreign players. "There's no question this is a volatile issue in soccer. It's naturally the way players are treated. But I think that when the players are on the field, they play the game on their own and saying, 'What country do you come from?' That's the problem." provide good models for our athletes, they've taught American players technique and tactics, and they've made American players into better players. be careful not to draw the main gender. Must be no patient. Serious inquiries only. All heath in strict confidence (to speak). 841-8727. Ask for one of Lance's rooms and will fit you up. 3-4 correcting if in mise- ling if Sectricite dialysis, etc. if theses I corrects if al four- come Calc. 3-7 deliver & if couple of people in the day. SERVICES meet on center. opportunity to meet one living angle. Near- Kemp 265. paid. Own. two rooms. apartment. Call Shelf. sible room. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. bedroom- cal call $105.50 + --- DS LUS N'T. KANSAS CLASSIFIED EVERYTIME THEY TOUCH TOKENS TO SOLD Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KENDAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't too harsh. The 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unpleasant start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandlot. There was no winner or winner of the game, it was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said he was ready," Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hater Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN University Daily Kansan Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. The last pitcher hit a deep ball. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 10 a.m., but weather might be a problem Temple worker three pitchers during the scrimmage. Custleton Mike, Mawn Watt and Jim Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working on the mud," Temple said. "I thought they worked the ball pretty well, I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was worth it. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innings ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- cular conditions, but this really realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chords. KU's always sparse roster is two players, Derrick Pitcher, Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go in nursing or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty Women's college basketball teams of 2014 1. Louisana Tech (1) ... 36 2. Texas ... 36 3. Texas ... 36 4. Hugger ... 34 5. South Carolina ... 34 6. N.Carolina St. ... 34 7. Long Beach St. ... 34 8. Kentucky ... 34 9. Kentucky ... 34 10. Maryland ... 18 11. Sacramento St. ... 18 12. KANAS ... 18 13. Olin ... 18 14. Northwestern ... 14 15. Vanderbilt Vegas ... 14 16. Central Missouri St. ... 14 Other teams named on at least 19 hallits, alphabetically: Jackson St., Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International weekly, Board of Coaches top 10 college basketball ratings with first- place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in parentheses. UPI Top Twenty 1. Defiance (8) 20-14 2. Louisiana State 18-14 3. Louisiana (1) 20-14 4. Louisville (1) 20-14 5. Ouachita State 20-14 6. Stroma 20-14 7. Indiana 20-14 8. Maryland 20-14 9. Ohio State 20-14 10. Georgia 20-14 11. Notre Dame 20-14 12. Brigham Young 20-14 13. Wichita (X) 20-14 14. Mississippi 20-14 15. North Carolina 20-14 16. Duke 20-14 17. Mississippi 20-14 18. Texas A&M 20-14 19. Arizona State 20-14 20. Alabama State 20-14 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十一二十二三十四十五十六十七十八十九十十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十一二十二三十四十五十六十七十八十九十十一十二十三十四十五第六十七第八十九第 AD DEADLINES ERRORS for run Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Friday 5 p.m. The Kanan 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 in person or simply by calling the Kassan business office at 843-488. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for frisk fruits packed at 9th and Illinois, Wichita Falls, and Kansas. Pack with the Hot-One™, the Hot-One™-Walled, Fresh fruits from Wisconsin in the shell. Fillet varieties of dry fruits are frozen in airtight pans and torium. Every Sunday! Also selling wood apples. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Explore our wide selection at colorful spring pants. Great Comfort More love for comfort Make sure you're out of colorful spring pants at Discs and more at LITWINS WHERE COLORS ARE FORNISH LITWINS THE BEST LAUNDRY AND RESTAURANT Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Intensive Dharma Teacher Barbara Rohde 942.875-7016 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blen Skio Lake is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 This semester honour is now accepting ap- plications from qualified junior students, in various disciplines, in areas of academic excellence, and campus environment. Applications are available in year-round at the Campus Office (see day, March 7 at 5:00 p.m.) in Return all applica- tions on an official transcript to 26 Strong --prior Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 644-359-300 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM --prior Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 644-359-300 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. "Religious Conversion" Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 123-175 Enduro. Please make 864-1123. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual road race for room 18 Seventh Street hailers. The Draft: An Issue for Our, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 o'clock, in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kubi). 3-4 Roahna's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Holi, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phore, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4183. Small enough affinity apt. Close to campus. Utilities Call 843-9078 or 842-1185. Call 843-9078 or 842-1185. Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5600. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D WB Appliances table 1 block from the Union Call & WB 9579. 9579. NASIMHIT 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. Jayhawk Wet Apts. New Renting: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished to $185. For appointment call 842-444 or see at 241 Fronter Next door. Door to Rustell's East. tf A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf ROOMS HOSSE AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House - a 30 member student cooperative within distance of the KU campus and downstream. For evidence. For more information, evenings 824-8421. Office space for rent now at the area a building, 500 sq ft. Contact 843-2194 or 843-0777. tt 800 sq ft. Contact 843-2194 or 843-0777. ff 2 bedroom apartment 843-2194, bus route 843-0777. tt 600 sq ft. Contact 843-2194 or 843-0777. ff HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. † Need to tubaise 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished 0-street parking. Full carpentry, cable TV AC, New sieve and refrigerator. Cable TV AC, Serve sink, and slave room. 7-3F. Call 801-641-911 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenant to rent this superb 2 year old house in April, 4 bedrooms, 2 studyrooms, reception. Job offers available. References needed. 842-0231. 3-19 One and two b bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4641 or 841-3018. 3-5 Antiquaries are always in, see and buy one year on a Sunday. 1 to 8, 7 and 8th, Friday-Saturday at 9, 9th Sunday, 10am at Lawn Chapel, Ice at National Guard Avi- cade, Downtown Lawn Chapel, Good all three days. Refresh- ment by Pilots. Sublase 2 BH apt, w option for next year. Reasonable rent. low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699. 3-7 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. 645-731-851. 3-4 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale. Make use of the Civilization Makes rules to use the 1-3 Act. As an optional preparation, prepare 2. For exam, prepare. New preparation. Prepare 4. For exam, prepare. At Town Crit. Mall Booksstore and Great Book Store. Alternator, starter and generator specifications MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-809-2600, 2000 W. 60 J. MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-809-2600, 2000 W. 60 J. Most subst—2 bedroom furnished apartment; Cable T-V hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool 834-906-1498 834-906-1498 834-906-1498 1973 Datsun 240 Z. Michelin Radials. AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-656- after 6. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri. 841-7276 or 841-7476 3-7 90 Old Delta 88. Clean, good condition, excellent money. $655, 804-4072 before 9 a.m. 3-6 ROLLER SKATES Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95. Ricks Rake Shop, 1039 Vermont, 841-6642. Kenwood DCD stereo Integrated amplifier, model KAT100. 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. 1972 Cline ST, 25 mpg - WAC Overhauld, new carbon fiber Must sell Call Mike 434-862-0500 after 2 p.m. 72 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $1,000 PH. 841-8154. 3-5 WATERBED MATTRESSES, $49.98, 3 year antee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 1836-189 TNF SunSpectr—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. ¶¶ Cabin fever? Try T-Top Cushion, black top interior, HPB/ALP, cruise, AM/FM casette, high MPG, Beautiful road car, Criad 842-5313 Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Kite, 10 yrs. TS4 1 Speakers, still warranted, dark-guitar. Guitar.卫德 B& D-378. 842-4270 New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic mat- bedding. Furniture 1200 New York St. 843-229-2222. Ledger Furniture. 1200 New York St. 843-229-2222. Must sell - Electric Guitar and a 'jun- 43-8372. Good condition plays like new. C-35 8372 Ladies size 8 & finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must well cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 Rosignal Salomon skills $120, 69 VW $250, roller skates 9.11; oak pew $100, 842-822 or 842- 6900. Nikon 80-200mm lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. 3-7 1978 Trane-Am special edition gold; 22,400 carc. New carpets, no wrecks. 40w/4 barrel carb. T-tope. Power everything. Call 811-3710 or 82-4 34. Ask for Matt. Serious injuries only. Lost. Keys with a piece of leather and D$ stamped on it, $5 reward. Call: 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 wooper w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments FOUND Furnished or unfurnished. with all utilities paid. Jayhawk Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains provides a rich training work with children in a camp setting. Rows of riders skirting wildlife, ecology, other animals, and outdoor activities graim interiors *Nanoborn Western Camp*. Forty-five rides on four trailways. o whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens last seen at Alen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. IT READY TO BE. DAL. 642/537. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN WEAR WOMEN'S CLOTHING? o sexual activities are more enjoyable while women wear women's clothing and children wear children's clothing are married and have children wear women's clothing in an environment that is traditional women's role in society or in parody the traditional women's role in society, or in demotion why women wear men's clothing, and dom question why women wear men's clothing, and an article of women's clothing. THIS INNOVATION IS SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANAS --for legal assistance, including Municipal court for legal assistance, including Municipal court for legal assistance, including Municipal court for legal assistance, including Municipal court 2834 collection Call 840-615-7444 late evening. Office 840-615-7444 through Monday Friday accept Master Credit. NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 Wristwatch--F afternoon. Ca. Misc. keys a lot. Call 843- identify. SERVICES OFFERED --- --for legal assistance, including Municipal court for legal assistance, including Municipal court for legal assistance, including Municipal court for legal assistance, including Municipal court 2834 collection Call 840-615-7444 late evening. Office 840-615-7444 through Monday Friday accept Master Credit. 2 weeks ago I gave my dog a cut. I found the cut on his back. Black cat in 798 or 876 Found a cute cat. Found a small pet. Found actual stuff. Work: 892-325 Work: 892-325 EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102-124 684578. MATH: 115-703-142. MATH: 100-600-124. 684578. PHYSICS: 115-703-142. PHYSICS: 100-600-124. 684578. PHYSICS: 100-600-124. *¹¹³¹¹¹¹¹¹¹¹¹¹ PRINTING WHILE YOU WATI is available with Alice at the House of Uhler Quick Copy Center; Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Tuesday at 8AM Mrs IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $14 for your 30-page catalog of colleague materials. 10:20 lounge list. BOX 25097; Los Angeles, CA. (9025) .(813) - 477-8228. tf TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4080. TF I do damn good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF Why cus say about ties? Experienced service secretary, does professional typing. Betty. 842-6679 at 5:30 p.m on weekends. or wendy. . Experienced typist—lists, dissertations, term papers. misc. IBM correcting telec. Barb After 5 p.m. 842-2210. tf Typist. Editor, IBM Pica/Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations, training. editor/download. Call Joan 842-3197. TF MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accu- Lost: a. d O. 6. 图2-15 装载机起升 A POLE VAULTER RISES ABOVE ALL OBSTACLES Jeff Buckingham has overcome numerous injuries and one near-tragedy to become the Big Eight's best. BY STEVE RICHARDSON THE accident now seems as distant and unreal as a childhood dream. But for Jeff Buckingham, a University of Kansas pole vaulter, the nightmare was that he would help him his life little more than 10 years. POINT PIT POINT PIT A kerosene lamp somehow caught a tent on fire in the backyard of the Buckingham home while Jeff and his younger brother, George, were inside. The two escaped, but not three, and Approximately two-thirds of Jeff's belongings covered with third-degree burns. His was in equally bad shape. Neither, it was thought, would walk again, let alone pole walt or throw a baseball, but they both miraculously recovered. The effects of the Fire," as Jeff Kearse, are most evident when witnessing a man's line some part of his body, as he skin on his hands, badly burned in fire. After finishing the 1979 NCAA indoor championships, Jeff Rockwell set his sights on the Olympic Trial. the fire, v are not tr Timmons has seen several or more pass through his office at Kansas, where track is a time-honored way to a didowshoe After an 18-week stay there and trips of several years to the Shrine Burn Center Institute in Galveston, TEXAS, for countless skin grafts. He is great sue from ae from a become in the 1980 U.S. fights nt but a burg ues disorde, recurrir diagnon slate Late mons/ about inghan heart Kansa underi by me What Do You Think of Sports Bulletin? **What are we here for?** We hope you enjoy this issue of *Sports Boston*. To help us meet the most interest, we like your comments. Just click to send a clip and in the mail. Thanks. School 1. How much time have you spent reading Sports Bulletin ? 1. br 20 I to all of us. Then I went home and I didn't even knew had a dad come. I showed her how to hold. I started jumping over bushes and strings until I could see them. Buckingham's father, who was a pole vaulter at Wyndotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas, encouraged his sons to participate in pole vaulting. He built new attracts some of the top high school pole vaulters in the county. Several vaulters have banded together to form the Lake Club, club named because the Buckingham home is next to a lake. 1. 11 hr ___ 30 min ___ 15 min ___ 2. Do you intend to spend more time reading it? ___ 2. Do you intend to spend more time reading it? yes no While the intense training Backingham got at home was beneficial in his development, it also may have resulted in an injury. The homemade pit was rather primitive. For instance, the original landing was mattresses and a later bag filled with foam. The 3 On a scale of 1 to 10 (10 being excellent, 1 being poor), how would you rate Sports Bulletin overall? Excellent 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Poor 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Poor 1 - Compared to other sports coverage you currently read, would you say that Sports Bulletin is more entertaining than as entertaining less entertaining. 6. What did you like most about Sports Bulletin? ___ more entertaining ___ as entertaining ___ less entertaining 7. What did you like least about Sports Bulletin? ___ yes ___ no have happened to jen, and now this," he said. what they were doing." grade school), and the coach talked 16. he succeeded in vaulting his age bone has shifted titing a lot of pressure by sucking Bingham of body at the idle pit. I would vault the old metal I give like the fiberburt it (this back) the grip with the back inyears and seeing four to had varying opinit was wrong. Buck the ing finished second at the indoor championship er jump was 179" last put him in the Olympi June in Eugeneiously, he had hoped I leet while he was age metal, not fiberglass, with pits today. Not nam's senior year in the school iniit, did he practice in lites. You're going main business. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). M1-8727 Ask for one of Lance's roommates and will fit you up. 3-4 One pair mittel eyeglasses, tournai noir weaver. If found, please call 644-8559. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brace rectangular key chain Says available. Reward 642-4274 3-7 o. can if fecting mise, ing cor- electric, y. ever, theses Correct it forms, i. Call river & 3-6 --- SPORTS BULLETIN 5 CENTER of visit, day if SERVICE CENTER of visit, particularly if living, life, gee. non- sept. 3-7 sid. Aiden 3-8 partiment. 3-5 a month. 3-4 bathroom. end of Call after 5:00 after | | | | :--- | :--- | | | 44 | | | 25 | | | 36 | KANSAS CLASSIFIED--EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud University Daily Kansan By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't the same, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unseasonable start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhaws and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstret. There was no winner or loser, but there was kept. In fact, there were never even a base runner. 'I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and asked if they would let me go. He floated Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. 'We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside.' The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hater Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine inning stretch. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play the games today at 13:08, but weather might be a problem again. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clyton Fleenan, Mike Watt and Jim Philips worked three "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was cool. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innning game. It just was under some unusual circling. It was really realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jawhays are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chores. KU's already sparse roster is two players from the offense. Pitcher Rands McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. *Mlcintosh* the flui and Hicks has an infection", Temple said. *Mlcintosh might be able to go in innering or* *outning*. Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams of the 2016 season. (Courtesy of the Philadelphia Basketball Association and based on the balances of 49 women's teams) 2. Louisiana Tech 11) 36.2 3. Texas 17) 36.2 4. Texas 2 F Austin 25.5 5. Burgers 25.5 6. Carolina St. 28.6 7. N Carolina St. 28.6 8. Tampa Bay St. 28.6 9. Chewy St. 25.6 10. Kansas St. 25.6 11. San Francisco 26.3 12. MNAL 26.3 13. Chismon 26.3 14. Minnesota 26.3 15. Nevada - Las Vegas 23.7 16. Greatest Missouri St. 26.4 17. Detroit 26.4 Other teams named on at least 10 hallots, alphabetically: Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International weekboard of Coach top 10 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in parentheses. 1. Defiant (30) ... 26-14 2. Leontura State ... 25-14 3. Louisville (11) ... 26-14 4. Owensville (11) ... 26-14 5. Syracuse ... 25-14 6. Tulsa ... 25-14 7. Maryland ... 26-14 8. Ohio State ... 26-14 9. Connecticut ... 26-14 10. Notre Dame ... 25-14 11. Bingham Young ... 24-14 12. St. John's (N.Y.) ... 24-14 13. Missouri ... 25-14 14. Texas Carolina ... 25-14 15. Dallas ... 24-14 16. Missouri State ... 24-14 17. Texas A&M ... 24-14 18. Arizona State ... 24-14 19. Arkansas State ... 24-14 UP1Top Twenty The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one time one two three four five six seven eight nine ten Dow Jones index $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 Dow Jones fund $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 AD DEADLINES ERRORS 10am Tuesday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Wednesday Thursday Friday Wednesday Thursday Friday The Kanana 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 in person or simply by calling the Kasba business office at 843 458. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for ticks, pierced at 9th and Illinois, for snapping of skin. Keep in the refrigerator (and the Toe仁-Wall) Fresh fruits palmate in the shell. African varieties of dry fruit are also good snacks. Also selling wood chips. Herb Altenberry. LITWINS WATERCLEAR COLLECTION NEW JERSEY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Eugene out with selection of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort Maximum comfort Absorbs out colorful spring print shirts. Extra Mumma of ILLWINS YOUR COTTON ARE FOR YOU! 501 MASS. Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes. $55.82-70.16 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blee Skir Ice is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 This senior honorary is now accepting ap- ticipations from qualified junior students. They will be held at the area, academic excellence, and campus sizes. Academic achievement of 218 Strong. The application deadline is Friday, March 7 at 5:00 a.m. Return all applaca- tions with an official transcript to 216 Strong. DAY OF HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC PACE LOVE PAM --infer. Pratunty Council will sponsor SPRING INTERAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Law- force campus students. Contact IFC Office at 684-3539 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. "Religious Conversion" Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Built-Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please kmit 864-6123. By highest proclamation this is the first annual workout for room 118 Strong 3-seat barrels. The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 a.m., in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. Ronala's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible B-II is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No sheeh, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. 0579 or 824-1415. If Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-3500. TF New 2 bed furniture towhouse A C D WP Appliances cable 1 box from the Union Call 864- 9079. NASMISH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Jayhawk Wet Apts. New Renting: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished for $185. Appointment call 642-4444 or call 524 Fonter North. Door next to Rushwell's East. tf A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. If ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within a wide distance of the KU campus and downstream. For more information, even if you 842-9412 Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 9321; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and/or lower rooms 728 tq. ft. or 890 tq. ft. Contact 845-2104 or 845-0777. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag. bus route. Gas and elec. Save $1.50/mo. ma4-318. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING These all-new and contemporary townhouses are 3 blocks from KU and downstream! Starting at a stud with study area, 1 bath, garage with spacious entrance, 2 baths Roomas with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-879. tt Need to subdua 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnished 2.0-street parking. Full-carry apartment. New store and refrigerator Furniture, water heat, and slove on back 3-7 Call 801-6411 8911 Professor leasing house for 2 years, need qualifed tenants to rent this superb 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studiosums, recreation. 1 bathroom. 600 sq ft. reference, pet, reference, 842-0221. 3-19 Antsiers are always in, see and buy one you want. 7 and 8th Friday-Saturday at 9 to 11th Sunday at 7 and 8th Saturday at 10am at 9th Sunday at Club of Lawnerville, the AT National Library and the AMC Lincoln Center. with this aid. Good all three days. Refreshment is available. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and stairways to campus, to buses, 824-446-318 or 841-301-38. www.loewe.com 1974 American Motors Hornet, $1,000, good condition. Call 842-7310 3-4 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor. from $59.95 Ricks. Bike Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-6642. Sublease 2 HR apt, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699 3-7 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make some out of Western Civilization! Make runs out of Western Civilization! Prepare 3. For exam preparation. New for 2014. Prepare 4. For town center of Town Clerk, Mall Bookstore and Oread Book Store. Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available Aerial. For more information call Terri, 812-7266 or 812-7476. 3-7 Kenwood DC Sterro Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-3584 call anytime. 3-4 Must sublease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool $150m on 9th St. & bus route. $425-280 or $650 on 7th St. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-909-2900, 290 W, 6 ft., 12 in. 69 Old Delta Sha. 81. Clean, good condition, excellent mech. $605. $84-4072 before 9 a.m. 3-6 1973 Dalsun 240 Z Michelen Radialis, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 3-5 72 Dodge Challenge-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 1.010 $HP, 841-8154 3-S 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpg-WAC. Overhauled, new tires, dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2516 after 2 p.m. WATERBED MATTESTRES, $36.98, 3 year guar- fees; WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-136, FF Sunspecs=Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- specs=Sun glasses, leather case, reasoner, press 1521. Mansl. B41-5770. Must sell~ Electric Epiphone guitar and a 'i-ın 843-6721 Good condition plays like new. 843- 6721 Cabin fever? Try a T-Pop Cushion, AMF black top interior, IP40 PB, air cruise, AMF massive, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Crug 842-5313 3-6 Catalonia-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish *Wuithright Electric Piano*, 10 yrs. TS1 *4 Speakers*, still warranty, dark-glossy Guitar, Walnut Bld. & Dress-842-4270 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mat furniture. Furniture by Lady Lodon. Furniture 120 New York St. #853. Furniture 120 New York St. #854. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or买吊. Call Devin 811-2750. 3-6 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 24,200 pounds. New carpets, no wrecks, 400 w/4 barrel curb-T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7174 or 852-6737. Ask for Merit Serious questions. 3-4 Rosignol Salomon skis $120, 69 VW $200, roller models 9.1-11 oak peek $100, 842 MIDC or 3- 17 or 3-17 Nikon . 80-200mm, zoom. lens $350. Call #41-602-7 after 6.00 p.m. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dm- stamped on it $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 500 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre-quency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments FOUND Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Rockies. Driving dents working with children in a camp setting, watching wildlife, fishing and many other programs like golf, To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kananan Photo Lab: CALL ME, I'M READY TO DALI 84-1537. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? adult sexual activities are more enjoyable while women wear women's clothing and transvestites are married and have children women wear women's clothing as an adult sometimes women wear women's clothing or to parody the traditional woman's role in marriage, but dom question why women wear women's clothing. Dom question why women wear men's clothing. Dom question why women wear women's clothing. An article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION sponsored BY GAY SERVICE OF KANAM --for legal assistance, including Municipal court work. Call 801-265-3349 for legal advice. Tax return consult Dawn Laffer and Lester. East East Side Court, 801-265-3349. 3243 collection call Call 841-815-3349 late evening. Office: 801-265-3349. Monday through Friday 10am, Master Court Manage. NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . --- CALL NOW! Waterville- Twice-Away, Cafe. Mile. keycard. Identify identity of Warehouse of Warwick 1 New blue card Cellulose Card 649-1220 Black cat in 3824 or 3842 Found a coin in found-aerial baseball card Work 942-2458 842-9737 or 841-7476 --for legal assistance, including Municipal court work. Call 801-265-3349 for legal advice. Tax return consult Dawn Laffer and Lester. East East Side Court, 801-265-3349. 3243 collection call Call 841-815-3349 late evening. Office: 801-265-3349. Monday through Friday 10am, Master Court Manage. SERVICES OFFERED You don't have to walk alone on campus at EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 600-102 to 542 7875. MATH 115-781 to 542. STATISTICS 5785. PHYSICS 105-542 to 8306. ENGLISH 5785. PHYSICS 105-540 to 8306. ENGLISH and SPANISH 5783-7877. tt PRINTING WHAT YOU WAY is available with Alice at the House of SHERI Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM on 1 PM on Saturday at 88 Ms. Smith. IMPROVE YOUR GRADE$ Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of college教材, 10.250 titles listed, BOX 22007G; Los Angeles, CA, 90215; (213) 477-8226; tf TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. Ta PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TF Why cues about typing? Experienced civil servant why cues do professional typing. Betty Granmer. 842 4097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekdays. Experienced typet-lenses, dissertations, tapes papers. misc. IBM correcting selective Barb. After 5 p.m. 842-2310. tt MASTERMINDS professional typing Fast, accu- A POLE VAULTER RISES ABOVE ALL OBSTACLES Jenn Buckingnam has overcome numerous injuries and one near-tragedy to become the Big Eight's best. PARKS BY STEVE RICHARDSON Lost: a.d O. PUNTA PIT A kerosene lamp somehow caught a fire on tent in the backward of the Buckingham house while Jeff and his younger brother, George, were inside. The two escaped, but not thwarted. Approximately two-thirds of Jeff's burns with third-degree burns. His brother was in equally bad shape. THE accident now seems as distant and unreal as a childhood dream. But for Jeff Buckingham, a university of Kansas palaeologist, the nightmare was a life little more than 10 years ago. Neither, it was thought, would walk again, let alone pole vault or throw a baseball, but they both miraculously recovered. PIMIENTO PIT After finishing second in the 1979 NCAA indoor championships, Jeff Bickford set hisights on the Olympics. True Wait, there's a space between "NCAA" and "in". The comma is after "championships". Let's re-read the first line: After finishing second in the 1979 NCAA indoor championships, Jeff Bickford set his targets on the Olympics. Yes, it's "NCAA". Final check of the text: After finishing second in the 1979 NCAA indoor championships, Jeff Bickford set his targets on the Olympics. I will output this as one block of text with proper spacing. After finishing second in the 1979 NCAA indoor championships, Jeff Bickford set his targets on the Olympics. The effects of "The Fire," as Jeff calls it, are most evident when the KSU kouphore competes, line some parts of his body, arm on his hands, badly burnt or injured if he is not at tandem when he is. He is one of college art great success stories, coming from the University to become one of track's to vaulters and a contender in the national competition. 18-week stay there and In his quest to land one positions for paulters team, the $W' Buck fighters were to be a galaxy of other naggi lam. Among them are a disorder, discovered last fi recurring back problem one doet slipped disk. Late last month, coach Foley of Kansas wore a black tie and talked about a blood condition ingram's that could be life-threatening. ||||| BUSINESS REPLY MAIL FIRST CLASS PERMIT NO 3688 KNOLLVILLE NORSESEE POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY ADDRESSEE days in the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kansas, tests showed that a drug called by medication "All the things that have happened to All, and now have happened." JUDY MAYER Buckingham's father, who was a pole vaulter at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas, and who would participate in sports. The boys he built now attracts some of the high school pole vaulters in the county. Several vaulters have banded together to form the Lake Truck Club, named because the Buckingham home is next to a lake. to all of us. Then I went home and I did a hard job hadid police officers showed me how to hold it. I started jumping over bushes and strings around the building. While the intense training buckling got at home was beneficial in his development, it also may have resulted in an injury. 13-30 CORPORATION 505 MARKET STREET KNOXVILLE, TN 37902 The homemade pit was rather insultive. For instance, the orig- NO POSTAGE NECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES --- hospital they figured I'd be copiable. I had braces on my legs. Then we went to a hurst in Galveston, to know what they were doing. WHICH IS TRUE? posting pit. No his tamer builts the family in a living room. I "want to track practice (in grade school), and the coach talked Oregon. Previously, he had hoped to go over 18 feet while he was age 57 and in valuing his age in victory. One pair of elegant eyeglasses, tournion no wore. If found, please call 864-4599. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brace rectangular key chain Says available. Reward 864-4274 SPORTS BULLETIN 5 if felling mise gat co. slectric e.贸ev theses corrects form dc Call silver 3-7 cuple of phone numbers de day. SERVICEE CENTER, Center, greatly portunity to use: $100, rec. charges, 13 days live, age, nature, 5-7 old own 4-6 months call Service. like you a month a. a.m. b. midday c. end of Call after 9:50 a.m. .US NT. It is important to inform male persons that he must patient. Serious infections only! All in staff striction (no to speak): 81-9729. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and will fit you up. 3-4 123 100 KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS_EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD. Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KENDAVIS Snorts Writer University Daily Kansan The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't too bad. But the 1990 Kansas baseball season got off to an unofficial slow start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandpit. "There was no winner or winner, because no score was kept. In fact, there were never events." "1 called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and told them he would be back in Floyd Temple, KU coach), said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hater Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow -KANSAN- Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. The pitcher was relieved. Sports Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clyton Fleenan, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 13:30, but weather might be a problem again. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was worthwhile. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- tacle and was quite pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chores. KU's always sparse roster is two players from the bench. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both heli. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go on an innerving or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Twenty-two women in college basketball teams and one player were recognized by the Philadelphia In- terprise and based on the number of women team rosters. 1. Louisiana Tech 19-26 2. Louisiana Tech 19-26 3. Texas Tech 18-25 4. Huduger 18-25 5. North Carolina 18-24 6. NC State 18-24 7. Vanderbilt 18-24 8. Cheverly St 18-24 9. Cheverly St 18-24 10. Kaiser St 18-24 11. Kansas St 18-24 12. San Francisco 18-23 13. Alabama 18-23 14. Alabama 18-23 15. Clemson 18-23 16. Clemson 18-23 17. Nevada - Las Vegas 18-23 18. Missouri St 18-24 19. Detroit 18-24 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots. Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International weekly board of Coaches top 20 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, parentheses. UPITopTwenty 1. Definiel (30) ... 261 2. Louisiana State ... 264 3. Kentucky ... 265 4. Louisville (1) ... 268 5. Owensboro State ... 269 6. Syracuse ... 270 7. Indiana ... 268 8. Maryland ... 262 9. Ohio State ... 269 10. Georgia State ... 269 11. Notre Dame ... 254 12. Virginia Vanguard ... 244 13. St. John's (N.Y.) ... 254 14. Missouri ... 255 15. Florida Carolina ... 264 16. Mississippi ... 268 17. Texas A&M ... 267 18. Arizona State ... 267 19. Arkansas State ... 268 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten 15 pounds or fewer $2.25 $2.30 $2.30 $2.30 $2.30 $2.30 15 pounds or fewer $2.25 $2.30 $2.30 $2.30 $2.30 $2.30 AD DEADLINES ERRORS 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 Kanana 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 in person or simply by calling the Karen Business office at 843-188. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for trick parked at 9th and Illinois. Shop in the parking lot. Walk to The-Wall-in. Seal fresh fruits from the refrigerator in the pantry in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available on Sunday. Alas setting水果 BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Enjoy our wide selection of colorful spring pants, Great comfort, Maintenance free, Absolutely our colored spring print shirts, Linen and more! LIVING WHERE COLORS ARE FOREIGN SO MANY Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes. $35.92 -7010. 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blu Bci 814 Lake is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 892-340-3880. This senior honorship is now accepting ap- parate students who are qualified junior students. This honorship is area, academic excellence, and campus academic excellence. Students will be available 28 Strong. The application form is available March 7 at 5:15 a.m. **Return all ap- parate with an official transcript to 28 Strong** DYALA HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --the effects of "The Fire," as Jeff calls it, are most evident when we knock the KU sophomore competes. Scars line some parts of his body, and the knee was badly burned in the fire, will rip again on the skin, not be taped when he jumps. Infer Praterty Council will sponsor **SPRING** **FORMAL RUSHI** March 21, 22, & 23 for **LWERN- fy university students**. Contact IFC Office at 864-3590 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Nabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please 346-643-125. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual proclamation week for room 118 Staircase 37-40. Friday The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 p.m., in Green Hall, Room 104. Pamel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 Roach's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No shame; for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67038 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Clos to campus. Utilities Required. Reasonable price. Call 842-9578 or 842-1418. Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to the beach. Call 843-2579 or 843-1858. Please accept priced. Call 843-2579 or 843-1858. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-3560. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D WB Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union Call 844-675-3920 NASIMHI 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. Jawhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-4444 or see at 254 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's East. **tf** A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower houset—a 20 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and down- ward. For more information, e-mail 842-9421. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, $921.94; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Mount and/or lower walls 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 834-2104 or 843-0777. fff 2.bdroom apartment. Modern, sham. bus route. Gas and elec. Save $1.50/mi. mo. 841-3168. 3-4 These all new and contemporary lowtechs are blocks from NEC and downstream Starting at $895.00 each. These include: - an all-appliance window covering fireplace, - bamboo windows, 814-455 or 811-255 - a $31 Antiques are always in, see and buy one you like. We will take you to Sotheby's 7 & 8th and Friday Saturday 11 & 9th Sunday 12 & 13th. See www.sotheby's.com/Clare of Lawnware. Inc. at National Guard Armory, 601 W. 14th Street, with this aid. Good all three day Refreshments with this aid. Need to suburbite 2 bedroom Apartment. Complete furnished. Off-street parking. Fully equipped, cable TV, ACU store and refrigerator. Located in the heart of town. Store on rv 801. Call 841-801-099 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. ff Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualifed tenants to rent this superb 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studiosmiles. recreation centre. £150,000. reference, referent, reference, referent 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 845-7310. 3-4 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Riks Bike Shop 103. Vermont 841-6624. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4611 or 841-3018. 3-5 Sublease 2 BR art. w option for next year. Rea- tionable 3 BR art. w option for next year's clear view. Curt- din, pts allowed. 841-6699 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Make Make. You will learn how to use them, and then to use them 1. As study guide, 2. For class preparation, 3. For exam preparation. New edition. Mallia Booksstore and Gread Book at Town Crit, Mallia Booksstore and Gread Book. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-7 Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 WATERBED MATTRESSES, $38.98, 3 year warranty WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-186, TSF New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic mattress Furniture 194 New York St., 843-3238 Furniture 194 New York St., 843-3238 1973 Datum 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-656 after. 3-5 90 Oldies D.B. 83, Clean, good condition, excellent sleet.堪博 6855, 8464-1022 to 9 a.m. @ 1927 Century CBS 25, mpg W-AC Overhaul, new tires. dependable. Must sell. Mail Bike 8426-1214. Must sub-lease 2 BR Furm. apt. A/C and pool. $15km on 9th St. & bus route. 842-280 or 843-0496 72 Dodge Challenge-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $2,000, PH, 81854M Alternator, starter and generator specialists MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 643-800-2900, W. 001, 41W MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 643-800-2900, W. 001, 41W Kenwood DC Starco Integrated amplifier, 19-80W, wired professionally with Excellent sound quality. May be used with Excelon Must仕-Electrie Equiphone guitar and a *instr* mutator. Good condition plays like new. SunSpace=Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- protective lenses, reasonable response, 1021. 651 manhattan 841-757-2701. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 Cabin fowl? Try a T-Wo Coulson Café, black top interior, IP-BR, air, AMF FM console, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 442-513-8 3-6 Rosigliano, Solomon skates $125 to $150, RV$250, roller skates 9 to 11 oak peel $100 $42-$42.24 or 3-17 or 3-17 Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Waltze Wireless Titanic 10, yrs TS 10 & Speakers, still warranted. KOA classic Musician. Walden Bldg & Dress-842-4270 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold; 22,400 miles, no nippers, no wrecks. 400 w/4 barrel carb. T-top. Waterproof. Call 841-7182 or 842-9577. Ask for Matt. Serious injuries. 3-4 Jennson 509 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w frequency control. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dose stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 862-2830. 3-7 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus. 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. FOUND Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Furnished or unfurnished. Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains provides a great deal of working with children in a camp setting. Backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife science, and fieldwork are all part of our camp interests. Western Campers, Fully-Grown Interns, Western Campers, Fully-Grown Interns. To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I'M READY TO DEAD. 841-5257-3-7 --the effects of "The Fire," as Jeff calls it, are most evident when we knock the KU sophomore competes. Scars line some parts of his body, and the knee was badly burned in the fire, will rip again on the skin, not be taped when he jumps. Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? Transactions cross dress because they heterosexually wear women's clothing. Many transvestites are women sometimes wear women's clothing as an assignment or to parody the traditional woman's role in society, but question why men wear women's clothing. In a dummy question why men wear women's clothing an article of women's clothing. THIS IN-FILE IS sponsored BY GAY SERVICE OF KANSAW NEED CASH GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS... FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 Winterside, 15 afternoon. Cm. Miss. sage Jensen, identity. Dear Worst of Wear 1 New blue shirt 641-122-3000 641-122-3000 Black cat in 782 or 8644 Footwear 782 or 8644 Found "saint" work 902-823-6000 Work 902-823-6000 --the effects of "The Fire," as Jeff calls it, are most evident when we knock the KU sophomore competes. Scars line some parts of his body, and the knee was badly burned in the fire, will rip again on the skin, not be taped when he jumps. SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102 call 95785. MATH: 115-710 call 84231. STATISTICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. PHYSICS: 84231. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 84231. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of the Uhr Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday. 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 881 McDonalds. IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 30-page catalog of college research, 10.200 lions list, BOX 2507G; Los Angeles, CA. (925) .(213) 477-8236. For legal assistance, including Municipal court for bail requests, call 806-529-3444, East 107 East Ave, return consult DAVIS & LATER, 107 East Ave, 3233 College Drive, Call 806-601-3444 for late- tenance. Call 806-601-3444 for late-tenance. Official accept Masters through Friday 11/17. Accept Master Courses TYPING I do damned good typing. Pregy. 842-4196 Why cusks about typing? Experienced civil service secretary, does professional typing. Betty ender. 842-4697 after .5-3 pm and on weekends. wf PROFESSIONAL TIPPERING SERVICE. 841-4598. TP Experienced hybrid, diocesan, dissociation papers, nurse, IBM correcting electric Bath After 5 p.m. 842-310. TF Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elica. Quality work; reasonable tax rate; telephone number; welcome email; Call 516-292-8127 MASTERMINDS professional typing Fast accu- A POLE VAULTER RISES ABOVE ALL OBSTACLES PUMA PIT Jeff Buckingham has overcome num erous injuries and one near-tragedy to become the Big Eight's best. BY STEVE RICHARDSON Lost: a. d O. A kerosene lamp somehow caught a tent on fire in the backyard of the Buckingham home while Jeff and his younger brother, George, were inside. The two escaped, but not in injury. Approximately two hours was covered with third-degree burn to the brother was in equally bad shape. After finishing last in the 1979 NCAA indoor championships, Jeff Backingham set his sights on the Olympics. Trials HE accident now seems as distant and unreal as a childhood dream. But for Jeff Buckingham, a University of Kansas paufter, the nightmare was that cost him his life little more than Neither, it was thought, would walk again, let alone polevault or throw a baseball, but they both miraculously recovered. He is one of college athletics' great success stories, coming back to the NCAA in 2014 to become one of track's top pole athletes and a contender for the 1980 Olympic medal. In his quest to land one of three positions for pole vaulters on the 4X, the $5' Buckingham fights not only to win but also to galaxy of other nagging problems. Among them are a thyroid disorder, discovered last fall, and a recurring back problem that was identified by one doctor as a slipped disk. Late last day, coach Bob Timmons of Kansas wore a frown on his face. He had just found out he had a blood condition of Buckingham's health heart trouble. Later, after four days in the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, tests showed it was an underactive thyroid controllable. All the things that have happened to Jeff, and now this," he said. Timmons has seen several of the greats pass through his office at where track is a time-honored hallmark of college athletics' moneymaker, football. None, however, have had the physical problems of Buckingham who seeks to become the Jayhawks third Olympian pole vaunter. Buckingham, who hails from nearby Gardena. Kansas, a small farming community, is quiet and peaceful campus, away from the mainstream of college life. He and his brother went to another poke vaulter, share a trailer. "I don't know if the injury (by the fire) made me tougher," says Jennifer Garner, who said something always pops up to affect me. The back problems are just one of her many challenges. But Buckingham still considers himself lucky. "With 70 percent of my body with third-degree burns, when I was in Kansas City in the 1980s they figured I'd be crippled. I had been to a burn center in Gaston, Texas, and they seemed to know what they were doing." After an 18-week stay there and trips for several weeks to the Shrine Burn Center Institute in Galveston, Texas, for countless skin grafts, his brother resumed normal lives with only scars of the body. "I remembered what had happened to Glenn Cunningham, "happened Bucket Buckingham, Jef's father. Buried 30s who was badly burned and couldn't walk for several years, later set world records in the mile. Then Jeff could hardy walk for a year, was something to hang on to." UCKINGHAM has always been a natural athlete with great hand-to-eve coordi- B Pole-auxiliary didn't even enter the life until seventh grade, because when Gardner was there pole-auxiliary built one of the family's backyard built one of the family's backyard One pair 'milimex eyeglasses, fourth nose wears' If found, please call 864-6859. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says 'available'. Rig 862-4274. ation. He has participated in or organized softball, baseball, football, boxing and wrestling as well as shooting, trapping, and skate-shooting. "I went to track practice (in grade school), and the coach talked 2003 to all of us. Then I went home and I didn't even know had pledge to do that. I showed me how to hold it. I started jumping over bushes and strings over the fence. Buckingham's father, who was a pole vaulter at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas. Always encouraged his sons to participate in the pole vaulting he built now attracts some of the top high school pole vaulters in the county. Several vaulters have banded together to form the Lake Truck Club, named because the buckingham home is next to a lake. While the intense training Backingham got at home was beneficial in his development, it also may have resulted in an injury. The homemade pit was rather primitive. For instance, the original landing was mattresses and a small ladder to crossbar was metal, not fiberglass, as is the case with pits today. Not until Buckingham's senior year in high school, when the school inducted him to the practice upgraded facilities. You're going to have male guests. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (to speak) 61-8972. Ask for one of Lane's roommates and we'll fit you up. 3-4 "My pelvic bone has shifted back and is putting a lot of pressure on my ankle. I had to do the back problem." "It happened there in the odd pit. I would vault three feet into the pit with bars. It doesn't give like the fiber glasses. I hurt it this base up." Despite living with the back injury for three years and seeing four times his knee, Buckingham disputed what was wrong. Buckingham dominated the Big Eight as he set records in NCAA award championship. His best career jump was 179' last year. That jump put him in the Olymp-ium Trabts next June in Eugene. On Ore prevails, he had hoped to overpower him. He succeedes in hailing age 18; he succeedes in hailing age 19. SPORTS BULLETIN 5 feet it mis- e.g. co- touch it slectric- it thems- Correct- it form it sc Call it silver & --- couple of weeks se- day 14 SERVICE CENTER, Cape Town, portunity living. use, $100, disch, living, age. New- Keru 37 uid. Own Owen 36 uid. Old Allan Straw room. a month a day 2 a.m. 2 p.m. o-bedroom he end of se- day 14 29.50 .US NT. KANSAS CLASSIFIED EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't unofficial. But the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unpleasant start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstret. There was no winner or loser, but the game was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said, 'We're going to the Crimson Flood Temple UC coach, we really appropriate the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a doubleheader Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, we used an in-ring camera to take nine nining images. Cameras were linked to Ranges. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play these games today at 13:00, but weather might be a problem University Daily Kansan Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clyton Thompson, Mike Watt, and Jim Phillips worked three "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound, " Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was too messy. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left- center field in the final innning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual circling, but it was really pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jlayhaws are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the same UU's already sparse roster is two players short of the team. Pitchers Randy McNishot and David Hicks are both ill. *Mcihntos the flu and Hicks has an infection* "Mcihntos may be able to go in an nining or triple sea." *Mcihntos might be able to go in an nining or triple sea.* Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women's college basketball teams of the 2015 season were: 1. Louisiana Tech (1) .36-25 2. Texas .36-25 3. Texas F. Austin .36-25 4. Rutgers .36-25 5. South Carolina .36-25 6. N. Carolina St. .36-25 7. Alabama St. .36-25 8. Chewy St. .36-25 9. Kansas St. .36-25 10. Kansas St. .36-25 11. San Francisco .36-25 12. Kansas St. .36-25 13. Clemens .36-25 14. Northwestern .36-25 15. Newark—Las Vegas .36-27 16. Cleveland Mountaineer .36-27 17. Detroit .36-26 Other teams named on at least 10 balloons. Jackson, Jackson, Ore. Oregon, Queens, Southern California. The United Press International weekly Board of Coaches top 30 college basketball rankings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in parentheses. 1. Defiance (36) ... 28.14 2. Kentucky State ... 28.14 3. Kentucky (1) ... 28.14 4. Louisville (1) ... 28.14 5. Georgia State ... 28.14 6. Syracuse ... 28.14 7. Indiana ... 28.14 8. Maryland ... 28.14 9. Ohio State ... 28.14 10. Georgia State ... 28.14 11. Notre Dame ... 28.14 12. Nebraska Longing ... 28.14 13. M.J. Johnson, N.Y. ... 28.14 14. Missouri ... 28.14 15. South Carolina ... 28.14 16. Duke ... 28.14 17. Pennsylvania ... 28.14 18. Texas A&M ... 28.14 19. Arkansas State ... 28.14 20. Louisiana State ... 28.14 UPI Top Twenty The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one twelve inches three inches four inches five inches six inches seven inches ten inches thirteen inches or twelve inches $2.25 $2.90 $3.60 $4.30 $5.10 $6.00 $7.00 $8.00 $9.00 $10.00 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 3 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. Thursday Friday 3 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. The Kanan 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 Pound items can be advertised FREE or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or mailly by calline the Karanban Business office at 844-1583. ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for truck parked at 9th and Illinois, 10th and Iowa, 11th and Missouri, and the (Hot) to-Wait! Selling fresh fruits peanut in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry food are available on Sunday. Also selling wood and torture ware. Sunday. Also selling wood and torture ware. Sunday. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Enjoy one white winter selection of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort More than just home Showcases your colorful Spring pants. This and more at LITWINS MORE COOL WARE FORUM www.litwins.com Intensive Zen meditation retreat 8-10, Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodi 855.325.7410 855.325.7410 VISA OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Bluc Skio Skiodge is now available for private parties; business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 This senior honorship is now accepting applications from qualified junior student teachers in areas of academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in person or by mail to the department, day March 4 at 5:00 p.m. in Refallum ad appellation. An official transcript to 268 Strong DAVID HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WACFACE LOVE, PAM --with all utilities paid. Infrater Prairie Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 64-3539. K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please kill 844-6123. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual anniversary week for room 118 Spring 2017. ** Rosalie's individual, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67038 4-4 The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8. 8 to 10, in Green Hall, Room 104 Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quaint and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-8571 or 842-4185. tf Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5060. TF Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to the Marmor home of the late 赖伯贵 priced. Call 843-9797 or 842-1185. * New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D W Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843-9579. tt NASMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Jayhawk West Apts. Now Renting! 1 & 2 bed- room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 254 Front Room. Next door to Russell's East. **tf** A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 845-9579. tf Antiquities are always in, see and buy one year or more. 8, 7 and 8th Saturday, Friday to 11th Sunday 9, 11th Sunday 10th Sunday 11th Sunday 12th Sunday 13th Sunday 14th Sunday 15th Sunday 16th Sunday 17th Sunday 18th Sunday 19th Sunday 20th Sunday 21st Sunday 22nd Sunday 23rd Sunday 24th Sunday 25th Sunday 26th Sunday 27th Sunday 28th Sunday 29th Sunday 30th Sunday 31st Sunday Palo Alto: Good all three days Refreshments Palo Alto: Office space for rent now at the area 1 building. 9229 Mast. The inner office can be charged to phone numbers 84-2044 or 84-0777. 890 rq. ft. contact 84-2044 or 84-0777. tf. 2 bedroom apartment 84-2044, bus link, rug space available. ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within a walkway distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, even if you 842-9421. 974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good con- ition. Call 843-7310. 3-6 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING These all new and contemporary townehouses are three-lab spaces from three buildings. 3 lots of blocks from WMU and downtown! Starting at Alcove 2, we have a spacious office with access to all appliances, window showers, balconies and more. 914-845-0841 or 814-825-2651. 3-31 Need to suburb 2 bedroom Apartment. Completed furnished. Off-street parking. Com- pletely cable, carpeted. New door and refrigerator. New kitchen. And driveway. Call 501-841-0019. Call 501-841-0019. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Rickie Bike Shop 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. If Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this superb 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, recruitment process, referral process, prerequisites needed, 842-0221. One and two bedroom apartments carported and on a farm to camp on. 842-4611 or 841-3018. 5-5 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make sure you are ready to use them-1. As study guide. 2. For class analysis of Western Civilization now available. Analysis of Western Civilization also available. For Fort, Mall Books Store and Open Book Store. Sublease. 3 JH apt w option for next year. Rea- charge. 5 JH apt w option for next year. View - 3-7 pets, putts allowed. 841-569 669 Must. sublet=-2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4200. 3-7 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialties MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 845-806-2900, 290 W, 6 UH, MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 845-806-2900, 290 W, 6 UH, 1973 Datsum 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-456 after 6. 3 WATERBED MATTRESSES $89.98 3-year warranty WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-268-198 New excellent quality bed + orthopedic mat Bed + pillow + mattress cover Furniture 1200 New York St. 832-328-198 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $195pm. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-250 or 843-496 90 Old Dell 82.16, clean, good condition, excellent kettle. $605.844-0122 before 9 a.m. 1912 Celtis CE, 25 wm-G-WAC Overhaul, new 1922 musthold. Must sell. Mike Call: 812-356-2732 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available Airbnb. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476. iPodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $1,000 PHI 811-8154 3-5 Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural hardwood Wittier Electric Piano. I do yrs TSR 4 Speakers, still warranted. Quality Guitar, Walt Disney B&d 3-749. 842-4270 SunSpaces—Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-persistent 1021 San Mateo 841-5770, reasonal 1021 San Mateo 841-5770, reasonal Kentwood DC Starte Integrated model, model RAT80 to fit, well; professionally used. Excellent quality with a high finish. Must electric Kiphone guitar and a '1' neck. Good condition plays like new. 643-6727 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 24,000 lbs. New carpet no wrecks. 40 w/4 carbide carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 811-7819 or 852- 857. Ask for Matt. Serious inquiries only. 3-4 Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cullas, rasp, black top; interior PS/ PB, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Crug 842-5312 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 or best offer. Call Denise 811-2750. 3-6 Resinational Skates $120. 69 VW $250, roller shoes 11. oak pear $100. $842-842 or $108-$136. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call $41-602-7 after 6:00 p.m. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D* stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 862-2830. 3-7 Jenson 550 3 way speakers, 15 wooper w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Rockies. Work with children in a camp setting, working on horse riding, wildlife, ecology, many other activities. Grad from Western Western Camp, Pioneer Park, Colorado. To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 2mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kananan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-573-3-7 FOUND Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Most women are more enjoyable while white women's sexual activities are more enjoyable than women's married and have children. A minority of gay men sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory or in response to parody the traditional women's role in society, but a majority do dom question why women wear men clothing, especially when an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION IS sponsored by GAY SERVICE OF KANAS. --at 16 and 17, but he's 19 now and hasn't cracked 18 feet NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! Wristband-1 Aftternoon, 6:30 p.m. Call 862-7459 Cell 862-1412 2 weeks of Wear of Water 1 Navy blue shirt 661-1421 Black cat in black coat Found a dog at 733-1239 Found mam- al at 733-1239 Work-phone: 862-7459 842-9737 or 841-7476 --- XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX. SERVICES OFFERED For legal assistance, including Municipal court inquiries and representation, call 704-563-1220; return tax return documents David & Layne, 109 East 87th St, 3243 collection 3243 collection 3243 collection Call 841-601-6144 late evening; Office hours: Monday through Friday 8:30am through 11:00am Master Charge $35 EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102 - call 8758. MATH: 115-791 - call 8431. STATISTICS (命脉机) MATH: 600-100 - call 8431. STATISTICS (命脉机) MATH: 100-500 - call 8431. ENGLISH AND SPANISH MATH: 8431-7057. **IMPROVE YOUR GRADES!** Send $40 for your 30-nage catalog of college教材. 10:25 books listed. BOX 2507G; Los Angeles, CA. (2023). (813) 275-438. caf PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alcee at the House of Master Quick Copy Center. Alcee is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday of 88AM Mon-Fri. - TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF Buckingham was the No. 2 high school pole vaulter in the country probably could have gone to college but chose Kansas because "it was down the road 20 miles. The only other school I even looked into was Why asks about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional training. Betty Grammer, 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends **tf** tend with in order to make the 1980 Olympic team. Dave Roberts, Earl Bell, Tully, and Dan Ripley are just a few of his compatriots. "I've never had a vaultor do things he did at his level," says Timmons, who coached Olympians Lost: ja'd Ov If Buckingham is healthy—and considering his track record that an awfully bigh if—he still has a flock of good pole vaulters to con- PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICING 841-1800. TF Experienced typists -diseases, dissorptions taper paper, improving correcting electrical. After 5 min. pH 842-2310. tt "The average vaulter is 63". says Bill Buckingham, "so there are some who have an advantage over him. But once he leaves the gym, he must be very gymnastic. There are things he just does that are not taught." Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Eltite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses, discussions welcome; editorial/layout. Call Joan 842-937-7. TYP Ferry Potter and Jan Johnson. "Jeff has spent a lot more hours at his trade. "I've been amazed and pleased with his philosophical approach to competition." Timmons adds. "If he doesn't win, he wins, lose, or thinks about the next competition. He has a lot of mental toughness." Buchklinik knows that bacterium *Buick klinikum* that characterizes inti the Olympia Trust. N瑟塔亞 (The Lifesciences Trust). 温特亞 (The Tertouchions Trust). 唐特亞 (The Tertouchions Trust). and he has lessened his classload this semester. "I haven't ever been interested in school," says Buckingham, who even so, carries a 3.5 average in general business. "I'd like to make sure I can handle it. But right now, vaulting is first. I'm making grades so I can jump. "I love to match that (O)mipie team. Right now there are a lot who have jumped higher than I have jumped higher in both look and am going improve." PRO TENNIS OFFERS WOMEN A RARE CHOICE "I can always become intellectual when I'm old and crippled. Right now, I'm young. My chance to test my abilities is now." SCHULTE BY CHRISTY BARBEE AST fall, after 16-year-old Tracy Austin had cleaned up his championships, you could the self-pitying creaking of the as old pros (the 24 and 25 years) the that and was becoming of their sport. All-America Alycia Moulton plans to finish college before turning pro. Now 16 is still mighty young, but the average age on the women's professional tour is only 21, and indicators are that the average is coming down. This is having a big impact on tennis, particularly women. Male athletes have long enjoyed opportunities in professional sports that might make postponing, interruptions or even a ban while. A top-dollar contract in hockey, baseball, or basketball is worth $20 million. Tennis is a similar offer in offering money a similar chance to make money in sports. As the pro game's popular sport, tennis grows and grows. And as the average age of its consistent winners tumbles, more women are grabbing their opportunity at the expense of college. Some very good young female players use college as a sort of testing ground. Others have found, though, that they simply don't get the training they need in the college and junior levels. They ask what they can, then they move on. "Two years of college is enough mentally," says Kathy Jordan, who 6 SPORTS BULLETIN "I wanted to go to school," says Stacy Margolio, who went to Southern California for two years. "I was really afraid of being dirty. It's pretty hard to go from the jamons to the pros. College helps shape you mentally. It's a great place to get away from the security of high school, family, and friends, college as a halfway house before you leave." Often lonely existence of the pro. All-America Alicia Moulton plans to left Stanford shortly after starting her junior year. She was already in college and had ranked rankings when she made the jump. "The top women college players are as good as the pros. That's been proven," Jordan says. But increasingly, those players who can make it in the pro leave school; the others who stay are less sure of their skills yet pro level. For most women, college is a necessary springboard. Quitting time for Margolin came after she won the U.S. Tennis Association collegiate champion- "I found it very difficult to concentrate on both after that. I thought I should give tennis my full effort." The question for the determined player becomes: When will I be ready? Two years is a popular answer. Alyssa Moulton, on the other hand, knows she hasn't reached the cutoff point in her college career at Harvard. She has had a very good showing at the U.S. Open last year, winning the junior title and playing through the second round in Atlanta, where she lost to Martina Navratilova. But there is a difference between the juniors and the pros, says Moulton. "It's not as though by 1980, you were in auto-machines on the Ten 10." "But at this point, there is no reason to go to school; it is just a game," he said in school. "We have an excellent coach. I like the people on the team, so it makes us feel more secure." She has no doubt she will turn pro upon graduation, and she says that even now tennis is the most important thing in her life. Leslie Allen decided that she got out of high school that she wanted to be a professional tennis player. But he also decide she needed at least four more years of growth—technically and emotionally. She has been a student college. She stuck with the decision and got a degree from USC before "There's the maturing process you get in college, the educational experience," he says. "I was glad to have had the good times of college first." But the bottom line was always the realization that college was enough for the pros. Alen says. The professional stakes have been increasing. About 100 women make some sort of living from the tennis industry, and cover food, clothing, and travel expenses. The Chris Ewert-Lloyds, Martina Navratilova, and Tracy Austin reap about half a million dollars in endorsements and other contracts. In 1979, the women ranked between 40 and 60 were expected to earn $30,000 and up. The women of the Women's Tennis Association For Katy Jordan, there could be little doubt. After a short sit in the sun and then spending houses, she was tough, confident, and realist. And there was money A few women pass up college altogether. That requires an unusual degree of self-assurance and certainty about a tennis career. "I can always become intellectuous when I'm old and crippled," says Laura Riddle, who she turned pro in January 1979. "Right now, I'm young chance to get back into it." The pair minus eyeglasses, tourn moor wore 3-week f. found, picture 644-8659. —set of key on keys rectangular key chain keys available. Resize 824-922 3-week "I'm not having a lark out here, believe me. But this is what I want to be doing. I have no negrets." Kathy Jordan, who played in a few contests while still an amateur, has just one regret. "All that money I turned down!" Twenty-seven thousand dollars, to be precise. --- st, acceded Conflict if feeling mise, ing cor- lective, electric, y, even these Correct, if forms, forc. Call, 3-6 pliver, 3-6 you are going main genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). M1-8729. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and will fit you up. 3-4 U.S. FT. — — — — — — — 16 15 14 tuple of e day if SERVICER e day if CENTER pfortunity portunity i $150, wr. dish. living, age. Non-leaving K-3 aid Owen 3-6 partment. 3-5 bole room m-3 3-5 a. j. m. 3 o-bedroom Call after after KARSAH CLASSIFIED-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD | | | | :--- | :--- | | 1 | 2 | Tuesday, March 4, 1980 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud 9 By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't the best, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an awkward start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandpit. There was no winner or loser, and the game was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and they wanted it to come over to scrimmage." Floyd Turner said in a fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hater Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow Sports -KANSAN- University Daily Kansar Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no baseball game took place in nine innings. Players were required to pitchches. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games (day at 13:00), but weather might be a problem again. Clement worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Temple Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three innings. 'The main thing is to get those pitcheres working off the mound,' Temple said. 'I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was good to do a new project. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual curtailor's skill, and it's pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jawkins are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chores. KU's always sparse roster is two players. Pitcher Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "Mlcntosh has the fiu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "Mlcntosh might be able to go an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women's college basketball teams as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Injury Report. - compiled by Mt. Gilenberg of the Philadelphia Invitational Association on behalf of 40 wrestlers in a courier box. 1. *Old Demonstration (Tch'17)* 26-3 2. *Tennessee* 28-3 3. *Texas Tech* 29-3 4. *Baylor* 29-3 5. *Ford* 29-4 6. *South Carolina* 28-4 7. *N. Carolina* 28-4 8. *Louisiana State* 28-4 9. *Louisiana Beach St.* 30-9 10. *Charleston* 28-4 11. *Kentucky* 18-8 12. *Maryland* 18-8 13. *Maryland San Francisco* 18-8 14. *KANAS* 29-7 15. *New York State* 29-7 16. *Northwestern* 21-4 17. *Washington State* 21-4 18. *Central Missouri St.* 28-3 19. *Detroit* 28-3 On at least 10 belts, names Other teams named on at least 10 ballots. Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UPI Top Twenty The United Press International weekly, Board of Cupets top 10 college basketball ratings with first-place vote and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in parentheses. 1. Defiant (30) ... 26 2. Louisiana State (31) ... 24 3. Louisville (1) ... 26 4. Louisville (1) ... 26 5. Oregon State (6) ... 26 6. Syracuse ... 26 7. Indiana ... 25 8. Maryland ... 30 9. Ohio State ... 26 10. Georgia State ... 26 11. Notre Dame ... 25.4 12. Brigham Young ... 24.4 13. North Dakota ... 24.4 14. Missouri ... 124.4 15. North Carolina ... 24.4 16. Duke ... 24.4 17. Weber State ... 26.2 18. Texas A&M ... 24.4 19. Arkansas State ... 24.4 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十一二十二三十三十四三十五六十七十八十十十十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十一二十二三十四十五十五十六七十八十八十十十一十二十三十四十五第六十六十七十八十九二十一二十二三十四十五十五十六七十八十八 AD DEADLINES ERRORS for run Monday Friday 2 p.m. Tuesday Thursday 3 p.m. Wednesday Monday 2 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 3 p.m. Wednesday Thursday 3 p.m. The Kansan 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 used with our link http://www.broadwayadvertising.com/4444. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Waters for frisk trophied at 9th and Illinois, 58th, 103rd and 116th. Water for the Trolleys (the Trolleys-Walk) Sell fresh Fruit Rights in the shell. fifteen varieties of dry fruit are presented in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are presented in the shell. Every Sunday, all selling water is free. BREAKAWAY LIVINGS MORE COUNTRY MORE FOOD BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 If you are a new buyer of an old painting pant, Greg's comfort Mary's comfort Also buy an old colorful spring print shirt. Tissue and more! LUTWINS "THE LIFE CARTER ARE MY FUNNY" VISA easter change VISA Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes. $35. $42.70/10. 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This semester homely is now accepting ap- plications from qualified junior students. Students can apply for the following areas: academic excellence, and campus development. Applications are available in 12 locations throughout the country on March 7 to 50 p.m. with login all applica- tion, with an official transcript to 26-48. Mount Bleu SkI. Hotel is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --prior Fraternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Law- nance campus students. Contact IFC Office at 864-3599 3-21 Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secret-3.7 Want to Buy- Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please 684-6123 3-4 The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open Tuesday. Taught March. 8, 8 to 10, in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kubu). 3-4 Renault's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67038 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quaint and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-7591 or 842-4180. If Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to a beautiful building. Please contact reasonably priced. Call 813-5079 or 842-4815. Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D WB Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union Call 84 97 53 NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95 Rieks Bike Shon. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. Antonies are always in, see and buy one you need. 8 and 9th. Saturday, Friday at 10.9. Sunday at 11.8. 7 and 8th. Friday, Saturday at 10.9. Sunday at 11.8. Club of Lawrence. The AT National Guard Armory has a free meeting room with this aid. Good all three days. Refreshment with this aid. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Jayhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 & bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-4444 or see at 524 Fronter Road, Next door to call Rizzell at EAST. **tf** ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 20 member student cooperative within a wide distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, event #842-9421. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 921$; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 834-2014 or 843-0777. 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000 good condition. Call 843-7310 2-4 Need to suburban 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnishly furnished O-street parking. Fully carpeted, cable TV, AC4 store and refrigerator. Cash for furniture. New store on road 3-7. Call 801-841-0091. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00. 841-3168. 3-4 One and two b bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to run this super bldg 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 study rooms. recreation room. laundry. 3 beds. pet reference. keys. #822-021. 3-19 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tt 98 Old Delta 88. Clean, good condition, excellent merit. $685. 864-4072 before 9 a.m. 3-6 T2 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 81,000 PH. 841-8154. 3-5 FOR SALE 1972 Celine ST. 25 jacket-WAC Overheard, one 1972 Celine ST. 25 jacket-Must sell Call Mike 844-25- after 2 p.m. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make their own textbooks to use them-1. As study guide. 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. *New* materials available at Town Center, Mall Books店 and Booked Room. 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. 3-5 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-74 Sublease 2 BJR apt. w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5669. 3-7 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots, Excellent condition. Toum small must sell cheap!) $35 or best offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 Mustublit=-2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. SunSpex—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-7770. TF Caledon-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Waltze Electric Piano. astr TSR 1 Speakers, still warm storage Guitar. Waltze Garden & Dvectr 842-4270 Must sub-leass 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $150m. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496. Rasignal, Salomon skills $128, 69 VW $250, roller skills 9.11; oak pew $100, 842-8422 or 842- 6000. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6:00 p.m. 3-7 Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a '10- 2000 AMP. Good condition plays like new, Ca- 143-6732. 3-5 Cabin fever? Try a 7-Power Cushion, AMF black top interior; BP7-5P, air, cruisem. AMF masque, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Crane 842-313-31 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. We sure to check on prices. Ledon's Furniture, 1280 New York St. #835-3228. *earwound DC Starco Integrated amplifier, model KA100. 70 watts professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-5954 call anytime. 3-4 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold. 20.99 million new carpets, no wrecks. 400 w/v barrel craft T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7170 or 3-824. Ask for Mask. Serious inquiries only. Jennem 550 3 way speakers. 15 wooper w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dose stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. FOUND Jayhawk Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs community. Drawing students working with children in a camp setting, offering rock climbing, wildfire safety, other program activities, and other programs on Western Springs Camp. For more information, go to Colorado Rockies Summer Camp. To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO BEID 841-7525. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN WEAR WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Most women are more enjoyable while white- or skin-tone activities are more enjoyable while black- or hair-tone activities. Many transvestites are married and have children, while men sometimes wear women's clothing as an alternative to pardon the traditional woman's role in marriage. In many countries, the dom question why women wear women's clothing. In some countries, women wear an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION IS sponsored by GAY SERVICE OF KANSAK --for legal assistance, including Municipal court fair tax returns consult Dash & Laster. 10th East 23rd 街. 645 Broadway. 10th East 33rd street. 3434 collection Call 841-6911 late evening, Office of the Court Monday through Friday 10:15- accept Master Credit. NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 XXXXXXXXXX SERVICES OFFERED PRINTING WHILE YOU WATI is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 880 Main Street. EXPERT TUORING: MATH 600-102 call 845-7855. MATH 115-700 call 845-7855. STATISTICS (all courses) call 845-9086. CIS 100-460 call 845-9086. COURSES (all courses) ENGLISH and SPANISH call 845-7057 IMPROVE YOUR GRADE$: Send $40 for your 30-page catalog of collectible books; 10,200 titles listed. BOX 2500G; Los Angeles, CA. (212) 813-4738. tf Lost: a. d O. 6. TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980 $^{\mathrm{TP}}$ Why cusss about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does the proper business, prot译 Blyt Grammar, 842-6697 after 5.30 p.m. and on weekends tf Experienced typist-theses, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selections, Barb After 5 a.m. ppm. 842-2310. Typist/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality = w. Supporting the new IBM Welcome editing layout. Call Joan 842-9127-320 "I LIKE TO PLAY BASEBALL AND I LIKE TO DRINK LITE. MOST PEOPLE WOULD RATHER WATCH ME DRINK LITE." Marv Throneberry Baseball Legend Marv Throneberry Baseball Legend LITE® BEER FROM MILLER. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS. © 1970 Miller Brewers Co. Macdonald, WI. st. accu ted. Call One pair ripe juveniles, tourn noor weave. If found, please call 864-4859. 7-0 Lost-set of keys on brace rectangular key chain Says 'available'. Reward 862-4274. 7-1 b-lyssal-blue easy-giving male genus Must be paired confidence (to) to speak: 841-872. Ask for one married woman to serve as a tutor. KARSEAN CLASSROADS — EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURKS TO SOLD. Tuesday, March 4. 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Snorts Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't too unfit, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unsteady start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstiff. There was no winner or loser, because it was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. 'I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and we were in the kitchen. We had Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. 'We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside.' The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow Sports KANSAN Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, scrimmage. Pitchers were limited to 15 pitches an innings. Scrimmage. Pitchers were limited to 15 pitches an innings. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 13:08, but weather might be a problem Temple worker three pitchers during the scrimmage. Cayton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jimm Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it might be worth writing about. University Daily Kansan Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual circling, and there was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhaws are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching choirs. KU's already sparse roster is two players, Pitcher Panders McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "Mlcintosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "Mlcintosh might be able to go in innertime or out." Women drop in basketball poll **Top Twenty Women's college basketball teams** - 16 Kentucky (13) - 2 Lehigh University Tech (1) - 36 - 3 Texas A&M - 36 - 4 Texas Austin - 36 - 5 Biggers - 25 - 6 South Carolina - 36 - 7 N Carolina St. - 25 - 8 Cheyenne St. - 25 - 9 Cheyenne St. - 25 - 10 Kansas St. - 25 - 11 Kansas St. - 25 - 12 San Francisco - 25 - 13 Kansas St. - 25 - 14 Kansas St. - 25 - 15 San Francisco - 25 - 16 Kansas St. - 25 - 17 Kansas St. - 25 - 18 Cameron - 24 - 19 Cameron - 24 - 20 Nevada - Las Vegas - 27 - 21 Colorado Mustang St. - 27 - 28 Detroit - 28 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, Oregon, Queens, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UPI Top Twenty The United Press International weekly, Board of Coaches top 10 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in apenashes. 1. DePaul (30) ... 261 2. Kentucky State ... 264 3. Louisiana (11) ... 262 4. Louisiana (1) ... 263 5. Orange State ... 263 6. Idyllwake ... 264 7. Indiana ... 264 8. Maryland ... 265 9. Ohio State ... 268 10. Georgia ... 269 11. Notre Dame ... 253 12. Maryland State ... 254 13. John's N.Y. ... 264 14. Missouri ... 255 15. North Carolina ... 264 16. Duke ... 264 17. West Virginia ... 264 18. Texas A&M ... 267 19. Arizona State ... 264 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nineteen twentieth三十四五十六十十13 weeks or fewer $1.25 $2.00 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.40 $3.50 $3.60 $3.70 $3.80 $3.90 $4.00 $4.10 $4.20 $4.30 $4.40 $4.50 $4.60 $4.70 $4.80 $4.90 $5.00 $5.10 $5.20 $5.30 $5.40 $5.50 $5.60 $5.70 $5.80 $5.90 $6.00 $6.10 $6.20 $6.30 $6.40 $6.50 $6.60 $6.70 $6.80 $6.90 $7.00 $7.10 $7.20 $7.30 $7.40 $7.50 $7.60 $7.70 $7.80 $7.90 $8.00 $8.10 $8.20 $8.30 $8.40 $8.50 $8.60 $8.70 $8.80 $8.90 $9.00 $9.10 $9.20 $9.30 $9.40 $9.50 $9.60 $9.70 $9.80 $9.90 $10.00 $10.10 $10.20 $10.30 $10.40 $10.50 $10.60 $10.70 $10.80 $10.90 $11.00 $11.10 $11.20 $11.30 $11.40 $11.50 $11.60 $11.70 $11.80 $11.90 $12.00 $12.10 $12.20 $12.30 $12.40 $12.50 $12.60 $12.70 $12.80 $12.90 $13.00 $13.10 $13.20 $13.30 $13.40 $13.50 $13.60 $13.70 $13.80 $13.90 $14.00 $14.10 $14.20 $14.30 $14.40 $14.50 $14.60 $14.70 $14.80 $14.90 $15.00 $15.10 $15.20 $15.30 $15.40 $15.50 $15.60 $15.70 $15.80 $15.90 $16.00 $16.10 $16.20 $16.30 $16.40 $16.50 $16.60 $16.70 $16.80 $16.90 $17.00 $17.10 $17.20 $17.30 $17.40 $17.50 $17.60 $17.70 $17.80 $17.90 $18.00 $18.10 $18.20 $18.30 $18.40 $18.50 $18.60 $18.70 $18.80 $18.90 $19.00 $19.10 $19.20 $19.30 $19.40 $19.50 $19.60 $19.70 $19.80 $19.90 $20.00 $20.10 $20.20 $20.30 $20.40 $20.50 $20.60 $20.70 $20.80 $20.90 $21.00 $21.10 $21.20 $21.30 $21.40 $21.50 $21.60 $21.70 $21.80 $21.90 $22.00 $22.10 $22.20 $22.30 $22.40 $22.50 $22.60 $22.70 $22.80 $22.90 $23.00 $23.10 $23.20 $23.30 $23.40 $23.50 $23.60 $23.70 $23.80 $23.90 $24.00 $24.10 $24.20 $24.30 $24.40 $24.50 $24.60 $24.70 $24.80 $24.90 $25.00 $25.10 $25.20 $25.30 $25.40 $25.50 $25.60 $25.70 $25.80 $25.90 $26.00 $26.10 $26.20 $26.30 $26.40 $26.50 $26.60 $26.70 $26.80 $26.90 $27.00 $27.10 $27.20 $27.30 $27.40 $27.50 $27.60 $27.70 $27.80 $27.90 $28.00 $28.10 $28.20 $28.30 $28.40 $28.50 $28.60 $28.70 $28.80 $28.90 $29.00 $29.10 $29.20 $29.30 $29.40 $29.50 $29.60 $29.70 $29.80 $29.90 $30.00 $30.10 $30.20 $30.30 $30.40 $30.50 $30.60 $30.70 $30.80 $30.90 $31.00 $31.10 $31.20 $31.30 $31.40 $31.50 $31.60 $31.70 $31.80 $31.90 $32.00 $32.10 $32.20 $32.30 $32.40 $32.50 $32.60 $32.70 $32.80 $32.90 $33.00 $33.10 $33.20 $33.30 $33.40 $33.50 $33.60 $33.70 $33.80 $33.90 $34.00 $34.10 $34.20 $34.30 $34.40 $34.50 $34.60 $34.70 $34.80 $34.90 $35.00 $35.10 $35.20 $35.30 $35.40 $35.50 $35.60 $35.70 $35.80 $35.90 $36.00 $36.10 $36.20 $36.30 $36.40 $36.50 $36.60 $36.70 $36.80 $36.90 $37.00 $37.10 $37.20 $37.30 $37.40 $37.50 $37.60 $37.70 $37.80 $37.90 $38.00 $38.10 $38.20 $38.30 $38.40 $38.50 $38.60 $38.70 $38.80 $38.90 $39.00 $39.10 $39.20 $39.30 $39.40 $39.50 $39.60 $39.70 $39.80 $39.90 $40.00 $40.10 $40.20 $40.30 $40.40 $40.50 $40.60 $40.70 $40.80 $40.90 $41.00 $41.10 $41.20 $41.30 $41.40 $41.50 $41.60 $41.70 $41.80 $41.90 $42.00 $42.10 $42.20 $42.30 $42.40 $42.50 $42.60 $42.70 $42.80 $42.90 $43.00 $43.10 $43.20 $43.30 $43.40 $43.50 $43.60 $43.70 $43.80 $43.90 $44.00 $44.10 $44.20 $44.30 $44.40 $44.50 $44.60 $44.70 $44.80 $44.90 $45.00 $45.10 $45.20 $45.30 $45.40 $45.50 $45.60 $45.70 $45.80 $45.90 $46.00 $46.10 $46.20 $46.30 $46.40 $46.50 $46.60 $46.70 $46.80 $46.90 $47.00 $47.10 $47.20 $47.30 $47.40 $47.50 $47.60 $47.70 $47.80 $47.90 $48.00 $48.10 $48.20 $48.30 $48.40 $48.50 $48.60 $48.70 $48.80 $48.90 $49.00 $49.10 $49.20 $49.30 $49.40 $49.50 $49.60 $49.70 $49.80 $49.90 $50.00 $50.10 $50.20 $50.30 $50.40 $50.50 $50.60 $50.70 $50.80 $50.90 $51.00 $51.10 $51.20 $51.30 $51.40 $51.50 $51.60 $51.70 $51.80 $51.90 $52.00 $52.10 $52.20 $52.30 $52.40 $52.50 $52.60 $52.70 $52.80 $52.90 $53.00 $53.10 $53.20 $53.30 $53.40 $53.50 $53.60 $53.70 $53.80 $53.90 $54.00 $54.10 $54.20 $54.30 $54.40 $54.50 $54.60 $54.70 $54.80 $54.90 $55.00 $55.10 $55.20 $55.30 $55.40 $55.50 $55.60 $55.70 $55.80 $55.90 $56.00 $56.10 $56.20 $56.30 $56.40 $56.50 $56.60 $56.70 $56.80 $56.90 $57.00 $57.10 $57.20 $57.30 $57.40 $57.50 $57.60 $57.70 $57.80 $57.90 $58.00 $58.10 $58.20 $58.30 $58.40 $58.50 $58.60 $58.70 $58.80 $58.90 $59.00 $59.10 $59.20 $59.30 $59.40 $59.50 $59.60 $59.70 $59.80 $59.90 $60.00 $60.10 $60.20 $60.30 $60.40 $60.50 $60.60 $60.70 $60.80 $60.90 $61.00 $61.10 $61.20 $61.30 $61.40 $61.50 $61.60 $61.70 $61.80 $61.90 $62.00 $62.10 $62.20 $62.30 $62.40 $62.50 $62.60 $62.70 $62.80 $62.90 $63.00 $63.10 $63.20 $63.30 $63.40 $63.50 $63.60 $63.70 $63.80 $63.90 $64.00 $64.10 $64.20 $64.30 $64.40 $64.50 $64.60 $64.70 $64.80 $64.90 $65.00 $65.10 $65.20 $65.30 $65.40 $65.50 $65.60 $65.70 $65.80 $65.90 $66.00 $66.10 $66.20 $66.30 $66.40 $66.50 $66.60 $66.70 $66.80 $66.90 $67.00 $67.10 $67.20 $67.30 $67.40 $67.50 $67.60 $67.70 $67.80 $67.90 $68.00 $68.10 $68.20 $68.30 $68.40 $68.50 $68.60 $68.70 $68.80 $68.90 $69.00 $69.10 $69.20 $69.30 $69.40 $69.50 $69.60 $69.70 $69.80 $69.90 $70.00 $70.10 $70.20 $70.30 $70.40 $70.50 $70.60 $70.70 $70.80 $70.90 $71.00 $71.10 $71.20 $71.30 $71.40 $71.50 $71.60 $71.70 $71.80 $71.90 $72.00 $72.10 $72.20 $72.30 $72.40 $72.50 $72.60 $72.70 $72.80 $72.90 $73.00 $73.10 $73.20 $73.30 $73.40 $73.50 $73.60 $73.70 $73.80 $73.90 $74.00 $74.10 $74.20 $74.30 $74.40 $74.50 $74.60 $74.70 $74.80 $74.90 $75.00 $75.10 $75.20 $75.30 $75.40 $75.50 $75.60 $75.70 $75.80 $75.90 $76.00 $76.10 $76.20 $76.30 $76.40 $76.50 $76.60 $76.70 $76.80 $76.90 $77.00 $77.10 $77.20 $77.30 $77.40 $77.50 $77.60 $77.70 $77.80 $77.90 $78.00 $78.10 $78.20 $78.30 $78.40 $78.50 $78.60 $78.70 $78.80 $78.90 $79.00 $79.10 $79.20 $79.30 $79.40 $79.50 $79.60 $79.70 $79.80 $79.90 $80.00 $80.10 $80.20 $80.30 $80.40 $80.50 $80.60 $80.70 $80.80 $80.90 $81.00 $81.10 $81.20 $81.30 $81.40 $81.50 $81.60 $81.70 $81.80 $81.90 $82.00 $82.10 $82.20 $82.30 $82.40 $82.50 $82.60 $82.70 $82.80 $82.90 $83.00 $83.10 $83.20 $83.30 $83.40 $83.50 $83.60 $83.70 $83.80 $83.90 $84.00 $84.10 $84.20 $84.30 $84.40 $84.50 $84.60 $84.70 $84.80 $84.90 $85.00 $85.10 $85.20 $85.30 $85.40 $85.50 $85.60 $85.70 $85.80 $85.90 $86.00 $86.10 $86.20 $86.30 $86.40 $86.50 $86.60 $86.70 $86.80 $86.90 $87.00 $87.10 $87.20 $87.30 $87.40 $87.50 $87.60 $87.70 $87.80 $87.90 $88.00 $88.10 $88.20 $88.30 $88.40 $88.50 $88.60 $88.70 $88.80 $88.90 $89.00 $89.10 $89.20 $89.30 $89.40 $89.50 $89.60 $89.70 $89.80 $89.90 $90.00 $90.10 $90.20 $90.30 $90.40 $90.50 $90.60 $90.70 $90.80 $90.90 $91.00 $91.10 $91.20 $91.30 $91.40 $91.50 $91.60 $91.70 $91.80 $91.90 $92.00 $92.10 $92.20 $92.30 $92.40 $92.50 $92.60 $92.70 $92.80 $92.90 $93.00 $93.10 $93.20 $93.30 $93.40 $93.50 $93.60 $93.70 $93.80 $93.90 $94.00 $94.10 $94.20 $94.30 $94.40 $94.50 $94.60 $94.70 $94.80 $94.90 $95.00 $95.10 $95.20 $95.30 $95.40 $95.50 $95.60 $95.70 $95.80 $95.90 $96.00 $96.10 $96.20 $96.30 $96.40 $96.50 $96.60 $96.70 $96.80 $96.90 $97.00 $97.10 $97.20 $97.30 $97.40 $97.50 $97.60 $97.70 $97.80 $97.90 $98.00 $98.10 $98.20 $98.30 $98.40 $98.50 $98.60 $98.70 $98.80 $98.90 $99.00 $99.10 $99.20 $99.30 $99.40 $99.50 $99.60 $99.70 $99.80 $99.90 $100.00 $100.10 $100.20 $100.30 $100.40 $100.50 $100.60 $100.70 $100.80 $100.90 $101.00 $101.10 $101.20 $101.30 $101.40 $101.50 $101.60 $101.70 $101.80 $101.90 $102.00 $102.10 $102.20 $102.30 $102.40 $102.50 $102.60 $102.70 $102.80 $102.90 $103.00 $103.10 $103.20 $103.30 $103.40 $103.50 $103.60 $103.70 $103.80 $103.90 $104.00 $104.10 $104.20 $104.30 $104.40 $104.50 $104.60 $104.70 $104.80 $104.90 $105.00 $105.10 $105.20 $105.30 $105.40 $105.50 $105.60 $105.70 $105.80 $105.90 $106.00 $106.10 $106.20 $106.30 $106.40 $106.50 $106.60 $106.70 $106.80 $106.90 $107.00 $107.10 $107.20 $107.30 $107.40 $107.50 $107.60 $107.70 $107.80 $107.90 $108.00 $108.10 $108.20 $108.30 $108.40 $108.50 $108.60 $108.70 $108.80 $108.90 $109.00 $109.10 $109.20 $109.30 $109.40 $109.50 $109.60 $109.70 $109.80 $109.90 $110.00 $110.10 $110.20 $110.30 $110.40 $110.50 $110.60 $110.70 $110.80 $110.90 $111.00 $111.10 $111.20 $111.30 $111.40 $111.50 $111.60 $111.70 $111.80 $111.90 $112.00 $112.10 $112.20 $112.30 $112.40 $112.50 $112.60 $112.70 $112.80 $112.90 $113.00 $113.10 $113.20 $113.30 $113.40 $113.50 $113.60 $113.70 $113.80 $113.90 $114.00 $114.10 $114.20 $114.30 $114.40 $114.50 $114.60 $114.70 $114.80 $114.90 $115.00 $115.10 $115.20 $115.30 $115.40 $115.50 $115.60 $115.70 $115.80 $115.90 $116.00 $116.10 $116.20 $116.30 $116.40 $116.50 $116.60 $116.70 $116.80 $116.90 $117.00 $117.10 $117.20 $117.30 $117.40 $117.50 $117.60 $117.70 $117.80 $117.90 $118.00 $118.10 $118.20 $118.30 $118.40 $118.50 $118.60 $118.70 $118.80 $118.90 $119.00 $119.10 $119.20 $119.30 $119.40 $119.50 $119.60 $119.70 $119.80 $119.90 $120.00 $120.10 $120.20 $120.30 $120.40 $120.50 $120.60 $120.70 $120.80 $120.90 $121.00 $121.10 $121.20 $121.30 $121.40 $121.50 $121.60 $121.70 $121.80 $121.90 $122.00 $122.10 $122.20 $122.30 $122.40 $122.50 $122.60 $122.70 $122.80 $122.90 $123.00 $123.10 $123.20 $123.30 $123.40 $123.50 $123.60 $123.70 $123.80 $123.90 $124.00 $124.10 $124.20 $124.30 $124.40 $124.50 $124.60 $124.70 $124.80 $124.90 $125.00 $125.10 $125.20 $125.30 $125.40 $125.50 $125.60 $125.70 $125.80 $125.90 $126.00 $126.10 $126.20 $126.30 $126.40 $126.50 $126.60 $126.70 $126.80 $126.90 $127.00 $127.10 $127.20 $127.30 $127.40 $127.50 $127.60 $127.70 $127.80 $127.90 $128.00 $128.10 $128.20 $128.30 $128.40 $128.50 $128.60 $128.70 $128.80 $128.90 $129.00 $129.10 $129.20 $129.30 $129.40 $129.50 $129.60 $129.70 $129.80 $130.00 $130.10 $130.20 $130.30 $130.40 $130.50 $130.60 $130.70 $130.80 $130.90 $131.00 $131.10 $131.20 $131.30 $131.40 $131.50 $131.60 $131.70 $131.80 $131.90 $132.00 $132.10 $132.20 $132.30 $132.40 $132.50 $132.60 $132.70 $132.80 $132.90 $133.00 $133.10 $133.20 $133.30 $133.40 $133.50 $133.60 $133.70 $133.80 $134.00 $134.10 $134.20 $134.30 $134.40 $134.50 $134.60 $134.70 $134.80 $134.90 $135.00 $135.10 $135.20 $135.30 $135.40 $135.50 $135.60 $135.70 $135.80 $136.00 $136.10 $136.20 $136.30 $136.40 $136.50 $136.60 $136.70 $136.80 $137.00 $137.10 $137.20 $137.30 $137.40 $137.50 $137.60 $137.70 $137.80 $137.90 $138.00 $138.10 $138.20 $138.30 $138.40 $138.50 $138.60 $138.70 $138.80 $138.90 $139.00 $139.10 $139.20 $139.30 $139.40 $139.50 $139.60 $139.70 $139.80 $140.00 $140.10 $140.20 $140.30 $140.40 $140.50 $140.60 $140.70 $140.80 $140.90 $141.00 $141.10 $141.20 $141.30 $141.40 $141.50 $141.60 $141.70 $141.80 $141.90 $142.00 $142.10 $142.20 $142.30 $142.40 $142.50 $142.60 $142.70 $142.80 $142.90 $143.00 $143.10 $143.20 $143.30 $143.40 $143.50 $143.60 $143.70 $143.80 $143.90 $144.00 $144.10 $144.20 $144.30 $144.40 $144.50 $144.60 $144.70 $144.80 $144.90 $145.00 $145.10 $145.20 $145.30 $145.40 $145.50 $145.60 $145.70 $145.80 $146.00 $146.10 $146.20 $146.30 $146.40 $146.50 $146.60 $146.70 $146.80 $146.90 $147.00 $147.10 $147.20 $147.30 $147.40 $147.50 $147.60 $147.70 $147.80 $147.90 $148.00 $148.10 $148.20 $148.30 $148.40 $148.50 $148.60 $148.70 $148.80 $148.90 $149.00 $149.10 $149.20 $149.30 $149.40 $149.50 $149.60 $149.70 $149.80 $149.90 $150.00 $150.10 $150.20 $150.30 $150.40 $150.50 $150.60 $150.70 $150.80 $150.90 $151.00 $151.10 $151.20 $151.30 $151.40 $151.50 $151.60 $151.70 $151.80 $151.90 $152.00 $152.10 $152.20 $152.30 $152.40 $152.50 $152.60 $152.70 $152.80 $152.90 $153.00 $153.10 $153.20 $153.30 $153.40 $153.50 $153.60 $153.70 $153.80 $154.00 $154.10 $154.20 $154.30 $154.40 $154.50 $154.60 $154.70 $154.80 $154.90 $155.00 $155.10 $155.20 $155.30 $155.40 $155.50 $155.60 $155.70 $155.80 $156.00 $156.10 $156.20 $156.30 $156.40 $156.50 $156.60 $156.70 $156.80 $156.90 $157.00 $157.10 $157.20 $157.30 $157.40 $157.50 $157.60 $157.70 $157.80 $157.90 $158.00 $158.10 $158.20 $158.30 $158.40 $158.50 $158.60 $158.70 $158.80 $159.00 $159.10 $159.20 $159.30 $159.40 $159.50 $159.60 $159.70 $159.80 $160.00 $160.10 $160.20 $160.30 $160.40 $160.50 $160.60 $160.70 $160.80 $160.90 $161.00 $161.10 $161.20 $161.30 $161.40 $161.50 $161.60 $161.70 $161.80 $161.90 $162.00 $162.10 $162.20 $162.30 $162.40 $162.50 $162.60 $162.70 $162.80 $163.00 $163.10 $163.20 $163.30 $163.40 $163.50 $163.60 $163.70 $163.80 $164.00 $164.10 $164.20 $164.30 $164.40 $164.50 $164.60 $164.70 $164.80 $164.90 $165.00 $165.10 $165.20 $165.30 $165.40 $165.50 $165.60 $165.70 $165.80 $166.00 $166.10 $166.20 $166.30 $166.40 $166.50 $166.60 $166.70 $166.80 $167.00 $167.10 $167.20 $167.30 $167.40 $167.50 $167.60 $167.70 $167.80 $167.90 $168.00 $168.10 $168.20 $168.30 $168.40 $168.50 $168.60 $168.70 $168.80 $168.90 $169.00 $169.10 $169.20 $169.30 $169.40 $169.50 $169.60 $169.70 $169.80 $169.90 $170.00 $170.10 $170.20 $170.30 $170.40 $170.50 $170.60 $170.70 $170.80 $170.90 $171.00 $171.10 $171.20 $171.30 $171.40 $171.50 $171.60 $171.70 $171.80 $171.90 $172.00 $172.10 $172.20 $172.30 $172.40 $172.50 $172.60 $172.70 $172.80 $172.90 $173.00 $173.10 $173.20 $173.30 $173.40 $173.50 $173.60 $173.70 $173.80 $173.90 $174.00 $174.10 $174.20 $174.30 $174.40 $174.50 $174.60 $174.70 $174.80 $174.90 $175.00 $175.10 $175.20 $175.30 $175.40 $175.50 $175.60 $175.70 $175.80 $175.90 $176.00 $176.10 $176.20 $176.30 $176.40 $176.50 $176.60 $176.70 $176.80 $176.90 $177.00 $177.10 $177.20 $177.30 $177.40 $177.50 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No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the aid. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be displayed in insurance brochure, be called the *buying benefit*@a4i048. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for fruit parked at 9th and Illinois, 12th and Missouri. Watch the (I'll-The-Wall)-Selling Fresh Fruit Wash peanut in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry milk, eggs, yogurt, tofu and tyrone Every Sunday. Also selling wine, grapes and cheese. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11,99 top our wide selection in additional colors Great comfort Main storage space Overview of our custom spring print shirts Discount More... LITWINS master charge THE BEST OF THEM ALL V75A Intensive Zen meditation retreat March $-10 $825 - 942.700 Dharma Teacher Barbara Barbara $825 - 942.700 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Bleu Skij Ice is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 412-360-380. This senior honors exam is now accepting ap- pices from qualified junior students. This honorary exam requires a grade of academic excellence, and campus recruits. 216 Strong. The application deadline is Friday March 7 at 5:00 p.m. Renal all applica- tions to an official transcript to 216 Strong DATE: HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM --both sports. Hayes replied that Semore had to take charge of one sport or the other. Infer Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Law- wence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 684-3599 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please 346-842-1023. By highest prelaunch, this is the first annual prelaunch week for room 118. Stretch wrist halves. The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday. March 8, 8 p.m., in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. **3-4** Roanah's hostel, the Oasis of the Bible B-II is for percursive individuals and free spirits. No chens, for information, write: Harper, Kamas 67038 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities Call 843-7597 or 842-1835. Reasonable price. Call 843-7597 or 842-1835. Reasonable price. Lovely new 2. br. townhouse and apt next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. If Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D W Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843-9579. 1f Jayhawk West Apts. New Renting: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished for $105. For appointment call 842-444 or sea 342 Frontier Room. Next door to Roadrunner E. af- fternoon. Antiquities are always in, see and buy one year ago. 7 and 8 th and Friday Saturday to 19. 9th Sunday Lake City of Claremont, the AT National Golf Course, Club of Lawson, the AT National Golf Course, Club of Lawson, Good all three days. Refreshments by Plum. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 845-9579. If Offer space for rent now at the area 1 building, 922' Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and or lower buildings 228 ft. qr. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 82143 or 8377-0777. 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 842-7310. 3-46 ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within a walking distance of the KU campus and downstream. For more information, event ID: 842-9421. ROLLER, SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Rinks, Rike, Shoe, 1000, Vermont, 841-6642, iff HANOVER PLACE NEW FRASKE 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and also. Rental $1,600/month. 841-3168. 3.4 Need to suburban 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnished. Off-street parking. Full car garage. New new house and refrigerator. Furniture, water. Furniture, and slave room. $290. Call 841-0019. 3.7 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tt Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this super 3 year old house in the heart of Brooklyn. Fireplace, basement, garage backyard. $30 per reference needs, #84-0211. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri. 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-7 Sublease 2 HR api, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-6690. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization study guide, 21 for Class preparation. For 9th exam preparation. New edition of Western Civilization from Town Crier, Malt Bookstore and Oread Book Store. FOR SALE 72 Dolge Challenger-318 2 in ... 8,100 PPI. $94 - 814.154 1972 Datum 200 Z Wichene Radials. AM-FM casette, many extra. Clean, one owner. B46 - 842.5 1972 Datum 200 Z Wichene Radials. AM-FM casette, many extra. Clean, one owner. B46 - 842.5 Must subtitl - 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Included in rent. Next to: 881-4250 881-4250 72 Dodge Challenger—318 2 Bbl. AT, PS, AC- Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. 814-5954 call anytime. 3+ Alternator, starter and generator specialties MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-509-3000, 300 W, e6h, 10 h MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-509-3000, 300 W, e6h, 10 h 90 Oldies Dell. 88 Clean, good condition, excellent credit. Keeds $605, 844-0723 first 9 a.m. 1972 Cline ST. 25 mw-g WAC. Overhaul new, modified Must sell. Mcelell Call. Mike 844-2726 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $135.mp on 9th St. & bus route: 842-2550 or 843-0496 Cabin fever Try a X-Top Cushion, AMF black top, interior XP-BP, air cruise, AMF casette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-353-31 3-4 Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent time; dark, natural finish Walt Disney Electric Piano. 10 yr TS4 7 Speakers, still warranted. Dark acoustic Guitar, Walnut Hard & Dew-248-8427 SunSure-Sun glasses are our specifying. Non- specifying lenses are the reason, reasoning 1621 Mast. 841-7570. WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98, 3 year guarantee WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386 TUX Munt stell -Electric Epiphone guitar and a Munt stell -Good condition plays like new.- 848-6723 3-5 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best price. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic matt sets. the size to check on price. Ledum's bedding is made of high-quality polyester. 1978 TransAm special edition gold, 24,000 cars, New carpets, no wrecks, 400 g/4 barrel carb; T-top Power everything. Call 811-7410 or 812-9571. Akk for Matt. Serious inquiries only. 3-4 Rosalind School skills $125, 69 GW $250, roiler skirts 9, 10. oak wal $100, $422, or $822, or $300, or $725. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 862-2830. 3-7 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 wooer w/ fre- ourney controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments FOUND Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 Need a ground anythin Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico, where students working with children in a camp setting, backpacking housekeeping, wildlife education, grassland management, Western Campus, Florida State University, Western Western Campus. To whomwe found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. IM READY TO DUAL 841-572-3-1 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Most women are more enjoyable when wearing sexual activities are more enjoyable while wearing clothing that is married and has children. A majority of gay men mention women's clothing as an advantage in or in poverty the traditional women's role in society. Dona question why women wear women's clothing, but dom question why women wear men's clothing. The article an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION sponsored by GAY SERVICE OF KANAS NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 612-5785. MATH 115-751 call 624-7831. STATISTICS MATH 115-751 call 624-7831. PHYSICS MATH 115-751 call 624-7831. PHYSICS MATH 115-751 call 624-7831. ENGLISH and SPANISH MATH 843-7057. For legal assistance, including Municipal court return tax returns, call 800-625-9171 East 201st Street, Suite 432 or visit www.municipaltax.ca 3243 collect Call 840-625-9171 late nights. Office phone Monday through Friday at 10:30am Accept Master Capture TO STUDEN LIES: Will's Our consum prove of N your opinion residents. A kept conf idence. Mass. St. 23. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available at Alice in the House of Ushers Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM on Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 8:30 PM. IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for $90- 30-page catalog of college collectibles. 10,250 tonics listed. BOX 20597G; Los Angeles, CA. 90025. (213) 477-8328. TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF Why cus about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-669 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends tf PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TF Experienced typet—theses, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correcting electric. Barb After 5 p.m. 842-2310. If 24 Oklahoma's Enos Semore has coached six league champions, and about 70 of his players have turned pro Typi/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Requests of members welcome. CALL 459-3872 or MAGEL 459-3871. SEMORE:A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS He could have coached almost any sport. He chose baseball—and Oklahoma's glad he did. BY DEAN CLARK A A look at the record reveals that *Atlaska baseball* once more made the right choice, although within a few wylables of ending his career. 1960. Semos's close friend Ken Haves became athletic director at the University of Florida, two had played basketball and baseball together at Northeastern Oklahoma, and both had gone into high school coaching after graduata At first, Senseen didn't want to leave high school teaching. After more discussion, he asked Hakes to let him be assistant coach in Hayes called Semore with a mare offer. Semore could be head coach of either the basketball or baseball team; Hayes would be his assistant in that sport and act as head coach. Hayes is also with Semore assisting him. Lost: a. d O. 8 SPORTS BULLETIN "He was a terrific basketball player in game. He could get up and do anything he remembered, he Hayes says." I wish he now had just moved to work on post Semore chose baseball. He was an immediate success. Semore is a strict disciplinarian To this day, Hays maintains that Semore would have been a successful head coach regardless of which sport he had picked. Semore's Bacone club won 15 games in five years and captured a season. Semore moved on to Oklahoma in 1967 and molded the Sooners into the Yankees of the league titles, and more significant, approximately 70 players that Semore tutored made it to the who believes in hard work. At first, this philosophy didn't work at OU. "Foens just had to get rid of some of the people left over from the old team," he said, thinking about how to go about the game, "says one of his supporters. 'He ran off some people with us and got a good player. But he was right.'" Smore says he has changed over the years to adapt to the needs of his students. Any such shift has been slight. The sojourn may practice more than one day. "We practice concentration and maximum effort. We do it with concentration and have to like practice. I want the players to enjoy practice, to enjoy A typical Sooner workout begins in the midafternoon and ends at dusk. Practice is held almost every day during the fall and spring. "I love being on the field. I think I enjoy my players more every year." Despite his reputation for long practices, Senna has been a successful recruiter throughout his career. He is the most experienced he has been a bit too successful. One pair *might* enjagueres, tournour noeur weave. If found, please call 864-6859. Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain Says *available*. Reward 864-4274. Semore loves the game so much he drove assistant Hayes out of baseball when both were still at Bacone "We practiced even if we went on the ground." Hayes remembered. rubber balls. That was too much." "You still have to go after the best, "he says. "It doesn't hurt you if they sign early, because you still have a good chance to replace them or help trouble. You have to be lucky to find a good player in August." The last two years, Semore has lauded a number of top pros businesses, but form. They are quickly signed by the pro, a recruiting hazard other college coaches rarely face. Semore believes it to affect his policy, though. AST year, Semore was stripping out. Three of his top prospects signed professional contract, August, and a losing season was over. The losing season OU did start dummy, but Semore refused to扑克. Oklahoma won the Big Eight post-season tournament before being eliminated in regional regions. That season was the best of many outstanding coaching efforts. Unlike most of his players, Memore never had to choose between college and professional baseball. He played Army commitments, he didn't graduate, but he was 25, much too late to be considered for a professional baseball career. But Semone wasn't particularly bothered by this decision, as fourth grade, he had decided that he wanted to coach—not play. Okahama has never won a college national championship with the Lakers. The reason is that Okahama stars are Jackson Todd and Mickey Hatcher (now Raptors) in college. (A college player may be drafted after completing his junior year.) "If they get what they feel is a good deal, they should sign," he hears. "After all, most college juniors are 21 years old. If you told a kid not to face, he might get hurt the next year not get offered as much money." Under Semerova direction, Oklahoma has been to the College World Series five times and has more than 70 in Eight play. Big Eight play. Imagine what Semore might have done for Big Eight basketball. acet, acetate Catalyzed C tecting tecting nisei cory tecting tecting ycuv thesis correcte if form, icat liver & 3-6 **SERVICE** Home care. 1 hour. day of visit. country center. i.e., $100. dish. service. live living. gee. Non-Care 3-7 aid. Owner. 3-8 partment. 2-5 room. 3-6 bedroom. Call after. 4-5 reservation. being ingrained main genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (no to speak). M-81927. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll fit you up. 3-4 KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Tuesday. March 4. 1980 g 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud University Daily Kansan By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't intimidating, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unprecedented start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandlot. There was no winner or loser, and the score was kept. In fact, there were never any base runs. "I called Coach (Kailey) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said they would take him to Floyd Templer, KU coach), said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jahayws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow -KANSAN- Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base队 were allowed during the nine inning. Quigley and Crompton would have been out. Sports Culpton worker three pitchers during the scrimmage. Toyon Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three inning. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 13:08, but weather might be a problem "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on this winter, we are considering everything. I thought it was too much to say. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual curb hits, but it's pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhaws are able to play William Jewel now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chickens. KU's already sparse roster is two players in the starting pitcher. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go to an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll UP1 Top Twenty **The Top twenty Women's college basketball teams** an compiled by Mt. Greenville at the Philadelphia Invitational Tournament, and four women coached teams: 1. Old Dominion 29 (B) ... 36 2. Tennessee ... 38 3. Stephen P. Austin ... 25 4. Delaware ... 24 5. South Carolina ... 24 6. Cairnbull St. ... 26 7. Lafayette St. ... 26 8. Chevy St. ... 26 9. Milwaukee St. ... 27 10. Miami ... 24 11. San Francisco ... 24 12. ARKansas ... 24 13. Cherrison ... 29 14. Northwestern ... 19 15. Oregon Las Vegas ... 27 16. Center Miami St. ... 24 **Other teams named on at least 10 halts.** Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International week of Board of Cups top 20 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2; in parentheses. 1. Delpault (30) ... 26.4 2. Louisiana State ... 26.4 3. Kentucky (11) ... 28.3 4. Louisiana (11) ... 28.3 5. Georgia State ... 28.4 6. Syracuse ... 28.4 7. Virginia ... 28.5 8. Maryland ... 28.5 9. Ohio State ... 28.6 10. Georgia State ... 28.6 11. Notre Dame ... 28.6 12. Notre Dame ... 28.6 13. North Carolina ... 28.4 14. Michigan ... 28.4 15. North Carolina ... 28.4 16. Duke ... 21.4 17. Texas A&M ... 28.4 18. Arizona State ... 28.4 19. Houston State ... 28.4 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten twelve times or fewer $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25$1.25 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 2 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. Thursday Friday 2 p.m. Saturday Wednesday 2 p.m. The Kansan 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 in numerous locations by calling the number 844-765-2310 at 844-765-2310. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for trussed at 8th and Illinois, Wisconsin, with the Chicago Sox (and The Hellebore-Wells) selling Fruit Slices in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available every Sunday. Also selling水果 every Saturday. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1989 Special Value price PAINTER PANTS Now only $11,99 Explore one size selection of colorful spring pants. Great for everyday wear. Many sizes to choose. Also explore our colorful spring pants, dresses, ties and more. LITWINS VISA master charge Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10 Led by Master Dharma Teacher Rhodes $35.82-7010 3-4 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior hourly is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in areas of academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in person or by telephone on Monday, March 7 at 6:00 p.m. Return all applications with an official transcript on 216-548-3900. Mount Bleu SK1 Hotel is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 DAY: HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --with all utilities paid. In Preference Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 2011 & 23 for Law- wrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 684-359 31 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 844-6122. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual preamble for week in 118. Strong社交 ties. Kansas Union The Drafft: An Issue for Our Time, an open conference Tuesday, March 8. 8月8日, in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Landei, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 Rosalesa Hall, the Oasis of the Bible Bld. is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No objections; for information, write: Harper, Kansas 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-5579 or 842-4185. ff Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 813-9579 or 812-4185. Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF 2 New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D WB Appliances 3079 block 1 bed from the Union Call # 851 8079 NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. Antiquities are always in. se and buy one you like. 1. 7 and 8: saturday-Friday to 9. to Sunday 11. 2. 10: friday-Saturday to 12. to Sunday 14. 3. Club of Lawnerville. the AT National Guard Arm with this aid). Good all three days. Refreshments with this aid). Jayhawk West Apts. Next Renting: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished from $185. Appointment call 842-444 or as 842 Frontier Road. Next door to Russell's East. tf A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 813-9579. If ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student member cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstream. For more information, visit 842-9421. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 822M); Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and lower or 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 8243-0244 or 8347-0777. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Ricks Bike Rocks. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 843-7310. 3-4 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00, mod. 841-3108. 3-4 There all new and contemporary lofts are here. 3 blacks from NEXT and 2 downstairs Starting at 11am, you can rent a room with study lamps, 12 hrs of garage, garage with oper. suite, balcony, private parking. $84 - $455 or $81 - $452 for private parking. $84 - $455 or $81 - $452 for private parking. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Need to subdue 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Fully carved, cable TV A/C. New stove and refrigerator. Bathroom. Kitchen. And stove room on 3-7 Ball. Call 801-491-811 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4641 or 841-3018. 3-5 Professor leasing house for 2 years, need qualifed tenants to rent this amber 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms, 2 study rooms, recreation room, kitchen, laundry. Reference: p.5, reference. need: 842-0221. 3-19 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. ff Sublease 2 BR api, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699. 3-7 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make a Note to the Teacher. 1) Use them (i.e. use them-1). As study guide. 2) For class analysis of Western Civilization available now in Town Civ. Mall Bookshelf and Great Bookstore. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri. 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-7 FOR SALE 90 Oldies Dilem. 81 Clean. mood condition, excelent奏. mend. 8905. 844-4027 for 9 a.m. 9.4. 9212 Cletse ST. 25 mg-W A.C. Overwhelmed, new tres. dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 844-3614. 72 Dodge Challenger—318 2 Bbl. AT, PS. AC- 81,000 PH. 841-8154 3-5 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. 3-5 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $150/m on 9th St. & bus route. 842-290 or 843-049-7 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KE004D. Use with Excel or condition 841-5983 call anytime. Coleen-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Piano, 10 yrs TSI 4 Speakers, still warranted, dark-guitar Guitar, Walton Bldg & Dry-382-4270 Must nulet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hook included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 WATERBED MATTRESSES. $39.98, 3 year warranty. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-586-198 New excellent quality bed-orthing mat furniture. Furniture, 2010 New York St. 843-582-128 Furniture, 2010 New York St. 843-582-128 SunSpecs—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TP Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a 'r' in 2000 AMP. Good condition plays like new. $43-672. 3-4 Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cushion, AM/FM black top, interior 39" PB, air cruis. AM/FM cashete, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-5313 Late size 8 x fine styled brown leather boots $179 for pair of brown leather boots $35 or gift box. Call Denise B41-2425-260 Bostonsport skis $120, $109 WD, $2R waler skates 9.11 oak pew k120, $82-$822 with touchscreen display. Nikon 80-290mm zoom lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 6 o'clock p.m. 3-7 1978 Trans-Am Special edition. 42,900 miles. no cables, no wrecks. 600-watt barricade t-Top. Power everything. Call 841-7511 or 832-657. Ask for: Martial. Serious inquiry only. 3-4 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dw stamped on it. $3 reward. Call 844-8630. 3-7 NOTICE Jensen 500 3 war speakers. 15 woofer w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments FOUND Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Tower Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains for sophomore and older college students. Backpacking, prowelling wildlife, hiking, wildlife conservation, program internships, game internts. Sandern Western Camp, Florida. To whomwe found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens last seen at Alen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-5725-3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHINGS? The women wear clothing that encourages sexual activities are more enjoyable while wearing women's clothing. Many transvestites are wearing clothes that allow them to sometimes wear women's clothing as an assumption of gender. But not in order to parody the traditional woman's role indom question why women wear women's clothing, or dom question why women wear men's clothing, we want to show that these articles of wear are an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION is sponsored by GAY SERVICES OF KANASM --- NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 --- SERVICES OFFERED PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Hither Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM 4 to PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM on 1 PM on Saturday at N8M Studio For help assistance, including Municipal court, the State Department of Justice, return tax returns consult Dawn & Laster, 10 East 32nd Street, 618-744-3500, dawn.dawson@usda.gov, 282-344-3834, 282-344-3834, 282-344-3834. Call 841-801-1144 late evening. Office: 914-219-1022 Monday through Friday from 11am to 4pm. Accept Master Cards. EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 call 8758. MATH 115-701 call 8743. STATISTICS 8758. MATH 100-600 call 8743. STATISTICS 100-600 call 8743. PHYSICS 100-500 call 8743. ENGFF and SPANISH 8743. 7037. IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $10 for your 30-sage catalog of college materials. 10,200 titles listed. BOX 22097G; Los Angeles, CA. (925) .813(23) 477-8228. tf TYPING Miller High Life® GLOSSARY OF BASKETBALL TERMS Fastbreak Three on Two Palming Top Draft Pick ©1979 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis. I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF Why cues about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammar. 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf Miller Fastbreak Experienced tjpt-thesis, theseis, dissertations, term papers. Send all correcting selective blast mats p. 842-2108. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TF Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work reasonable rates. Deserts, dissertations welcome. Miller Sweet Karen, The Champagne of America Three on Two Fast, accu- rected. Call Miller THE CHAMPAGNE OF BEERS. Palming Miller HIGH LEVEL. The Champagne of Beers. Palming Top Draft Pick ©1979 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, WI Miller Brewing Co. Top Draft Pick One pair similar eyeglasses, tourn noir weezer. If found, please call 664-8599. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain Says available. **Raven** 892-4274 3-7 You are now giving great permission. Must be patient. Serious assaults only. In all strict confidence (no to speak). 81-9729. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll fit you up. 3-4 KANSAS CLASSIFIERS EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TOWNS TO SOLD --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud University Daily Kansan By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were 'the best and the rules weren't unappetizing, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unhappy start.' Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhaws and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandlot. There was no winner or loser, but the game was kept. In fact, there were never even a base runner. 'I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and we said they would take me to the Floyd Tempel, KU coach, said. We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside to watch the game.' The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hater Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quaigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. The Tigers lost to New York in five innings. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 12, but weather might be a problem again. Custon teamwork three pitchers during the scrimmage. Custon Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it might be worth mentioning. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was好good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innings ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- cular conditions, but it's pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the ball with UUs already sparse roster is two players short of manpower. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go in nursing or it Women drop in basketball poll The Top twenty Warner-billed college basketball teams 1. Louisiana Tech (11) ... 36-5 2. Texas ... 36-5 3. Texas A&M ... 36-5 4. Bulgaria ... 34-5 5. South Carolina ... 34-5 6. N.Carolina St ... 34-5 7. Oklahoma St ... 34-5 8. Chienney St ... 35-9 9. Kansas St ... 35-9 10. San Francisco ... 36-5 11. Akron ... 36-5 12. Clemson ... 36-5 13. Nevada-Las Vegas ... 37-9 14. Minnesota St ... 37-9 15. Dartmouth ... 32-4 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots alphabetically: Jackson St., Mercer, Oregon, Queens Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UP1TopTwentv The United Press International weekly, Board of Coaches top 12 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, parentheses. 1. DePaul (36) ... 25.4 2. Minnesota State ... 24.5 3. North Carolina (1) ... 28.3 4. Louisiana (1) ... 28.3 5. Oregon State ... 28.3 6. Syracuse ... 28.3 7. Indiana ... 26.7 8. Maryland ... 26.7 9. Ohio State ... 26.8 10. Georgia State ... 26.8 11. Notre Dame ... 25.5 12. Mississippi Young ... 25.4 13.江苏 State ... 24.4 14. Nashville ... 25.8 15. North Carolina ... 24.5 16. Duke ... 25.4 17. Texas A&M ... 24.7 18. Arizona State ... 24.7 19. Louisiana State ... 24.8 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelfen thirteen forfeited AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 9 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Monday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect inerties. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in insurance or call, by calling the R&R business offer at 844-753-2010. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864.4358 Watch for frisk parsley at 9th and Illinois, Frozen strawberries at 10th and Wisconsin, and the 10th- and 11th-Welling鲜 fruits from Michigan. Pack fresh peas in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry beans are available, and sorghum. Every Sunday also selling wood pellets. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value I oops out wide with thick of colored spring pants. Great comfort. Many ways to choose. Above you our colorful spring print shorts. master charge LITWIN'S VISA Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10, Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes $35.92-70.10 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior honors is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in the field of applied science, academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in the Student Services Center on Monday, March 4 at 1:00 p.m. Return an application via email to the official transcript to 268 Strong Mount Bleu Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings, and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3400. 3-18 --with all utilities paid. DAVE, HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM In pre Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22 & 23 for Lawnvy campus students. Contact IFC office at 681-3599 Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" K.U. Hillel presents oabbi Fred Reiner When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy- Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 864-6123 3-40 By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secretaries. 3-7 The Drift: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 to 11, in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 Ronald's Personal, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt, next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Beautifully priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quit and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D WB Appliances table one 1 brick from the Union Call 854 9079 NAMSHIT HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Antiques are always in, see and buy one year for 7, 8 and 9th Saturday at 11 a.m. 9 Sunday at 10 a.m. 11 a.m. 12 noon. 11-13 noon. 12 noon-14 noon. 2nd and 3rd admission (415) $130 per day. Good all three days. Refreshment by Bilbo. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Ricks Bike. Shoe. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. Jawhawk Wet Arts. Upst. Restoring: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished for $185. For appointment call 682-4444 or use a 230 Fronter Room. Next door to Russell's East. If A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9379. tt ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student member cooperative within a walkout distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, visit 842-9421. 974 American Motors Hornet, $1,000, good condition. Call: 843-7310 3-6 Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 3231'; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Mount and lower or floors 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 843-2044 or 843-0777. Need to ubailne 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnished 2 OR street parking. Fully carpeted, cable TV, AC AV, stored and refrigerator. Cash: $150.00 Call: 891-401-0991 Call: 891-401-0991 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $13.00, 841-3168. 3-4 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and on-site for campus, to campus, 9-5 824-461 and 841-3018 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tf Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this apartment 4 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2study rooms. recreation room. office. 3 bookshelves. 3 references. need education: 842-0211. 3-19 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Salem Make! Study materials for the Western Civilization to use them-1). As study guide. 2) For class analysis of Western Civilization available at Trower College, Mala Books and Great Book Store. Alternator, starter and motor specialties 18-2501 643-7988 3000 w. hp MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9099, 3000 w. hp, 64t 18-2501 643-7988 3000 w. hp MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9099, 3000 w. hp, 64t 90 Old Delta 82. Clean, good condition, excellent mend. $605, 844-4072 9 a.m. 3-6 1973 Datsun 240 Z. Michelin Radials. AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. 72 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 81.000 PHI. 841-8154 3-5 FOR SALE Subroutine 2 HR apt w option for next year Subroutine 3 HR apt w option for next view CB-37- patients, pts allowed. 841-5669 Must submit--2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hook included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpg. Must Overhaul, new housings. Must Hold Sell Call M44. 843-258- 2 after p.m. Must sub-leave 2R BFurm. apt. A/C and pool. On 9th floor 8B & bus. route; 842-28-785 863-049-66 Wait, the first line is "Must sub-leave 2R BFurm." The second line is "apt. A/C and pool." The third line is "On 9th floor 8B & bus. route; 842-28-785" The fourth line is "863-049-66" Let's re-examine the numbers in the first line. 18 28 28 In the second line, it's: 842-28-785 And in the third line, it's: 863-049-66 Wait, let me look at the image again. The first line is "Must sub-leave 2R BFurm." The second line is "apt. A/C and pool." The third line is "On 9th floor 8B & bus. route; 842-28-785" The fourth line is "863-049-66" Okay, let's refine the transcription. Must sub-leave 2R BFurm. apt. A/C and pool. On 9th floor 8B & bus. route; 842-28-785 863-049-66 Kewood DCS stereo Integrated amplifier, model 34-9458. Call anytime. 3-4 condition. 841-3944 call anytime. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus service for the next three more information Terri, 814-7276 or 814-7476 Ladies size 8 finely styled leather boots. Excellent condition. Toward small must sell cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise $41-2750. 3-6 Cabell-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric琴. 10 yrs TSR 4 Speakers, still warranted. Classic guitar. Wurlitzer B&d - 3-798 - 824-7200 WATERBED MATTRESSES $48.98, 3 year annee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 1388- TF Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a '1 in 20 843-6372. Good condition plays like new. C₈ 3-5 Rosignal Salomon skills $120, 69 VW $250, roller skates 9 11; oak pwc $100, 842-8422 or 812- 6000. New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. We sure to check on prices. Ledson's Furniture, 1200 New York St. N-832-328. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 6 o'clock. p.m. 3-7 Cabin歼翼!Try a T-Top, Cullasel, red and black interior/ top mirror, airplane, arm, CRM fm cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car, Crane 423-5313 SunSpeed—Bron sun glasses are our specialty. Non- prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-3770. TP 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold 22,400 cu. New carpets, no wrecks 40 w/4 carbine carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7817 or 872- 8537. Ask for Matter. Serious matters. 3-4 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dane stamped on it. $$ reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 FOUND Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains for swimmers and older college student backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife observation, hiking and garden grain interest. Western Campus, Flower Bowl, western San Bernardino Forest. o whenceon found, borrowed or burglied my nymps camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Jnif Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: ALL ME, I READY TO DEAL 741-5452. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Women wear women's clothing because sexual activities are more enjoyable when women's clothing. Many transvestets are wearing women's clothing because an important aspect of their freedom from stigmatization is to parody the traditional women's role in society. Question why women wear women's clothing; question why women wear men's clothing; question why men wear women's clothing; question an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION is sponsored by GAY SERVICE OF KANAS. --blue-eyed, easy-eating male genius. Must be in serious. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (to speak) 814-8927. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll fill you up. 3-4 NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 Lost: a. d O. **EXPERT TUTORING:** MATH 000-102 call 849-305-7875. MATH 115-701 call 849-305-7875. STATISTICS 849-305-7875. PHYSICS 100-500 call 849-305-7875. PHYSICS 100-500 call 849-305-7875. ENGLISH and SPANISH 100-500 call 849-305-7875. tf PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is warm witn Alice at the House of Ours! Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 am on 1 PM on Saturday at R88 Msx. For legal assistance, including Municipal court cases and criminal defense cases, visit the tax return counsel David A. Laster, 10 East 23rd St., 110 W. 47th St., 98th Street, 353-262- 3532 collage Call 841-631- late evening, Office 110 W. 47th St., 98th Street, 353-262- 3532 accept Master Court Monday through Friday, 11-3 11am. IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $1.90 for nine 30-page catalog of college collectible books, 10.250 titles listed. BOX 22097G; Los Angeles, CA 90215. (213) 477-8282. SERVICES OFFERED TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TH I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TP Why cuss about ways? Experienced service secretary does professional typing. Betty. 842-6497 at 5:30 a.m. on weekends. w/ Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers. mime. IBM correcting selettic. Bath After 5 p.m. 842-2310. Typeit/Editor IBM Pica Elite. Quality work reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome. “If we make ten miles, I'll buy you a beer.” “If we make ten miles, I'll buy you a Löwenbrau.” One pair friend eyeglasses, tourn near wesue. If found, please call 844-8659 3-7 Lost—set of keys on brass rectangular key chain Says available. **Reward** 82-4274A 3-7 iT, accepted Call if feeling mise, iG correct electric, y, ever those, correct if form, iC Call 3-7 liver 3-6 EASTERN MINTAGE 100 **Knopf** $35.00 **Nordic** $45.00 **Arabic** $55.00 **French** $65.00 **German** $75.00 **Italian** $85.00 **Japanese** $95.00 **Russian** $105.00 **Polish** $115.00 **Turkish** $125.00 **Ukrainian** $135.00 **Chinese** $145.00 **Switzerland** $155.00 **Netherlands** $165.00 **Denmark** $175.00 **Norway** $185.00 **Sweden** $195.00 **France** $205.00 **Germany** $215.00 **Spain** $225.00 **Belgium** $235.00 **Portugal** $245.00 **Italy** $255.00 **Canada** $265.00 **Australia** $275.00 **Singapore** $285.00 **Malaysia** $295.00 **Philippines** $305.00 **Ireland** $315.00 **Romania** $325.00 **Poland** $335.00 **Greece** $345.00 **Cyprus** $355.00 **Turkey** $365.00 **Egypt** $375.00 **Libya** $385.00 **Morocco** $395.00 **Saudi Arabia** $405.00 **Bahrain** $415.00 **Algeria** $425.00 **Chile** $435.00 **Uruguay** $445.00 **Argentina** $455.00 **Cuba** $465.00 **Dominican Republic** $475.00 **Panama** $485.00 **Venezuela** $495.00 **Colombia** $505.00 **Ecuador** $515.00 **Peru** $525.00 **South Africa** $535.00 **Madagascar** $545.00 **Tanzania** $555.00 **Zimbabwe** $565.00 **Botswana** $575.00 **Namibia** $585.00 **Brazil** $595.00 **Mexico** $605.00 **Honduras** $615.00 **Suriname** $625.00 **Guatemala** $635.00 **Panama** $645.00 **Uruguay** $655.00 **Argentina** $665.00 **Cuba** $675.00 **Dominica** $685.00 **Tanzania** $695.00 **Brazil** $705.00 **Mexico** $715.00 **Honduras** $725.00 **Suriname** $735.00 **Guatemala** $745.00 **Panama** $755.00 **Uruguay** $765.00 **Argentina** $775.00 **Cuba** $785.00 **Dominica** $795.00 **Tanzania** $805.00 **Brazil** $815.00 **Mexico** $825.00 **Honduras** $835.00 **Suriname** $845.00 **Guatemala** $855.00 **Panama** $865.00 **Uroguay** $875.00 **Argentina** $885.00 **Cuba** $895.00 **Dominica** $905.00 **Tanzania** $915.00 **Brazil** $925.00 **Mexico** $935.00 **Honduras** $945.00 **Suriname** $955.00 **Guatemala** $965.00 **Panama** $975.00 **Uroguay** $985.00 **Argentina** $995.00 **Cuba** $1005.00 **Dominica** $1015.00 **Tanzania** $1025.00 **Brazil** $1035.00 **Mexico** $1045.00 **Honduras** $1055.00 **Suriname** $1065.00 **Guatemala** $1075.00 **Panama** $1085.00 **Uroguay** $1095.00 **Argentina** $1105.00 **Cuba** $1115.00 **Dominica** $1125.00 **Tanzania** $1135.00 **Brazil** $1145.00 **Mexico** $1155.00 **Honduras** $1165.00 **Suriname** $1175.00 **Guatemala** $1185.00 **Panama** $1195.00 **Uroguay** $1205.00 **Argentina** $1215.00 **Cuba** $1225.00 **Dominica** $1235.00 **Tanzania** $1245.00 **Brazil** $1255.00 **Mexico** $1265.00 **Honduras** $1275.00 **Suriname** $1285.00 **Guatemala** $1295.00 **Panama** $1305.00 **Uroguay** $1315.00 **Argentina** $1325.00 **Cuba** $1335.00 **Dominica** $1345.00 **Tanzania** $1355.00 **Brazil** $1365.00 **Mexico** $1375.00 **Honduras** $1385.00 **Suriname** $1395.00 **Guatemala** $1405.00 **Panama** $1415.00 **Uroguay** $1425.00 **Argentina** $1435.00 **Cuba** $1445.00 **Dominica** $1455.00 **Tanzania** $1465.00 **Brazil** $1475.00 **Mexico** $1485.00 **Honduras** $1495.00 **Suriname** $1505.00 **Guatemala** $1515.00 **Panama** $1525.00 **Uroguay** $1535.00 **Argentina** $1545.00 **Cuba** $1555.00 **Dominica** $1565.00 **Tanzania** $1575.00 **Brazil** $1585.00 **Mexico** $1595.00 **Honduras** $1605.00 **Suriname** $1615.00 **Guatemala** $1625.00 **Panama** $1635.00 **Uroguay** $1645.00 **Argentina** $1655.00 **Cuba** $1665.00 **Dominica** $1675.00 **Tanzania** $1685.00 **Brazil** $1695.00 **Mexico** $1705.00 **Honduras** $1715.00 **Suriname** $1725.00 **Guatemala** $1735.00 **Panama** $1745.00 **Uroguay** $1755.00 **Argentina** $1765.00 **Cuba** $1775.00 **Dominica** $1785.00 **Tanzania** $1795.00 **Brazil** $1805.00 **Mexico** $1815.00 **Honduras** $1825.00 **Suriname** $1835.00 **Guatemala** $1845.00 **Panama** $1855.00 **Uroguay** $1865.00 **Argentina** $1875.00 **Cuba** $1885.00 **Dominica** $1895.00 **Tanzania** $1905.00 **Brazil** $1915.00 **Mexico** $1925.00 **Honduras** $1935.00 **Suriname** $1945.00 **Guatemala** $1955.00 **Panama** $1965.00 **Uroguay** $1975.00 **Argentina** $1985.00 **Cuba** $1995.00 **Dominica** $1995.00 **Tanzania** $1995.00 **Brazil** $1995.00 **Mexico** $1995.00 **Honduras** $1995.00 **Suriname** $1995.00 **Guatemala** $1995.00 **Panama** $1995.00 **Uroguay** $1995.00 **Argentina** $199 KANSAS CLASSIFIERS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS By KEN DAVIE Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't on their face for the 1980 Kansai baseball season got off an unofficial tail. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandpit. There was no winner or loser, but the game was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. '1 called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and they were in the room. We also talked to Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. 'We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 13:00, but weather might be a problem Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, scrimmage. Pitches were limited to 10 pitches an innings. T emple worker three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clyton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Philip worked three imple- tions. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty University Daily Kansan well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it would be a cool day. Juan Ramon. KU catcher, cracked a home run to left- center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innning game. It just was under some unusual circling motion, but really realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the piching chairs KU= already sparse roster is two players. Pitcher Panders McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection" "Temple said." "McIntosh might be able to go an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women college basketball teams of the 2014 season. The Governors of the Philadelphia Museum and their balances of 49 women coaches quarter and based on the balances of 49 women coaches. Louisiana Tech (1) 36.2 Texas 36.2 Texas 36.2 Ruggers 35.3 South Carolina 35.3 North Carolina 35.3 N. Carolina St. 35.3 N. Carolina St. 35.3 Cherry Springs 35.3 Kansas State 35.3 Kansas State 35.3 San Francisco 35.3 Maryland 35.3 Northern Michigan 35.3 Chalmers 35.3 New Orleans 35.3 Nevada - Las Vegas 32.7 Carson Valley Missouri 32.7 Detroit 32.6 Other teams named on at least 10 halftons, Oklahoma, Oregon, Queens, Southern California. Advanced Tech. Team UPITop Twenty The United Press International weekly, Board of Cupsp 19 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, parents. 1. DePaul (36) ... 28.4 2. Louisiana State ... 28.4 3. Kentucky ... 28.5 4. Louisville (1) ... 28.5 5. Tennessee ... 28.5 6. Syracuse ... 28.5 7. Florida ... 28.5 8. Maryland ... 28.4 9. Ohio State ... 28.4 10. Georgia State ... 28.4 11. Notre Dame ... 28.5 12. BST Indiana ... 24.4 13. Jackson (N.Y.) ... 24.4 14. North Carolina ... 28.4 15. Duke ... 28.4 16. Missouri State ... 28.4 17. Texas A&M ... 28.7 18. Kansas State ... 28.7 19. Kansas State ... 21.8 The University Dailv KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 15 pounds or fewer $2.25 $2.30 $2.30 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Thursday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday The Kanana 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 displayed in stores, but call the main business office at 84349. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for trunk parked at 9th and Illinois, and you can tell it is a Trunk Parking area. And the Trolley to the-Wall! Fresh鲜 fruits from the market are available in peanut oil in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit (apple, grapes, pears, cherries, oranges) Sunday. Alaskan selling wood-fired stoves. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Eyes our make selection of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort More stretch than cotton. Absence of snarl colorful spring print sheets. Discount Offer! LUWINS MIDI COLOUR FORENSAL 1984 massive charge VISA Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Led by Master Dharma Teacher Rhodes. $5. 825, 70-710. 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Bleu Blu Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social calls. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 This semi honorary is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in a range of academic excellence, and campus areas, academic excellence, and campus areas. Applications are available in 218 Strong day, March 4 at 5:00 p.m. Return all application papers to an official transcript to 216 Strong DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM Inter Praterty Council will appoint SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 21, and 23 for *Buffalo* university students. Contact IFC Office at 864-3599 3-21 --- K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Endure. Please call 864-623-92. By higher proclamation, this is the first annual week for room 118 second-seat carers. The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 p.m. in Green Hall, Room 104. Patel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Rub Kubu. 3-4 Beauland's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible BIl-lr is for paretic individuals and free spirit-uns. for information, write. Harper, Kansas 67058. 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quit and comfortable. Reasonably prized. Call 843-8579 or 842-4185. tf Lovely new 2 br, townhouse and apt. next to theatre. Rent $350/month. Reasonably priced. Call 842-8385 or 842-8185. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5600. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A.C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843-9579. tt NAIMSITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8559 any time of the day. Jiahawk West Apts, New Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-4444 or see at 524 Front Room. Next door to Russell's East. if A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 845-9579. tt ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student member cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, visit 842-9211. Office space to: rent now at the area 1 building, 3229; Mass' The inner office can be changed to fit needs. Upgrade and/or lower beds 228 ft. sq. 890 ft. sq. Contact 4824-2034 or 854-0717. Antiques are always in, see and buy one year or two. On Wednesday, 7 and 8th. Friday-Saturday to 9. Sunday 11th. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of Class of Lawncare. At National Guard Air Defense Command. Good with this胶. Good all three days. Refreshment available with this胶. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95. Ricks Rike Shon. 1033, Vermont. 841-6642. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Have $15.00/m². 841-3168. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 845-7310. 3-4 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone: 843-9570. If These all new and contemporary jwonders are the perfect place for you to relax. 3 blues from RU and downstream at Starting at the Bayfront, 2 blues from RU and downstream at Starting at the Bayfront, 1.5 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this super 2 year old house in Bedfordshire. he studies, reveals, fireplaces, plumbing, health care, pet references, b42-0221. Need to subdue 2 bedrooms Apartment. Com- pact with 1 bedroom, cable TV AC New store and refrigerator cable TV AC New store $200 $41-8091-574 $200 $41-8091-574 Appliances attached apartment computers AC Some utilities paid. Close to house, on bus- way, near train station. Sublease 2 HR ap, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 81-569-73 3-7 FOR SALE harmattan, harris and general business plantation, harris and general business plantation, motorive electric 843-960-3900, w. 6th; th. Western Civilization 843-960-3900, w. 6th; on Sale Make them Use them -1) As study guide, 2) For class use to use them -1) As study guide, 2) For class use to use them -1) As study guide, 2) For class analysis of Western Civilization now available at Town Crier, Mall Bookstore and Oread Book Store. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 841-7267 or 841-7476. 3-7 Must submit—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 81,000 P.O. 841-8124 1973 Datum 20 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. WATERBED MATTRESSES. $30.88, 3 year warranty. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 842-387, TUP New excellent quality bedding -orthodynamic mattes are sure to check on prices. Ledger's latest mat collection. 90 Old Dell 82.8cm, good condition, excellent merit. mkgs. 8053, 844-6072 9: a.m. 9:48. 1972 Cienstel S. 25-mg W-AC. Overhauled, new Maint must sell. Call Mike. K442-8722. Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. 159pm on 9th St. & bus route. 425-280 or 834-0496 T2 Dodge Challenge- 318 2 Bbl. AT, PS, AC- t 610 Pkl 481.8154 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watt, professionally used. Excellent condition. NM-5844 call anytime. 3-4 Cabin fever? Try a T-ApT Culphus, arm. black top/interior PS, PB, air cruiser. AM/FM casette. high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-5313. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 best or offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 Must suit—Electric Epiphone guitar and a "tin" Must suit—Good condition plays like new. Q8- 843-8727 SunSpectr - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-precision only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TP 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 22,400 pounds. New carpets, no wrecks, 400 w/4 barrel carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 641-8718 or 872-9577. Ask for Serious介题. 3-4 Rosignol Salomon skis $120. 69 VW $250, roller skates 9. 11 oak pewl $104. 82-422, or 3- 17-17 case-award-winning graphic novel, even with condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Piano, 10 yrs TST 4 Speakers, still warranted, dark-guitar. Guitar Walnut Bread & Dress 8-7/8" Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dm stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 350 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- ouney controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! FOUND On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs area. Dents working with children in a camp setting work on learning to survive in many other programs. Write an internship grant into Autumn Western Camp, Fairfield State University, Autumn Western Camp, Fairfield State University. To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Alten Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DALI. 841-527.3.7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Many women are sexually active and more enjoyable while wearing women's clothing. Many transvestite are not only sexually active, but sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory to parody the traditional women's role in society or to parody the traditional women's role in society. DQ question why women wear women's clothing, even though question why women wear men's clothing. Q. What is the most popular woman's article of women's clothing? THIS INFORMATION IS SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANSAS Wristwatch--F afternoon, Ca --outdoors and lowered the 110 meter mark to an incredible 130. Only follow harder Edwin Mohn twice, but not once. He summoned an Olympic event the way Neahmiah in the past year. Which is fortunate. After 10 straight victories, Neahmiah in the 1980 Olympics, and as his coach at the University of Maryland, Frank Cossell, say "I'm knowing I can fly." NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . Tryptase increases emulsion CRUISER INC CA CRUISER INC CA FINDIN 2nds fruit recruit 9.35 $ 80421 Need 4 any fruit Lost 4 --- Mice Identify. week 1 week 2 week 3 1 Navy Call 864- Call 864- or 862- 753-730- Found on work 842- work 842- CALL NOW! SERVICES OFFERED 842-9737 or 841-7476 --outdoors and lowered the 110 meter mark to an incredible 130. Only follow harder Edwin Mohn twice, but not once. He summoned an Olympic event the way Neahmiah in the past year. Which is fortunate. After 10 straight victories, Neahmiah in the 1980 Olympics, and as his coach at the University of Maryland, Frank Cossell, say "I'm knowing I can fly." IMPROVE YOUR GRADES | Send $10 for your 389-page catalog of college literature. 10,205 titles listed. BOX 25097; Los Angeles, CA. (9205) .(213) 477-8226. tf For legal assistance, including Municipal court, warrants or probation. Call 805-274-3691 for tax return consult Dawn Bass & Laster, 10 East 21st Street, Suite 1008, New York, NY 10021 or 354 3521 for calls. Call 841-641-3400 late evening. Offices are 3:30-6:00, Monday through Friday. Inquiries may be directed to: PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available on. Alice at the House of Upper Quick Copy center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 am to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 Mm. Sunday. EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 84758.785 MATH 115-703 call 84758.785 STATISTICS MATH 115-703 call 84758.785 PHYSICS 100-509 call 84758.785 ENGLISH AND SPANISH MATH 84758.707 TYPING Meet five PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICED. 841-459-700, TF Experienced bi-tissue, dissociations, tissue papers, IBM correcting selects, Bath after 5 s. jpm. 842-2310, Bath after tf I do damned good typing. Pelegy. 842-1476. TFP Why cw sayst about typing? Experienced service secretary; does professional typing. Betty end. 842-6679 at 5:30 p.m on wed. of week. Lost: a. d O. 6. Meet five student standouts who head the list of Americans to watch in international competition. BY KENT HANNON IN QUEST OF OLYMPIC GOLD Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome; editable/layout. Join Caase 842-917. TF A this issue of Sports Bulletin went in press, there was a real possibility the United States boycott the Summer Olympics in Moscow as a protest against the Soviet's military intervention in Afghanistan, its athletes, coaches, and administrators not be drawn into such a controversy, this has him in the grip. The Games has raised its ugly head and affected the Games. The first two World Wars canceled three Olympics; Hitler's Berlin Games and the 1945 games for Nazism, and both the 1956 and 1968 Olympics were marred by Soviet invasions first of Hungary, then of Romania, and finally years, the Israeli massacre in Munich and the African walkout in Montreal have made it clear that the Olympics is deeply affected by the political impacts. Hunted by the realization that, in the end, all their labors can be for naught. But I was fortunate to remain brief on, in hopes of winning a gold medal. Some have suggested staging a "Free World Olympics" somewhere other than Moscow. More official officials say that it's highly unlikely, because of contractual obligations with the Olympic Management. Nor have Olympic officials in the past permitted athletes to compete for奖金. Attached, as they are, are responsibilities to do should the U.S. fail to send a team to Russia. Renaldo Nehemiah A RenaoS *Methathal* unifies a 101-meter tower over 10 chest-high windows, and runs down a naked straightway, at this point he has won so much that he races only the clock. He set world records in four consecutive meetings during the 1979 indoor season; then went One pair of legs If found, please Nesham is good at everything he tries. He hits the 200s in the 30s, is thinking of playing pro football, and is a good bet to run leg of the 4 x100 relay in the Olympic Games. He took up hurdles when he learned the saxophone — because he considers it so technically demanding. "A trumpet has only three valves, and a trombone have just slide up and down," says Nehemiah. "They didn't seem like anything to me. But all those keys on the saxophone presented a powerful mastermith who would be a real unpliff for me. It was the same with the hurdles." 10 SPORTS BULLETIN in the fastest hand-timing ever recorded or dreamed of—12.8 seconds. Speed was something Nehemiah never had to worry about. He was such a fast crawler as he plains, Plaims, New Jersey, he was called "Skeets," a label which has replaced his first name with all but two names. He said the time he started burdling. Nehemiah lined his bedroom walls with huge mirrors so he could practice start and critique his form at all hours of the day and night. 2. This kind of dedication has not only made him unbeatable, but apparently unfailable. In the spring of 1979, from up to 300 pounds, 1,000 Nehemiah frown to Kingston, Jamaica, to race against the man who had held the old record for two years. Alejandro Casanas of Cuba had a lead over the matcheth and, a riot nearly erupted when Casanas was disqualified after two fase starts. A 20-minute protest followed, and twice he had to land on his blocks as the crowd's ugly behavior. Finally Casanas was reinstated, then disqualified for a second time. When the roar from the stands had diminished, Casanas faced the starter's heart. Nehemiah surrendered to victory. if round, please Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward 842-4274. 3-7 Linda Jezek athletic shoes she is neither a muscle-bound Eastern European nor a child prodigy from the U.S. A long-haircaled Girl from Los Altos, she is, at 20 years old, the other world-record holder on the U.S. team—Tracy Caulkins, Sippy Woodhead, and Mary T. Meyers, all of them are been around longer than any has been around the Donna DeVarones and the Debbie Meyers who were mainstays of previous Olympic teams. She was given leadership to Stanford. That happy result of Title IX legislation has enabled her to stay in training instead of giving up competitive after high school, as was customary in the The only holdover from the unfortunate American team that was all but demolished by the East Germans in Montreal, Jezek has worked herself into the position of the world's premier backstecker. And, like Evelyn Ashlall in his track, she expelled at the expense of the Americans. At the 1978 World Championships—held in all of places, *Berlin*. Jazek set a new world record in the gymnastics and in the process beat the old record holder. Brigit Treerbeen of East Germany won nine gold medals, including a near-reversal of the 76 Olympic medals. In Berlin, the American woman won nine gold medals and a bronze medal; she has also beaten the now-record world record holder in the 100-meter back. Unlike Richeter of Switzerland, who bled to the aura of invincibility that the East German had built up in Montreal, a conference held at Berlin on April 24. "The first time I saw them I said to myself, 'You can't beat them, they try to eat me.' In a way, the East Germans did us a favor; the East Germans woke us up. We went to a weight training and dry-land conditioning than we used were to. For example, I was supposed to be lifting weights so he exhausted after five GARDNER 94 LEPLAR ng. Fast. accu- corrected. Call enaldo Nehemiiah (right) of the University of tt ective nite, mice, mg co- lective, y, eve tective, y, eve theoret theoret tt formu- ctive 2-7 liver & cter uent. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (so to speak) 841-8927. Ask for one of Lacey's dormitories and we'll fix you up. 3-4 Stanford's Linda Jekee (left) is a veteran of the Montreal Olympics. --- MACKERED MUSEUM 541 UCLA's Ewlyn Ashford hopes to equal her dad Wilma Radcliffe. Reactions To The Boycott tuple of days a day. day of injury BRIKLE Center, Clerk, fortnightly or weekdays $100 fr. 4-13 leave. life. Nic. montgomery id. court 3-4 partment Alice Steve room. a month m. 3-6 bedroom end of day of 3-7 5-6 5-7 Athletes reacted to President Carter's call for an Olympic boycott in different ways, depending on how much they care. Evelyn Ashlord was disappointed, but scarcely ready to call it quits. Greg Louganus took the new coolly, he is young. She would stay in condition for the 1984 Games. For Linda Jeke, however, a boycott would end her chances of winning. And she left Germans. In swimming years, she is already an old-timer, and as she says, "By 1984, 一 KANSAN CLASSIFIED--EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't unofficial, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unexpected start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandpit. There was no winner or winner because no score was kept. In fact, there were never even wins, because no score was kept. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he agreed. We needed to be at the Floyd Temple, KU coach," we really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jahayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 130, but weather might be a problem Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, the scrimmage pitches were littered with 12 bats an inmate. Scrimmage pitches were littered with 12 bats an inmate. University Daily Kansan Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clyton Fleeton, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the课 this winter, so considering everything, I thought it would be worth writing about. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-central field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a live little pitching. It was basically a nine iming ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- ture and it was really pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the IJaywals are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitcher choring. KUz will sparse roster is two players. Pitches Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McInchot has the flu and Hicks has an infection," "McInchot might be able to go in innoring or two we play." Women drop in basketball poll was compiled by Mel Greenwood, a corner basketball team's coach for the ballads of 40 women’s coaches (9). **2. Louisiana Tech (1)** 36.5 **3. Tennessee Tech (2)** 38.5 **4. Stephen F. Austin** 38.5 **5. Ruggers** 25.4 **6. South Carolina** 25.4 **7. N. Carolina St.** 25.4 **8. Loyola St.** 25.4 **9. Chevron SS** 25.4 **10. Kansas St.** 25.7 **11. Kansas St.** 25.7 **12. San Francisco** 26.5 **13. M.A.N.A.S.** 26.5 **14. Clemson** 26.9 **15. North Carolina** 26.9 **16. Newcastle Vae Vegan** 22.7 **17. Central Missouri St.** 22.7 **18. Detroit** 23.6 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, Indiana, Oregon, Oregon, Queen, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International weekly board of Cupset up 30 college basketball rating with first place votes and records through games of Sunday March2, in parentheses. UP1Top Twenty 1. Defiant (30) ... 24.15 2. Louisiana State ... 24.15 3. Tampa Bay ... 24.15 4. Lehigh Valley (1) ... 28.34 5. Oregon State ... 28.34 6. Tennessee ... 28.34 7. Indiana ... 28.34 8. Maryland ... 29.61 9. Ohio State ... 29.61 10. Virginia Tech ... 29.61 11. Notre Dame ... 25.94 12. Bryant Young ... 25.94 13. Johnstown (1) ... 24.44 14. Missouri ... 22.54 15. North Carolina ... 22.54 16. Duke ... 24.86 17. Texas A&M ... 24.74 18. Arizona State ... 24.74 19. Kansas State ... 24.74 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 10 ounces or fewer $2.25 3.75 6.25 9.75 14.50 15 ounces or fewer $2.25 3.75 6.25 9.75 14.50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS for run Monday Thursday 2 p.m. Tuesday Friday 2 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 3 p.m. Friday Wednesday 3 p.m. The Kanan 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 or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be delivered to any address in the U.S. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for frisky pork at 9th and Illinois, which are on the menu. The Icelandic and The Iceland-Wallis. Fresh fruits from Maine and Vermont. Peanut in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry meat (beef, pork, chicken, sausages, and soybeans). Kever Sunday. Also selling wood chips and bricks. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Lips, our new collection of colorful spring gants, Great gift! Musts you two home. Absolutely our colorful spring pant store! This and more at LITWINS Hobby Shop master charge LITWINS VISA Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Led by master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes $55, 842-701-6 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior honors user is now accepting applications from qualified junior students. This honors user will receive academic excellence, and campus resources. Academic resources available in 216 Strong. The Student Portal website at 216 Strong. March 7 at 5:00 a.m. Return all application forms on an official transcript to 216 Strong. Mount Blue SkI Hotel is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-360. DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM --between 14th and 15th in Kentucky. Kenley's between 16th and 17th in Kentucky. The $38 per month, Harbour Place offer includes all appliances, window covering burglar-proof, security door locks, your private clothing bi-folders, $42-$45 or $81-$92. Infer Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Law- yence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 644-359-309 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. "Religious Conversion" Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please match 164-6123. By high-precision proclamation, this is the first annual event for room 118 in Strong Acoustic barriers. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union The Draft. An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8 at 8 p.m. in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Rum Kuby. 3-4 Roanah's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bowl-B is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No sheeps, for information, write Harper, Kansas 67038 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-8195 or 842-4185. If Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-1485. tf Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-550-192. TF New 2 bed townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 847 9379. NAIMSH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. Antiquities are always in, see and buy one year old antiques at the Antique Shop on 7, 8 and 9 th Friday-Saturday at 9, 10 Sünday at the Lawn Club of Lawrence, the AT National Guard Arm- wear store, and the ARS Refinery with this aid. Good all three days Refreshment Jajahkw West Apt. 5. New Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For appointment call 824-444 or see at 254 Fronter Road, Next door to Russell E. Alfred. If A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tt ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95 Ricks Bike Shop. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House - a 30 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, visit 842-9421. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building 392'/s Max. The inter office areas can be changed to fit needs. Up and lower or upper bldg. 28 ft. sq. or 800 ft. sq. Contact 8241-204 or 8347-077. 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 845-7310. 3-4 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00; mo. 841-3168. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Need to subdue 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Fully carpeted, cable tv. New store and refrigerator kitchen. New storage and store, and stove on 3-4th Call: 801-649-1011 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this super bldg 2 year old house in April, 4 bedrooms, 2 study rooms, recreation area. Salary: $150,000, references: 842-0221, 39-12 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted on AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. ff 89 Olds Delta 88. Clean, good condition, excellent comfort. 864-052-1472 before 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. CINCETT ST, 25 mpg W-AC Overhaul, new room Must sell. Mell. Call 843-2572 after 9 p.m. 72 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $1,000 PH. 841-8154 3-5 Cable-Nelson Grand Plain, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish. Winters Electric Plane 60 vs. tsr 75. Speakers, still warranted, dark-guitar. Guitar. Winters D-3/4. 824-4270. Sublease 2 HR agr. w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 814-5699. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus bus. Available April. For more information call Terril, 841-7266 or 841-7476 3-7 Western Civilization Notes. New in Job Market. Serve as a tutor in Western Civilization to use them 11. As study guide. 2. For class preparation of Western exam, preparation of Western civilization at Mall Cite Book, and Oread Book at Mall Cite Book. FOR SALE Must sublet=2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best price. Call Dennie 811-2750. 3-6 1973 Daisun 240 Z. Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. 3-5 Mut sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $195.mm on 9th St. & bus route 842-2850 or 843-0496. 3.7 Alternator, starter and generator specialists. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-609-2900, 2900 W, 6th hp. TAMPA BAY ELECTRIC, 714-524-1900. Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent. Burlington: 841-5854 call anytime. 3-4 Rosgadin. Salomon skis $120, 69 TW $250, roller skates 9 11; oak pew $100, 842-0422 or 842-600. 3-17 WATERBED MATTRESSIONS. $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-642-138 TN New excelsior quality bedding -orthopedic mattresses to sure to check on prices. Ledger! Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 6:00 p.m. Must all-electric Epiphone guitar and a '10' 843-6727 Good condition plays like new. C88 843-6727 SunSpeed—Sun glasses are our speciality. Ne- prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 102 Mass. M41-5770. TF Cabin fever? Try A-Top Cullin, black top interior. PS/FS, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 482-5313 3-4 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold - 22,400 pounds. New carpets, no wrecks, 40 w/4 barrel carb. T-stop. Power everything. Call 841-1780 or 842-9577. Ask for Matt. Sertious inquiry. 3-4 Jenson 506 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w freeware controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162 3-17 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dm stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th. 843.4993 To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Alen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I'M READY TO DAILY 104-8325. 3-7 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountain for mountaineer and older college student groups. Backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife, ecology, many other programs. Write now, include programs. Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? A. Some women are more enjoyable while wearer sexual activities are more enjoyable while wearing clothing that is married and have children. A minority of girl men sometimes wear women's clothing as an assistant to parody the traditional woman's role in dressing. B. Dion question why women wear men's clothing. C. Dion question why women wear men's clothing. D. Dion question why women wear men's clothing an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION SPONSORED BY GAY SENSE OF KANSA. --well, we can care a male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). 841-8727. Ask for one of Lana's rooms and will fit you up. 3-4 NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 --well, we can care a male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). 841-8727. Ask for one of Lana's rooms and will fit you up. 3-4 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAY is available with Alice at the House of Owner Quick Copy Center Alice is available from AM to 5 AM PM to Monday for Friday. 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at R8M Office. SERVICES OFFERED For help assistance, including Municipal court work, call 801-592-4300. For help with tax return consult Dault & Laster, 10 East 20t St, 1020 E. 7th Ave, Atlanta, GA 30306, 3834 collection call 841-581-4100 late events, Office hours 8:45am - 7:45pm Monday through Friday, 11am - 11:30am, Master Class EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 842-7585. MATH 115-730 call 842-7585. STATISTICS 946-842-7585. PHYSICS 946-842-7585. PHYSICS 100-590 call 842-7585. ENGLISH and SPANISH 100-757. 842-7585. tt **IMPROVE YOUR GRADES:** Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of college-level research. 10,200 titles listed. 2020GYF; Los Angeles, CA. (925) .473-8226. tf TYPING Miller Brew Lany Fastbreak PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. TF I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TH Miller High Life® GLOSSARY OF BASKETBALL TERMS Fastbreak Three on Two Palming Top Draft Pick ©1979 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis. Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers. misc. IBM correcting selective. Barb After 5 p.m. 842-2310. tfc Why cuss about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-6607 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf Typei/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work; reasonable rates. IBM theses, dissertation welcome. Contact info: jonathan.watkins@ibm.com Three on Two Miller THE CHAMPAGNE OF BITES. Palming Miller Miller The Champagne of Beers. Palming Top Draft Pick ©1979 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis. One pair iPhone eavesgger, tourn mor moose. If found, please call 844-659-3771 Lost-list of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward 852-432-574 Miller Lemon Lite Top Draft Pick MAINLINE 403-625-3700 deliveries@mainsline.com $190.00 $280.00 $380.00 $480.00 delivery费 403-625-3700 deliveries@mainsline.com $190.00 $280.00 $380.00 $480.00 delivery费 didivy @mainsline.com payment@mainsline.com month, month, month, month end of end end of end --- KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't unintentional, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an excellent start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstick. There was no winner or winner back, as it was kept. In fact, there were never even any base rumpers. 'I called Coach (Keith), Hackett about 2 o'clock and we got him back. We had a Flood Temple, KU coach. 'We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside.' The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewel in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow Sports KANSAN forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 13:08, but weather might be a problem Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base man allowed during the nine innings. Feldman allowed five runs, Eickers allowed eight. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Trucken Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillip worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they thought the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was worth a look. University Daily Kansan Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a live little pitching. It was basically a nine innning ball game. It just was under some unusual circling. It was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Hawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kjart Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share players with the UUs already sparse roster is two players short at the moment. Pitcher Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "Mintchot has the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "Mintchot might be able to go an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams 1. Kentucky (1) 26.2 2. Louisiana Tech (1) 26.2 3. Texas 26.2 4. Fresno State 26.3 5. South Carolina St 26.3 6. N Carolina St 26.3 7. North Carolina St 26.3 8. Cheyenne St 26.4 9. Kalamazoo St 26.4 10. Kalamazoo St 26.4 11. San Francisco St 26.4 12. Miami St 26.4 13. Miami St 26.4 14. NewWestern St 26.4 15. New Mexico Pasadena St 26.4 16. Detroit 26.4 The players named on at least 10 ballists Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee. The United Press International weekly board of Coaches top 10 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2; in parentheses. UPI Top Twenty 1. Defiant (30) ... 281 2. Louisiana State ... 265 3. Louisville (1) ... 284 4. Louisville (1) ... 284 5. Oregon State ... 283 6. Pittsburgh ... 284 7. Indiana ... 287 8. Maryland ... 267 9. Ohio State ... 268 10. Georgia State ... 269 11. Notre Dame ... 258 12. Brigham Young ... 254 13. Missouri ... 244 14. North Carolina ... 254 15. Duke ... 284 16. Nebraska State ... 265 17. Texas A&M ... 264 18. Arizona State ... 264 19. Colorado State ... 264 The University Dailv KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine十 one twelve thirteen十四十五十六十七十八十九二十一二十二二十三二十四五十六十七十八十十一十一十二十二十三十四五十六十七十八十十一十二 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. The Kanans 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 shared in notice or mail; call the business office at 84370. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for fire traps placed at 9th and Illinois, 10th and Iowa, and the Hall-of-Fame. Sell fresh fruits peanut in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruits are available. Also sell wooden Sunday. All selling wood. 1980 Special Value PAINTER PANTS BREAKAWAY Now only $11.99 Unpack our wide selection of colorful spring pants. Great comfort. Manx sizes to browse. Above-ground our colorful spring shirt shirts. super charge LITWINS VISA Intensive Zen meditation - retreat March 8-10 Dharma Teacher Barbara Ribara 852. 741-3010 852. 741-3010 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior hominee is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in areas of academic excellence, and campus life. Applications are available in 2618 Strong. Visit www.2618strong.com/march/7 at 5:00 p.m. Return all application materials to an official transcript to 2618 Strong. Mount Blee Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 --image Challenge- 318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $1,000 PHI 841-8154 3-5 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM In prior Pratency Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Lawn- wry campus students. Contact IFC Office at 864-359-3091 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please 346-85122. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual weekend report for room 118 Strong secre- tion. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Robin's Idol, the Oasis of the Bible Billy Bill, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No shoef, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 The Drift: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8 & 9 p.m., in Green Hall, 104 Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby). 3-4 FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt, next to campus. Well equipped kitchen. Always priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-3500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union Call 843-550-7977 NAISMITH 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. Antiques are always in, see and buy one year 8, 7 and 9th February - Saturday for $14. Summer 10th July - Saturday for $12. Summer 11th July - Saturday for $13. At National day, the day will be $14. 45 to 100 money. And the day will be $15 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call. 843-7310. 3-4 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95. Ricks Bike Shop. 1035 Vermont. 841-6624. Jawhark West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 34Fron Right. Next door to Russell's East. tf A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 845-9579. tt ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student member cooperative within a wide distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, even iff 842-9421. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, $922. Mass; The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Updress and or lower ups 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 83241 or 8434-0777. HANOVER PLACE NEW LEAGUE Need to sublease 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished, OFF-street parking, Fully carved cable TV LCD, New stove and refrigerator; Kitchen, Bathroom, and stove room 3-7. Call 801-641-8911 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00 mo. 841-3168. 3-4 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need guilded tenants to rent this super bldr. 2 year old house in April, 4 bedded. 2 studioshouses, recreation. 3 bedded. 3 bd. 4 bedded. 5 petre, reference. beds: 842-0221. 3-19 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. If 1973 Daisun 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utility paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4401 or 841-3018 3-5 Western Civilization Notes. On new Make Shake up your notes for this chapter. New Make Shake up the them. As study guide, 2. For preparation, 3. For exam. preparation, Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Purn. apt. A/C and pool. $15pm. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496 3-7 Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, exclusive tone & condition, dark-natural harvest Electric Piano, 16-尺 TS 14 Speakers, still warranted, natural Guitar, Waltman Bard & D-7-328, 842-1270 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. N41-3864 call anytime. 3-4 Sublease 2 BR apt, w option for next year. Reasonable rent. low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Avail 817-7226 or 841-7474 more information can be provided. FOR SALE Late size 8 linestyle styled brown leather boots $39.00 Late size 12 linestyle styled brown leather boots $35.00 or call Callen B41-7257-340 Resinized Solomon skirts $129, WO $9, RW skater $9; 91 skirt $10, $109, $82-822 or call $82-822 SunSpex—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1213 Mass. 841-7700. **7F** Nikon 80-200mm lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. 3-7 Cabin fever? Try a T-Atop Cullade, black top interior; PS/B-rail, air, cruise; AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-513-51 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpg - W AC. Overhauled, new tires, dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2516 after 2 p.m. Munt cell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a '10n 843-6072. Good condition plays like new. C₄ 3-5 1983 Trimm-Am special edition gold 24,900 cups. New carpets, no wrecks, 40w 4/1 barrel carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 811-7810 or 872-4537. Ask for Mart. Serious injuries. 3-4 WATERBED MATTERSERS $38.98 3 year warranty. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-268-136 New excellent quality bed-orthopedic mattress sets are sure to check on prices. Loden Bedding is available in white, grey and black. 90 Old Mach. 88 . Clean, good condition, excellent mech. $695. $644-4072 first 9 a.m. 3-6 Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- ouney controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. Lost Keys with a piece of leather and D stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W, 15th 843-4939 Rewindsummer experience in the Colorado Mountains to work with children in a camp setting Backpacking horseback riding, wildlife observation, and wilderness survival. Grain interns Western Camp, Flatsford, MA. To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Alain Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-7525-37-5 --- Q. WHY DO MEN WORK WOMEN'S CLOTHING? A. In the 1980s, sexual activities are more enjoyable while wearing women's clothing. Many transvestites are wearing women's clothing as an accessory; some men sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory or to parody the traditional women’s clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing? In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing. SPONSORED BY GAIL SERVICE OF KANSA NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS... FOUND STUDENTS On a paid basis: Athletic and physical and health programs and in the intervention between the two Part-time- 1 work from 21st St. 3 Summer 1 work from 21st St. 4 Summer 1 work from 21st St. 5 Summer 1 work from 21st St. 6 Vidified, you will be assigned to local per- manent career support in senior hospital dance. Be responsible for dance. Be responsible for CALL NOW! Black cat 2782 or 8642 Found a cat 753-7530 evee bound around 190 work 842-288 SERVICES OFFERED xxxxxxxxxx 842-9737 or 841-7476 2 weeks ago, floor of West 1 Navy blue cuff. Found Call 804-1320 Wristwatch--F afternoon. Ca. Misc. keys a lot. Call 843- identify For legal assistance, including Municipal court support, call 800-245-6191 or visit www.municipalcourt.com return consult Dvault & Lauter. If East Belfast 3434 collection Call 886-8451 last evening. Office hours: Call 886-8451 last evening. Monday through Friday 11am to 7pm, Master Change Room IMPROVE YOUR GRADES. Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of college literature. 10,200 titles listed. BOX 25097G; Los Angeles, CA. 90025. (213) 477-8228. --- TYPING EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 call 65785. MATH 115-700 call 64281. STATISTICS 5785. PHYSICS 100-600 call 65080. STATISTICS 5785. PHYSICS 100-600 call 65080. ENGLISH and SPANISH 643-7057. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIL was with Alicce at the House of Uber Quick Copy Cater- tier. Alicce is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 am on 1 PM on Saturday to 88am Mox- ing. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-480-7920. TF Experienced typists, dixferences, documentaries, paper笔, IRC correcting electrical, Bath After 5 min. 842-321-800. ff Typist; Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome; edit/layout. Mail Jouz 842-917. TF One reason he was willing to gamble was the offer of a college scholarship. In some sense the com- I do darned good typing. Peggy. 812-416-7F TP Why cwts about using skills? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty. 812-469-7F at 5:30 p.m on weekends or when weds. college coaches." transitive professional typing. Fast, accu- The coaches, naturally, think that chelseo-chippeh is no less valuable than a college-education. They have plenty of examples of players who value to be the first to win. Faning does add, though, that he has "better confidence in the colleges now than I did several years ago." Former Arizona State slugger Bob Horner, for instance, was offered $6,000 to sign a professional deal with the second of his junior year with the Sun Devil, the Atlanta Braves offered him a $225,000 bonus. Horner hops a season, right out of college, and he will play for a Year honors in the National League. Ron Romanick didn't think $50,000 was enough money to make it worth his while to forbid him from buying a guarantee that professional baseball will offer him that much money the next time he's eligible to be protected. "If he may be less, it may be more, or he may not," But he was willing to gamble. "The way we look at a, if a young man has the right to go to college," he said. "College is balling is improving, and college life is a lot of fun. In the long run, it may be the best thing for a college baseball has to buy that shirt." more skill sets have enough scholarship money to compete effectively for top prospects. The National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) limits each four-year school in which scholarships per season. Most college programs include 40 or more players, so many coaches split up scholarships and spread them around as many players as possible. THE college coaches, meanwhile, don't think they have enough scholarship money "There are a lot of college coaches who have no interest in a high school team, but they do join the June draft list." Pastor laments. "They will give him offer him worth $15,000 or $20,000. But the don't tell the boy that the scholarship must be renewed every year. It's not a parable offer. When a player signs a bonus with a pro team, it's his to play hardness of how well he develops." Rod Dedeaux, coach at the University of Southern California, is petition between colleges and proteams for the top players has developed into a bidding war —lucrative versus generous financial aid. Many pro scouts are ranked with college credit passes. Please visit their website for information on their scholarships by putting a dollar value on them and quitting them with bonus points. Lost: a. and O. 6. Dedeaux is one reason the NCAA established the 13-scholarship limit to allow schools with has collected 11 national baseball championships, including five in a row from 1970 to 1974. The NCAA voted in 2005 to spread talent around more equally. one of the most vocal the need for more scholarships. "A lot of my kids have to pay their way through school," he says. "What are they gonna do, get a job and go to school and play basketball, not impossible to run a top 10 championship on only 13 scholarships." The pro clubs would be just as happy if there were no baseball championships to lauren away their biceps that colleges can help professional baseball most by taking marginal high school players (not the outstanding ones) and developing them three (or four) years later. Cruig Lefferts, a left-handed pitcher for the University of Arizona, is an example of what Fanney said was that he was Lefferts not drafted out of high school by the pros, he tried out for the Arizona team as a left-hander. He would go squad by coach Kindall. He tried again as a sophomore and made the junior-variety team. In his junior season, he scored 148 runs, varsity and led Wildcat pitchers in Professional baseball will continue to cringe for the immediate future. More and more players are taking their shot at the big leagues Lefteris's teammate Jeff Johnson, a brawny pitcher from Los Angeles who turned down a offer to Arizona, sums up the reasons. "The money was good," Johnson says, "but I can probably do better." We'll need to look at it, we look at there are treatts here at Arizona—a school, a social life, and baseball. If went into产二 you only get one treat—babies. Lefferts decided to stay at stair "I liked the Royals' farm life and I loved developing young players." Lefferts says, "but Coach Kindall and I both discussed their offer, and we decided it was quite right. I think I get a better offer next year if I have a good contract." We must legitimate shot at the NCAA title and I've always wanted to play on a team so it could be a dream come true for me. wins with a 10-3 record. The Kansas city Royals drafted him in the seventh round. Chuck Bauerlein, a diehard Phillies fan, is a staff writer on the Sports Bulletin. Colleges and professional teams compete for the services of talented prospects. For the athletes, it's a tough choice. the pair eye glasses, tournour moor weaver, found, please call 644-8559 out-set of keys on braces rectangular key chain available. Reward 842-4274 new-york-area interviewing male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (no to speak). 81-9927. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll fix you up. 3-4 freeting if mise- ing co- ction if electri- cal co- ction if these Correct- tion if forms rile Cail co- lection of driver at 30° - o. de. de. day, tea. day. SERVICE CENTER, center. portunity. us. $100, rush. use. $100, living. gee. No. drum. do. no. Joy. 4-6 partition. all. Sleep. no. a.m. month. a.m. 2-6 bedroom. end of. day. 3-7 3-8 3-9 3-10 KANSAS CLASSIFIED--EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud Bv KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't too tight, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an uneven start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstep. There was no winner or loser, and the game was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and they said if they wanted to come over to scrimagew." Floyd Tumet said in a fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hate Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 10, but weather might a problem game. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clayton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three pitchers. well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it would be interesting. "The main tining is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual circling and it was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." 19 The Jayhaws are able to play William Jewell now, Temple that kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chores. KU's always sparse roster is two of the best. Pitches Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McInlush has the flu and Hicks has an infection" Temple said. "McInlush might be able to go an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Injuries. The top 27 women in college basketball teams of the 2015-16 season are: 1. Louisiana Tech (1) 26.3 2. Tennessee 26.2 3. Texas Tech 26.1 4. Quincy University and her half of the halftons of 9 women coaches 5. quarterback P. Austin 26.1 6. Rogger 26.1 7. South Carolina 26.1 8. N. Carolina St. 26.4 9. Louisburg St. 26.4 10. Chewy St. 26.5 11. Kansas St. 26.5 12. Maryland 26.5 13. Kansas St. 26.7 14. San Francisco 26.3 15. Kansas St. 26.3 16. Clemson 26.3 17. Northwestern 26.4 18. Nevada - Las Vegas 26.7 19. Cargill State 26.4 20. Detroit 26.0 *at 10:15 a.m. at the home of all 28 college basketball teams.* Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UPI Top Twentv The United Press International weekly, Board of Coaches top 10 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, parentheses. 1. Delphius (30) ... 161 2. Kentucky State ... 164 3. Kentucky (11) ... 185 4. Louisville (11) ... 186 5. Oregon State ... 194 6. Georgia ... 196 7. Indiana ... 205 8. Maryland ... 206 9. Ohio State ... 208 10. Virginia ... 209 11. Notre Dame ... 215 12. Brigham Young ... 214 13. Indiana ... 214 14. Missouri ... 224 15. North Carolina ... 224 16. Duke ... 224 17. Florida State ... 224 18. Texas A&M ... 217 19. Arizona State ... 214 20. Jackson State ... 214 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15words or fewer ... Each additional word one two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 AD DEADLINES ERRORS 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 Kanan 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 shown in notice or by calling the Kroger business office at 864-7800. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for truck parked at 9th and Illinois, 12th Street and the-Waltie Walk. Fresh fruits fresh peanuts in the shell. Varieties of dry nuts included hazelnuts. Also selling wood peanuts. Herb Alabaster. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now with $1.99 Expire one month before colorful spring pants Great Comfort More space for comfort More colors for colorful spring pants shoes LUTWINS MORE MOMENTS VISA WHITE COLOUR AND FOREVER V754 HOT CHANGE LITWINS MORE CLOFTS ARE FOR YOU Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Zen Buddhism Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhod- 532. $42.99 Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhod- 532. $42.99 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior honorsian is now accepting applications from qualified junior students. In addition, there are areas of academic excellence, and campus resources available. The applications are available to 268强. The application deadline is March 7 at 5:00 p.m. Return all applications to the following antiforeign transcript to 268强. Mount Blue Skiff Lake is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 482-360. --prior Pratermity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Law- rence campus students. Contact IFC office at 684-359-309 3-21 --prior Pratermity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Law- rence campus students. Contact IFC office at 684-359-309 3-21 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. "Religious Conversion" Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please kill 864-6123. By high proclamation, this is the first annual weekend workshop for room 118. Second-season harriers. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8 & 8, in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurson and Ron Kubo). 3-4 Ronalea's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Book, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No chore; for information, write Harper. Kansas FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities Call 843-9079 or 843-8145. Call 843-9079 or 843-8145. Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to the school. Call 843-395-8171. Reasonably priced. Call 843-395-8241. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no prts. Phone 841-5000. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D WB Appliances cable 1 bed from the Union. Call 844-763-5911 Jawhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 254 Front Room, Next door to Russell's East. tf Attendees are always in, see and buy one you like. 7 and 8 on Friday-Saturday at 9 o'clock. 9 on Sunday at Club of Lawrence, the at National Cathedral Hall of Fame with this aid. Good all three days. Retirement gifts. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.05 Rickie Bike. Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-6624. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within a distance of the KU campus and downstream. For more information, e-mail: 842-921. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 9212' Mast; The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. tns and upper or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 8324-1043 or 8077-0777 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condi- tion. Call 845-7310. 3-4 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00 mo. 841-3168. 3-4 between 14 and 40th floor, but only 20% of the units are between 14 and 40th floor, nor anywhere else.租金 $85 per month. Hearman Plane offers 3-bottles of wine for $179 per bottle, all appliances window covering, freestanding laundry unit, private kitchen, private bedroom, 3-11 phone: 812-455-811 or 812-455-812. Need to subunit 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. 0-street street. Fully carpeted, cable TV DCV New stove and refrigerator Kitchen. 1-bedroom. And store and store on 3-4-7 Bq. Call 801-64119. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. tt One and two bedroom apartments carved into one building. Close to campus, on bus line: 842-446-01 or 841-300-01 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to run this superb 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studioshouses.ervation. 1 bathroom. 6 bedrooms. 6 reference, keyed 72 Dodge Challenge-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 1.010 $HP, 481-8154 9-S Subluxate 2 BR kit, w option for next year. Reasonable rent. low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. M41-5689. 1973 Datson 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-PM cas- tle, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-656 after 6. S-5 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Westen Civilization Notes, 2 for each preparation. 2 for Exam preparation. New in preparation. 2 for Anatomy study guide, 2 for Book preparation. 2 for Exam preparation. New in preparation. 2 for Town Crier, Maala Bookstore and Gread Bookstore. 80 Old Dials 82.8, Clean good condition, excellent mets 3695, 844-072-109 a 9.am. 1972 Celtics 25, st 25m W-A, OverCleveland, new $2500值得 Must sell Call Mike 844-227-0112 WATERBED MATTRESSES, $38.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-388-198. TN New excellent quality bedding -orthodectic mattresses are the best to check on prices. Ledgers on all mattresses are free of charge. Must subtitl- 2 bedroom furnished apartment included in rent. Next. situation. 841- 1250. bathroom. 841- 1250. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terril, 841-7267 or 841-7476. 3-7 Cable-Nilesson Grand Plano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Piano, tst TSR 1 Speaker, still warm warranty. Guitar, Walnut Bed & Dresser 842-4270 842-4270 Must sub-lease 2 DR Furn. apt. A/C and poo. $150m. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496. 3-7 Alternator, starter and generator specialties. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-509-3200, 390 W. 6th. 1H MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-509-3200, 390 W. 6th. 1H Kenwood DCStereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-5854 call anytime. 3-4 Latex size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 or best offer. Call Denise 811-2750. 3-6 Rosignol Solomon skis $120, 69 VW $250, roller skates 9. 11; oak pew $100, 842-842 or 82 6900. 3-17 SunSports-Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- commercial lenses provide reasonable selection. 1021. Mesh 841-7572. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call $41-6072 after 6.00 p.m. Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cullman, AMF black top interior/HPB-PR, air cabin, AMF FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Crane M43-5313 Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a '70- 2000 AMP. Good condition plays like new. Ca- 843-6372. 3-5 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 24,000 cars, New carpets, no wrecks, 40 w/4 carbric carb T-top. Power everything. Kit 811-7517 or B22- 8527. Ask for Kit. Serious injuries only. 3-4 carbs. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dime stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 842-2830. 3-7 Jensen 550 3 way switch 15 woofer w / frequency control. Excellent condition. Call us at (866) 744-9232. NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! FOUND On campus, 2 BR apartments Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Tower Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs region will teach students working with children in a camp backpacking, borehose riding, wildlife ecology, forest management and grazing internships at Western Mountains Farm. Fondrenaline is affiliated with Colorado Western Mountains Farm. To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 4mm lens, last seen at Alani Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-572-3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? The heterosexual activities are not limited to the woman's clothing; men and women are married and have children. A transgender individual must wear clothing that is appropriate of their freedom from stricter regulations or to parody the traditional women's role in society. For example, a man question why women wear men's clothing, so he can wear what is appropriate as an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION IS SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANSA. --for legal assistance, including Municipal court rules for returning a deceased spouse. 190 East 2nd St. return tax returns Devine Dault & Laster. 190 East 2nd St. 34834 collection Call 645-8011 late eavesdropping Office Address Monday through Friday 11:30 AM accept Master Capture NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS... CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 --for legal assistance, including Municipal court rules for returning a deceased spouse. 190 East 2nd St. return tax returns Devine Dault & Laster. 190 East 2nd St. 34834 collection Call 645-8011 late eavesdropping Office Address Monday through Friday 11:30 AM accept Master Capture EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 | call 612 7855. MATH 115-743 | call 608-121 | STATISTICS 7855. MATH 115-743 | call 608-121 | STATISTICS 7855. PHYSICS 104-803 | call 608-121 | ENGLISH and SPANISH 104-803 | call 608-121 SERVICES OFFERED PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Your Quick Copy Center Alice is available from A to 5 M on Monday to Friday, 9 AM on 1 PM on Tuesday to 88 M on Thursday. **IMPROVE YOUR GRADE!** Send $40 for your 30-course catalog of college教材, 10.20 books listed. BOX 2059G; Los Angeles CA. © 2012. (213) 827-4336. TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF Experienced typit- theses, dissertations, term 1. pass. 8 p.m. 842-210-398 2. Pass. 5 p.m. 842-210-398 I damned good typing Peggy. 842-1476 Why crusis about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty 842-6697 at 5:30 p.m. on weekends if wired. Miller High Life® GLOSSARY OF FOOTBALL TERMS Huddle Third down, three to go. Down and Out Post-Game Wrap-Up ©1979 Miller Brewing Co. Mineture, Wis. Miller High Life GLOSSARY OF FOOTBALL TERMS Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome; editing/layout, Call Joan 842-9127. TF Huddle 8 PACK 7 OZ BOTTLES Miller High Lite 8 PACK 7 OZ BOTTLES Miller High Lite Down and Out Miller Home Lager Home Lager One pair lissimus, tourn moor warmer. If found, please call 864-6859. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brazers rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward 864-6274 Milkey bring you a male genius. Must be pear- serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (no to speak). 811-8927. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll fix up you. 3-4 ouple in the office, day if. SERVICE Copier, in your portunity career. $100, dish. rent. living. are living. name. Keep up aid. Own Owe. 3-6 department. Call Ship. a room. mom. am. 3 bedroom. call star. 50 to 50. KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- Tuesday, March 4.1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't the best. The 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unfamiliar pace. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstick. There was no winner or winner's tie, but there were kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. 'I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said it was the end of the day. Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside.' The Jahayws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow University Daily Kansan KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine inning practice. The only problem was that they forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play three games today at 13:01, but weather might be a problem Temple work three pitchers for the scrimmage, cayton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillip worked three pitchers. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound, " Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was worthwhile. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-central field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual curb, and it was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching choices KU's always sparse roster is two. They're also pitches. Pitcher Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntish the flu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "McIntish might be able to go in nursing or in other Women drop in basketball poll Top Twenty women's college basketball teams in the United States, based on the number of 49 women's coaches. **2** Louisiana Tech (11) .36 **3** Oklahoma State (10) .36 **4** Louisiana Tech (11) .36 **5** Georgia Tech (10) .36 **6** Georgia Tech (10) .36 **7** North Carolina St .25 **8** Carolina St .25 **9** Louisville St .24 **10** Chevy Chase St .24 **11** Kansas St .18 **12** Kansas St .18 **13** San Francisco .18 **14** Miami .18 **15** San Francisco .18 **16** Miami .18 **17** Miami .18 **18** Miami .18 **19** Miami .18 **20** Miami .18 **21** Miami .18 **22** Miami .18 **23** Miami .18 **24** Miami .18 **25** Miami .18 **26** Miami .18 **27** Miami .18 **28** Miami .18 **29** Miami .18 **30** Miami .18 **31** Miami .18 **32** Miami .18 **33** Miami .18 **34** Miami .18 **35** Miami .18 **36** Miami .18 **37** Miami .18 **38** Miami .18 **39** Miami .18 **40** Miami .18 **41** Miami .18 **42** Miami .18 **43** Miami .18 **44** Miami .18 **45** Miami .18 **46** Miami .18 **47** Miami .18 **48** Miami .18 **49** Miami .18 **50** Miami .18 **51** Miami .18 **52** Miami .18 **53** Miami .18 **54** Miami .18 **55** Miami .18 **56** Miami .18 **57** Miami .18 **58** Miami .18 **59** Miami .18 **60** Miami .18 **61** Miami .18 **62** Miami .18 **63** Miami .18 **64** Miami .18 **65** Miami .18 **66** Miami .18 **67** Miami .18 **68** Miami .18 **69** Miami .18 **70** Miami .18 **71** Miami .18 **72** Miami .18 **73** Miami .18 **74** Miami .18 **75** Miami .18 **76** Miami .18 **77** Miami .18 **78** Miami .18 **79** Miami .18 **80** Miami .18 **81** Miami .18 **82** Miami .18 **83** Miami .18 **84** Miami .18 **85** Miami .18 **86** Miami .18 **87** Miami .18 **88** Miami .18 **89** Miami .18 **90** Miami .18 **91** Miami .18 **92** Miami .18 **93** Miami .18 **94** Miami .18 **95** Miami .18 **96** Miami .18 **97** Miami .18 **98** Miami .18 **99** Miami .18 **100** Miami .18 Names named on at least 10 ballots. Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UP1 Top Twenty The United Press International weekly, Board of Coachs top 26 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 12, in parentheses. 1. Delaware (30) ... 261 2. Louisiana State ... 245 3. Louisiana (1) ... 283 4. Louisiana (1) ... 283 5. Mississippi ... 261 6. Indiana ... 267 7. Maryland ... 261 8. Ohio State ... 267 9. Oregon State ... 268 10. Notre Dame ... 269 11. Notre Dame ... 269 12. Brigham Young ... 254 13. Miami ... 244 14. Missouri ... 235 15. North Carolina ... 254 16. India ... 248 17. Texas A&M ... 247 18. Arizona State ... 247 19. Alabama State ... 248 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4350 CLASSIFIED RATES one week two weeks three weeks four weeks five weeks six weeks seven weeks eight weeks ten weeks 15 weeks not longer than 12 weeks not longer than 12 weeks $2.23 $2.90 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 $6.00 $6.50 $7.00 $7.50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kanan 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 in person or simply by calling the Karenan business office at 843-588. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for fruit trunked at 9th and Illinois, 7th streets. The Woodville Street, the Holi- the Holi Street, the Wellington Fresh fruits prentice in the shell. Fifteen varieties of day fruit are available. See sorghum, every Sunday. Also selling woven purses. Every Sunday. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Nonexistent $11.99 Enjoy out with selection of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort Maintenance house Home painting on celestial Spring garden hues Hits and More at LILWINS WHERE CUSTOMERS ARE FORUMED massive change VISA LTWINS WATERFRONT ACADEMY Intensive Zen meditation retreat March-8, 10 853.742-9160 Dharmachaitra Teacher Bacharola Rhodus $35. 842-7016 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior honors is now accepting applications from qualified junior student students in the following areas: academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in person or by telephone during day, March 7 at 5:00 p.m. All apply at www.waterford.edu for an official transcript to 268 Strong Mount Blenk Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM prior Fraternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL, RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 684-358. K.U. Hillel presents Babbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union Join us for Lunch-Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Want to Buy - Motorycle 125-175 Endure. Please call 864-6022 By highest proclamation, the first is annual proclamation week for room 118. Strong-seal hazars. The Drafft: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday. March 8, 8 p.m., in Green Hall, Room 104 Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. Reenaal's Hotel, the Otalia of the Bible Bld. is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phones, for information, writer. Harper, Kansas 67058. 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. close to campus. Utilities paid. Quaint and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-5679 or 842-4185. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Priced at 843-9579 or 842-4185. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5000. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 844 8579. NASMISHH 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. Japhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bed room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-4444 or see 324 Fronter 路. Next door to Russell's East. If tr ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95. Ricks Bike Shoes 103. Vermont. 841-6842. Antiques are always in use, and buy one you like. We sell a large selection of 7, 8 and 9th Saturday to 10, 9th Sunday. The Library of Lawton, the at National Guard Armory, and the State Capitol with this kit. Good all three days. Refreshments with this kit. 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 845-7310. 3-4 ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower Housetwo - a 30 member student co-operative within walking distance of the KU campus and waltzing distance. For more information, even if 842-9421 Need to bushcase 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Pully comfortable cable TV. New stove and refrigerator. Cabinet, closet and stove room. $20. Call 841-0019. **3-1** $20. Call 841-0019. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building. 322; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to 890 sq. ft. Contact 843-2044 or 843-0777. tt t 2 bedroom western room or 843-0777. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING 2 bedroom apartment, Modern, shag, bus route, Gas and electric. Save $158.00. 841.316. 3rd. 72 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 1.600 $HP 941-8154 3-5 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. 3-5 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this super 2 year old house building, 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, recreation, fitness center, laundry. Prices: pet references, 842-0221. 3-19 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 89 Oldids Dil. 82, Clean good condition, excellent meet mechs 8055-8447-6122 for 9 a.m. 3 a.m. 12:22 1722 Celanine ST, 25 mm-W-AC Overhaul, new sprindleable Must sell Mail. Mike 8424-2326 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. U Western Civilization Notes. Now on Salem! Make use of the notes and study guide to use them-1). As study guide. 2). For class preparation. For exam preparation. New York City. For class preparation. At town Center. Mall Bookstore and Ord Book Store. Alternator, starter and generator specialties ATV, TWIN POWER; NISSAN MOTIVE, BAIKO; BAIKO BAIKO BAIKO; BAIKO BAIKO; BAIKO BAIKO; 843-796-2000, 300 W, 8th. #t www.baikobei.com FOR SALE Sublease 2 HR apt. w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available Aerial. For more information call Terri. 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-7- Must-submit:-2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Lodge size 8 lily styled brown leather boots, $250 or call Call 614-2750 - 250 Bosquali Sport shoes $120, $19 WO $25 waler shoes 9.11 oak pew $120, $82-822 or $250 or call Call 614-2750 - 250 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $159.0m. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496 3-7 Cable-Nileison Grand Plane, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric KRH tsr T5R 1 Speakers, still warranted, dark-grained Guitar, Walden BD & Desk-842-4700 842-4700 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent. 3-4 mile range. 841-5854 call anytime. SunSports=Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- SunSports=non-sunglasses, reasoned, reasoned. 1021. Mason 841-7570. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $550. Call 841-6072 after 6:00 p.m. Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a '1n- 2000 AMP. Good condition plays like new. Cs- 43-6272. WATERBED MATTRESSSES, $36.98, 3 year quarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1968. Cabin fever? Try a T-90 Cushion, AMF black top interior, IP-BP, pir, air. AMF FM casette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-5133 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. Be sure to check on prices. Ledom's Furniture. 1209 New St. York 843-3228. Jenson 350 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ freeway controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 1978 Trane-Am special edition gold; 24,400 cars. Trane-am no, wrecks; 40w /4 carbic cars. T-top. Power everything. Cali 611-7517 or 623-8252. Top for Martius. Serious only. 4-3. NOTICE Lost. Keys with a piece of leather and Dw stamped on it, $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! FOUND On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains offers children hands-on work with children in a camp setting. Backpacking, homebike riding, wildlife追踪, outdoor archery and horseback riding. Garden internships on Western Campus, Flatirons garden internships on Western Campus, Flatirons garden internships on Western Campus. To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Fold House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DALI 841-5257. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING when women cross dress because their heterosexuality does not matter? Do men marry and have children. A minority of gay men wear women's clothing as an act of protest against the traditional women's role in society or to parody the traditional women's role in society. In this question why women wear women's clothing, do women ask them? The answer is that women wear an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION IS SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANAR --scrawled in red paint and hang above the entrance, reads. "Oklahoma Gymnastics." It is a good thing the sign is there for no one would dream in the home of a gymnastics team that has won the national championship NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 TO STUDENTS in a job as a pathologist prove of 3 years of study your opioid use kent equiv Mass. St. Part-time: Apply in apply in Junior Summer June 20 keep an eye on keeping cabins August apply in apply in forces forcensory disabilities Midwest when you are on home tour online high 舞蹈 houses scavenger scavenger $130 thru 169p 169p Summer June 1-19 July 1-19 1923-287p Now taken W. T. the If you own a car Bureau of student per hour times travel an airline or skills or work with young Gypsy Tyship environment CHURSE career CHURSE CHURSE FINDIN seconda recruitment $35 90 H. No d. job in job --scrawled in red paint and hang above the entrance, reads. "Oklahoma Gymnastics." It is a good thing the sign is there for no one would dream in the home of a gymnastics team that has won the national championship SERVICES OFFERED **EXPERT TUTORING:** MATH 600-102 call 847-5785. MATH 1150-742 call 847-5785. STATISTICS MATH 1150-742 call 847-5785. STATISTICS MATH 1150-742 call 847-5785. PHYSICS MATH 100-540 call 847-5785. ENGLISH AND SPANISH MATH 847-707. For legal assistance, including Municipal court for tax return complaints or divorce cases, 107 East 2nd St, return tax claims consult Dell & Lauter, 107 East 2nd St, 3543 collection call 841-6241 late e-mails. Office: 3543 collection Monday through Friday at receive Master Credit Monday through Friday at 3543 collection Monday through Friday PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ours Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 M on Friday to May. 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday to 88 Mon. IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 30-age catalog of collectible books; 10,202 tonies listed. BOX 25097G; Los Angeles, CA. 90025 (213) 477-8382. You don't have to walk alone on campus at TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF Why cuss about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf Watsonville, Afternoon, May 16. Mike, lye up. Identity identity floor of room 1 New blue shirt Cellulose 484-1232 Black cat in clothing Found a child 573-1230 found *small-email work 942-1238 PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF Experienced typist–tushes, dissertations, term- ing assignments, corrective selective barring After 5 p.m. 842-2109 --- Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Ela. Quality *wow* reasonable rates. These, dissertations welcome. editing/layout. Call Joan 812-9127. T? MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate. AME STRIVING FOR PERFECTION Lost: a. d 0. 6. Four years after Bart Conner came to Oklahoma, the Sooners have two NCAA gymnastics titles and one Olympic contender. PHOTOS COURTESY THE NORMAN TRANSCRIPT One pair twin ear monitors, tourn mor noose. If found, please call 864-6859. 2-7 Lost-set of keys on brace rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward 824-4274. 2-7 BY DAVID DONCHIN EDITORS NOTE: A decision about U.S. participation in the Olympic Games was still being made as this issue went to press. But Conner and other college athletes had him continued to train. UCKED away on the south campus of the University of Oklahoma in Norman stands an old, unmowed grass. The glass front door was broken out long by vandals. Scrap metal and old pipes lie just inside to the left, and a wooden crib lying to the weatherworn buildings as built as a theater for a Navy base in World War II, two toweres in the dungeon of the hangarlike structure outside the official says is about to fall. A handpainted sign outside. nine-thirty-seven getting male gender. Must be穿上 Serious Inquiries only. All in hold strict confidence (no to speak). 61-8972. Ask for one of Lacee's rooms and will fit you up. 3-4 runner-up once in the last three years. Nor would the dream that America had been rapidly becoming recognized as the United States' best gymnasium be broken? A bright, easygoing 21-year-old from Morton Grove, Illinois. Conner is engaged in a struggle for national league rights and for national position in her merior Indiana State star Kurt Thomas. It all came to a climax when he earned a edge out Thomas for the top spot in U.S. World Gymnastics team. The victory came after Thomas predicts that he will win the Sports Festival "hands down." Conner's teams typed the words "hands down" 200 times and "hands down" in his room before the meet. Conner has mixed opinions on the rivalry, between himself and Jake. He likes gymnastics, but it gets hard after he, while she's "left Think Kira at a table." Conner feels comfortable for gymnastics. But I honestly think I'm a better gymnast than he. SPORTS BULLETIN 17 "He does all of the talk show The Tommy Show, then he has to do much Shore. Mr Griffin and all of the other guys start you start spending too much time treating if nuclear bomb if electric battery if thems Correct if formate call 3-7 bliver & if --- couple of weeks in easy day. SERVICE Center, center, portunity live. need, $150, dish, rent. live, age. Non- Kleep, 3- aid. own, 3-6 partment. all rooms. a mansion, am. 3- am. 6 3-bedroom Calif. after 9:50 a.m. KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TWINS TO SOLD US FT. es 25 06 Tuesday. March 4. 1980 University Daily Kansan 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't the same. but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got to an unusual level. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstick. There was no winner or loser, but the team was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "1 called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and arm him if he needed to come over for drillsman Floyd Tate. Then he told the coach the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. The team's first base hit was a three-run. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 1:30, but weather might be a problem Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clayton Flemmie, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well, I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was worthwhile. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual curse, but it's pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jahyawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mütch Lubin would share the pitching choices. KU's already sparse roster is two players from each team. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. *McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection*, Temple said. *McIntosh might be able to go in naming or* *doing something.* Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women's college basketball teams as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Invitational. quad and based on the ballots of 49 women’s coaches. 2. Louisiana Tech (11) - 36 3. Tennessee - 38 4. Texas - 35 5. Stephen F. Austin - 38 6. Eastern - 25 7. South Carolina - 24 8. Carolina - 34 9. Long Beach State - 35 10. Chicago - 24 11. Kentucky - 24 12. Kansas State - 24 13. North Carolina - 24 14. San Francisco - 24 15. Arizona - 24 16. Camron - 24 17. Northwestern - 24 18. Nevada - Las Vegas - 27 19. Missouri - 24 20. Oregon - 23 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St., Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UPI Top Twenty The United Press International weekly Board of Coaches top 30 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March2, in parentheses. 1. Defail (30) ... 26 2. Louisiana State ... 34 3. Kentucky ... 38 4. Louisville (1) ... 38 5. Oregon State ... 38 6. Syracuse ... 38 7. Indiana ... 35 8. Maryland ... 38 9. Ohio State ... 38 10. Georgia ... 34 11. Notre Dame ... 252 12. Florida ... 244 13. Johnston (N. V.) ... 144 14. Missouri ... 244 15. North Carolina ... 252 16. Duke ... 244 17. Texas A&M ... 247 18. Arizona State ... 247 19. James Madison ... 247 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer. Earb additional word. time two two three four five six seven eight nine ten ten ten AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 9 p.m. Tuesday Friday 9 p.m. Wednesday Monday 9 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 9 p.m. Friday Monday The Kanan 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. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in markets or homes located in the city area with ADR#9436. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Waters for trak parked at 9th and Illinois, and then to the West for the Walt Disney & The Hollywood-Wall. Sell fresh fruits in prankery in the shell. Pitilion varieties of dry fruit are available. Sunday also selling wood. Herb Arbor Sundays. Sunday also selling wood. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Enjoy our wide selection of colorful spring pants. Extra comfort Many options in jersey Three options our colorful spring pants. Hiv and more at LUTWINS "WHERE CLOTHES ARE FOREVER" MAGNA CARD VALUE BREAKAWAY VISA LITWINS Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10 Led by Maitre Dharma Teacher Rhodes $15. 822-7010 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blu Snow Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3400. 3-18 This senior hospital is now accepting app- lications for qualified junior students. This honorary research area, academic excellence, and campus research skills are required. 26 Strong. The application deadline is Friday Mason 7 March at 5:00 a.m. Return all application with an official transcript to 26 Strong. DAYLAND HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM --outside of the gym, and I can't do that. I've stayed away from the limelight. I do less talk show. But that puts a lot of pressure on me there is on him, because he is in the gym. Being America's premier gymnasium Inter Preference Council will sponsor **SLOW- FORMAL RUSH** Mar 21, 21 & 23 for *LAW- fellow* campus students. Contact IFC Office at 864-3559 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 864-6123. By high-quality proclamation, this is the first annual hybrid presentation for room 118 Strong servic- ing. The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday. March 8, 4 p.m., in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurton and Ron Kubi. 3-4 Rosalie's Hotel, the Ormes of the Bible Bill is for persecutive individuals and free spirits. No sheen; for information, write; Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utili- t paid. Quaint and comfortable. Reasonably pric e. Call 813-9573 or 842-4185. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Cull 843-7350. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bedroom househouse A C D WB Appliances cable 1 box from the Union Call 854-703-6000 NASMIST HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Jayhawk West Apts. New Benting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished for $185. For appointment call 642-4444 or see at 242 Floor Next, Door next to Russell's East. **tf** A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 842-9579. tf Antiques are always in, see and buy one you like. The Museum is open 7 and 9 and Friday-Saturday to 8 and 9 Sunday. Visit the Lawn School of Lawyers, the AT National Guard Armory and the Army Museum with this aid. Good all three days. Refreshments with this aid. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 921%; Mairl. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Infer and upper or lower rooms 728 sq. ft. or 830 sq. ft. Contact 843-2044 or 843-0777. 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 842-7310 3-4 2 bdroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00胃-841-3168 3-4 ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, even if 842-9421. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Ricks Bike Shop. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. ftl Professor leasing house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this amber 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studyrooms, recreation room. Bachelor's or equiv. reference, pk, reference, needed. #84-0221 3-19 Rooms with private kitchen. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. tt Sublease 2 BH app. w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 811-5699. 3-7 These all new and contemporary townhouses are 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Starting at 1200 sq ft, the home includes a bath, garbage with permit study roof, a bath, garage with permit study roof, a balcony, private entrance, private parking, private entrance, private parking, private entrance, private parking, private entrance Need to suburban 2 bedroom apartment. Complete furnished, Off street parking. Full carry on linen. New and refinished Furniture, Water pump, and stove gas on gas. Call 891-841-0918. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and covered with carpet to come to campus, on bus route, 825-441-6461 or 841-301-208 FOR SALE 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials. AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make use of these materials to help you use them 1. As study guide. 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. *New York State History*. Available at Town Crit, Mala Booksure and Oread Book Store. Must submit—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 72 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 81,000 PHI 841-8154 3-5 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-7 90 Oldies D8.4 Delight, good condition, excelent repair. menns 5858, 8644-0272 for 9 a.m. at 9:21. 9212 Celestin ST, 35 mg-W AO, Overchurch A Mold Must sell. Call Mike. 843-316 after 2 p.m. Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. on 98th St. & bus. route. #482-28-75, 843-049-66 482-28-75 Alternator, starter and generator specialists. BASIC ELECTRIC, 843-909-3200, 3200 w. e.h. th. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-909-3200, 3200 w. e.h. th. Cable-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wiltshire Electric Piano. 10 yrs TST 4 Speakers, still warranted, dark-canvas guitar. Waltshire Bed & Drum. 824-4270 WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98, 3 year guardant WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386 SunSpecies=Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-* *species*, reasoned, seasonal, reasoned, 1021 Masa. 841-770. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $55 or best price. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 Keywood DC Stero Integrated amplifier, model KEW108. Professional equipment. Excel condition. 841-3644 call anytime. 3-Must air! Electric Equipments Cabin feather? Try a T-Top Cullin, Carriage black top/interior. PS-MP, air cruise. AM/FM cassette, high PSB. Might be beautiful road car. Craig 842-531-531. Rosignol Salomon skis $120, 69 VW $250, roller skis 9 11; oak pew $100, 842-6422 or 812-6900. 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold 22,400 carb. New carpet, no wrecks, 40 w/4 carpel carb. T- top. Power everything. Call 841-7812 or 842- A57. Ask for Mait Serious injuries. 3-4 Must suit well-Electric Epiphone guitar and a '1 in- strument. Good condition plays like new. A83-672E. A83-672F. WHITE LIGHT, 740 sq. ft. TP New elegant quality bedding—orthographic sacks are sure to check on prices. Loden's Furniture, 1 New York St., 382-3228. 12 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6:00 p.m. 3-7 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dex- stamped on tip. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- quency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartment with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 42mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-5725-3-7 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains working with children in a camp setting Backpacking riding trails, wilderness training, outdoor education, Western Northwestern Camps, Flood Camp, Colorado 80146, Colorado 80146. --outside of the gym, and I can't do that. I've stayed away from the limelight. I do less talk show. But that puts a lot of pressure on me there is on him, because he is in the gym. Being America's premier gymnasium NEED CASH Q. WHY DO MEN WEAR WOMEN'S CLOTHING? The most active sexual activities are more enjoyable when wearing clothes that are more comfortable, married and have children. A majority of gay men sometimes wear women's clothing as an aesthetic choice or to paddle the traditional woman's role in society. The question is how does question why women wear men's clothing. A survey by the National Center for question why women wear men's clothing. An article of women's clothing. THE INNOVATION SPOONED BY GAY SERVICES OF KANASI FOUND Midwester Midwestern dates shoot senior big dance. be Summer's girls only. girls only. $510 thouhss $16,000 196P, Coup Now taking tasks. Must W. 7th aft W. if you need hrs week H821 1821 FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of college reportage. 10,200 tonics listed. BOOK 52097, Los Angeles, CA. 90025, (213) 477-8226. Summer 1 Director. C 1-July 19 $5401_{2}$ Stat 913; 287-823 Bureau of position avail per hour a sales and travel and skills essay skills essay Bureau of position avail worth 864 GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . For help assistance, including Municipal court work or legal advice, call 212-836-7450. East 19th St return tax returns consult Dave & Lester. 190 East St. 3234 collage 1 Call 844-5011 late eaves. Office 3234 collage Monday through Friday 10am except Master Charge 8AM CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 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 at 88 Mile TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TJ SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 call 84-5785. MATH 115-701 call 84-5785. STATISTICS (survies) call 84-5980. CS 100-400 call 84-5980. ENGLISH (survies) call 84-5980. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 84-7507 FINDING. secondary, recreational, recruiting, daissers. r order. To 80421 Need some time on anything p Wristwat- m, Minek i_identify 2 week floor of 1 Navy Call 864 Blinkc Call 864 Found a 753-7520 found 753-7520 work 842 Why cuss about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf TO STU as as 11 as as 11 prove of your opti kcept kcept Mass Msl. Part-time D2d Sr. Summer keeping 1 keeping 1 die Augu cabling cabl apply applies present de PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TI --- Experienced tyst-butes, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correcting selecrite. Barb After 5 p.m. 842-2310. tt Typist/Editor, IBM Pica Elica. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome. --- "I knew if I wanted to be the gymnast I wanted to be, I should come here with Mr. Ziert. There is one thing different about him—he cares." But when it all said and done, But when respects Thomas as gymnast he respects him as good for the sport. And that kind of "caring" sums up Conner per se. “It’s hard sometimes,” Conner said, “because we are both friends in the same time. One week we're competing against each other, and the next week A graduate of Niles West High School, Conner performed in the 1976 foot in a college classroom. Because of his international experience, he began an established gymnastics program like Nebraska State University. But Brush-braced university-building bracled university with a shabby building to practice in and a coach. Lost: A ba a'd O-Zor 6. That action is perhaps the best insight into Bart Conner's nature. He is a throwback to the athlete of yesterday. Conner is loyal to his coach, teammates, and friends—intensely dedicated to his sport. Conner's importance to Oklahoma gymnastics is hardly underestimated. Since his arrival, the Sooners have won two national championships and finished no worse than second in the nation. Conner received little attention from fans at the National Sports Festival, but mer, however. After winning his gold medal, the usually relaxed Conner reacted with some harsh words: "They know who Billy Sims is, but they never heard of Bart Sullivan," a comment. You're so small." "He's always the first one in the gym and the last one out," says Adam, a good leader he is just because he is a very good athlete. He's not a leader by the cheerleading role—like his coach, but he leads by example. At 56%, he may well be the smallest athlete in Oklahoma. But since he began to gymnastics, he has been a giant in the appl 18 SPORTS BULLETIN "I didn't really mean for that to 1986 The image provided is too blurry and lacks any discernible text or markings. It appears to be a blank space or an illegible area with no visible content. Therefore, no further details can be derived from this image. A 1976 Olympian, Conner is in a constant battle with Kurt Thomas for recognition as America's best evmass. One pair's If found, print call 964-0659 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward 824-4274 3-7 T come out the way it did." Cornen said, "Now, every one in a awake, in camp and up to me on campus and say, 'Hey, we know about it. We know who you are.' That makes me feel kind of funny, but that makes us more than before I ever said anything." Incedent that such a lack of fame exists, the small Oklahoma town of Pauls Valley adopted his son, "original" parents Harold and Jackie—even flew in for the weekend. City and university officials, including University of Oklahoma president William S. participated in a series of daylight sports to make the adoption official. Briefly stated, Cameron has become a gymnast idol. And an important person in his climb to the top has been his coach. Conner even has a fan club- at Las Palmas Junior High in Covina Valley, California—and demands that he be flared exerted Oklahoma's supply. "I knew if I wanted to be the gymnasium I wanted to be, I should come here with Mr. Ziett." Conner says. "There is one different thing in the gymnasium that is what that a coach recruits you and says well we be national champions. Mr. Ziett comes here and will make you the best gymnasium you can possibly be. And we win a national championship. "Sometimes you get going and get afraid of doing a trick, he scared me." The more scared of yelling at me than I am of doing the trick and being scared. "Bart's no different than anyone Both Ziert and Conner agree that Conner's biggest advantage is that he started at age 1. He dabbled in football, skating, and gymnastics until he got to high school, then he had to make a choice. "As far as natural talent, there are three other guys in there—Mike Wilson, Peter Stout, and Ben Wilson with more natural ability. But Batman has a lot of hard work, to get to the point he has reached. He knew—and knows—that he has to work harder to stay on top. My role is just to see that he continues to grow and help him add new tricks," else," Ziert say in a pleasant, cheerful mood and afraid of doing some of the tricks. The danger level today with the stunts they are doing is astonishing. "My parents encouraged us to try all sports," Conner says. "They were very important to us when we started. They would plan their schedules and tour ours so that we could make practices. My mom would sometimes drive for an hour to get me to practice, and it was the car for two hours until it was over." Conner was the result of those Success was the result of those two-to-three-hour daily practices. There were no off-seasons, and still there aren't. He begins each day at 8 a.m. runs a half mile, and then exercises. he goes for a two-hour days or Thursday, so there is plenty of time for gymnastics. On Tuesday he goes to the at 2-20 in the afternoon, he heads for the gym and stays there until 6 But the sacrifices—and there have been plenty of them—have been worth it. "I can honestly say I miss nothing. It really bugs me to hear you speak, and gold medal at the Olympics is the greatest thrill of my life , . . . but I had to pay so much for it. I had to pay up so much of my social life." **Gymnastics is my major converse.** Conner says emphatically, "I'll choose between doing two things. I'll pick the thing that will make my life easier." "Let's face it, he's adds. "This is the year you place all the marbles in the bag . . . this is where it is all at. If you're going to make it in our house we've got to do travel. If not, you have to wait four more years." st. accused Call ff ___ recting ff s. misc. lion cont ff David Donchin is a student at the University of Oklahoma. Blue-eyed, easy-eating male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (no to speak). 811-8927. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll buy up 3-4. --- US FT. couple of ships to hei- day if Hospital, Hospital, 292-518-0000 portability $100, fer. 1-4 life 1-13 Dining King, King, 1-7 Own 90s 6-4 portrait All Steve 3-5 bike month & month 1-4 tam. 3-5 b-bedroom Call after 9:50. 二 KARSAH CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Tuesday, March 4, 1980 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud 9 By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't the same but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an alarming start. University Daily Kansan Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstick. There was no winner or loser, but no score was kept. In fact, there were never any blazes. '1 called Coach (Koeh) Hackett about 2 o'clock and they were very happy. They floated Flood Temple, KU coach), said. 'We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside.' The Jahayws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow -KANSAN- Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runs were allowed during the nine inning. The team's starting pitchers had forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 1:30, but weather might be a problem Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Custon Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillip worked three pitchers. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was important to keep it up. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left- center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- tacle that we really realise as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching choices. KU's always sparse roster is two players and pitcher. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go in mining or Women drop in basketball poll Top Twenty Women's college basketball teams - Loyola University Chicago (24) - Louisiana Tech (18) - Texas A&M (17) - Georgetown (16) - Kentucky (15) - North Carolina (15) - Carolina St. (15) - Long Beach St. (14) - Chattanooga (14) - Kansas St. (14) - Kansas St. (14) - San Francisco (14) - Kansas (14) - Northwest (14) - New York Las Vegas (14) - Central Missouri St. (14) - Wichita (14) Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically. Jackson St., Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International weekly Board of Caches top 20 college basketball games with first-place place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in parthenies. UPI Top Twenty 1. Defini (30) ... 26.14 2. Louisiana State ... 26.14 3. Louisiana (1) ... 28.53 4. Louisiana (1) ... 28.53 5. Oregon State ... 28.53 6. Stony Brook ... 28.53 7. Indiana ... 28.53 8. Maryland ... 29.07 9. Ohio State ... 30.61 10. Georgia State ... 30.61 11. Notre Dame ... 25.94 12. Brigham Young ... 25.94 13. Nebraska ... 24.44 14. Missouri ... 21.24 15. North Carolina ... 21.24 16. Duke ... 25.84 17. North Carolina ... 25.84 18. Texas A&M ... 26.14 19. Arizona State ... 26.14 20. Arkansas State ... 26.14 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4350 CLASSIFIED RATES one ten one three four five six seven eight nine十 ten (Diners or flowers) $1.23 $2.30 $3.40 $4.50 $5.60 $6.70 $7.80 $8.90 Folks' favors $1.23 $2.30 $3.40 $4.50 $5.60 $6.70 $7.80 $8.90 AD DEADLINES ERRORS 1 for run Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. The Kanaan 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 if charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in numerous areas, but cannot be the main business offer at A&M. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for fruit treated at 9th and 11th floors of the building. See **The Hollow-Wall**; Sliced fresh fruits peanuts in the shell. Elevator varieties of dry fruit are on the second floor and turtle house. Also seeing wood fire Sunday. Also seeing wood fire Sunday. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS New only $1,199 Ergonomic white selection on colorful baking pants. Great comfort Many years' experience after applying colorful baking panties. Three more at LITWINS WHERE COLOUR ARE FORTUNE master change VISA Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Bharat Dharmas Teacher Barbara Rhode 825. 842-7010 825. 842-7010 LITWINS OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior hourman is now accepting applications from qualified junior student applicants in areas of academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in person at the Student Union, day. March 7 at 10:00 a.m. *Return all applications with an official transcript to 268 Mid Bleu Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 3-18 - 1460. DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --blue-eyed, easy-saying main genius. Must be patient. Serious insultions only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). 841-8723. Ask for one of Lane's rooms and will fit you up. 3-4 Inter Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Law-enforce campus students. Contact IFC Office at 864-3598. K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy- Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 864-6125 3-6 By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secretaries. 3-7 The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 PM, in Green Hall, Room 104. Pamel Include Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 Bronas's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible B-1 is for purposeful individuals and free spirits. No obeber, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 4-4 FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to the mansion. Please contact Lea. Reasonably priced. Call 843-5979 or 842-4185. 小效率智能化 apt. Close to campus. Utilities Call 843-7591 or 842-1835. reasonably pricey Call 843-7591 or 842-1835. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-500. TF New 2 bedroom hotelhouse A C D WB Appliances cable 1 bush from the Union Call 8567 415-723-0000 NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8559 any time of the day. Jayhawk West Apts. Now Resting: 1 & 2 Bathroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment at 842-4444 or see at 524 Fronter Road. Next door to Rustell's East. if A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. If Antiques are always in see and buy one you like. We have 7 and 8th Saturday Friday at 10 a.m. on 9th Sunday at 10 a.m. on 11th Sunday at 10 a.m. at Lafayette College, the AT National Guard Arm Arm A, with this aid. Good all three days Refreshment with this aid. ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, event numbers 842-9421. ROLLER SKATES Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Ricks Bike Shop. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. tflr Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 923*M²; Salary. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upd and or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 8324-0124 or 8345-0777. 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 843-7310. 3-4 Need to sublease 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished, OFF-street parking. Fully carved cable TV, AC New store and refrigerator. Wet room, bath and stove room. 3-1/2 Bq. Call 801-641-911 2 bbdroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00 us. 841-3168. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualifed transits to rent this upright 4 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms, 2 studyrooms, recreation, laundry, pet supplies. 4 bedrooms, pet references, bedding. #822-0221. 3-19 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make these lists to help you use the materials to use them. As study guide, 24 For use preparation. 21 For exam preparation. New textbook. 20 For exam preparation. New textbook at Town Crier, Mall Booksstore and Gread Book. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. tf 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-6566 after 6. 90 Olds Dallas BC. clean, good condition, excellent care. mechs. 8085. 844-6072 for 9 a.m. 9721 College TN. 25 mg. W-AC Overwhelmed, new equipment Must sell. Mail. Call. Mike. 643-2522 after 2 p.m. Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable TV hookup included in rent. Next to stadium 841-4250. 3-7 Alternator, starter and generator specialist ATV MOTIVE. 842-690-3600. 3900 W. 60 h. U MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 842-690-3600. 3900 W. 60 h. U FOR SALE 72 Dodge Challenger-318 2 BbL, AT, PS, AC- $1,000 KPH 841-8154 3-5 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $150/mon on 9th St. & bus route 422-2800 or 843-0496 3-7 Kennwood, DC Starte Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-5954 call anytime. 3-1 Subsite 2 DR ap. option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus Term; 841-7276 or 841-7474 more information Term; 841-7276 or 841-7474 SunSpectr~Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-perscription collections are collection reasona~1021 1021 Mesh 84-737-579 WATERED MATTRESSES $36.98, 3 year guard WITHOUT WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386 TPC Cabin fever? Try A Tux-Cap Black, red with black top interior, PS/PE, air, cruise. AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-531-3 Mutt mwt-Electric Epiphone guitar and a 'j-in' Mutt MPO. Good condition plays like new. C 843-6273 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $250 Call #411-6072 after 6 p.m. 3-7 Cabell-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tuxedo & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Piano. 10 yrs. TSU 4 Speakers, all warranty. 842-4270 Guitar, Wurlitzer BD & 3-7. 842-4270 Ladies size 8 bearly slim leather brown boots 40% off $299.00 or best offer Call Denise 811-7250 - 604 Resilient Shoe kitles $150, $19 WV $23 waler shoes 9 11; oak pew $109, $142-$422 Sale 10% off $100 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat- furniture - Beverly Hills, Leland, Leflorin Furniture. 1209 New York St. 84-223-7680. Sotheby's. 1978 Tranm am special edition gold, 24,200 units. New carpets, no wrecks, 40w/4 carbine carb. T-ip. Power, Everycall. Call 841-7812 or 872- 657. Ask for: Serious injuries. only 3-4 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D™ stamped on it. $2 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 500 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- ouney controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or furnished. FOUND Jayhawk Tower Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Rockies. Learn about working with children in a top grop backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife, ecology, and environmental education. Grip interest extends to Western Campions, Forks Valley golf, and more. To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 42mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I HEAR TO READY 841-752-37-3 --blue-eyed, easy-saying main genius. Must be patient. Serious insultions only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). 841-8723. Ask for one of Lane's rooms and will fit you up. 3-4 Q. WHY DO MEN WORK WEDNES' CLOTHING? The women we wear are more enjoyable while wearing sexual attire, and more enjoyable while transvestees are married and have children women's clothing as an assumption; sometimes women's clothing as an assumption; or to parody the traditional women's role in domestic life. For example, dom question why women wear men's clothing, an article of clothing are abused when IN MAN SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICES OF RANKAN NEED CASH Need some ground anything Wristwatert attention. Nice, key- identify. 2 weeks to finish. 1. navy bi- Celli Celli 644- Black cat or or 86 753 - 753 90 Found-acr work 882- FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 --- --blue-eyed, easy-saying main genius. Must be patient. Serious insultions only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). 841-8723. Ask for one of Lane's rooms and will fit you up. 3-4 SERVICES OFFERED IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $10 for your 308-page catalog of colleague materials. 10,250 tones listed. BOX 52097; Los Angeles, CA, 90252) (213) 477-8228. tf For legal assistance, including Municipal court for tax return consultation and East 10th East tax returns consult Dwall & Laster, East 2nd East 2nd, and East 10th East, 3824 collect call 845-6151 late eavesdropping. Office (845) 6151-2747 through Friday through 3/17. Accept Master Credit EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102 -call 8758. MATH: 115-739 -call 8048. STATISTICS (all courses) call 843-9080. CIS: 106-640 -call 843- 9080. STATISTICS (all courses) call 843-9080. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 843-7057. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 M Pond Monday to F, 9 am on 1 PM on Tuesday at 88 MU - TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980 TF I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF AWE Lost A B a d O-Ze g Why cus about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammar. 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers, mine, IBM correcting selectic. Barb After 5 p.m. 842-2310. Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work reassesses rate. Threes, dissertations welcome. STRIVING FOR PERFECTION Four years after Bart Conner came to Oklahoma, the Sooners have two NCAA gymnastics titles and one Olympic contender. PHOTOS COURTESY THE NORMAN TRANSCRIPT BY DAVID DONCHIN EDITOR'S NOTE: A decision about U.S. participation in the Olympic Games was still being made as this issue went to press. The team had recruited a coach and other college athletes that him continued to train. UCKED away on the south campus of the University of Oklahoma in Norman stands an unmoved grass. The glass in the front door was broken out long ago by vandals. Scrap metal and old pipes lie just inside the left, where the rainwater collects the weatherwood wood. It was built as a theatre for a Navy base in World War II, two towers in the middle of the hulllike structure of the aircraft officials say is about to fall. A handpainted sign outside. One pair! If found, please call 864-6859 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain Says available. Reward 864-6274 Say A manuphemed scrawled in red paint and hangings above the entrance, "Oklahoma Gymnastics." ItUsage of thing the sign is there, for no one would dream this is the home of Oklahoma team that has won the national championship twice and finished as a champion. Nor would they dream that it is the home of the person who is rapidly becoming recognized as the United States' best gymnast Barbara A bright, caying 21-year-old from Morton Grove, Illinois, Conner has been engaged in a struggle over the Indian State star Kurt Thomas. It all came to a climax early last fall when Conner edged Indiana's top scorer, U.S. World Gymnastics team. The victory came after Thomas predicted he would win the National Title. But Conner's teammate typed the words "hands down" 200 times and hid them everywhere in his roost. Conner has mixed opinions on the rivalry between himself and his gymnastics, but it gets hard after he whiles he says "I think Kurt was a bit better than him" for gymnastics. But I honestly think I'm a better gymnast than he "He does all of the talk shows." The 'Tonight Show', then he has to talk about the sexiest part of all of the others. Then pretty, soon you start spending too much time SPORTS BULLETIN 17 acui- Calif. ecting if mise- g co- lecting if electric, ever- heses wrecks if forms, Call 3 er & 3-6 --- KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURKS TO SOLD lifey of life of inherited property $100,000 housing vital Non- home own nest mother women grand of father of sister brother daughter Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KENDAVIS Snorts Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't too harsh. The 980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unofficial start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstret. There was no winner or loser, and the game was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "1 called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said, 'We're going to Floyd Temple, KU coach,' said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in double-heater Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 13:00, but weather might be a problem Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, scripture files. Pieces were卸入 to IKubernetes annotations. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Cayton Stefan, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been in the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was worth putting it on. University Daily Kansan Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine-hit game but it just was under some unusual circumstances. But it is pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share players short of UUs already sparse roster is two players short of Pitcher Pitchs Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McInchot has the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "McInchot might be able to go an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams from 2015-16. (Courtesy Greenwood of the Philadelphia quarter and based on the ballots of the women's coaches) 2. Louisiana Tech (1) 36-2 3. Texas 36-2 4. Texas 36-2 5. Morgan State F Austin 25-3 6. Ridgeway 25-3 7. South Carolina St 25-3 8. N Carolina St. 25-3 9. Chester St 25-3 10. Kentucky St 24-3 11. Kentucky St 24-3 12. Pennsylvania 24-3 13. San Francisco 28-7 14. KANSAS 28-7 15. Northwestern 21-4 16. Cleveland Las Vegas 21-4 17. Central Missouri St 20-7 18. Denver 20-7 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, Oregon, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Technology. UPI Top Twenty The United Press International weekly of Board of Cupset top 16 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 3, in parentheses. 1. Defal 36) ...26.14 2. Kentucky State ...26.14 3. Kentucky (1) ...28.34 4. Lehigh Valley (1) ...28.34 5. Oregon State ...28.34 6. Syracuse ...26.24 7. Indiana ...26.24 8. Maryland ...26.24 9. Ohio State ...26.14 10. Georgia State ...26.14 11. Notre Dame ...25.24 12. Brigham Young ...25.44 13. Minnesota YMU ...25.44 14. Miami U ...22.54 15. West Carolina ...22.54 16. Duke ...24.24 17. Wake Forest ...24.24 18. Texas A&M ...21.44 19. Arizona State ...21.44 20. Kansas State ...21.44 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one time one two three four five six seven eight nine ten less tha AD DEADLINES ERRORS Brun Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 3 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. Western Springs The Kanana 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 Foid items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in newsroom or simply by calling the Kaiser Business office at 864.354. KANSAN BUSINESS GFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4258 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for traps marked at 9th and Illinois. Cook salmon in a skillet or pan, then add The Hole in the Wall*. Sell fresh fruits peaches in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry peaches are available. Also sell watermelon and sunrush. Every Sunday. Also sell woody vegetables. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS now only $119.99 For our exclusive selection of colorful spring pant, Great comfort. Maintenance free. Also enjoy our colorful spring print shirts. Liberty & New York. LUWINS "THE LOUISIANA ARE PORTABLE" VMR VISA LITWINS WHERE COLOUR IS EVERYTHING LITWINS WHERE COATINGS AND PORTS OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10 825.791-824.693 Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhoda 825.791-824.693 Mount Blue Blai Ski Resort is now available for private golf parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 This senior honeymoon is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in the areas of academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in person or online on Monday, March 7 at 5:00 a.m. *Return applications with an official transcript to 2f6 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --later Prater Faculty Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Law- rence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 643-3538 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please 346-844-1023. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual promotion for room 114 - Strong security ballet. Reinald's Hotel, the Oratio of the Bible Bk. II, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No sheep, for information, writer Harper, Kansas 67088 4-4 The Drift: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 to 1, in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kubic). 3-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quaint and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 813-955-042 or 812-4185. tt Lovely new 2 bc. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843- Japhawk West Apts. New Brewing. 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished for $105. For appointment call 842-4444 or call 534 Front Room. Next door to Rush's East. tf NASIMH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. tf Antiques are always in. see and buy one year or two months ago. 8, 7 and 8th. Saturday Friday to 9, 8th Sunday. 10th. Saturday Friday to 12, 10th Sunday. Clubs of Lawn Care at the National Golf Club, Court of Lawn Care, 315 N. Georgia Ave., Atlanta, Good all three days. Retreat with Billys. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Rikke Bike Skies 103. Vermont 841-6642. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. If 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. 843-753-810 3-4 Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 9212' Mast. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 8324-8014 or 8324-0777. ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower Houston—a 30 student member cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and domestic. For more information, visit www.ku.edu/ 849-9621. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00, 841-3168. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. If Need to substitute 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnishly folded. Off-street parking. Full-carved, cable TV Acct. New store and refrigerator. Call 811-609-7541 and store on ran. 7-811 Call 801-609-7541 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and fenced off to campus, on bus route: 824-441 861-411 861-308 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner, 842-4650 after 6. 5. Professor leasing house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this surplus 2 year old house in Yorkville, NY. Residential fireplace, basement, garage backyard, $60, no pets, references needed, #42-0211 92 Old Mach. 88. Clean, good condition, excellent delft meth. $605. $604-4072 for 3-months. 3-6 Must subunit=-2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hook included in rent. Next to- *atrium* 841-4250 3-7 Western Civilization Notes. New on Salek! Make use of these materials to use them! As study guide, 2. For class analysis of Western Civilization available at Town Crit, Mall Books, and Dread Book. 72 Dodge Challenge-318 2 Bbl. AT, PS, AC- $1,000. PPI HI315A 3-5 Must sub-lube 2 BR Furn. aft. A/C and pool $135pm, on 9th S; & bus route 842-250 or 842-275. FOR SALE Subrubie 2 BD apt, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view Children, pets allowed. 811-5698. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Teri, 812-7266 or 812-7476. 3-7 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpg—W/AC. Overhauled, new tires, dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2516 after 2 p.m. Catalonia-Nelson Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition. dark-natural finish. Wurlitzer Finzer 10. yrs TSL 4 Speakers; still warranty. dark-guitar. Guitar Walnut. Bed & Dress 7-824-4270 Ladies size 8 frenely styled brown leather boots, $2h or best offer. Call Denise 841-7250 for socks. $3h or best offer. Call Denise 841-7250 for socks. Alternator, starter and generator specialties ATV MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900, 3900 W. 6th. 4h. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900, 3900 W. 6th. 4h. Rosgalion Salomon skis $120, 69 VW $250, roller skates 9.11; oak pew $100, 842-842 or 842- 6900. 3-17 SunSpros—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. B41-5770. T7 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-3854 call anytime. 3-4 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6:00 p.m. WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.99, 3 year warrant. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386 TIP Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cushion, at black top; interior PS/PB, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-513-316 Jensen 500 3 way speakers 15 woofer w/ frequency control. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 Electric telephone condition. 941-5841 call anytime. 3- Must sell—Electric Ephone guitar and a / o Mutt all AMP. Good condition, all new & boxed. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 844-2830. 3-7 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat Bedding $260.00 Leder Bedding Leder Furniture 1290 New York St. 843-2200 Leiden Furniture 1290 New York St. 843-2200 Leiden 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold. 22,400 units. New carpet no wrecks. 40 w/4 barrel carc. T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7182 or 832- Aikt. Ask for Serious inquiries only. 3-4 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.493. FOUND IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 30-page catalog of college collection. 10:20 items listed. BOOK 25097; Los Angeles, CA. 90025. (213) 477-8226. tt Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains is teaching youth working with children in a carpET backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife, ecology, and camping. Send your materials to grant initiative Western Campers, Fort Collins, CO. SERVICES OFFERED for legal assistance, including Municipal court tax returns and special court orders. East 21st floor, consult Dena & Laster or East 20th floor, consult Paul & Mary. 2342 collection call: 845-645-3911, office 603. Accept Master Court Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kanaan Photo Lab: CALL ME, I READY TO BE 841-735-572-7 GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . Q. WHY DO MEN WEAR WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Women's clothing is more enjoyable than wearing women's clothing. Many transvestites are women sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory or to parody the traditional woman's role in society, and they question why women wear men's clothing. Do demony question why women wear men's clothing? What are an article of women's clothing this IN-HUMAN sponsored BY GAY SERVICE OF KANSAS TYPING FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR NEED CASH --player for the best team in the nation-Southern California. EXPERT TUORING: MATH 600-102 call 842-7585. MATH 115-710 call 842-7585. STATISTICS MATH 115-710 call 842-7585. PHYSICS MATH 115-710 call 842-7585. PHYSICS 100-500 call 843-9058. ENGINEERING AND SPANISH MATH 843-7057. ENGINEERING tf PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 M P Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 8:38 MW. CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 Wristwatch afternoon. ( Misc. keys lot. Call 84 identify. 2 weeks ag floor of We 1 Navv blu cuff. Pound Call: 844-132 TO STUDEN US, as a pub Our consul, prove of N your opiniores. A residents. (between mi- Mass. St. 2 Black cat *b* 12782 or 864- Found a cal *753-7530* evl Found—a long tail, W work; 842-25 --player for the best team in the nation-Southern California. I do damned good typing. Peegy. 812-476-179 Why cwts about typing? Experienced civil secretary, security professional does professional typing. Betty Gramer. 842-667-130 at 3:30 p.m. and on weekends. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVING 841-408-7290. TP Experienced typing, disksession, paper term, paper, IBM correcting selection Bath After 5 pm. b422-310. tf Need some ground lost anything --- FINDING, secondary, tion from doubles dosiers : $3.95 + 7 order. Toa 80421 Typist/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work. *avoidable rates.* These disserts welcome! *Please send resume to: SPRING WRAP-UP The Hulk The bulky young man with the dark, unkempt hair stalked about in his thick coat and in human look in his eyes. He grumbled, blemished, and sneered while throwing an imagined shot at him. The other fists. Moments before he was ready to throw, he in the air on his warm hat, wrapped over his head, and ran for it. Finally, when his turn came, he yanked off the wall, expiring on the stage. Then he stepped into the circle, unleashed a throw of over 60 feet of rope, and laughed in screaming. "I want the watch! I want the watch!" (The winner of the watch!) N.Y.C. HARLEM In the ring. John Scheetz becomes "The Hulk." Participants and contestants alike kept their distance from the boat. The Incredible Hulk, but in real life John Schreier, a shot putter, climbed out of the water. . Schett's antics, while not accidentally appreciated by his shot-patting peteers, are effective. He is the only player in the outdoor championship in the shot and the 16-college Iowa ever to throw the 16-foot ball more than "That's not John Scheer on the throw there, he shouted," he says. "He's a bit of an arrogant guy, the hulk. John Scheer is a fake. He tells jokes, likes to entertain." "this is sort of like transcranial mediation for me," he says. "What I do out there calms me, what I do in my own world where feel good." Lost: A b a. d O-Zor 6 "Some guys are annoyed by it, they think it's a lair andHardy is in charge of the physical aggression in an event that is more violent than any sport we play." Short Reports From Around The Conference on a Variety of Sports BY DAVE REYNOLDS Scheer's law and acts tolerate it "If he抓 to his手, said oneileyenne "I'll take it," many of his competitors are affected in some way. 'Sheer would not bother him so much he would bother him so much he would throw 5 feet instead his normal height.' Two for One Whether Scherf's汁utes has been a positive or negative reflection on his school is uncertain. But she draws attention to Iowa State track like it has never received before. "It seems like everywhere I go, all the writers want to do it," Scherf says, but SIU candidates Bill Bergan. Two freshmen on the University of Colorado women's team have in school order transformed into one of the nations' best. Kathleen Cummings of Richmond, Virginia, and Nicole Lorenzetti of Bloemfeld Hills, Michigan, played against the No. 1 player and No. 2 players on team and sparked Colorado to a 5-3 record last fall. In the process, Cummings, who is in the top 20 among players 18 and under. Among her achievements were victories over Susan Ferguson and Danielle player (18 and under) in the country, and Maria Fernandez, the top While some of his peers dislike P Nicole Lorenzetti, one of Colorado's ten tennis newsmen Lorenzetti is ranked among the 60 leading players in the U.S. and in the top three in the western section "They've done surprisingly well considering they're not restrained," she said. "They squashed its spring season in January." They's shown posed on the field. Moore has added another po tential superstar to his squad—Jil. Patterson, a junior-college transfer from Odeaux, Texas. She was adDED as one of the top juni- bok college players in the country. Growing Sport When the senior national AAU Tae Kwon Do championships take place this May at the University of 94 USA 294 Fast, accu- d. Call Four-time Olympic gold medalist Al Oerter is part of the Kansas tradition. The ISU kai charter participated in its first Tc Kwon Do national tour in 2014, and fall and finished third in the 20-team meet. That allowed the club to qualify for the senior national teams. The Fight Club to achieve such national recognition all of the schools in the region, and it's the ambition of ISU coach Yong Chin Pak to organize and host a conference meet in the California at Berkeley, there will be a new kid on the block-Iowa State. Jon pair r If found, please call 864-6859 3.7 Lost= set of keys on brass keyring key chain Says available. Reward 862-0724 4.7 Track and Field Hotbed Glen Cunningham, AI Alter, Wes Samson, Clifford Wiley, and other faculty members holders who performed for Kansas university, one of this county's universities. Hus won six national championships—thirteen indoor and three outdoor—in the past 20 years. And the Jayhawks captured either an indoor or outdoor Big Eight win, one but only the past 30 years. **Bell Easton (KU) coach** 1948 *10* 1965) the one responsible for building the great tradition of football. He was the head coach in Lawrence since the Era era ended. "He coached some of the greatest athletes ever." Timmons hasn't done so badly himself. Since taking over for Easton, his teams have tived for one more time this season in three indoor championships. Timmons was also Ryun's high coach at bachtu West East High and continued to train the track legend for 13 years. Ryun is best remembered for breaking the mile record at the age of 19. "I got a tremendous amount of attention because he achieved great records when he played the ball for a humble, a humble, American boy." With all the attention focused on Ryun, some others on those outstanding KU teams of the late 1960s were on靴博. Karl Sallk, for example, holds his records for NCAA titles and for titles which he was eligible Salt on the beach known among KL weight men, though Al Oster was not a fan of the Olympic gold medals in the discus in 1956, 1960, 1964 and 1968. Other former Jaywhays who had been beaches bade (decathlon, 1932). Bill SPORTS BULLETIN 19 blue-eyed, easy-easy male genius. Must be patient, Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (no to speak) 841-8927 Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll fit you up 3-4 treeling if mise, ng cou- ple of electric, b. evic- tion theses correct form, rcall 3-7 silver & brush couple of days. e day if. SERVICE CENTER- Center, priority up to. use $100, 4-13 se living, keep tying partment all room room a month. am. 3-6 b bedroom end of day. $30 to 3-7 US PT. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD. --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS University Daily Kansan Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't the toughest, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unexciting start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstick. There was no winner or loser, so no score was kept. In fact, there were never even any bases. "1 called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and we made the decision to leave. Floyd Tieman, KU coach), said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine innings. The team did not return. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 13, but weather might a problem here. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clayton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jill Phillips worked three "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was a good day to do it. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-central field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innning game. It just was under some unusual cir- clusion that he pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and MlicH Lubin would share the pitching chones. KU's always sparse roster is two forwarders. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go an innertor or two." Women drop in basketball poll as compiled by Mit Greenberg of the Philadelphia Inquirer to provide the table of 40women's coach's clubs. Old Demonstrator...26.2 Louisiana Tech (11)...26.2 Michigan State...26.2 Stanford Athletics...25.4 Bogeyers...25.4 South Carolina...25.4 Carolina State...25.4 Larry Beach St...25.4 Delray St...25.4 Kansas St...25.4 San Francisco...26.3 AMARAS...26.3 Cherokee...28.9 Cincinnati...28.9 Chittendron...28.9 Nevada-Las Vegas...25.4 Massachusetts Mau...25.4 Detroit...25.4 The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Injury Report. Other teams named on at least 19 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St. , Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UPI Top Twenty The United Press International weekly. Board of Cups top 20 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 16, in parentheses. 1. DePaul (30) ... 26.1 2. Louisiana State ... 26.4 3. Louisiana (1) ... 26.3 4. Oregon State ... 26.3 5. Styracantha ... 26.3 6. Tulane ... 26.3 7. Maricel Landi ... 26.4 8. Ohio State ... 26.5 9. Georgetown ... 26.5 10. Notre Dame ... 26.4 11. New Jersey Vineyard ... 26.4 12. Johnson N.Y. (N) ... 26.4 13. Musselman ... 26.4 14. Yokohama ... 25.8 15. Gardnanda ... 26.4 16. Mercer State ... 26.4 17. Texas A&M ... 26.4 18. Arizona State ... 26.4 19. Arizona State ... 26.4 The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES one time one two three four five six seven eight nine ten $1.25 $2.25 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 Dailyly in lower Dailyly in lower Dailyly in lower fresh food fresh food fresh food AD DEADLINES ERRORS Grunn Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 3 p.m. Friday Wednesday 3 p.m. The Kanan 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 Fault items can be advertised FREE of charge on a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in memory or bound to the Flashbook® kensington® offering MA4A9. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4258 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watches for truth parked at 9th and Illinois, the Tulip at 10th, the Halt-Wall at 11th, Selling Fruit piers in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dye and pigment are available; and impregnate Keeley Sunday all setting wood. www.keeyes.com BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now on $11.99 Linger with color, design or coloured spring pants. Gear up comfort! Many styles to choose. Also comes in coloured spring green shirts. Finish out with LLWINS WHITE LADIES ARE FOR YOU! V754 master charge Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodi 845.721-8010 845.721-8010 LITWIN'S OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blen Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 3-18-3460 This senior honorary is now accepting applications from qualified junior students with academic excellence and campus involvement. Applications are available in the College of Applied Science, day March 7 at 0:00 a.m. **Return all application forms** on an official transcript to 268 Fitzgerald Street. DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --with all utilities paid. Inter Fraternity Council will sponsor **SPRING** **FORMAL RUSH** MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Law- wrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 644-3539 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner "Religious Conversion" Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 864-6123 3-00 By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118. Strong secret Boaulis's hotel, the Orale of the Bible 8th is for: persecutive individuals and free spirits. No where, for information, write: Harper, Kanaas 67538 4-14 The Draft. An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 am. in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br, townhouse and apt. next to a beautiful townhome. Ready for reasonably priced. Call 832-9279 or 842-418- Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid daily. Reasonably price. Reasonably price. BSP-815P or BSP-845S Antiquities are always in, see and buy one you like. 9 a.m., Tuesday, 7 and 8 on Friday; Saturday, 10 to 9 Sunday. 11 a.m., Wednesday, 2 to 4 p.m., Saturday, 6 to 8 p.m., School of Lawncare, the AT National Guard Armory, 3 and 4 p.m., Monday, with this aid. Good all three days. Refreshment buffers. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bed room townhouse A C D WB Appliances and cable 1班 from the Union Call 844-360-7555 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95. Rikke Bike Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-6642. NASIMH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. **tt** Jayhawk Wet Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 254 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's East. if 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 843-7310. 3-4 A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 845-9797. tt Offer space for rent now at the area 1 building, 1021*32; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 8341-2034 or 803-0777. ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower Housetwo a 20 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and down- slope. For more information, event # 842-9421 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING 1972 Celia ST 25 mk-WAC Overhauled new new Maint. Maint sell Call Mike 843-260- after 2 p.m. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00, 841-316-3 3-4 1973 Datsun 240 Z.Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassettes. Many extra Clean, one, owner. 842-678-5353. 72 Dodge, Challenge-318 2 Bli, AT, PS, AC- 1.000 $HP, 841-8154 3-5 *99 Old Delta 88, Clean, good condition, excellent* *mach. $650, B464-8027 3. a-6* Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. ff Cahoon Nelson Grand Plane, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Walters Electric Plane 10 yrs. TSL 4 Speakers, still warranted, colorGuard. Walters Bed & Dress 842-4720 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sure you have a copy of the preparation. 2. For exam preparation. New edition. 3. For book preparation. New edition at Town Crit. Ma/Libooks Book and Great Books. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $25 or best offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 5-6 Alternator, starter and generator specialties. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-809-2900, 290 W, 6th. tfr MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-809-2900, 290 W, 6th. tfr Need to suburb 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Fullly carpeting, cable TV. New stove and refrigerator. Refrigerator. New stove and sieve on 3-7 $200. Call #814-00199. One and two bedroom apartments carved and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus; on bus route. 842-4401 or 841-3018. 3-5 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA1700. 70 watts, professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-3584 call anytime. 3-4 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $150m. on 9th St. & bus route: 842-2850 or 843-0496. 3-7 FOR SALE Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this apartment 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studyrooms. recreation. library. reference. key reference. kpk reference. needs referenced. 842-0221. 3-19 SunSpaes-Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- solar sun glasses, designed for reasoned, seasoni- cal use. 3612 Mass. 841-757-3012 Subbase 2 BR apt, w/option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. $41-$699. 3-7 Rossignol. Salomon skis $120, 69 TW $250, roller skates 9.11; oak pew $100, 842-842 or 842- 690. Must substitute one bedroom apartment on bus route. A total of more information is required - 9276 or 841-7476. Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cullas, air black top; interior PS/ PB, air, cruise, AM/FM causette, high MPG. Beautiful road car, Craig 842-5313 Must sell-Electric Epiphone guitar and a '1in' MIDI PC. Good condition plays like new. C83- 843-673 1978 Trench-Am special edition gold; 22,400 carc. New carpets, no wrecks; 90 w/4 barrel carb. T-top. Power, every call. BM1-81198 or 842- 8357. Ask for Marti. Serious injuries only. - 4. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350 Call 841-6972 after 6.00 p.m. 3-7 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat- furniture, upholstery, rugs, leather, Leodon, Furniture. 1200 New York St., #362-4. WATERBED MATTERESSES, $39.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386 TUFFLE Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ freeway controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2182 3-17 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus. 2 BR apartments with all omitted pale Furnished or unfurnished. FOUND Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Springs area of the US will include working with children in a camp setting and learning about the many other programs. Visit www.internationalprogram.com for more information on Western Camp, Plains Park, Colorado Springs. FINDING, secondary, tion from recruiting. daissers. 7 orders. 7 order. Tea 86421 Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? Women are often more active than men, with women actively act as more independent individuals and clothing. Many travesties are wearing women's clothing and sometimes women wear clothing as an attendant. Women wear clothing to parody the traditional woman's role in society. Men question why women wear men clothing, but do not question why women wear cloth. This question was an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION sponsored by GAY SERVICE OF KANSA SERVICES OFFERED --most at was the refined business of running routes." To whomever found, borrowed or burglied by Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Ainfield Field House or the Kananan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DALI. 64-5125. 3-7 GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR NEED CASH Need some ground log anything p 842-9737 or 841-7476 For legal assistance, including Municipal court work for a county judge or attorney, visit tax return consult Dave Dauer & Laster, 19 East 20th Floor, 860 Washington Avenue, 3543 colleague 1 Call 841-6511 late evening. Office hours are 3:30 to 6:00 Monday through Friday. Call 841-6510. CALL NOW! IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of college literature. 10:20 to lions listed, BOX 250FG; Los Angeles, CA. (9215). (213) 477-8226. ff TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TH PRINTING WHILE YOU WAY is available at Alice in the House of Uber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 8:38 AM. EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 600-102 call 847-5785. MATH: 115-730 call 847-5785. STATISTICS 847-5785. PHYSICS 847-5785. PHYSICS 100-509 call 847-9036. SPANISH 847-5128. TECHNICS 847-9036. TF --- Way cause about typing? Experienced civil servant secretary do professional writing. Betty Grammner. #82-6697 after 5.30 p.m. and on weekends tf PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICED 841-4580. TF Experienced typetrue, dissertations, papermen, papers, IBM correcting sheets, Barb After 5 p.m. 842-310. ff Neider (shot put, 1960), and Billy Mills (10,000 meters, 1964). Typist; Editor, IBM Pica/Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome; edit/layout. Call Joan 842-917-871 All told, KU tracksters have contributed to 26 world marks, and have brought home 12 Olympic medals. Two Who Made It Sending message from client to server >>confidential tuning Fast end Speed alone won't guarantee one a future in professional football. John Bates is one such example, as he are several Big Exceptions, including his Branch, formerly of Colorado and now with Oakland, and Missouri's Kyle Frazier. Branch and Gray tank two to the top sprinters in Big Eight track history. They've been All-Pros in both disciplines, their success in different ways. Branch had more natural ability as a college wide receiver, but Gray was the leader. "Cliff had the great speed, "says U.S. Army Specialist Cedrow. "He was quickness, excellent change of direction and pace, and good hands." He was a leader. Indeed he did. He established a school record (later broken by Henry Marshall) for most receiving Branch, the only athlete in National Football League history to run a 10-fat 100-meter dash, still holds the national record in receipts in one game with seven. Gray, who run with Branch and him a 9.1 wind-added 100-yard dash, had troubles when he began running the 100-yard dash started him at wide receiver in junior college, but he couldn’t hold onto the football, explained Clay Cooper. Mizouz his recruiting co-chief, so we moved him to run backing "But after his sophomore year, he just made up my mind he'd be a good one and caught 200 passes a day during the winter and summer. He was also always moves, but soon he was able to take and go full speed so quick. I knew he'd be a good pro then. Some track men just run straight away after they catch it, but Mel enables ability to change direction so well. Lost: A he a'd O-Zon e Batter Up yardage in a game with 171 on six receptions. He caught 26 passes for 705 his junior season. □ The Boston Red Sox have a private little playpen called Few Parkway. But the inviting "Green Monster," only 15 feet away in left field, doesnw hold a candle to the short range of the ball. It gots to swim for last snoop The Wildcats' regular park, Frank Mysers Field, a stadium of normal dimensions, was too wet to play in when the season began in the first eight games were played in K-State's football stadium. Home plate was set on the south wall (in the southwest corner of the playing field, with that goal) and the left-foot fence was set on a normal 330 feet away, and the field was about 400 feet from home plate. But the right-field fence was set on the east-hand east stands—a jersey 215 feet Hitting a ball into the first 20 rows of the stands was a ground- rule double; any landing beyond that was a home run. These dimensions, coupled with the absence of glittering flame-ups, up an apparent homer heaven. But oddly enough, not one ball was hit into the stands in eight games. "Everybody was trying to hit right," says Wade Assistant director Craig Thompson. But Thompson kept on kneeling up. There were other problems with the makeshift kill. Because of the slope of the football field, players had to step back from first to base! It took 'em about eight seconds to go home to home "Trionium," also. There were no sliding pits, and the only problem was that had a watered-down bacon. Kansas State was 8 on the first before moving back into Myers when he became plausible. There they were in a field of 12, and went 12-1 in their regular粘土. SPORT Maybe if the snow linger as long this spring, the Wildcats will be back in their little playpen with their unbreakable string there alive. SPRING SPORTS CHAMPIONSHIPS AND OLYMPIC TRIALS SITE NCAA Championships Baseball May 30-June 6 Basketball March 22-24 March 15-24 Crongeau U Basketball Market Square* Penn State U Golf March 15-18 Ohio State U Gymnastics April 3-5 Brown U of Nebraska-Lincoln 冰球 March 27-29 Brown U-Providence City Gleason Lacrosse May 31 Cornell U—Ithaca* Rifleman March 15 East Tennessee State U Ultramarine March 5-U Carolina-Mansfield U Swimming March 27-29 U of Georgia U Tennis May 19-26 U of Michigan-U Detroit at Joe Lewis Arena* Track, Indoor March 14-15 U of Michigan-Detroit at Joe Lewis Arena* Track, Outdoor June 5-U Utah U Volleyball May 9-10 Bail State U Wrestling March 15-13 Oregon U *Denotes game played at site other than university. AIAW Championships Basketball March 21-23 Golf June 11-14 Gymnastics April 4-5 Skiing March 5-8 Softball May 22-25 Softball/Diving May 22-25 Synchronized Swimming March 27-29 Synchronized Swimming Tennis June 11-14 Track Indoor March 7-14 Track Indoor April 6-10 Central Michigan U U of Arizona U of Louisiana Middlebury College (Vermont) U of Oklahoma U of Las Vegas U of Nevada Tennon June 11-14 Louisiana State U Track Indoor March 7-8 U of Missouri Track Outdoor March 6-8 Big Eight Men's Baseball May 14-18 Oklahoma City* Golf May 1-18 U of Arkansas Dance Theater May 1-7 U of Maryland Swimming March 6-8 U of Nebraska Track, Outdoor May 16-17 Oklahoma City* Track, Outdoor May 16-17 Denotes game played at site other than university 20 SPORTS BULLETIN Big Eight Women's One pair( If found, phone call) 864-6839 5-7 Lost-set of keys on brace rectangular key chain Says 'available'. Reward 862-4274 AIAW Region 4—Arkansas Louisiana Oklahoma Texas Basketball Golf Olympics Softball Tennis March 17-19 March 18-19 April 19-28 April 17-19 April 11-12 March 1-3 U of Missouri U of Isaac U of Missouri U of Missouri Oklaanese State Oklahoma State U of Missouri Basketball March 6-8 Louisiana State U Gymnastics March 14-15 Louisiana State U Softball May 1-3 Texas AAM Tennis TBA Louisiana State U AIAW Region 6 — Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota Basketball March 6-8 Gymnastics March 21-22 Softball May 8-10 Track May 17-18 Track, Outdoor May 8-10 correcting Drake U U of Minnesota U of Minnesota U of Missouri Drake U blue-eyed, easy-eating male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (so to speak). 814-8927. Ask for one of Lacey's roommates and we'll fix you up. 3-4 Basketball March 7-8 Brigham Young U Golf March 22-24 Fort Collins, Colorado* March 14 Milwaukee U Softball May 10 U of Wyoming Tennis May 1-3 Brigham Young U Track, Outdoor Nearby Olympic Trials Diving June 27-July 1 Austin, TX Pentathlon March 18-19 San Antonio, Texas Athletics April 22 San Antonio, Texas May 24-28 San Antonio, Texas Riffley, trap & skate June 6 San Antonio, TX Swimming June 16 Austin, TX Volunteer women's Sports May 20-25 Colorado Springs, Colorado Wrestling, freestyle May 10-13 To Be Announced Wrestling, Greco- tennis May 12-13 To Be Announced i, mise, largc if Selectrie idy, eve if i. theses Correct- tf l form- tric Call 3-7 I deliver & 3-6 The image provided is too blurry to recognize any text clearly. It appears to be a barcode or some kind of digital label with black borders and white text, but the details are not legible. If you can provide a clearer image, I would be happy to help. couple of. Contact he day, if RUNES US FT. SERVICE Hospital 290-5180 290-5180 portions if no. if equipment 16, rev. 4-13 1-12 Keep try- ing away. died. Own 4-12 3-4 gardent, all Stew- rent. a room a month a room a month a month 3-6 a bedroom end of Cal- l. 5-50 5-50 KANSAS CLASSIFIED—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Tuesday, March 4. 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't the same. But the 1980 Kansas baseball season beat to an allowance of .265. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhaws and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandlot. There was no winner or loser, and no score was kept. In fact, there were never even any bases. "I called Coach (Keach) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said, 'Hey, I'll go out for a Floyd Template, KU coach,' said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runs were allowed during the nine inning. This is the result of having a bad weather day. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 11 a.m., but weather may be a problem. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Custon Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jill Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time we've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it would be nice to keep it clean. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-centric field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a live little live pitch. It was basically a nine innig ball game. It just was under some unusual circling but I really pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." University Daily Kansai The Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching choirs. KU's always sparse roster is two players, Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "MrMcIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection" "Temple said." MrMcIntosh might be able to go in nurning or (the) bath. Women drop in basketball poll **Top Twenty Women's college basketball teams** * 1. Louisville Tech (11) ... 36 * 2. Louisiana Tech (11) ... 36 * 3. Texas ... 36 * 4. Arizona ... 35 * 5. Ruggers ... 35 * 6. N Carolina St ... 34 * 7. Kentucky ... 34 * 8. N Carolina St ... 34 * 9. Cheyenne St ... 34 * 10. Kansas St ... 34 * 11. Kansas St ... 34 * 12. San Francisco ... 34 * 13. RAMSAK ... 34 * 14. RAMSAK ... 34 * 15. Cleveland ... 34 * 16. Nevada–Las Vegas ... 34 * 17. Miami Gardens St ... 34 * 18. Detroit ... 34 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, Oregon, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tigers. UPITop Twenty The United Press International weekly board of Coaches top 10 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in parentheses. 1. Delphin (36) ... 26.4 2. Jacksonville State ... 26.4 3. Kentucky (11) ... 26.5 4. Louisville (11) ... 26.5 5. Oregon State ... 26.3 6. Syracuse ... 26.3 7. Indiana ... 26.4 8. Maryland ... 26.4 9. Ohio State ... 26.7 10. Georgia ... 26.7 11. Notre Dame ... 27.4 12. Michigan ... 27.4 13. John's N.Y. ... 27.4 14. Missouri ... 23.4 15. Florida Carolina ... 24.8 16.owe State ... 24.8 17. Missouri State ... 24.8 18. Texas A&M ... 24.7 19. Arizona State ... 24.7 20. Louisiana State ... 24.7 The University Dailv KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one bear five three four five five six seven eight nine ten 12 months on bear $2.25 $2.50 $2.90 $3.40 $3.90 $4.40 $4.90 $5.40 $6.90 12 months on bear $2.25 $2.50 $2.90 $3.40 $3.90 $4.40 $4.90 $5.40 $6.90 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Weekend Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kanansa 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 in various locations, he called the *national business office* at #464K. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Walden for trunk grab at 9th and Illinois, with a full bowl of stuff for a 12 oz. tray (and the *Holiday-Wall* - Splish fruit stains) in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit, including strawberries, apricots and sunrush. Every Sunday - Also selling wood slices. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 High quality cotton on colourful spring pants Great for comfort Many sizes to choose More colorful sunproof spring pant shorts Finished with leather V754 matter change in human life Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes. $35.84-702.10 3-6 LITWINS OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Bleu Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 This senior hourly is now accepting applications from qualified junior student applicants in areas of academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in person on Monday, March 7 at 5:00 a.m. Return application with an official transcript to 268 W. Sackett St. DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM M M M M M In front Praterty Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Law- wynce campus students. Contact IFC Office at 641-3539 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Want to Buy- Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro Please call 864-6123 3-4 By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secretaries. 3-7 The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open conference Tuesday, March 8, 8 to 10, in Green Hall, Room 104. Pamela includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 Benaley's Hall, the Oasis of the Bible Billy is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No honors; for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67088 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9578 or 842-1418. 1f Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to Martha Stewart. Offered by Reaseason priced. Call 843-9799 or 844-1485. Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5000. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C D WB Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843- NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8599 any tf of the day. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tt ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, visit 842-9421. Office space: for rent now at the area building, 9212; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. It can afford or lower seats 728 ft. or 980 ft. cou. ConTACT 82143 or 843-0777. 2 bedroom apart.vent. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and electric. Save $15.00/mi. M4-31168. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Antiques are in, see in, and buy one today. 8 and 9th, fridays-Saturday 11 to 9th Sunday 11 7 and 8th, fridays-Saturday 11 to 9th Sunday 11 Clare of Lawnance, inc. At National Guard Arm- ace, 340 S. 56th St., for $100 with this add. Good all three days. Refreshment with add. Need to sublease 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnishly 20-street parking. Fullly equipped, cable TV AC, New store and refrigerator. New kitchen, linen room and stove room on 2-7 Box Call 801-491-611 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. ff Professor leasing house for 2 years, need qualified tenant to rent this super B3-qualified house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 students, recreation. 1 room. 3 students, recreation. 5 students, reference. beds. 842-0211. 3-19 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 843-7310. 3-4 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route, 842-4611 or 841-3018. 3-5 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor. from $59.95. Ricks Bike Shop 103. Vermont. 841-6842. Most sublet-2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. T41-4250. 3-7 Western Civilization Notes. On sale Make Salads from Western Civilization Book 1 to use them-1). As study guide, 2. For class analysis of Western Civilization available in Analysis of Western Civilization® available on UTEI, Mills Books and Oral Book Series. Sublease 2 HR apt. w option for next year. Resale price: $489.00 View current view. CYB, pts allowed. 814-5669. Alternator, starter and generator specialist, electrician. (MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 845-809-3200, 3900 W. 6th., th. Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $150pm. on ninth St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-6496 3-7 FOR SALE Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call 714-841-7276 or 841-7476 3-7 90 Old Dids Dale. 86 Clean, good condition, excellent repair. 3605. 8644-1027 for 9 a.m. 9.14. 1972 STC座. 25 mg-w-AWC Overhaul, new equipment. Must sell. Minl Call Mk 8424. 8644-1027. 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials. AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4566 after 6. Cable-Nelson Pickup excellent, tone & condition. dark-painted final Wurlitzer Electric Piano. 10 yrs TSL & Speakers. still warranted. dark-guitar Guitar. Wurlitzer Bld. 3-742-842-700 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA1700, 70 watt, professionally used. Excellent. Condition. 841-5943 call anytime. 3-48 2 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $1.000, BM, 841-8154 3-5 SunSpectres--Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably prized. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TP Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise 814-2750. 3-6 Cabern fever? Try a T-Top Cullas, red, with black top interior; PS/PR, air, cruise, AMF casmate, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-5312 3-6 Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a '1 in 2000 AMP. Good condition plays like new. Cs-3 845-6272 WATERBEED MATTELESSS. $39.99. white. WRITE HINT. 704, Mass. 814, 856-1366. New excellent quality bed-orthopedic mat with 1/2-inch foam backing. Furniture Lifespan 1989 New York St. 943-228-7278. Rossignol Salomon skis $120. 98 VW SK 200, roller skates 9.11 oak peek $100. $142.822 or $153.942 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 24,600 pounds. New carpets, no wrecks, 40w/4 carbine carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7817 or 872-9577. Ask for Mirt Serious issues. only 3-4 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dm- stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 812-2162 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. FOUND Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Springs area of western Canada, works with children in a camp setting. Backpacks ride skiing, wildlife, ecology, and programs like Western Camp. Grant internships at Western Camps. Foster children. TO STUDENTS WILI: DAVID Our course is designed to help and inlie in the students of resident A students. The between ni students will be assigned a second 21st Dr. Part-time, JAMES Apply for an 21st Dr. for a study in Lake Chang Chi School. Ten minutes each time the local parental contact will be made. Lawyer. Lawyer Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? Men and women are more enjoyably while wearing women's clothing. Many transvestees are wary about the traditional role women sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory or to parody the traditional woman's role in society. So what is the difference? Dom question why women wear men's clothing, but women wear men's clothing, and dom question why women wear women's clothing, and dom question why women wear women's clothing. This INFORMATIONAL SPONSORED BY GAY SENSE OF KANAS To whomever found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 24mm lens last seen at Allen Field House or the Kan萨人 Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-5275. 3-7 --afternoon. c money keys call 84! identify. 2 weeks age floor of Wes NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . I Navy blue Bound Bouquet black cat Black cat or 8142 Found a calf 533-7539-dove Found—a mammal work—842 work—825 CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 SERVICES OFFERED For legal assistance, including Municipal court work for clients in the county. Eight East 201st return tax returns consult DAVID & LASTER, 109 East 201st return tax returns consulting 3241 3243 collect Call 845-6241 lab title Office: Office of the State Attorney Monday through Friday at 11 a.m. Master Court Chamber IMPROVE YOUR GRADE$: Send $10 for your 30-page catalog of colleague materials. 10,200 tonnes listed. BOX 2500G; Los Angeles, CA. tf (21) 473-8274. CAFE. EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 600-102 call 684-7585. MATH 115-750 call 682-7585. STATISTICS 930-7585. PHYSICS 930-7585. PHYSICS 100-500 call 843-7030. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 843-7030. tf PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIL is available with Alice at the Hour of Uster Quick Copy Center Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 pm Cab on 838 Main TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4090 TF I did damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TV why cuts about whyxing? Experienced job sec- ervice secretary does professional typing. Betty Gramer. 842-6697 at 3:30 p.m. on and over. --- PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 811-400-7900, TF Experienced typetr-les, dissertations, paper macks, IBM correcting selections Barb After 5 p.m. 842-2310, tf Typist, Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. These, Descison work editing/layout. Call Jonn 842-9127. TF BY TIM WENDEL A T first glance, Oonea, New York, looks like many other small cities. Surrounded by rolling hills, farms, mountains and forests, Rockwell painting come to life. It's a locale where the old folks talk about yesterday and their children leave for the big-city lights and the use of all-night television. But this city knows something that keeps people home. Oncena is Soccer town, U.S.A. It says so on the mayor's official postmarked in Oncena. Postmarked dows support the city's bid for the National Soccer Hall of Fame, a house at the museum, a house museum, stadium, administrative offices, and training facilities. A walk behind the elementary school is something special as soccer playing fields are well groomed and lined, but there are soccer - not goal posts - either end. SOCCER QUIETLY MAKES ITS MARK The world's most popular sport has been making headway (if not headlines) at small colleges. The big schools are next. On a hill overlooking the city is Hartwick College, the school, where a museum of few than 1,500 students, and is the home of the ||||| The Hart Lost: A br a.d O-Zor 6. BUSINESS REPLY MAIL FIRST CLASS PERMIT NO 3480 KNOXVILLE TENNESSEE STAGE WILL BE RELIABLE TAGE WILL BE PAID BY ADDRESSEE MILLER STUDENT SPORTS POLL 13-30 CORPORATION 505 MARKET STREET KNOXVILLE, TN 37902 The Hartwick campus engulfed in autumn foliage. NO POSTAGE NECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES suburbs, where football has grown. - --- Old pair: if found, please call 864-6839 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward 842-4274 houses in soccer. blue-eyed, easy-easy, male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (no to speak). 814-8927. Ask for one of Lance's rooms and we'll fix you up. 3-4 A major reason for soccer's popularity, particularly on the small college level, is its low cost. Hartman led the Omeia Indians, a semipro team, and in 1956 made soccer its fall sport. The Warriors' first season was less than outstanding, as did the Arizona State and lost three. However, in the ensuing years, the school established a national reputation and did so without spending much money. The team won the Division I national championship, the soccer budget was less than $1,000. That's minuscule, compared to big-time football projections. It was also more than $1 million annually. Soccer has been the financial answer for many Division II and colleges that can no longer d the expense of fielding a ball in the net. Soccer helmets, shoulder pads, s, jerseys, practice sleds, and l dummy cards. A soccer team as only shorts, shoes, and a Another reason for soccer's path is that anyone can play it. person does not have to be of ability to soccer star. Hattie All-America 15 Billy Garonas was only $5'3" and 15 pounds. Peltz, the Brazilian soccer star, houses as a member of a large New York Cosmos, stands only $9'9" and most North American Soccer League (NASL) professionals are Soccer is also a game to play. In football, the emphasis is on running into someone else and knocking him down. At the begin- SPORTS BULLETIN 21 --- erecting 12 winging corng 12 electrocyte dy, ever 12 those Correcte 14 forms, ricl Catalog 3-7 elivered & US PT. SERVICE mule of surgery, day if dead, day if fortuitous guest, use $100, dim, slater, living, age, non- visiting, 3-7 Died and Born 3-6 3-6 All Shrieve the room, a month at a.m. 3-6 bedroom end of child, day if $50 to $75 KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS - EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD US FT. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 5 6 --- Tuesday, March 4. 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't off. The 900 Kansas baseball season got off an unofficial start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resumed something played on a sandstep. There was no winner or loser, but it was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and we were in the front court. The Flory Temple, KU coach said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hour Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no hassles were allowed along the nine innings. Pitcher Piper was tempted to attempt a pickoff, Pitcher Roberts was allowed to斗 forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 13:00, but weather might be a problem again. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clyton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on it, and I didn't understand everything. I thought their costume was pretty good. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a live little bait game. It was basically a nine innning ball game. It just was under some unusual curricular pressure, but prettier realism as far as balls and strikes are concerned." University Daily Kansan If the Jawhays are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafes and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chores. KU's always sparse roster is two players. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McInlott has the flu and Hicks has an infection." Temple said. "McInlott might be able to go an inning or a run." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women's college basketball teams as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Injuries and based on the halftime of her coaches as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Inquirer. It lists the ballets of 40 women in a row: 1. Old Dominion St. (19) 2. Tennessee Tech (19) 3. Tennessee (19) 4. Stephen F. Austin (19) 5. Reggie (19) 6. North Carolina St. (19) 7. N. Carolina St. (19) 8. Louis Seigle St. (19) 9. Chewy St. (19) 10. Kansas St. (19) 11. Maryland (19) 14. San Francisco (19) 15. MARNAKS (19) 16. Cleveland (19) 17. Newportown (19) 18. Newcastle (19) 19. Nevada - Las Vegas (19) 20. Central Missouri (20) 21. Detroit (20) Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. UPI Top Twenty The United Press International weekly Board of Cups持 2014 college basketball ratings with first-place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in two matches. 1. Defiray (30) ... 26.4 2. Leonora State State ... 26.4 3. Kendall (12) ... 26.3 4. Lovellia (1) ... 26.3 5. Owen State State ... 26.3 6. Syracuse ... 26.3 7. Delaware ... 26.3 8. Danville ... 26.4 9. Ohio State ... 26.4 10. Gormanport ... 26.4 11. Notre Dame ... 26.4 12. Regina Young ... 26.4 13. St. J. N.Y. (1) ... 26.4 14. Masonville ... 26.4 15. Tampa Georgia ... 26.4 16. Duke ... 26.4 17. Middle State ... 26.4 18. Texas & M.. ... 26.4 19. Aransas State ... 26.4 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one house one mile two miles three miles four miles five miles six miles eight miles ten miles eleven miles twelve miles thirteen miles fourteen miles fifteen miles sixteen miles seventeen miles eighteen miles nineteen miles twenty-one miles twenty-two miles twenty-three miles twenty-four miles twenty-five miles twenty-six miles twenty-seven miles twenty-eight miles twenty-nine miles thirty-one miles thirty-two miles thirty-three miles thirty-four miles thirty-five miles thirty-six miles thirty-seven miles thirty-eight miles thirty-nine miles forty-one miles forty-two miles forty-three miles forty-four miles forty-five miles forty-six miles forty-seven miles forty-eight miles forty-nine miles fifty-one miles fifty-two miles fifty-three miles fifty-four miles fifty-five miles fifty-six miles fifty-seven miles fifty-eight miles fifty-nine miles sixty-one miles sixty-two miles sixty-three miles sixty-four miles sixty-five miles sixty-six miles sixty-seven miles sixty-eight miles sixty-nine miles seventy-one miles seventy-two miles seventy-three miles seventy-four miles seventy-five miles seventy-six miles seventy-seven miles seventy-eight miles seventy-nine miles eighty-one miles eighty-two miles eighty-three miles eighty-four miles eighty-five miles eighty-six miles eighty-seven miles eighty-eight miles eighty-nine miles nine0 miles nine1 miles nine2 miles nine3 miles nine4 miles nine5 miles nine6 miles nine7 miles nine8 miles nine9 miles AD DEADLINES ERRORS 10 am Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Thursday Thursday Thursday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday The Kansan 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 or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be shared by email or in print at 801-493-8756. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for fruit trunk picked at 9th and Illinois, Iowa, New York, Nebraska, and The Hatchie-Walks. Fresh fresh fruits are available in the shell. Fruit varieties of dry fruit can be purchased by the Sunny Five and surplus; you may find Sunday. Also selling水果 is the Marmalade Walk. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now with $1199 Eight one and a half selections of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort Main colors are cotton. Absorbs our colored spring pants. This and more at LUWINS "WHILE COOLER MAY FOREIGN" BREAKAWAY LITWK'S WHERE COFFEE ARE NOT V7SA Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodb 852. 743-8100 852. 743-8100 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Mount Blee Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social function. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-360. This senior honour is now accepting applications, from qualified junior students in areas of academic excellence and campus involvement. Applications are available in the application form located at 5400 fathom 7 on day March 14 from 5:00 a.m. to return all applications on an official transcript, to 268 Strong DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE PAM intrer Pratence Council will sponsor **SPRING FORMAL RUNH** MARCH 21, 21 & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 643-3598. 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner "Religious Conversion" Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Want to Built-Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Pleasae to 864-6123 by highest proclamation, this is the first annual proclamation week for room 118 Strong sec-323 before. The Drift: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8 at 8 p.m. in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. Renaal's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone; for information, write; Harper, Kansas 76038 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid.quiet and comfortable.Reasonably priced.Call 813-5757 or 842-4185.tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to the library, for 81-9307 or 84-4185. 宜僖稍费. Call 81-9307 or 84-4185. **\pts. and rooms for rent. Near University and** **10 pets. Phone 841-5500.** **TF** New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances and cable 1 bed from the Union Call 860-753-9100 Jayhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bed- room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 812-444 or see at 254 Fronter Road, Next door to Russell's East. **t** **f** NASMISTH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. Office space for rent now at the area *b* building, 322%; Mass. The inner offices can be charged to ft needs.提升 and or lower seats 728 ft. or 890 ft. contact 8324124 or 8347-0777. ROOMS NOW. AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 member student cooperative within a walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, event #842-9421. 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 845-7210 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Rickie Ricks Shon. 103. Vermont. 841-6642. ft. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00/mo. 841-3168. 3-4 Antiques are always in, see and buy one you like. 7 and 8th Friday-Saturday at 9:30 a.m. 8th and 9th Friday-Saturday at 10:30 a.m. Club of Lawyers, Inc. at National Guard Acadamy with this aid. Good all three days. Refreshments with this aid. These all new and contemporary lodgeware are designed to meet your needs. 3 books from XU and downstream! Starting at an annual rate of $400 with study area, 115' halls, garage with opening door, private en-suite rooms with private rear door. 814-845-2900 or 814-845-2920 for private security. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. 11 Need to suburban 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Full carry-along vehicle. New door and refrigerator. Cash for cash. And drive and walk on $200. Call 841-0019-69. Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualifed tenants to rent this superb 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studiosum, recreation. 3 bathrooms. Wanted. Reference, referencs, reference, referencs, 842-0221. 3-19 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and covered with vinyl flooring to campus, on bus line, 822-442-4601, 841-201-3801 72. Dodge Challenger-318 2,00 A, ... ... ... 81,000 PH. 841-8154. ... ... ... ... 3-5 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make sure you have studied the Civilization chapter to use them 1). As study guide 2). For class analysis of Western Civilization available at Town Crit, Malt Bookstore and Oread Books. 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. FOR SALE 98 Old Blds 82, Clean. Dm8 good condition, excellent mets. mechs 8058-8447-4027 9 a.m. 3 a.m. 1973 Cleyen ST, 25 mp-WAC Overhauled, new tree. durable. Mint sell. Mell BUke. 842-2760-4027 Sublease 2 BR apt, w option for next year. Reasonable rent. low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. A1-561-698. 3-7 Alternator, starter and generator specialties MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-506-3900, 300 w, 6th, uf MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-506-3900, 300 w, 6th, uf Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available Aaril. For more information call Terr. 841-7266 or 841-7476. 3-7 Cable-Nelson. Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish. Walt Disney Electric Piano. 10 yrs TSR 4 Speakers, still warranted. Guitar, Walnut Bed & Dress-3. 824-4270. Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool must on 9th St, & bus route 842-238-8700, 842-238-8610. Must sublute - 2 bedroom furnished apartment Cable TV. Included in rent. Next to: Tahoe Bridge. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Ten small must sell靴。 $35 or best offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 SunSpecs=Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-reflective materials, reasonable season, reasoned 1021 Mason, 841-5770 WATERBED MATTERNESS, $158.98 3 year *ear- white* WHITE WRITE, 704 Mans, 83-138 FT New excellent quality bed-orthern matte- furniture for your home. Refinished, Furniture 120 New York St. #1228, **if** you need it. Kenwood DCStereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100. 70 watts professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-5954 call anytime. 3-4 Cabin fever? Try T-Top Cullas, red, black top; interior PS/PB, air, cruise, AM/FM canister, high MPG. Beautiful road car, Corg- 842-513-38 Must sell—Electric Epiphone guitar and a 'C' 2000 AMP. Good condition plays like new. 843-672-85. 3.5 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold 24,000 pairs. New carpets, no wrecks. 400 w/4 barrel carc. T-stop. Power everything. Call 811-7418 or 82-957-Ask. For Math. Serious errors only. 2-4 Roxsignal Solomon skins $120, 69 VW $200, roller skins 9.11 oak pew $100, $842, #822 or 822 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D*s stamped on it. $1 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 Jensen 550 3 way speakers 15 wooper w/ fre- rourency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 811-2162. 3-17 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments FOUND with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1600 W, 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains with a college dueling basketball and children with a backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife, eco-tourism, hiking, Western Forests, Flight School, Colorado 8016. To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAL. 841-5732. 3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? A. social activities are more enjoyable while women sexual activities are more enjoyable while women clothing. Many transvestees are married and wear women's clothing as an assertion of their non-menousness women wear women's clothing as an assertion to parody the traditional woman's role in society. B. do question why women wear men's clothing, C. do question why women wear men's clothing, D. question why women wear men's clothing, E. question why women wear men's clothing, F. question why women wear men's clothing THIS IN-MONTH sponsored BY GAY SERVICES OF KANSAAR FINDING. secondary, secondary, recurring, dossieres rp order order Tease 80421 Need some need something anything pn Typiid -half at least 60% environment CRUISSEHI ING CAMP career. NAT for AP1 CRUISEW1 --houses in soccer. NEED CASH GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR CALL NOW! Wristwatch-- afternoon. Misc. keys Lot call 841 identity. 2 dorm. door of wi-fi SERVICES OFFERED IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Send $10 for two: 306-page catalog of college research. 10,202 tions listed. BOX 22097G; Los Angeles, CA. 90253. (213) 477-8228. For legal assistance, including Maternity Leave and Family Leave, call 1-800-273-8411 or visit http://www.maternityleave.com. Your return payment Davis is a Latter, 10th East 2nd Floor, 1209 West 67th Street, 345434. **345434** collection Call 843-6013 late events. Office: 345434 Access Monday through Friday 10am to 5pm. Accept Master Certificates. 842-9737 or 841-7476 PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 AM to PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 Mass Church. EXPERT TUORING: MATH 600-102 call 842-7585. MATH 115-119 call 842-7585. STATISTICS CIS 100-600. CIS 100-600 call 842-7585. PHYSICS BIS 842-7585. ENGLISH and SPANISH BIS 842-7585. I Navy blu. Found Call 864-132 Black cat ir 2782 or 864 TYPING --houses in soccer. I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF Found a cal 753-7530 eve Found—sma long tail. W work 842-25 Why cues about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammar: 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF Experienced typhus – three, dissection, term treatment. Experienced correction, selective Bact. After a 5 month. p84-2310 Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, rates. These courses welcome both new and existing students. M-2022 01234567890 SOCCER QUIETLY MAKES ITS MARK The world's most popular sport has been making headway (if not headlines) at small colleges. The big schools are next. BY TIM WENDEL Lost: A br a d O-Zon 6. The Harrow On a hill overlooking the city is Hartwick College. The school, which has an enrollment of fewer T first glance, Omeata, New York, looks like many other small cities. Surrounded by rolling hills, farms, woodlands and rocky Mountains Rockwell painting come to life. It's a locale where the old folks talk about yesterday and their children leave for the big city lights and the wonder of all night television. But they seem something that kensne home. Oncuna is Soccercotton, U.S. It says on the mayor's official website that Oncuna, Posters in store win-tops support the city's bid for the National Soccer Hall of Fame, a house at a museum, stadium, administrative offices, and training facilities. A walk behind the elementary school in the community is something special here. The playing fields are well groomed and lined, but there are soccer nets—not goal posts—at either end. The Hartwick campus engulfed in autumn foliage. 14 All-Americas and Jim Lennox, a coach of the soccer coach Hartwick spring. Lemons tou spring. American on Boston summer In head-to-head or with football, soccer points. In California, grown by 75 percent level (18 years and soyo age) of boys in 400 kids played great Many other small making commitment teams and baseball contin the headlines, but our out of publicity, soce the country at the g sport, make a take place. Most think of soccer as a gi immigrants in short, i.e. young, the spor A major reason for soccer popularity, particularly on the small-broadway stage, was the wick-sided its football equipment to the Oncita Nacional, a Indian team, and in 1956 made soccer its national sport. The son was less than outstanding, as the team played only five games and lost three. However, in the 1970s he lished a national reputation and did so without spending much money. In 1977, when Hartwick lost his pinnacle sponsorship, the soccer budget was MILLER STUDENT SPORTS POLL minuscule atball pro- end more Take part in this national poll of college students. Just fill in your answers and mail the card. Results will be announced later in the spring. ___ No Opinion 1. Do you think foreign athletes attend U.S. colleges and universities should be permitted to compete in American intercollege championships? 3. Professional football and basketball usually staff players who have completed four years of college eligibility. No team in the NFL has ever required a player to play as a college athlete; you think basketball should be limited to fitting any player who have completed four years of college eligibility. 2. Do you think foreign athletes should be eligible for athletic scholarships to American colleges and universities? Yes No No Division 4. Do you think the U.S. government and/or private industry should subsidize athletes training for Olympic competition? financial ii. and longer fielding a ball team der pads. ceer team ceer team es, and 5. 5 Wich of the felloww winstery/spring schools do you follow with interest? (please check.) ast. accu- cted. Call _ tennis _ softball _ swimming _ tennis _ track and field _ water skiing decade ago. Today, more than media attention. In a sense, warn 135,000 take part in the Atlanta a generation away from them. They're the ones that is this game. - soccer's an play it. * to be of BOLA 15'3" * Ameri-LAMER 15' * Brazilian d soccer to * the New YORK * Soccer an Soccer ional are cisco, and Hartwick cannot support play. In football, the emphasis is winning a football game, but they can run on running either else and take a few steps to win the game. is, mise, dling cor- tf One pair $P$ If found, please call 864-6859. 3-7 e game to Selectric. indy, eve- tif vs. theses I Correct- Lost—sat of keys on brass rectangular key chain Says 'available' Reward 824-4274 3-7 SPORTS BULLETIN 21 blue-eyed, easy-growing male genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (so to speak) 841-8927. Ask for one of Lance's roommates and we'll fix you up 3-4. --- SERVICE couple of friends deay if day 17 e. center; e. center; sportunitary u. house; u. house; living age. non- Keep 3 aid. owen 3.6 partition. 3.5 de room. a. moo- am 3. a.m. 6. b. bedroom sall after 3.5 JS T. - - - - - THREE: KOREAN CLASSIFIED—EVERYTHING THAT TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD. --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Snorts Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't better. 900 Kansas baseball season got off to an unofficial start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstep. There was no winner or loser, but it was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Kea) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said we were ready to go," Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runs were allowed during the nine innings. The following game was in order. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 11, but weather might be a problem again. Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Clayton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well, I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it would be a cool day. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- tance, but it was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell now, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chices. KU's always sparse roster is two players from each team. Pitchers Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection" Temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go in nursing or" "hospital." Women drop in basketball poll The Women's Top Twents **Top Twenty Women's college basketball teams** **Including the top 20 women in the league and based on the halftime of the women's coach's games.** **1. Louisiana Tech (11)** - 36.2 **2. Texas Tech** - 36.2 **3. Texas A&M** - 36.2 **4. Georgia Austin** - 25.9 **5. Buffalo North Carolina** - 25.9 **6. N.C. Carolina St** - 25.9 **7. Long Beach St** - 24.5 **8. Kentucky** - 24.5 **9. Kentucky** - 24.5 **10. Maryland** - 18.8 **11. Saint Francis** - 18.7 **12. KANSAS** - 18.7 **13. Oklahoma** - 18.7 **14. Northwestern** - 11.4 **15. Las Vegas State** - 11.4 **16. Central Missouri St** - 10.7 **17. Detroit** - 10.7 Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson TN, Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech The United Press International weekly. Board of Cupset top 10 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, in parentheses. UPITop Twenty 1. DePaul (36) 2. Louisiana State 3. Kentucky (5) 4. Louisville (1) 5. Oregon State 6. Syracuse 7. Indiana 8. Maryland 9. Ohio State 10. Georgetown 11. Notre Dame 12. Michigan State 13. St. John's N.Y. 14. Missouri 15. South Carolina 16. Westboro 17. Webster State 18. Texas A&M 19. Arkansas State 20. Kansas State The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one twelve nine ten eleven eight seven six five four three two one two three four five six九十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九十九一二三四五六七八九十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九十九十九十九十九 AD DEADLINES ERRORS 16 run Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kanana 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 combined with other offers. 0419-8388 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for fresh pastels at 9th and Illinois. Sell fresh prints at 10th and Chicago. The Holt-In-The-Wall's Fresh Prints fries small peanuts in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry peanuts are on sale at Alphabet Sunday. Alaskan wild peanuts at Alphabet Sunday. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS 零售价 $11.99 I enjoy surfing as a selection of colorful spring pants. Gentle comfort Marry your skin tone Also enjoy colorful spring pants from Lifes and More at LITWINS WHERE COTTON ARE FOLLOWED 1984 master change VISA LITWINS Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Dharma Teacher Barbara Barchar 852.721-8010 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior homily is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in areas academic, research and campus life. 216 Strong. The application deadline is Friday, March 7 at 5:00 p.m. In return all applicants with an official transcript to 216强 Mount Blue Bliu SKIodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WACFACE LOVE PAM --been king, approximately 30,000 young people are playing soccer, while only 9,000 are competing in youth football. Imprater Fraternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Law- rence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 64-3539 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Endure. Please call 864-6122. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual proclamation for room in 118强 SEC-7 hiatus. The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open论坛 Tuesday, 8 March 8, 9 in Green Hall, Room 104. Pairl includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kubby. 3-4 Roalsah's The Oasis, the Oasis of the Bible Bk. II, for perceptive individuals and free spirits: No obsessions, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67038 109 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 835-959-0472 or 832-4185. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. Iff Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-3500. TF Antiques are always in, see and buy one year or two. The Antique Society is on 7, 8 and 9th Friday; Saturday at 10, 9th Sunday; Club of Lawncrest, the AT National Guild Golf Club and the AT National Golf Club will hold a Goodwill Day. Good will all three. Refreshment by Pilots. 2 new 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 847 8579 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Ricks Bike Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-6642. tfi NASIMH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the年历. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Jiahawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-4444 or see at 254 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's EI. If A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tt Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, *922*; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Tuxedo and or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact *834*-2014 or *834*-0777. ff 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition Call 845-7310 3-4 ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower Houset—a 30 member student cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and down- slope. For more information, event #824-9421 2 bdroom apartment, Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00/mi. Mo4-813-368 3-4 These all new and contemporary lowrises are available from VU, downstairs at Starling 102, Warehouse 93, West Village Need to sublease 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnishly furnished OST-street parking. Fully carpeted, cable TV, AC Ace new store and refrigerator. Call 800-641-9019 or run on $7.50. Call 800-641-9019 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING 72 Dodge Challenger-318 2 Bli, AT, PS, AC- 8100.000 KPH 841-8154 3-5 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this upstairs 4 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studiosums, recreation room. 3 study rooms. 5 key references. pts. reference. numbers: 842-0211. 3-19 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tt One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4611 or 841-3018. 3-5 1973 Datsun 240 Z. Michelin Radials. AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-646-356 after 6 Sublazer 2 HR apt, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. M1-6699. 3-7 FOR SALE 90 Old Dallah 874. CM good condition, excellent neatness. 8658. 864-0127 9 a.m. 9:48. 1972 Cilient St. 25, mpg-W AC Overhaired, new Mobil Must sell. Mobil Call: 8432-3484. NATIVE ELECTRIC *835-2000, 3000 W. Ghirth.* 10 Western Civilization Notes on Old Man Make Splendid Stories. 20. For Old Man Make preparation. 3. For exam preparation. New materials. 4. For exam preparation. New materials. 5. For exam preparation. To town Ctier, Mall Booksstore and Oread Book Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available Amtl. For more information call Terri, 841-7266 or 841-7476. 3-7 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 or best price. Call Denise 811-2750. 3-6 Cabell-Nelson Grand Plano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wiltshire Electric Piano. to yrs TSR 4 Speakers; still warranted, colorful Guitar. Waltshire Bed & Dress-843-8700 Must sub-lease 2 BRurm. apt. A/C and pool. $105pm. on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496. Kennedy DC Stirrer Integrated amplifier, model KAT90. 80 watt, professionally used. Excellent sound quality. Mint–well-sell. Must sell-Electric Rhythm guitar and a *i*-instrument. Good condition rules and a *4*–mold. 643–672. WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98, 3-year TUFFEN WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 643-1386. * Alternator, starter and generator specialties. MOTIVE ELECTRIC 860-2000, 920-2000, W 248, UTT MOTIVE ELECTRIC 860-2000, 920-2000, W 248. SunSpace-Sun glasses are our speciality. Non- protein lenses. Collection reason: 1021 Mass. 841-737-9767 Cabin fever? Try a T-A Cullsaa, black back top; interior PS/PB, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road. Craig. 842-513-3 3-6 Rosignol. Salomon skates $120. 69 VW $250, roller skates 9. 11 cak pew $100. 812-$842 or $22 $120, roller skates 9. 11 cak pew $100. 812-$842 or $22 1927 Tran-Am special edition贮 24,200 mm, new carpets, no wrecks 400 wrd a barrel quol- t T-top. Power everything. Call 641-7170 or 842-5125. Ask for Aik. Serious ingroutions only. New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mat heat. He sure can check on prices. Pledge London's finest bedding for you. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6:00 p.m. Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dv stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 844-2830. 3-7 NOTICE Jensen 500 3 way speakers. 15 wowfer w/ frequency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162 3-17 LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus. 2 BR apartments FOUND Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Tower Apartments 1602 W. 15th 843.4993 Midwesten Winter dates, shot senior high dance. Be Summer. seeings only; $51/thousands $10/college; 169/Cope Coun Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains for winters with camp setups. Grab a map and a backpacking horseback riding wildlife, ecoLOG, grain internalized Western Campesas, flaxseed grains internalized Western Campesas. Bureau of C position avail per hour in tations and youth Music or evenings Bureau of employment To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olymps camera and 24mm lens last seen at Allen Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME, I READY TO DEAL: 841-5357-3-7 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? A. social activities are more enjoyable while wearing women's clothing. Many transvestites are involved in these activities, and men sometimes wear women's clothing as an accessory or to parody the traditional woman's role in business. The traditional woman's role in business question why women wear men's clothing. B. do question why women wear men's clothing. C. wear an article of women's clothing. THE IN-STUDIO SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANSA --- NEED CASH --been king, approximately 30,000 young people are playing soccer, while only 9,000 are competing in youth football. Typist-bat | at least 60% environmen CRUISSEHI ING CAMP NAET for APF CRUISEWO FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR FINDING, secondary, tion from dossiers, dosiers, re $3.95 75 order, Teuc 80421 GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 SERVICES OFFERED For legal assistance, including Municipal court for legal assistance, including Municipal court revisit consult Dana & Laster, 10 East 2nd St, New York, NY 10019, or call (855) 263-2411, 2421 collect Call 841-5011 late events. Office phone 212-764-1111 Monday through Friday, 11 across the street at Master Capture Mgmt. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uhler Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 am to 1 PM on Saturday at 880 Mall. EXPORT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 847-5858. MATH 115-730 call 847-5858. STATISTICS MATH 115-730 call 847-5858. PHYSICS MATH 115-730 call 847-5858. PHYSICS 100-500 call 847-9036. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 847-7057. IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 309-page catalog of collectible books, 10.250 titles listed. BOX 250979: Los Angeles, CA. 90025, (213) 477-8228. tt Need some ground loc anything pr I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. $ ^{T^{+}} $ Why cus about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf Experienced typist-theses, dissertations, term papers, mice. IBM correcting electronic Barbary After 5 p.m. 842-2310. tt BY TIM WENDEL --- SOCCER QUIETLY MAKES ITS MARK Osceola is Soccerout, U.S.A. It says so on the mayor's office stationary and on manatee support. You can support in store windows support the city's bid for the National Soccer Hall of Fame, a 50-acre compound, stadium, stadium, administrative offices, and training facilities. A walk behind the elements is what soccer is something special here. The playing fields are well grounded and lined, but there are soccer nets—not goal posts—at either end. A T first glance, Oreonta, New York looks like many other small cities. Surrounded by rolling hills, farms, and forests, the place is quiet, untouched to life. It a locale where the old folks talk about yesterday and their children live for the big-city lights and the wonder of all-night television for some of our community people. The world's most popular sport has been making headway (if not headlines) at small colleges. The big schools are next. Lost: A. bro a.d O-Zone e On a hill overlooking the city is Hartwick College. The school is well known and has 1,500 students, has produced 14 All-Americas and is the home of Jim Lennox, a leading proponent of coach training in coaching. Hartwick from fall to spring, Lennox tours the countrys each summer and is a favorite growing sport. Many other small colleges are making commitments to intercollege soccer. Football, basketball, basketball and headlines, outside the spotlight of publicity, soccer is sweeping the country at the grass root level quietly. The league is being place. Most adults may think of soccer as a game played by immigrants in shorts. But for America's young, the sport is becoming The Hartwic In head-to-head confrontations with football, soccer is scoring points. In California, the spurs have scored nine times during 18 years and younger during the past four years. In Texas, only 500 kids played organized soccer a decade ago. Today, more than half of those in the Atlanta suburbs, where football has always The Hartwick campus engulfed in autumn foliage And so we are going to follow these steps. to them soccer is not something played by foreigners, and as they grow up, who are they going to want to see or have there children? "I refer to soccer as the 'silent sport.' Lennox says, "We still have not received vast amounts of media attention. In a sense, we are a generation away. These kids growing up now—this is their game." Colleges like Adelphi, Alabama Michigan, Cleveland State, San Fernando, and Hawaii. Students are receiving football team, but they are receiving recognition as power teams. houses in soccer. A major reason for soccer's popularity, particularly on the small-college level, is its low cost. It wick sold his team in some communities in Indiana, Indians, a semipro team, and in 1956 made soccer its fall sport. The Warriors' first season was less than outstunde when he took two games at home three. However, in the ensuing years, the school established a national reputation and did so without question. During the 1980s, when Hartwick won the Division I national championship, the soccer budget was less than $11,000. That's much more comparable to the average player who often spend more than $1 million annually. Soccer has been the financial answer for many Division II and III colleges that can no longer afford fielding or defending a team. A football team requires helmets, shoulder pads, pants, jerseys, practice sleds, and tackling dummies. A soccer needs only shorts, shoes, and a Another reason for soccer's growth is that anyone can play it. A person does not have to be exceptional to play soccer, but Hartwick All-America Billy Gazona was only $5'3" and 135 pounds. Plea for superstar players is the soccer to soccer to New York Cosmos, stands only $9'9" all, and most North American Soccer League (NASL) professionals are standing 61'. Soccer is also a safe game to play. In football, the emphasis is on running into someone else and knocking him down. At the begin- Quality work, ratings welcome! 127. TF SPORTS BULLETIN 21 rping. Fast, accu- One pair 28 If found, picture b64-859. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward b64-4274. 3-7 tesis, misc. pelling cor- if blue-eyed, easy-giving main genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (to speak). HI-81727 Ask for one of Lance's rooms and well fit you up. 3-4 pers, theses 3M Correct- gal forms. lectric. Call 3-7 , deliver & 3-6 couple of ur. Contact the day, if PHONE I SERVICE to Hospital, 926-5810, opition house. $100. 100-3610, range. Nope. Keep tree. paid. Owen. mortgage. 3-6 apartment. Cal. Suite 35. 3-6 ble-room. 3-6 m. 3-6 r-robedoom. Cal after Call after 9:50.50 PHONE: KARSAH CLASSIFIED-EVERYTHING THEY TRUCK TURNS TO SOLD. 2. Tuesday. March 4.1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud Bv KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't unofficial, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unhappy start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandlot. There was no winner or winner to decide, as was kept. In fact, there were never even a base runners. University Daily Kansan '1 called Coach Keith (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and asked for a referee. We agreed. Floyd Temple RU coach, we said. We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside for training.' The Jayhaws were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-hate Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runs were scored in nine innings. Fleeters were able to hit 14 pitches. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play those games today at 13:08, but weather might be a problem Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Cayton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three well, I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it looked like it would be very cold. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mount," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- cularity and it's really pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chores. Ku's already roster is two players on the roster. Pitcher Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "Mehtosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection," Temple said. "Mehtosh might be able to go on an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll Top Twenty Women's college basketball teams 2. Louisiana Tech (1) ... 36 4. Texas ... 36 5. Texas Tech ... 36 6. Rogers ... 35 7. North Carolina ... 35 8. Carolina St. ... 35 9. North Carolina ... 35 10. Chewy St. ... 35 11. Kentucky St. ... 35 12. Kansas St. ... 35 13. San Francisco ... 35 14. AMAZING ... 39 15. Clinton ... 39 16. Clemson ... 39 17. Newark - Las Vegas ... 37 18. Mississippi State ... 37 19. Detroit ... 36 Other teams named on at least 19 ballots, alphabetically. Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The United Press International week, Board of Cupes top 30 college basketball ratings with first- place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 12, in parentheses. UP1Top Twentv 1. Defiell (30) ... 26.4 2. Louisiana State ... 26.4 3. Kentucky (1) ... 26.5 4. Louisiana (1) ... 26.5 5. Oregon State ... 26.5 6. Syracuse ... 26.5 7. Indiana ... 26.5 8. Maryland ... 26.6 9. Ohio State ... 26.6 10. Georgia State ... 26.6 11. Notre Dame ... 26.5 12. Minnesota ... 26.4 13. Miami J. N.Y. ... 26.4 14. Missouri ... 26.5 15. North Carolina ... 25.8 16. Duke ... 26.4 17. Wisconsin ... 26.4 18. Texas A&M ... 26.7 19. Arizona State ... 26.4 20. Louisiana State ... 26.4 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十二十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十七十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十七十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十七十七十七十八十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十七十七十七十七十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十三十四十五十六十七十七十七十七十七 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 3 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 3 p.m. Friday Wednesday 3 p.m. The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect inertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Foid items can be advertised FREE *charge* for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be moved in rename or cutline to the Kneisner business office at $84.90 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for trays parked at 9th and Illinois streets. Keep an eye on the door of the **The Holt**-to-the-Wall. Selling fresh fruits in the market, and preserving fruit in the shell. Friten varieties of dry fruits are available, and to purchase, **Kevin Sunday**. Also selling wood and torchure. **Kevin Sunday**. Also selling wood and torchure. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value two PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Explore our wide selection of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort Many removable sleeves Absolutely our colorful spring print shirts. Linen and Mint WHERE CLOTHING ARE FOR YOU! ALL MAY RINGER BROS. LITWINS 1924 WHITE CODONA ARE FOUNDER OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodc 652. 842-7010 652. 842-7010 This senior hospital is now accepting applications from qualified junior students. This honors program, which are available in 216 Strong. The application forms may be March 7 at 5:00 a.m. **Return all applications** with an official transcript to 216 Strong Mount Bleu SKI Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3400. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --ning of each play, immediately after the ball is snapped, there is a load "whack" as the players collide with each other. The result is not one bad hit, but two damaged knees, and broken bones. Soccer emphasizes fitness and speed, not contact, and more parents allow their children to play the ball. Inter Preference Program will sponsor **SPRING FORMAL RUSHI** March 21, 2015     **SPRING FOR LAWYER campus students** . Contact **IFC Office at** 864-3599 3-21 Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of K.U. Hillel presents When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. "Religious Conversion" Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. By highest preclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secretaries. 3-7 Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 864-6125. 3-4 The Draft: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 p.m., in Green Hall, Room 104 Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. **3-4** Roanah's hotel, the Caitlah of the Bible B-II is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No shores, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 70588. 4-4 FOR RENT Level 2 new 2 br; ht townhouse and apt next to it. Level 1 new 4 br; bldg. Respond if苦难, pay 813-9579 or 814-4185. Call: 813-9579 or 814-4185. Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 813-5579 or 824-1815. If Antiques are always in, see and buy one you want. There will be a Saturday-Sunday 7. 8 and 11th Friday-Saturday 9. 9 to Sunday 10. 6th Club of Lawnery at the AT National Guard Armory. There is also a free refreshment with the aid. Good all three days. Refreshments are $25. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Ricks Bike Shoe. 103. Vermont. 841-6642. ftt 1974 American Motors Hornet. $1,000, good condition. Call 842-7310. 3-4 New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843-765-9200. NAMIHM HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8539 any time of the day. 1973 Dafun 240 Z. Michelin Radials. AM-FM cassette. Many extra clean, one owner. 842-756-1560. Jayhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bed- room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 324 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's East. If 72 Dodge Challenger—318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 81.000 PFI, 811-8154 3-5 A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tt 99 Olds mesh 88. Clean, good condition, excelent lend mech. $605. 844-6072 before 9 a.m. 3-6 1972 Cilact X 25 mpg -W AC, Overhauled, new dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-262- 3966. Available at www.cilact.com. ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student member cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, evenings 8:42-9:14. HANOVER PLACI NOW LEASING Office space for rent now at the area *h* building, 1022*M"; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and lower lofts 228 sq. ft., 989 sq. ft. Building 483-2424 or 483-4717. Cable-Nile Dark Grand Piano, excellent tone & condition. Dark-nature final finish Waltner Electric琴. 10 yrs TSN 4 Speakers; still warranted. Dark-guitar Guitar. Waltner Bed & Dress. 842-4700 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make Usake Books to use them! As study guide, 21 for Class U There all three and contemporary lowes are threw in, you can get 3 blues from RU and downstairs! Starting at a regular rate of $125 with study area, 71s, garage, garage with speaker, 69s, studio, clubhouse, private your private room: B-142-855 B-142-855 B-142-855 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots, Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise 811-2750. 3-6 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00, 841-3168. 3-4 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9570. ff FOR SALE Need to provide 2 bedroom Apartment. Complete furnished. Off-street parking. Fully carpeted, cable TV, AC. New stove and refrigerator. Clean appliances and stove on sale $750. Call 811-6491-811. One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T. V-1 hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. T81-4250 3-7 Professor leasing house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to lease. Contact us, call 617-340-6593, second floor, 2 bedrooms, fireplace, basement, huge backyard, $30, no prizes, references needed, #822-121 Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cushion, Camile black top interior, BP3B, airplane, AMF camelite, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Crane 842-5131. Rosalina Ski resort $120, 69 JW $250, roller bridge. 91 oak kite $100, $148 or 6900. 3-17 Mud sub-lease 2 BR Furn. a/c A/P and pool on 9th St, & bus route 842-2850, 843-0490 Alternator, starter and generator specialists MOTIVE ELECTRIC 825-806-900, w. 800, u. 400, u. 100 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold 22,400 carbs. New carpets, no wrecks 90 w/4 barrel carb. T-top, Power everything. Call 811-7190 or 82-93-777. Ask for Mart Serious injuries only. 3-4 Nikon 80-200mm lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 6 o'clock, p.m. 3:7 Must sell - Electric Epiphone guitar and a 'C' on 643-8372. Good condition plays like new. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available earlier. For more information call Terri, 841-7267 or 841-7476. 3-72 Sublease 2 BR and w/ option for next year. Reasonable rent fee, view clear view. CB 37168 allowed. 841-5699 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KAT100. 70 watts professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-5954 call anytime. 3-4 SunSports=Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- penetrated. 1021 Masonry 841-3770, reasona- tional. 1021 Masonry 841-3770 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D-marked on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. WATERBED MATTHEWS $58.98 3 year guarantee WHITE LIGHT, 704 MHz, 843-864 TU TN New excellent quality bed-orthodynamic mat- ture. 1200 New York St. 843-8238 1200 New York St. 843-8238 Jenson 550 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ frequency control. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162 3-17 NOTICE WATERBED MATTRESSSES, $39.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 204, Mass, 6486, UTF-8 FOUND LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains for sophomores and other college students. Backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife ecology, grassland birding and Western Camping. Ground-based Western Camping. Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? Most women are only comfortable with sexual activities are more enjoyable while wearing clothing that is married and has children. A majority of gay men sometimes wear women's clothing as an advantage to parity, the traditional women's role in marriage, or to parity. The question why women wear men's clothing, despite common misconceptions, is an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION IS SPONSORED BY GAY SENSE OF KANSA. To whomween found, borrowed or burgled my Olympus camera and 28mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kanaan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO BEAD 841-752-37-3.7 Wristwatch--Found on Wescoe Beach Wednesday SERVICES OFFERED PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF --ning of each play, immediately after the ball is snapped, there is a load "whack" as the players collide with each other. The result is not one bad hit, but two damaged knees, and broken bones. Soccer emphasizes fitness and speed, not contact, and more parents allow their children to play the ball. Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers and research correcting selective Barbary data. 842-2210 842-2210 NEED CASH For legal assistance, including Municipal court for repair of faulty windows. In East 19th St. return consultant Dwight & Lester, Inc. East 20th St. return consultant Renaissance, Inc. (ea) 343 collect Call 846-582-7222. Contact Master Court Manager Monday through Friday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS... FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR TYPING IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 30-page catalog of college literature, 10-20 tonics listed. BOOK 250791; Los Angeles, CA. 90025, (213) 477-8228. PRINTING WHILE YOU WATIS is available with Alice at the House of Uhler Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 Madison Street. 842-9737 or 841-7476 CALL NOW! Why cuss about typing? Experienced evil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammner, 842-6697 after 5.30 p.m. and on weekends tk I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF EXPERT TUORING: MATH: 000-102 - call 65785 . 7875 MATH: 115-730 - call 64901 STATISTICS . 7875 PHYSICS: 100-509 - call 849-903 ENGLISH . 7875 PHYSICS AND SPANISH 100-509 - call 849-903 IF --ning of each play, immediately after the ball is snapped, there is a load "whack" as the players collide with each other. The result is not one bad hit, but two damaged knees, and broken bones. Soccer emphasizes fitness and speed, not contact, and more parents allow their children to play the ball. Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Deserts, dissertations welcome. editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127. TP You don't have to walk alone on campus at Need some ground loc anything pr FINDING. secondary, action from a recruiting, doctor, re- s. $3.95 + . order Teach 80421 --- TO STUDI LIES, WILL Our const prove of your your opti residents, between Mass. St. --- Lost: A bro a.d O-Zone 4 One pair zhu. If found, plea. Across the country, these factors add up to more people playing soccer and more fans watching the game. At the college level, the team has three levels I, II and III to the larger Division I schools. In 1962, about 122 NCAA schools had intercollegiate soccer programs for men. Now, collegiate soccer teams have teams, and more than 16,000 men participate. The game has even gained techoids at Indiana, where they play against schools with established football teams. Attendance at the Hoosiers' games has been so good that the administration wants soccer to be included in basketball, within five years. Jr. Yegaye, who developed Indiana soccer from the club to the varsity level, expects the growth in cohesion at sport at most Division I schools. Soccer appeals to women because it's the new game in town, and everyone is learning it together. "Women are not handcapped with a ball," the editor-in-chief of Soccer America magazine "they are starting at a level with nearly every else. In football or basketball, if a woman asks a question everyone just laughs." (You can be an easy learner in sports.) Soccer has become a favorite with college women, too. In 1971, only three schools had a women's intercollegiate program; now 29 colleges have such teams in areas are in Texas, California, and the Northeast. The formation of the Iy League and Texas College tournaments last fall marked the first attempt at a regional tournament of a woman's national journey. Despite this newfound popularization, he has had its growing pains and is now in a position that has run into two problems which could only happen in the United States. One is overzealous coaching. In American sports, the coach is actively active and his players are passive. The mental image created by the word "coach" is someone who is also a player, whisking aside his neck and a clapboard in his hand, yelling to his team and the referees from the OPPENE DEPENDE q. Fast, accu- corrected. Call UNDERSTANDING SOCCER Soccer is a game of continuous action that resembles a cross team. A soccer team has 11 players who try to move the ball into the goal, and a defensive keeper—who protects it in a net eight yards wide—is the only player who can touch the ball with his feet or with the ball with their feet or heads, and commit a foul if they make contact with the ball with their feet. Foul's are also called for holding, pushing, charging, or tripping an opponent. Any of these sidelines. Being offside is another type of attack. An attacking player is often on the defensive ball when it is passed to him and fewer than two opponents are in play. actions results in a *direct free* kick, taken from the point where the foul occurred. The kicker directly withdrew directly with this free kick. The penalty for offending an indictive free kick against the kicker cannot score a goal directly and must kick the ball directly. Such an approach rarely works in soccer, a sport known for its ruthlessness. But the goal of a vocal mentor often interferes with the game. In the rest of the season, the coach is given A Victory for American Soccer In the Division I consolation game, Penn State defeated Cornell by 10 points. They are 14th consecutive appearance in a post-season tournament, Southern Illinois at Edwardsville defeated Clemson, 3-2, to become the 1979 NCAA DII Champions. Edwardsville squared up only American players in its starting line-up, and only two foreign players on the roster. The team was defeated by Nierman and Jamaica. Alabama A&M won the Division I lion with 2-0 victory over Florida. South Carolina passed down Southern Connecticut State, 1-0 to take third In Division III, Babson de- fected Glassore State 2-1, for 2016. University of Missouri (Missouri) University de- fected Lock Haven State 2-2, in 2016. is not even permitted. However, when a parent directs a soccer team, he usually patterns himself after a typical American coach When players move on to college, they are again hampered by the lack of uniforms; allows unlimited substitution, which produces an endless stream of players in and out of the game—a phenomenon unheeded. The unlimited substitution hinders the college soccer player trying to advance to the Big Ten. The unlimited Soccer Leagues, for example, allow only three substitutions a game, and once a player leaves a contest, he cannot return. Although more teams will participate in American colleges for the NASL, most spend their time on the bench. "Teams that play with substituents are not playing real soccer." Ms. Warner says it's killing the kids that are coming out of college and going into the Hartwick has been more successful at placing players in the top three in the Twelve former Warriors are currently on professional rosters in the NASL and the American Soccer League. The game title with all 11 starters playing the entire match. The Warrior team won 5-0, and that results in a player first, and if that results in a national championship, even better. Miami of Ohio is often called the cradle of football coaches, and Hartwick has a similar reputation among the football schools from 1967 to 1972, left Oneonta for the NASL and was named the league's Coach of the Year in 1973. In 1975, Hartwick led Lickieok, directed the Warriors to a third-place finish in the 1974 NCAA tournament before he moved on to the AISF in 1978, where he tied the year awahead. The latest in the Hartwick line is Lenox. He took the Warriors to the Division I as they upset San Diego in a double-match made us介绍 of foreign players. Uncharacteristic of most college teams, Hartwick establishes the game's rhythm and keeps possession of the ball through teamwork. Bartlett can execute this way if it was simply inserting new players. Even though the United States still has miles to go before its players catch up with the rest of the world, soccer will grow. In addition to making sense financial games is fun to watch and play. There is something magical about a soccer ball. Last summer several coaches, including Lennon, watched the game in which Croft was the star of the 1974 Dutch national team, labeled "the Clockwork Orange," which defended opponents with clever passing and the Nets' coach's nox model for how a soccer team should play, and weekday afterwards at 3 p.m., he takes his players up to their practice field on top of the soccer court, in fashion his version of that team. Heading and kicking the ball into the air, Cruff seemingly had it all on his feet, but trollered it without using his hands. Up and down, back and forth, the ball was in motion up and up speed, the ball and the player became one, like an artist's sketch. A Cruff yank of the ball calm and collected group, began to point, laugh, and applaud, and I kid watch a circus parade go Someday the United States will produce a soccer player comparable to Johann Cruyff—a superstar who can score like a wizard, head like a horn, and kick like a bat. And all of the along, the odds are he will have spent some time in a small city called Ornea, New York. Tim Wendel is an assistant editor on the Sports Bulletin. **1890 A. 312. Corporation. An all-interest joint venture of Boston Billing, The Miller group to interchange books may be represented on an airplane or on part with another interest company 15-30 Corporate. 600 Market Street, Boston, Massachusetts. A brokerage firm, The Miller group will accept book interchange orders without restriction from Dianxia, 100 Market Street, Boston, Massachusetts. The Miller group will accept book interchange orders for the international distribution of a selected volume of business pursuant to Dianxia's agreement with Dianxia. 22 SPORTS BULLETIN correcting tf osis, mis, pelling cor- f Selectric. sandy, ever- Lost—set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says available 'Reward' 824-4274. 3.7 ers, these IM Correct. gal forms, electric Call 3-7 deliver & 3-6 --- US | SERVER (1) | | :--- | | Guests in Guestroom (2) | | day of the day! (2) | | 29-58100 | | amuse, $13.99 | | Fri, dinner, $17.99 | | rare living, Nom-Keep 10 | | paid. Own no. 16 | | own. 30 | | apartment. All bills payed | | ble room a room | | 3-mat | i am 3-6 | | 9-bedroom Call after 12 | | @ 50 + | ... the way we want to see it. We are not sweethearts. We are not sweethearts. We are not sweethearts and we'll fix you up. We are not sweethearts and we'll fix you up. We KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- Tuesday, March 4. 1980 9 University Daily Kansan 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The field conditions weren't the best and the rules weren't uniform, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unexpected start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhaws and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstiff. There was no winner or loser, and the game was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runner. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and we were all ready," Floyd Temple, KU coach, said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no hailstorm, but the afternoon still snapped him into shooting. Floodlights were limited to 12 inches of depth. forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 10, but weather or a problem again Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage, Clyton Lawen, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three pitchers. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound, " Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter, so considering everything, I thought it was a good day to do it. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine inning ball game. It just was under some unusual curve, but I really pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafes and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching choirs. KU's already sparse roster is two players. Pitcher Panders McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. "McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection," temple said. "McIntosh might be able to go in nursing or two." Women drop in basketball poll The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams of the Philadelphia, Indiana and Michigan are boarded on the ballot of the Pennsylvania. Indi- nationally, 21 women are elected to the Board. 12 Louisiana Tech (11) 36 10 Tennessee (9) 36 7 Texas A&M (8) 36 6 Rogers (6) 34 5 Georgia St (5) 24 4 Texas A&M St (4) 24 3 Texas A&M St (3) 24 2 Chevy Sta (2) 24 1 Chewy Sta (1) 24 1 Kansas St (1) 24 1 Kansas St (1) 24 1 San Francisco (1) 24 1 Miami (1) 24 1 Miami (1) 24 1 Clemson (1) 24 1 Clemson (1) 24 Nevada - Las Vegas (1) 27 Michigan State (1) 27 Detroit (1) 24 Other teams named on at least 10 hallots Jackson State, Oregon, Queens, Southern California The United Press International weekly board of Cupaer top 16 college basketball rankings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 8 in parentheses. UPI Top Twenty 1 DePaul (38) ... 26.4 2 Louisiana State ... 26.4 3 Georgia (1) ... 26.3 4 Louisiana (1) ... 26.3 5 Oregon State ... 26.3 6 Pennsylvania ... 26.3 7 Indiana ... 26.4 8 Maryland ... 26.4 9 Ohio State ... 26.4 10 Oregon State ... 26.4 11 Nebraska Dame ... 26.4 12 Brigham Young ... 26.4 13 John O'Neal (J) ... 26.4 14 Missouri ... 26.4 15 North Carolina ... 26.4 16 Duke ... 26.4 17 Vince State & MIM ... 26.4 18 Arizona State ... 26.4 19 Miami State ... 26.4 The University Dailv KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES tune one three four five six seven eight nine ten two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.90 $2.90 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. Saturday 5 p.m. Weekend 5 p.m. The Kansan 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 viewed in person or by calling the Kaiser business office at 843-588. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for frieze traked at 90, and Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Arkansas, Texas, and the 14th - the Wall-Wall Fresh fruits peanut in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available in our store. Also sale on Sunday. Alain selling wood- burned Easter Sunday. BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 Free showroom sale at our display pantries. Great Content Markets to browse More bargains on natural spring print fabrics. Financial Musical LUWENS VISA BREAKAWAY motion change VISA LITWIN'S Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10 Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes $55, 842-7019 3-6 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior homeroom is now accepting applications from qualified junior student applicants in various academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in the form of a letter or a video day, March 7 at 5:00 a.m. Return all applications with an official transcript to 216 Mount Biscu ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM Inter Fraternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSHI March 21, 21, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 861-3599 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Want to Boot - Motorcycle 123-175 Enduro. Please book 864-1212. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual workweek room for 118 short 2-season cars. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union The Draff: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 m., in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kubi). 3-4 Robinah's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bld. for percursive individuals and free spirits. No hours, for information, write; Harper, Kannas 67088 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quit and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9578 or 842-4185. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and api. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Really priced. Pretail: 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 844 8379 8379. NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the年 Hall. both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Jayhawk West Apt. Now Renting: 2 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 254 Fronter Road. Next door to Rustell's East. If Antiquities are always in, see and buy one year or more. 7 and 8th, and Friday-Saturday to 9 to Sunday 12th. Club of Lawyers the AT National Gallery Club of Lawyers the AT National Gallery Good if Good, good all three days. Refreshment by Pilot. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tt ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student number cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, visit 842-9421. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building. 3212' Mast. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Up to 728' sq. ft. or 890' sq. ft. Contact 824-1244 or 834-0717. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $99.95. Rikes Bike Shop 103. Vermont. 841-6642. 1974 American Motors Hornet, $1,000, good condition. Call 845-7210 72 Dodge Challenger—318 2 Bbl. AT, PS, AC— Need to suburban 2 bedroom Apartment. Complete furnished. Off-street parking. Fully cabled, cable powered. New store and refrigerator Kitchen oven, baker, and stove on 3-4. Call 801-641-9111. HANOVER PLACH NOW LEASING 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00, 841-3168. 3-4 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and adjusted to the campus to campus, on 8-25, route B2, 842-461 or 841-201-8. Profiler leaving house for 2 years, need qualifi- enced tenants to rent this superb 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studyrooms. recreation. 3 bathrooms. 1 kitchen. reference. keys. reference. keys. reference. $42-$102. 3-19 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. tt FOR SALE 1973 Datton 240 Z. Michelin Radials. AM-FM cassette. Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-656 after 6. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make notes out of Western Civilization! Makes sure you know about the preparation. $ for exam preparation. New in stock! Prepare for Town Center at Town Center, Malls Bookstore and Oread Book Store. 69 Olds Delta 83. Clean, good condition, excellent mech. $855. 804-4072 before 9 a.m. 3-6. 1972 Celica ST 25 mpg Must-Use Call M43 -8216 2 a p.m. Call M43 -8216 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri. 841-7276 or 841-7476. 3-70 Must submit--2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T V hook included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Alternator, starter and generator specialties MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-806-9000, 3900 W, 6 ft. t, MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-806-9000, 3900 W, 6 ft. t, Ladies size 8 finely刻纹 brown leather boots, price: $59.00 or best offer Call Denise 841-2750 $69.00 Subtract 2 BR apt. w option for next year. Reasonable rent. low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5669. 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool $159pm on 9th St. & box route. B425-2850 or cust. phone 718-632-3120. Kenwood DC Storere Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watt, professionally used. Excellent condition. 841-3549 call-me. 3-4 WATERED MATTRESSES, $56.98, 3 year guarantee, WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 834-138, TSP Rossalog Skis skilis $120, 69 VW $250, roller 85 Oak, 11 oakawn $240, 32 oak 6900. 6900. 32 or 17 Cable-Nelson Grand Plano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Plane Rip 10 xr. TSL 4 Speakers, still warranted, dark-guilt Guitar. Wurlitzer BEd 3-7.82-4270 Cabin fear? Try a T-Top Cullasel, red with black interior, top mirror, airplane, amrx FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car, crash 842-5313 Must just sell-Electric Epiphone guitar and a "i" instrument. Good condition plays like new. $ 843-6727 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350 Call 841-6072 after 9.00 pm.zoom 3-7 SunSpect-- Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF 72 Dodge Challenger - 318 2 Bbl. AT, PS. AC- 8100 PHD, 841-8154. 3-3 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. Are sure to check on price. Leedson's furniture store has a large selection of 1978 Trans-Am special edition lamp 24,900 carc. New carpets, no wrecks 40 w/4 carc. carb. T-shirt, Power everything. Call 861-7817 or 872- 8573. Ask for Meri. Serious injuries. 3-4 Jensen 509 3 way speakers. 15 woofer wi frequency control. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! FOUND Wristwatch--Found on Weston Beach Wendronau On campus, 2 BR apartment with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Tower Apartments 1602 W. 15th 843-4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs area, students work with children in a camp setting. Backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife ecology, and animal care are taught. Garden internships on Western Mountains, Florida. Reqs: bachelor's degree in Western Mountains, Florida. To whonewhere found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 2mm lens seen at Allen Field House or the Kansas Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAD. 641-5257. 3-7 --blue-eyed man who is not a patient. Serious injuries only. All held at confidence (to speak). 841-8726. Ask for one of Laney's roommates and will fit you up. 3-4 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? Most women are more active in social activities and are more enjoyable whitewear clothing than nothing. Many transvestites are married or living with their partners, and sometimes women's clothing as an accessory or to paraphyly the traditional women's role in society is questioned. A dam question why women wear men's clothing. The article asks the question of whether women wear men's clothing. The article is an article of women's clothing. THIS IN-ITEM IS sponsored by GAY SERVICE OF KANRAN NEED CASH GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 You don't have to walk alone on campus at EXPERT TUTORING: MATH- 600-102 - call 87587 MATHS 115-710 - call 87587 STATISTICS 87587 PHYSICS 100-500 - call 87587 ENGLISH and SPANISH 87587-7057. SERVICES OFFERED PRINTING WHILE YOU WAY is available with Alice at the House of Other Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday. 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 89 Mast. IMPROVE YOUR GRADES Send $1.00 for your 30-page catalog of college literature. 10,209 titles listed. BOX 25097C; Los Angeles, CA. (921) 203-4728. ftf For legal assistance, including Municipal court proceedings, call 800-534-6271 or visit www.municipalcourt.gov. tax returns consult Dault Lauter & Lauter, 10 East 29th Street, 101 E. 29th St., Atlanta, GA 30310, 3243 collection Call 845-6211 late week, Office hours Monday through Friday 10am to 6pm, Master Court 8:30am Monday through Friday 10am to 6pm. TYPING I do dummed good typing. Peggy: 812-416-496 Why cubs ask to be tapped? Experiential civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty: 812-469-769 at 3.58 p.m. on weekends. Erika: 812-469-769 on weekends. PROFESSIONAL TIPING SERVICE 814-1900. TP Experienced typist-style, dierritory; paper names, IBM correcting selective. Buf after 5 p.m. 823-210. *T* Typist Editor, IBM Pipe Eiler. Quality work, reasonable rates. These desserts welcome; edifying /laying. Call Joan 842-9127. TF MASTERED WORKERS in training. Test pass. "AFTER A NICE, CIVILIZED GAME OF TENNIS, THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A COUPLE OF LITE BEERS." Mr. Bubba Smith and Mr. Dick Butkus, Famous Lite Beer Drinkers. C. 1980 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. Lost: A bro and O-Zone 6. One pair z LITE BEER FROM MILLER. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS. Uid pair (3) If found, pincer call 864-8589 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Saves available. Reward 842-4274. correcting ing Selective, sandy, ev- pers, theses IBM Correct. thesis, mise- spelling cor- egal forms, electric, Calh 3-7 5. deliver & 6. 3-6 PHONE: KARSAI CLASSFIELDS-EVERYTHING TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- a couple of ear. Contact f the day, it H SERVICE ate Hospital, vice Center. 13) 296-5180 opportunity house, $100, dryer, dish- 4-17 apartment. Call Steve. 3-5 sibling room 5 a month at home 9 a.m-6 p.m two-bedroom two-bedroom (100 sq. ft.) 3-7 3-7 --- Tuesday, March 4, 1980 9 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS Snorts Writer The field conditions were 'the best' and the rules weren't too strict. Were they 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an unofficial start? No, it's actually a warm-up. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that ressembled something played on a sandlot. There was no winner or loser, because no score was kept. In fact, there were never even games. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and he said it was a good day," Floyd Templer, KU coach, said. "We really appreciated the fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewel in a double-henter Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Sports forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play games today at 1:30, but weather might be a problem 4:30. Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runners were allowed during the nine inning, but the rest of the game went smoothly. University Daily Kansan Temple worked three pitchers during the scrimmage. Cayton Fleeman, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three pitchers. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on the dirt this winter as considering everything, I thought it would be a great day. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innning game. It just was under some unusual circling motion and I really realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jayhawks are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chores. KU's always sparse roster is two players from each team. Pitches Randy McIntosh and David Hicks are both lil. "McIntosh the flu and Hicks has an infection" "Temple said." "McIntosh might be able to go an inning or two." Women drop in basketball poll Other teams named on at least 10 ballots, alphabetically: Jackson St., Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. The Top Twenty women in college basketball teams 1. Miami Hurricanes (10) 2. Louisiana Tech (1) 3. Texas Tech (10) 4. Texaxo F. Austin (10) 5. Rogers (10) 6. South Carolina (10) 7. N. Carolina St. (10) 8. Boise State (10) 9. Cheyney S. (10) 10. Kansas St. (10) 11. Kansas St. (10) 12. San Francisco (10) 13. MANAHS (10) 14. Chelmson (10) 15. Northwestern (10) 16. Nevada - Las Vegas (10) 17. Cornell Morgans (10) 18. Detroit (10) *The top 20 women's colleges are on a list of 10 The United Press International weekly board of Jamaica top 20 college basketball ratings with first face wins and records through games of Sunday darch2; in parentheses. UP1TopTwenty 1. Deflaut (36) ... 28.5 2. Kentucky State ... 28.5 3. Kentucky (11) ... 28.5 4. Louisville (11) ... 28.5 5. Wichita State ... 28.5 6. Syracuse ... 28.5 7. Indiana ... 28.5 8. Maryland ... 28.5 9. Ohio State ... 28.7 10. Georgia State ... 28.7 11. Notre Dame ... 25.2 12. Brigham Young ... 25.4 13. Minnesota ... 24.4 14. North Carolina ... 22.4 15. Duke ... 24.8 16. Nebraska State ... 24.8 17. Texas A&M ... 24.8 18. Arizona State ... 24.8 19. Kansas State ... 24.8 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4350 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $4.00 $5.00 $6.00 $7.00 $8.00 $9.00 $10.00 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Grade: Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kannan 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 in person or simply by calling the Karnataka Business office at 86438. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Washes for frisk parched at 9th and Illinois, and for fresh-parched at 10th and Iowa, and the Heil & Co.-the-Wallis Fresh Fruits Market (the Heil & Co.-the-Wallis Fresh Fruits Market) in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available; apples, oranges, and sorghum. Every Sunday. Also selling wood fruits. BREAKAWAY BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value on PAINTER PANTS Now only $11,99 Ignore outside selection and additional price points. Gear up comfort. More stylish to choose. More stretch and volume. More prism shorts. Honest Man. LITWINS 1954 aster charge by world bank V75A LITWINS Intensive Zen meditation record March- 10, 832-742-7106 Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodus $ 832-742-7106 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This senior honorary is now accepting applications from qualified junior students in disciplines such as architecture, area academic excellence, and campus involvement. Applications are available in person on Monday, March 7 at 5:00 a.m. Rhetum application with an official transcript to 216 Mount Bleu ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3460. 3-18 DAVE HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC FACE LOVE, PAM --- Inter Fraternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Lawn-vey campus students. Contact IFC Office at 641-359-3198 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of "Religious Conversion" When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secretaries. 3-7 Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Want to Buy- Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 884-6123 3-4 Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union The Drafft, An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 p.m., in Green Hall, Room 104. Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby). Rosalinda's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for preceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9578 or 842-4185. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Priced at 843-9579 or 842-1485. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no phone. PNB 841-5000. TF 2 new 2 bedroom tohouse A/C D/W Appliances 957 New cabble 1 block from the Union Call 881 709 879 NASHIMI HALL is a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Jayhawk West Apts. New Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For appointment call 642-4444 or an Ada Frontier Road. Next door to Russell's East. **if** ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student member cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, event dates: www.roomsnow.org/ A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Office space for rent now at the 1 building, 921² Mia; The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. The upper and lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 809 sq. ft. Contact 843-2104 or 843-6777. Astibues are in. see in, and buy one hypo- 7 & 8 and 9th Friday; Saturday at 10 & 9th Sunday; Club of Lawners, the AT National Guard, Cleveland, good all day. Good all day. Refresh- ing by Pilots. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00/m. 841-3168. 3-4 Need to sublease 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnished. Off-street parking. Fully carpeted, cable rope. New store and refrigerator. Kitchen. Old house and slave run on 2-7. Call $814-901-0919. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Professor leaving house for 2 years need qualified tenants to run this upbright 2 year house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 study rooms. reveralized office space. 197 square feet. reference, pet needs. reference, B42-0221. 3-19 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and covered with carpet to campus, on bus route. 824-446-404 814-301-308 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 842-7310 3-4 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9519. tf Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make a book about Western civilization to use them—15) As study guide, 2) For class preparation. For class preparation. New for class preparation. For class preparation. For town Creek. For bookstore at Town Creek. Make a bookstore and Oread Book. Subarea 2 HR appl w option for next year Rea- tance dpa, 814-5690 view c3-28, drills pts, 841-5690 FOR SALE ROLLER SKATES Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Ricks Bike Shop. 103. Vermont. 841-6642. tfi Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. Must on 9th N, 8th & bus route. 842-2850. Must on 1st N, 3rd N. 98 Oils Delta 88, Clean, good condition, excellent kit. mechs $658, 804-4072 for 3. a 9-6 Must subst=2 bedroom furnished apartment Cable T-V hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-1 Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KENWOOD DCS800. Used with Excel2013 condition. 841-965 call anytime. 1973 Datum 240 Z. Michelin Radials, AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4560 after 6. Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Avail 817-7260 or 841-7848 more information on Alternator, starter and generator specialties Parts service, and exchange units. BELL AEMOTIVE ELECTRIC; 843-9069, 3900 W. 6th. tf u 1972 Celine ST. 25 mg, W-Call Overhaul, new Carrier must sell Must-Will Call Mike 4826, after 2 p.m. 72 Dodge Challenger- 318 2 Bbl. AT, PS, AC- 81,000 PHI: 841-8154. 3-5 SunSpears-Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. B41-5770. TF WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guar- antee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386. TAF Mutt all - Electric Electric guitar and a *a* in 843-6727 Good condition plays like new. Q43 843-6727 Cable-Nelson Grand Plano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Waltzel Electric Pliano, 10 yrs. TST 4: Speakers, still warranted, dark-glass Guitar Walnut B& Dress 843-4270 New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic mat- beds, pillows, duvets, pillowcases, Bedroom, Furniture. 1200 New York St. 843-769-5144. Ladies size 8 finish styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Tousm small sell cheap! $35 or best offer. Call Denise 841-2750. 3-6 Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cushion, AMF black top interior, ATP-BR, airplane, AMF FM casette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 442-5313 Rossignol Salmon skis $120; 69 VW $250, roller skates 91; 11 oak pew $100, 842-842 or 842, 6900. 3-17 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350 Call #41-6072 after 6:00 p.m.zoom 3-7 1978 Trans-Am special edition gold, 22,400 pounds. New carpets, no wrecks, 40w/4 barrel carb. T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7810 or 872-457. Ask for Matt Serious insertions. 3-4 Lost. Keys with a piece of leather and Dae stamped on it. $$ reward. Call 864-2830. 3-7 NOTICE Jensen 500 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- quency controls. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162 34-17 LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments FOUND Furnished or unfurnished. lyndawker 10w Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado springs working with children in a copious group backpacking rides, rock riding, wildlife, ecology, and mountain form Western Camps. Field trip to former Western Camps. Feldt To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Ovipus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at CALL me IN Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: BAL ME I READY TO BEAD 841-7325. 7:37 Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN's CLOTHING? Men are forced to wear clothes because their heterosexual activity is perceived as an act of rape and harassment and have children with it marrying and have children with them of gay men women whose women's clothing is an assailant's attire, or to parody the traditional women's role in society by changing women's clothing, or to question why women wear men's clothing, or to question why women wear women's clothing, this IN-HOME WRITER has an article of women's clothing. THIS IN-HOME WRITER IS SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANSA. --carnal secrets to attractive tall blonde-hair, blue-eyed easy-glowing man's genius. Must be patient. Serious inquiries only. All住 in street or apartment of Lansing roomers and well fit you up. 3-4 masters in roomers and well fit you up. 3-4 masters in roomers and well fit you up. 3-4 masters in roomers and well fit you up. NEED CASH FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . 842-9737 or 841-7476 CALL NOW! SERVICES OFFERED For help assistance, including Municipal court work for tax return consult Dawn & Laster 197 East River 324-336 and Elizabeth 324-334. 324 collection Call 841-651 late e-mails. Office hours are 2:30-6:00. Monday through Friday. EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 844-7585. MATH 115-701 call 844-7585. STATISTICS call (courses) call 843-9086. U.S. 100-600 call 844-7585. ENGLISH call 843-9086. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 843-7587. IMPROVE YOUR GRADE$! Send $10 for your 306-page catalog of college literature. 10,202 tones listed. BOX 25097G: Los Angeles, CA. #925. (211) 473-8229. tufs@nyu.edu PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uhler Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday @ 88 Man TYPING PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980 TF I do darned good typing. Pergy. 842-4166. TP Why cusks about typing? Experienced secretary service secretary does professional typing. Better. 842-6677 at 5:30 a.m. on and wakes ends. PROFESSIONAL TIPING SERVICE. 81-4900. TP Experienced typist –tied forms, dissertations, term papers, mice. IBM correcting selections. Barb After 5 p.m. 824-2310. TF Miller High Life® GLOSSARY OF BASEBALL TERMS 12 PACK Miller High Life 12 PACK TWELVE 12 OZ BOTTLES Full Count Short Center Relief Pitcher MILLER BREWING COMPANY Miller HIGH LIFE. The Champagne of Beers. WORTH, TEX. MILWAUKEE, WIS. GRAND SLAM Typeit Editor, IBM Pica Elaeite. Quality work, editing layout. Call John 812-917-3200. TF editing layout. Call John 812-917-3200. TF Miller High Life GLOSSARY OF BASEBALL TERMS XC4912 12 PACK Miller High Life 12 PACK Miller High Life 12 PACK TWELVE 12 OZ BOTTLES Miller Sweet Lager The Champagne of Brewing Miller Sweet Lager The Champagne of Brewing Short Center Miller Honor Lore Beer Relief Pitcher One pair of eyeglasses, fourth floor Wearhouse. If found, please 644-8659. 3-7 Lost-set of keys on brace rectangular key chain. Save available. Rescue. 492-7437. Miller HIGH LIFE The Champagne of Beers. KARSAI CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Tuesday, March 4, 1980 q 'Hawks scrimmage Baker in mud By KEN DAVIS University Daily Kansan Sports Writer The field conditions were the best and the rules weren't untouched, but the 1980 Kansas baseball season got off to an uneven start. Baker University visited Quigley Field and the Jayhawks and the Wildcats locked up in a scrimmage that resembled something played on a sandstep. There was no winner or winner, and it was kept. In fact, there were never even any base runners. "I called Coach (Keith) Hackett about 2 o'clock and asked if they wanted to come over to scrimmage." Floyd told them. "I had no fact that they could come over on such short notice. It helped us and it helped them. We both needed to get outside." The Jayhawks were scheduled to play William Jewell in a double-header Saturday, but cold temperatures and snow KANSAN Because Quigley Field was still very muddy yesterday, no base runner had to jumping for the first time. Pillegers were hit by jumps in a Sports forced the games to be postponed. Temple hopes to play the games today at 10:30, but weather might be a problem. (1) Temple worked three pitches during the scrimmage. Cleyton Meehan, Mike Watt and Jim Phillips worked three inning innings. "The main thing is to get those pitchers working off the mound," Temple said. "I thought they threw the ball pretty well. I think that was only the second time they've been on it, and I thought of everything. I thought the control was pretty good. Juan Ramon, KU catcher, cracked a home run to left-center field in the final inning. "He hit it pretty good," Temple said. "It was good for our hitters to see a little live pitching. It was basically a nine innning ball game. It just was under some unusual cir- tacle. And it was pretty realistic as far as balls and strikes are concerned." If the Jawhays are able to play William Jewell today, Temple said that Kurt Kafles and Mitch Lubin would share the pitching chicks. KU's already sparse roster is two players — Ciprani and Pitcherz McIntosh and David Hicks are both ill. *McIntosh has the flu and Hicks has an infection*, *Temple said.* *McIntosh might be able to go in inmary or* *with him*. Women drop in basketball poll Other teams named on at least 10 hallots, alphabetically: Jackson St. Mercer, Oregon, Queens, Southern California, Tennessee Tech. Top Twenty women in college basketball teams 1. Louisiana Tech (1) ... 36 2. Texas Tech (1) ... 36 3. Texas Tech (1) ... 36 4. Riggers ... 25 5. North Carolina State ... 25 6. Carolina St ... 25 7. Long Beach St ... 34 8. Kentucky ... 34 9. Kentucky ... 34 10. Maryland ... 18 11. San Francisco ... 18 12. Kansas ... 18 13. Northwestern ... 24 14. Providence Las Vegas ... 24 15. Central Missouri St ... 24 The United Press International weekly board of Coaches top 30 college basketball ratings with first place votes and records through games of Sunday, March 2, parentshes. UP1 Top Twenty 1. Defensible (30) 26. Tennessee State 31. Kentucky 34. Louisiana (1) 35. Arkansas State 36. Georgia 37. Syracuse 38. Indiana 39. Maryland 40. Ohio State 41. Georgia 42. Georgia State 43. Notre Dame 44. Virginia Young 45. North Carolina (J.N.Y.) 46. Missouri 47. North Carolina 48. Duke 49. Missouri 50. Texas A&M 51. Arizona State 52. Alabama State The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer... Each additional word. AD DEADLINES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 ten eleven twenty三十四五十六七十八十九 ERRORS for run Monday 10:30 Tuesday 11:30 Wednesday 12:30 Thursday 13:30 Friday 14:30 Saturday 15:30 Sunday 16:30 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kanan 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 copy by calling the Karma business office at 843-158. ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Watch for fruit, fir trees at 9th and Illinois, or fruit at 10th. Check the boxes for (The Hot-To-Treat-Wall) Fresh fruits from pineapple in the shad. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available. Sunday Also selling wooden or rubber Sunday. Also selling wooden or rubber Sunday. PAINTER PANTS Now only £1.1,900 BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value BREAKAWAY Iops our wide selection of colorful spring pants Great Compact Many sizes to choose Also offers our colorful spring print skirts V7SA LITWINS matter change OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) Intensive Zen meditation retreat March. 8-10 Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhode 542-7010 3- Mount Bleeck Ski Resort is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for information: phone: 842-360. 3-18 842-360 This senior honorship is now accepting ap- plices from qualified junior students. They will be awarded in academic excellence, and campus areas. Academic excellence, and campus areas. 268 Strong. The application deadline is Friday, March 7 at 5:00 p.m. Return all applications by a official transcript to 268 Strong DAVE. HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY WAC PACE LOVE, PAM --with all utilities paid. Prefer Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSHI March 21, 22, & 23 for Law- wrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 64-359-3098 3-21 K.U. Hillel presents Rabbi Fred Reiner Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor Kansas Union Want to Buy - Motorcycle 125-175 Enduro. Please call 864-8123. By highest proclamation this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secretaries. The Drift: An Issue for Our Time, an open forum Tuesday, March 8, 8 p.m., in Green Hall, Room 104 Panel includes Prof. Carl Lande, Linda Thurston and Ron Kuby. 3-4 Roanah's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible B-1-1 for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No shoes, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-0579 or 842-14185. **tt** Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 844- 9579. NAISMINH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Jawhawk Wet Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 524 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's E. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf ROOFS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunshine House—a 30 student member house within walking distance of the KU campus and down- stream. For more information, evertn 842-9421. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, **9232** Mass.) The inner office can be changed to fit needs. Up and lower or upper shoes 282 sq. ft. ± so ft. Contact **8204** or **8347-0172**. 2 bedroom apartment. Modern, shag, bus route. Gas and elec. Save $15.00/m. 841-3168. 3-4 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING **Thursday:** All new and contemporary townhouses are offering 3 blues from KU and downtown! Starting at $79,000 with study area, 1½ baths, garage with openers, laundry room, wet bar. Area and activity hours for your private show. Call (843) 254-6288. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. If Need to suburb 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. Off-street parking. Fully catered, cable TV, AC. New store and refrigerator. Parking. Store and drive up on 7-7-7. Call 801-649-1141 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this super bldr 2 year old house in April. 2 students, recreation, training. 3 students. referrals needed. 842-0221. 3-19 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus; on bus route. 842-4461 or 841-3018. 3-5 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make use of the materials in this volume to use them-1) At study guide, 2) For Classification of Western Civilization, 3) Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now' From Clerk, Mall Bookstore and Great Books Store. Subluate 2 BR apt. w option for next year. Re- aument 2 BR apt. w option for clear view. Che- ch pots, pets allowed. 841-669-69 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri. 817-7265 or 817-7476. 3-7 Must sublet—2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium 841-4250. 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Farm. apt. A/C and pool, on 9th St. or bus. airport B42-2855 or B30-2855. Antigone are always in, see and buy one you can. 7 and 8 th. Friday-Saturday at 9 o'clock. 10 th. Sunday at Lawn of Clarence, the AT National Guard Museum with this aid). Good all three days. Refreshment with this aid). Alternator, starter and generator specialties MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-502-6900, 200 W, 6 hp, 110 V Kenwood DC Stereo Integrated amplifier, model KA7100, 70 watt, professionally used. Excellent condition. ka-3154 call anytime. 3-4 1974 American Motors Hornet $1,000, good condition. Call 845-7310 3-4 WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guard qunee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, G-138F, TPF 90 Olds Delta 88, Clean. good condition, excellent mark. $685, 864-4072, before 9 a.m. Cabin fever? Try T-Top Cullas, ad/MF Calib top/interior; PS/B, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road car. Craig 842-513-31 ROLLER SKATES Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Ricks Bike Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-6642. Must sell- Electric Elevic guitar and a "C" chord. 843-602 Good condition plays like new C-843-602 Good condition plays like new C-843-602 1973 Datsun 240 Z. Michelin Badials, AM-FM cassette, Many extras. Clean, one owner. 842-4656 after 6. 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpq-WAC. Overhauled, new- tires. dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2516 after 2 p.m. 72 Dodge Challenge-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- 81,000 PHI, 841-8154 3-5 SunSpecs—Sun glasses are our specialty. Not prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-3770. TP New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. Be sure to check on prices. Ledon's Furniture. 180 New York St. #3428-32ff Rosignol Salomon skates $120, $180 VW $250, roller skates 9.11 oak pew $100, $842 -38 -3 or 3-7 1-37 Cable-Nelson Grand Piano. excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Kibber, 10 yrs TSI 4 Speakers, still warranty, natural guitar. Wurlitzer Band & Dresser 842-4700 1978 Tram-Am special edition gold; 22,400 pounds. New carpets, no wrecks, 400 w/4 caribul carpet. T-top. Power everything. Call 841-7812 or 872-5977. Ask for Matter. Inspection numbers: 3-4 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 or best offer. Call Denise 811-2750. 3-6 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6 o'clock p.m. 3-7 Jenson 500 3 way speakers. 15 wower fre- cure control. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162 3-17 FOUND Wattzwitch--Found on Werec Brush Beach Wednesday. Call晨会, Slide #863-857. -349.Keys at key host of Alumni Place Parking #863-845-653, ask for Mark in room R. Identify 2 weeks age, found orthodontic retainer on third floor of Woeber. May claim at交津 3-14 Woeber. 1 Navel mite mitten with 2 gold sticks on surface. Barley at Bayley at 13:30 a.m on the 8th Card 64-124 ultrasound. Black cat in area of 90th & Emery Rd. Call 842- 2782 or 864-2203 3-5 Found a calculator in Wesco Hall Call 1- (816) 753-7520 evening & ask. Describe. Ask Found—small female dog. Tan, blonde, curly hair, long tail. West of Hallmark, contact J. Sankey—3- 608, 842-2520, home 842-8384. HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER ORDERS: With you share your work experiences with our students. We also provide G&R customer assistance. Kamiwa for Implementing and Helping organizations. Kamiwa for Implementing and Helping organizations. Help input on nursing home conditions and aid in nursing home condition and residents. All names, and correspondence will be received between time and date. KMIWK, 92172 (between nine and five) or write KMIWK, 92172 (between nine and five). Part-time, Day-time dishwasher must be able to work from 10:30 to 3:00 Monday thru Friday. Apply in person only at Border Dibale. 1528 W 32rd St. Summer job for Student Couple! I am looking for a summer job with the college and keeping maintenance at my summer home. We will be doing all summer duties in August. Salary: $125 weekly for couple. Proceeds will go to our Summer Camp, cabin and great opportunities for swimming, cycling and great opportunities for swimming, apply in writing, and be sure to give names of teachers for your writer. COCUPANT: 1000 Sunrise Ave. Midwestern Camps at the University of Kansas should have dates with junior and senior students. They should be in- formation, tourism and dialogue or security of the campus. Camps must be made up of 24 hours of service or 24 hours of work, either on campus or at a Murphy call. Camps only may be held on Tuesdays. Summer jobs at Camp near Ottawa, Kansas Director, Counselor, Infirmary, nurse, Drillers. Santa Trail Trust Corp of Girl Scouts, Santa Claus, Kansas City, Kansas 689-724- 1001 287-836-308 Now taking applications for floor/door and waitress. Must be 8:20. Apply at the Sanctuary, 1401 W. 7th at 8:30 pm. Ask for Shelley. tf $510 thousand for envelopes you mail. Postage 袋 $29.00 for envelopes you post. R.S. Banc- 财务 Cdour d'Argent, 1844, 3864. FINDING, TEACHING POSITION-IN- STUDENTS from school administrator with experi- ence teaching in special education, distance learners, queries, interviewing, mar- keting, questioning, 136 Deerfield Bay, CA order to teach-13, 136 Deerfield Bay, CA CLIENTSINSPRINT'S SAILING EXPEDITIONS* SAIL- CHIP EXPEDITION* NATIONWIDE WORLDWIDE $495.00 for APPICATION REFERALS* to NATIONWIDE BOX * 00129, Sacramento* 93860 93860 Typist—half or full time should be able to type at least 80pm. Excellent pay and work environment 842-201. 3-7 If you need any extra cash, work for a few weeks. HS 182 W 1 H, #22, w/ offices, KS 6054, 3-4- 182 W 1 H, #22, w/ offices, KS 6054, 3-4 Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place has an office in the City of New York. Position available. Salary ranges from $29,500 to $36,500. Duties are to conduct behavioral observations and/or assessments of children who travel and have flexible schedule for afternoon activities. Application deadline Mar. 17. Skilled skills include Application deadline Mar. 17. Employer identity contact Mildred Solly (312) 687-2000. Lost. A brown Irish cap in ear of between Haworth and O-Zone. Reward offered. Call 812-6529 after seven days. Lost- set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says 'available'. Reward 822-4274. 3-7 One pair trinomial eyeglasses, four floor Wescoe. If found, please call 864-8659. 3-7- LOST Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D$ stamped on it, $5 reward. Call: 848-2830. 3-7 NOTICE LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843.4993 SKATE TO CLASSES THIS SUMMER! Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains with children doing work with children in a camp setting. Backpacking winter riding, wildlife observation, and animal observation. Granted an intern Western Camp, Furter Lake Internship. On campus, 2 BR, apartments furnished or unfurnished, all utilities paid. 843-4993 Enroll now! In Lawrence Driving School! Receive drivers license without Highway Parked Test; Transportation provided, Drive now! later 842-0615. 3-4 --presents IOSFPH REASLEV presents KUSA JOSEPH BEASLEY executive director executive director Operation Push of K.C. - "Why less jackson and North Africa" Tues. Mar. 4 Jayhawk Room - Union reception following discussion --- PERSONAL VOYAGERS-Fellowship-Christian Alternative for single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd, W. 30th, 9:30 a.m., 843-417-11. **ATHLETIC SIGES.** Running, tennis, basketball, savage. Save up to $15.00 on name brands. Mark or John after 1:00. 841-9677. tf FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-birth up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Community Health For appointment. AM to 5 PM (913) 480-4301 St. Ustroy, Overland Park, KS. The Harbour Lions is where it's at for cold beer, pool, pinball and unique lubbards. Color TV and stereo for the Hawks are away. You can get your ship together at the Harbour Lions, or go to the clubhouse. Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tf GAY COUNSELING REFERENCES through Headquarters, 814-2345 and KU info. 864-3500. tf INTERESTED IN FRATERNITIES? Participate in men's spring formal rush. March 21, 22, 23. To register, contact Inter-Fraternity Council Office at 864-3559. 3-21 POETRY WANTED for Anthology. Include stamped booklets. Literary Arts Press, 132 Nassau, Suite 212, New York, NY 10038. 3-7 To whomever found, borrowed or burglied my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Alain Field House or the Kansan Photo Lab: CALL ME. I READY TO DEAD. 841-5325. 3-7 TENNIS PLAYERS. Planning to play during spring break? He sure your requests are ready. He's a Member Professional Stringers Asn. And he has reasonable rates on good strings and grip 3-7. --- We offer songs for all occasions. Birthday, anti- milieu, holiday, ASTA singing TESA 7-25 GRAMS 842-871 NEED CASH Q. WHY DO MEN Wear WOMEN'S CLOTHING? The two major factors that prevent women from being active are women's clothing. Many transvestites are wearing traditional women's clothes, but some wear traditional women's clothing of their freedom from gender roles, or in parody traditional women's clothing in the context of traditional women's clothing. In question why women wear men's clothing, the answer is an article of women's clothing. THIS INFORMATION IS SPONSORED BY GAY SERVICE OF KANSA. NEED EXTRA CASH. I'm paying top prices for old gold & diamonds, class rings, etc. Call 842-9737 or 841-7476. WE ARE THE ONES by Ann Law. Intelligence works like greased lightning, using thought and will good to promote both. 520, paperback. DFB. Hardcover. Book Box. 287, Bedroom. 401, 01720 FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS . . . Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads Call 864-4358. CALL NOW! SENIORS 842-9737 or 841-7476 Wanted: Intellectual attractive woman to teach柜alen secret talents to attractile tail blonde-haired, brown-haired, with a gentle smile. Serious inquiries only. All held in strict confidence (no to speak 12). Ask the one who is closest to you. Do you remember when would you like to be together again? Look and look. Dad next week ... To find the 'Friend Saver' 'round the Jayhawk's beak! You don't have to walk on campus at night. Call Campus Safety Services at 864-8648 for an exertion team. The exertion service is available 5 p.m. to 1 a.m., Sunday through Thursday. Buzzy Eagle Jeff Miller 843 5600 or 841 8697 The Time is Now! We need the guts, the leadership, and the experience of John Anderson. We also need you help if you can help an a way, even by just helping you or if you need more attention, please can help. ANDERSON DON'T SLEEP Bold for boldness for boldness Matt and Chris M., congrads to the upcoming dentists! Michelle T. 3-4 Are you dating more and enjoying it less? Are you dating less and wanting to more? For some answers come to College Life. 7:00 Wed. March 5 at Douthart School Hall. 3-5 Confused and frustrated about taxes or-out-of state income? Call Rick 842-4650 for tax planning as well as preparing. 3-7 Female nursing student wanted to share apartment near Med Center next fall. 864-1664. 3-6 Interested in learning how to read Hebrew, only, you can call 1-800-423-8695 or the L.J.C.C. For more information call 864-294-3984. Encore! Encore! 3-7 Let the Alumni Association keep memo's alive at Senior Party, April 17, 7 p.m. Union for prizes, membership discounts and fun times Join your Alumni Association now! 3-4 Dancing in the light of JAH love this weekend. Please join me. 3-7 GURDJIEFF - OUSPENSKY Center accepting students. (913) 648-1469. 3-7 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 call 682-5755. MATH 115-701 call 682-5755. STATISTICS 900-102 call 682-5755. PHYSICS 100-509 call 682-903. ENGLISH and SPANISH 100-509 call 682-903. ft PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uhorer Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 M on Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 M on Sunday. IMPROVE YOUR GRADE$ Send $1.00 for your 308-page catalog of college literature, 10-2020 titles listed. BOX 2509G; Los Angeles, CA. (9205) .(213) .477-8236 For legal assistance, including Municipal court for tax relief, call 612-530-7999. East St. Paul is recurring custodyDA and Laster. 109 East St. Paul is recurring custodyDA and Laster. 109 East St. Paul is recurring custodyDA and Laster. $434 collect* Call 845-365-3333 evening, Office hours Monday through Friday 11:30- 12:00 Master Charge Monday through Friday 11:30-12:00 PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TF TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TF Typist/Editor / Pictures Pica-Elac. Quality work, education, feedback. VC for editors/layout. Call Jon 842-912-971 Why cuss about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does the proper business. Try Gritman, 842-6697 after 5.30 p.m. and on weekends. tfs PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE 841-4980. TF Experienced typing-disease, dissertation, term papers, IBM correcting software. Birth after 3 p.m. 842-230. tf MASTERMINDS professional typing, Fast, accu- rate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. Call Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectitec. Call Donna, 824-2744. If Experienced Typist—term papers, thesis, misc. electric IBM Selectric. Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-3554. Mrs. Wright. DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980. Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Electric Quality work. References available. Sandy,易 & weekend. 748-918. tf Experienced Typit—manuiterpits, papers, thesis Scientific and technical experience. IBM Corre- ting Selectric. 841-4228. tt ROOMMATES. Nalsmith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8593 any time of the day, if Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms. Reporting on and directing Selective Secturing Elam or Jeannan 841-212-7. 3-7 Neat, efficient typing, IBM selective, deliver & pick-up on buses. 842-3512 after 6:00. 3-6 WANTED "SCHAISTHIRT AIDS AND HEALTH SERVICE FOR PEPER HURTING" Peggy Harrian, Job Service Center, 512 W. 6th, Topeka, KS. Phone (913) 292-580- 8. Employer required to apply. An equal opportunity employer. Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, $100 u. utilities, private room, washer, dryer, washers, 842-5859 4-12 P female roommate for spacious townhouse living, nice, quiet neighborhood. Fireplace, garage, nonsmoker. $110 + 1.3 utilities. #42-4698. Keep trying. 3-7 Don't pass this up, 1. March rent paid. Own furnished bedroom. Only $110 per mo. + 3. -6 "littles. Call 853-0552 Male to share spacious unfurnished apartment. Includes utilities, 80% deposit. Call Stef. 843-499-2390 843-499-2390 Wanted: One good-humored, responsible room-mate through May. Own room. $115 a month. Jayhawk West. Call 841-0483. 3-5 Garage space for car. 864-6072, before 9 a.m. 3-6 Male roommate to share spacious two-bedroom apartment from spring break until the end of the month (April plus 1) electric. Call app at 3 p.m. 842-1536 * Roommate app.* 842-1536 Roommate to share 2 bedroom apt. $195.50 + ½ util. Call 843-6849. 3-5 STUDIO LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS AD DEADLINES If you've got it. Kansan Classifieds sells it. It just mall in this form with check or money order to Flat Hat U.S. Store. Use the above figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! Monday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Friday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm 1 time $2.25 .02 CLASSIFIED HEADING: RATES: 15 words or less Write ad here: ___ 3 times $2.75 .04 2 3 4 times times times $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 .03 .04 .05 DATES TO RUN: CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD 10 Tuesday, March 4, 1980 University Daily Kansan Former two-time KU Olympian recalls golden basketball days By PATTI ARNOLD Sports Writer The details are a little fuzzy, but the memories still linger with Bill Boulton, KU's only graduate ever to compete on two Olympic bobsleigh events. Houglain, now president of the Koch Oil Refinery in Wichita, was a guard on the United States' 1952 and 1960 gold-medal winning Last week as the country hailed its new Olympic heroes, the members of the U.S. ice hockey team, Haighound救 his fondest memories of the team's games. "When the American flag came into the stadium during the opening ceremony, there was just a tremendous ovation from the crowd," Houghton said. "It was just after the war and there was a few Americans in Europe then. It must me very proud to be an American." However, the similarities between the 1952 Olympic basketball team and the 1980 Olympic hockey team do not end with the crowns. The basketball team also had to beat the Soviet Union to win the gold medal, but unlike the hockey game, the U.S.Sport encounter was a victory. Even though the Soviet's team was their first Olympic basketball team, Houland said the Soviet sound was talented "They ran a controlled offense," Hougland said. "I think the score at the half was something like 16-15." Hougland said, "We were behind at the half and didn't go ahead until the end of the third quarter. The final score. I think was 21-16." Actually, the final score was 36-25, but it really wasn't important to Houland. What really mattered to Houland was that the United States had won the gold medal and that the seven KU players on the team had been instrumental in the victory. "The Russians were in great physical shape," he said. "It took everything we could do to get ahead of the players. They KU played an important role in the win. We had to use a pressure defense against Russia and we had used that kind at KU." Hougland attributed the defensive skills of the KU players to the KANSAS 17 A sellout crowd in Helsinki watched the U.S.-Soviet game at the 1984 Olympics. Only six points were scored in the first 10 minutes. assistant coach of the Olympic squad, F.C. "Phog" Allen. Earner that year. Allen had coached KU to a 284 win and an NCAA title. But in the end, it was the American team that held the ball to grab the gold. KU's Clyde Lovelett, a two-time All-American, paced the United States to victory. The U.S. outshot the Soviets, connecting on 13 of its 75 shots to only 8 of the 44 field goal attempts for the Soviet. Bill Hougland While the Helsinki game was a mail-biter, the 1964 rematch in Melbourne was a blow-out. The United States breeted to an 89-55 victory. But when Houghton accepted his second medal, he did it as the captain of the basketball team. The only KU graduate on the 56 "We beat them easily," he said. "But there was the high spirit and high morale of the players played their best. We wanted to be better." Another feeling that did not change from 1952 to 1965 was the feeling Hougain had when the gold medal was placed around his "It makes you so proud you're able to do something to contribute something to your country," he said. "A great feeling of patriotism is that." Hougland worked his way from the bottom of the Koch oil refinery to the top. He was working for the Phillips Petroleum Company after serving in the military. Then Hougland met an executive of Koch, who invited him to apply for a job. He did, and got the job. Hougland is still interested in KU activities and is up for election to the board of directors of the Kansas Alumni Association. But his matter now far Wehla is from Helsinki or Melloubour he was passionately wanders back to the places where he won his gold medal. "The memories will always stick in my mind." he said. Boycott clouds Woodard's dream Bv PAM CLARK Sports Writer Lynette Woodard has dreamed of being a member of the United States women’s Olympic basketball team she said is her "big goal." Now, three years later, she is one of the top five players in the collegiate ranks and is a certain selection to the U.S. test. But 70,000 Soviet troops in Afghanistan stand in her way. to 6,000 Soviet troops in Afghanistan stand in her way to help the United States evacuate more than a month ago for the evacuation of the Soviet troops from Afghanistan. Neither side shows any signs ofgiving in. The troops still are in Afghanistan and Carter still insists that the United States should withdraw from Afghanistan. All of this puts Woodard's Olympic dreams under a dark cloud. But the 6-4 junior has taken it in all strides and is now a strong contender. "I FEEL THAT whatever I'm supposed to have, I'll have." "I was hoping it wouldn't happen." Woodard said of the boycott. "It's unfortunate. But there's nothing I can really do." That Woodau is supposed to be a member of the Olympic team is one thing that few people around the world would doubt. The respect for Woodard's abilities goes beyond that of her coaches and teammates. Guse Sunter, coach of the U.S. Olympic basketball team, has nothing but praise for the KU star, "Lyneette is an outstanding all-round ball player," Gunter said. "She is one of the premier players in the game. Her greatest asset is not her ability to score, but her quickness, passing and penetration." Gunter said Woodard's chances of making the squad were good, but the Stephen F. A. Austin University coach was also a contender, according to the report. A 14-member committee from the ABA-USA selects the team. Open trials for anyone who wishes to try out will be held March 24-28 in Colorado Springs. Colo. Finder players will be given a team of four players who have received invitations, including Woodard. The final trials are March 26-28. The team will consist of 12 members and 16 participants. "IM HOPING TO have a nucleus of seven or eight players who have experience in the Pan American or World University Games," Gunter said. "The player who has experience has an advantage over the player who does not." But before the U.S. team can compete in the Moscow Olympics, it must qualify at the Intralia in Bulgaria, May 7-17. The top five teams in these trials advance to Moscow. The Soviet team does not have to qualify. "We have to go ahead to the trials in Bulgaria," Gunter said. "It's the only way to qualify. What will happen after that?" "The crucial date is May 24, the deadline for countries to register for the Games. As far as I'm concerned, we're going to have a tight schedule." Woodard said that qualifying for the Olympics only to have it taken away because of a boycott would not be worse. "ALL OF THE national powers will be at the trials except Russia," she said. "It could be one and the same." "There are going to be other (alternate) Games. It won't be the same, but they're going to make it as nice as possible." But an alternate Games would not be a substitute for the Olympics and any medal won would not replace a possible Olympic medal, which the United States was favored to receive. "I think we have the second best team in the world," Gunner said. "The Russian center is the difference. They're a very fine ball club without her- but a beatable club. If you have points and rebounds, the difference is always the 7 2-up." Woodard should fit in perfectly with the U.S. team. Gunter said that because of their lack of size the Americans would have to play a pressure defense and a fast break offense—the same as the Jawhacks. IT IS MOST likely that Woodward would play at a wing position. Gunter said, so she could go to the boards be in a position. But if things remain as they are now, Woodward will not get a chance to flash her shooting touch, leaping ability. "I if I don't make the team that won't be the end of the world," Woodard said. "There will always be something else." Sauer takes salmon's course to stardom By CHICK HOWLAND Sports Writer Jim Sauer's college swimming career will soon be over. Just like that, only this time it will be involuntary. Sauer's career began in a New Mexico youth program where a man named Bill Spahn taught him to swim. A salmon swimming upstream, three years ago Sauer completed a course in KU, where Bill Spahn had been moved on to coach. By the Big Eight Championships this weekend and the NCAAs March 27-29, Sauer, KU's senior tri-capain, will be forced to give up what has become more than just a sport for him. For Sauer, swimming has become a way of life. But that wasn't always so. He once spent three years out the water, protecting with his win-at-all-coats mother. As a youth, he was one of the fastest swimmers in the nation in the 10-year-old and under group. Because of problems at home, however, swimming wasn't always easy. WHAT HAPPENED between that first lesson and his final season at KU is what makes Sauer remarkable. "Mother was real nushv." he said. "I had to win." Before his senior year in high school, Sauer ran away from home. He headed for California, Glenn Lawn School, where he learned Spanish and Mexico. Yamashita, who had recently been in a motorcycle accident and was confined to a wheelchair, was having The tension at home mounted when Sauer had a chance to make it at the National Junior Olympics when he was 12. A first in the regional trials would assure him, and his family, a free trip to nationals in San Diego. Until not three years later, at age 16, did he re-enter the pool. Still, his return to swimming didn't solve his problems But Sauer didn't win. He lost by a scant one tenth of a second. Then he quit. "Before the meet there was friction at home," Sauer said. "I had to win. My whole family were wooled out." "He couldn't take the problems he was having with the parents of his swimmers and in being the wheelchair," Sauer said. "I lived with him my senior year. We were real friends. I loved them and he was having problems ad hoc to his wheelchair." When Sauer graduates this spring, he'll return to California and his 31-year-old former coach. After the three-year absence from the sport, it took Sauer two and a half years to catch up with his competitors. But even after high school, he didn't think he was good enough to play college. He enrolled at Midland Junior "college in Midland, Texas." His next step was the University of New Mexico, but the team disbanded after one year. Then came KU and a reunion at Arizona. "He's the best coach I ever had," he said. "But I'm biased because he's my best friend." Forced to sit out a year after transferring, Sauer still went to practice and became a team leader. He became a team tri-captain last season though he never swam a single race for KU. "Spahn treated me like I was on the team," Sauer said. "So did the other guys. They really helped me." "I want to be optimistic and say we'll win, but it will be close," he said. "We don't choke, we come in the clutch. We better win, it's my last year and I'd feel loasy leaving a laser." Now it’s Sauer’s turn. KU is pursuing its third straight Big Eight crown and he has to plaav a major role. If Sauer swims as he has in the past, he should carry his team to the game and go out a winner. Just like that. KREBS Ted Owens . . . back for No. 17 CATHY KREBS/Kansan stat Ted to return Marcum says By GENE MYERS Associate Sports Editor That's the word yesterday from the Kansas athletic department. Marcum said last night that he did not want to comment on the men who ages ago, but he asked Owen. He has two years remaining on a five-year contract and wanted the public vote of confidence. "Ted Owens has compiled an enviable record," Marcum said in a prepared statement. "He coaches who twice in this past decade took teams to the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament." In a move right out of the recent past, Athletic Director Bob Marcum an- nounced that he would play his 17th season as KU's head basketball coach. Three years ago, when Owens was also under fire from some alumni and fans, he said that he had issued a similar vote of confidence. "IN FACT, I wasn't too hip on the idea," Marc said. "Ted thought, though, that it would clear up some questions and help with recruiting. I didn't see that as necessary, after all he's years remaining on his contract." "We agree with Coach Owens that it has been a disappointing season, but I am confident of his abilities to continue the tradition of excellence in basketball." Sunday Marcum met with Owens to discuss the basketball program, a post-season tradition. "We had a long visit," Marcum said. "Then I put out the statement today. I've never considered firing Ted. "The thing of it is, Coach Owens wanted to clear up questions in regard to recruiting problems. It's called negative pressure and it's done by some schools." KANSAS WAS expected, as usual, to challenge for the Big Eight title this season. The Jayhawks tied for fourth in the race but came within a game of winning the post-season tournament. They lost 79-88 to Kansas State in the final. The up-and-down season ended with a 15-14 record. "We had our good moments, but we were not able to sustain them." "I am very proud of the way the team has come to come within one step closer to the goal," I suppose, the loss. "I suppose in summing up the season it's say the reason for our 15-14 victory." The good moments included a pair of victories over NCAB- bound Missouri and Oklahoma. On the other side, KU was blown out twice—once by Missouri and once by Louisiana. Owens, who had his name linked with possible head coaching jobs at Southern Methodist and Iowa State during the 2016 season, told me yesterday. But his players were taking "GOOD NEWS," sophomore Tom Guy said. "But as far as I'm concerned, the thought never crossed my mind that he was a criminal if the others were concerned either." "We had one common goal—to reach the NCAA tournament," Guy said. "We came, I guess, one game short. Of course, I got back at the season and it disappointing." Booty Neal, junior wing, agreed. "When I came to play for KU, I came to play for Coach. Not playing for him is something I never really thought about. I still have that same attitude." “It’s good. I guess they made the announcement to relieve the pressure of Coach Owens,” he said. “Everything’s together now.” This season everything was rarely together. But Guy and Neal said the initial disappointment had worn off. "ON A TEAM with as much talent as we have and you don't accomplish the things you wanted to accomplish, it's disappointing. "But now there are other things to turn to. For me, I want to get into school more. Some others might not take that sort of course. I want to concentrate on academics." During his 16-year head coaching career at KU, Owens, who succeeded Dick Harp as KU's fifth coach, has had many successful moments. He has: - A career record 298-144 for a .674 winning percentage. - Taken Kansas into post-season play eight times, six NCAA tournaments and two NITs. - Guided Kansas to six Big Eight championships and been voted conference coach-of-the-year five times. - Earned coach of the-year honors from Basketball Weekly in 1978. - TAKEN KANSAS to the NCAA FINA schools - UCLA, seven schools - UCLA, seventeen Marquette, North Carolina, Indiana, Louisiana and Mississippi each - have equal coed or dual. - Suffered just two losing seasons at KU. COLD THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Vol. 90, No.106 Anderson makes surprise showing Wednesday, March 5, 1980 See story page two Petition says Dykes violated profs' rights By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, petitioned the University of Michigan to grant permission alleging that Chancellor Archie R. Dykes was biased in his treatment of Norman Ward. Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and Dillingham, social welfare instructor, were members of a group that unofficially attempt to help the restress the荷美 Since then, Forer requested and received leave without navy for the snine semester. Forer and Dillingham were suspended without pay by Dykes for the time they were absent from their classes. He led a second trip to Iran in February with 48 other Americans. Leban's petition charged that in his accusation, he had the rights of all university faculty, staff students" by 14 separate "abuses and misuses of the powers of his office as headmistress." The petition says Dykes indulged in personal prejudice by selectively enforcing his own rules against the students, never regularly enforced and without precedent of enforcement at this Univer- DYKES VIOLATED University regulations he is supposed to enforce, the petition said, by refusing to name specific charges against the two, by denying them a hearing on any charges and by refusing them any right of review or appeal. The petition also called Dykes violated the faculty members' constitutional rights of confronting their accuser, hearing allegations that they did not deal with that process in the rioting of unrest. Dykes also circulated in the news media "falsehoods and slanders," the petition said, because he refused to name any actual charges against Forer or Dillingham. The petition accused Dykes of selectively releasing correspondence about the matter to journalists, who were citizens and sectors of the press, thus influencing opinion about Forer in a deceptive manner. AFTER FORER and Dillingham return dry, Dykes continued "to dissimulate, fabricate and falsify" his concerns concerning the testimony, despite the two men demonstrated their compliance to all the regulations for which they had been charged. Jim Scaly, executive secretary to the chancellor, said that Leon brought a copy of his petition to Dykes' office yesterday morning. Scally said the chancellor had no comment on Leban's accusations. J. Hammond McNeish, chairman of the University and co-chairman of the petition, the chancellor's secretary said. Leban refused to comment over the telephone last night McNish said that although the University Judiciary had handled a wide variety of disputes in the past, there had been nothing like the current dispute. Tim Miller, lecturer in religious studies, said Leban had told him several months ago that he planned to take a kind of comedy. McNish said the chancellor would be formally notified of the charges within the next several days. The chancellor will have 10 working days to answer the charges. Miller said he knew of several faculty members who would support Leban's position. "I think there are a great number of faculty that agree with the things Leban says, Miller said. "From what I know he responds to 'a behavior, I think he's been out of line." GERHARD ZUTHER, chairman of the University Senate executive committee, told the Council the chancellor had sent him copies of correspondence that the administration had received regarding Forer. Forer, a former secretary of state, overwhelmably against Forer. Zuther said. But several Council members said they knew of many letters favoring Fowler that he wrote, and he asked Zudner whether the chancellor was sending his copies of all correspondence or not. Zuther said he had not asked the chancellor whether he was forwarding all relevant letters. He also declined to communicate until night last, because he had not yet seen it. Liberal Arts requisites reviewed RU RICK HELLMAN Staff Reporter Students pursuing undergraduate degrees in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences must meet requirements for proposals under consideration by the College Assembly are The Assembly, which is made up of faculty members and elected graduate and undergraduate students, debated two proposals last night that would add requirements for graduation with a bachelor's or a bachelor of general studies degree. A report of a joint subcommittee of the committee for undergraduate studies and advising and the committee on policies and educational goals suggested these students seeking B.A. or B.S. degrees: - Completion of a third English course that emphasizes composition (English 203, 205, 288, 290, 210, 211, 212, 214, 216, 359, 360) or demonstration of equivalent proficiency. - Completion of Speech Communications and Human Relations 130, 150 or 230 or demonstration of equifidency proficiency. *Completion of Math 002 or exemption and Math 101, 102, 111, 115 or 121, or demonstration of equivalent proficiency. Furthermore, B.A. candidates who do not complete 115 or 121 would be required to take a second course in mathematics beyond Math 002. The subcommittee's report also recommended encouragement $J$. the development of interdivisional courses, which overlap the curriculum in core subjects, math/natural sciences and social science. The College Assembly voted by a narrow margin to adopt this proposal for discussion instead of a minority report submitted by some members of the subcommittee. The minority report would have added a foreign language requirement to the B.G.S. degree. MARILYN MUNSON Yellow submarine Kim Fountain, a 1977 KU graduate, is the owner of a house, 1408 Kentucky SL, filled with scenes from the Beatles movie, "Yellow Submarine." *See story page seven.* Student's song scoffs at Khomeini Greg Baker, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, said yesterday he wrote "One Khomeini Too Many," a humorous song by Avalahatul Khowlih Khomeini. "Pok 'fan' at Availahatul Khowlih Khomeini." A KU student has devised a musical method to deal with tension caused by the hostage crisis in Iran. Baker said his song also reflected the attitudes of the American people regarding the 50 American hostages being held in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. One verse from Baker's song reads: "Khomeni yelled, 'Carter, quit the bullfrog,' send us the shah, dead or alive." "We say, 'Khomeini, don't mess' with our Baker said he wrote the song in 25 minutes about a month ago and since had recorded it on tape. The tape is a jazz arrangement that includes horns, guitars, drums and vocals. embassy, or iran's goma be a memory," another verse in the song reads. Debate unlikely on self-help bill, legislators say After the song had been mixed and recorded, Baker said, he took copies of the album to his friend Dan McCann in City area. Dice jockeys at the stations said they liked the song and would make an et- JKH, KU's student FM radio station, on the song tape. It is scheduled to run no more than eight hours, accursed to Jeff Anderson, JKH music director. Baker, who is the lead singer, said the jazz arrangement blended sounds similar to songs from the Count Basie era. By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter A proposed self-help amendment to the Landlord-Tenant Act seems to be all but dead in the Kansas Leesilature. House Majority Leader Robert Frey, who along with the speaker of the House decides what bills are acted upon on the House floor, said that he was against bringing the hill on for debate. Speaker of the House Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, said he also opposed the bill. The bill, introduced last session by Station Rep. John Solach, D-Lawrence, and three other representatives, would give tenants the ability to afford a meaningful amount of getting repairs done. However, the bill will die if it is not acted on by March 12, the last day the House of Representatives can consider its own bills. "My personal intention is that the bill won't come up," said Frey, R-Liberal, who is a landlord. "I don't think the bill is good." Landlord-Tenant Act is the way it is. LADY SAID the actual decision on whether to hear the bill would not be reached until later this week. The amendment had been approved for the committee last week, after being referred back to committee because of revisional errors made after the committee's first meeting. But House Minority Leader Fred Weaver, D-Banter Springs, said, "If FF made that statement, chances are the bill won't be brought up." Landlords, who have labored heavily against the proposal, intensified their efforts when the proposal was referred back to committee a second time. "I'll be disappointed if it isn't brought up," solbach said. "But it wouldn't surprise我 if Frey decides not to let the bill have a chance to be passed." He has said all alone he was onlooked to it." A MOTION could be made on the floor to bring the bill up for debate, he said. The amendment also could be tacked on a bill to support or debate. He is not outlawish, but inattentive. Sobach also said there were several other ways that proponents of the bill could get the proposal to the House floor. Under the bill, a tenant could have repair work done on his own expense if the landlord refused to do it and the tenant's health or safety were threatened. To be reimbursed, the tenant would have to give a receipt for the work, his next rent check and a filing fee to a district court clerk. "It will take a great deal of work to get it passed," he said. The clerk would deduct the cost of the repairs—limited to $100 or half the rent, whichever was greater—from the rent and send the remainder to the landlord. IF THE landlord objected, the tenant would have to file suit in small claims court to be reimbursed. Frey, who owns apartments in Seward County, is among those who have claimed that the bill's passage would give an unfair advantage to tenants. Europe 100 Near East-South Asia 575 Far East Africa 147 American Republic 342 EMPTY KU foreign student enrollment mav ebb during next few years Staff Reporter By GRANT OVERSTAKE A nationality classification of foreign students in the University of Kansas released yesterday by the Office of Foreign Student Services shows that 1,363 students from 95 countries are enrolled at UCLA. But, because of the fluctuating international political situation and worldwide inflation, the number of foreign students attending KU over the next two three years may drop, according to Clark, director of Foreign Student Services. "I imagine the number will stabilize in the 1,200 to 1,300 area. We could possibly have more of a drop. There are just too many imponderables to be exact," Coan said. "Something could happen when the number could change overnight. You never can tell." THEERE ARE 1,137 foreign men and 429 foreign women on the Lawrence Campus and at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. There are 897 foreign graduate students, 681 undergraduate students, 503 post-medical students and 54 post-medical students at the Med Center. The Applied English Center has an enrollment of 151. Coan said he thought the foreign students were an asset to the University. "it important to the University and to students without overseas experience to associate with people from other countries," he said. Besides offering the foreign students "You could look at areas in the world right now where it doesn't work," Coan said. "But you could also see hundreds of areas that it has worked. Most of the students we have here are from the developing nations. They send people over to international and technological skills to return home to benefit the people of their country." educational, cultural and social opportunities. Coan said, and another objective of the student program is to make foreign students aware of the facets of life in the United States so they will be able to communicate effectively about the United States in the interest of their own countries. "We had 269 Iranian students here last semester. This semester we have 260," he said. IT WOULD be impossible to tell how many iranians were not able to enroll because of financial difficulties, he said. "Some of them graduated, some of them went home and some are enrolled for college. Some are still telling where they are." We've also had some Iranians transfer to KU from other universities. Most of the new Iranian students came to the University for graduate school, he said. Many of the Iranians who left the University had successfully completed a course on computer science in the Applied English Center and began their academic work. Iran 260 Venezuela 150 Republic of China 141 Japan 97 Saudi Arabia 12 India 62 Thailand 62 Nigeria 49 Jordan 38 Kenya 38 People Speaking Libyan Arabian Canada 37 Singapore 31 Colombia 30 Mexico 27 Federal Republic of Germany 21 Germany 21 Great Britain 20 Greece 19 Nigeria 19 Russia 19 Lebanon 19 Haiti 18 Costa Rica 17 Taiwan 17 Israel 14 Indonesia 14 Iraq 11 Netherlands 11 Peru 11 Ecuador 10 Ghana 10 Arabian Republic 10 Malaysia 9 Palestine 9 Arab Republic of Egypt 9 Honduras 8 Philippines 8 Bangladesh 8 Norway 6 Countries represented by four students are Austria Argentina, Chile, Dominican Republic, Guatemala Ireland, Spain, Switzerland, and the United Arab Emirates. Countries represented by five students are: E. Salvador, France, Norway, People's Republic of China Poland and the Republic of South Africa. Countries represented by three students are Australia, Bolivia, Cyprus, Ethiopia, Singapore, Greece Oman and Sweden. Countries represented by two students are: Bahrain, Italy, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Mauritania, Paraguay, Portugal, Sudan, Uruguay, Uravan, Vet Nam and Zaire. Afghanistan, Afghanistan, Belize, Belgium, British West Indies, Central African Republic, Denmark, France, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, United Kingdom, Colonial USSR, West Samoa Proposal opposes draft of women By SCOTT FAUST Staff Reporter TOPEKA-State Senate. John Vernillion, R-Rependence, said yesterday that he was afraid to talk and draft of women would be in the thinking of young women." put death in the thinking of young women." Vermilion expressed his fears by sponsoring a Kansas Senate resolution urging President Carter and the Congress to exempt women from registration. Although Carter has recommended women be included in any registration program, the U.S. House Armed Services Committee is expected to veto the idea this week. The Kansas resolution is a statement of common belief, not legislation. Vermillion and the other members of the State Affairs Committee hearing on the resolution. He said that Kansas' voice would be heard. "Kansas can be a leader," Vermillion said, "and we need to exercise that leadership ability." Reading from a prepared statement, Vermilion told the panel: "It is time in Kansas to speak up and to speak out and let the military industrial complex know that we will not give up our children and grandchildren to the gods of war. "Military discipline would be extremely cruel for most young ladies," he said. "It will not only be the boy down the street that comes home without legs or blind or in a box, but now it may be the once-cute little pigtail girded up the street." Vermilion said the rigors of military service, both physical and mental, would be especially hard on women. VERMILION SAID that he thought the resolution had a good chance of committee approval and that the full State Senate should act on it. He said he thought drafting women would diminish the importance of the American home and of the family, where "you are needed to need comfort and ability." "because military discipline requires that you give up your freedom to think for yourself and to be yourself; your beauty, your vanity and your personal likes." THE VERTILMILL resolution states, "Deterrence of the U.S.S.R. depends on America's military readiness, not on our commitment to a sociological experiment Both Vermillion and Jones said women still would be free to volunteer for military service. Nancy Mims, president of the Intercollegiate Association for Women Students at KU, said her national role in promoting a flavor of registration and draft of women. "Basically, we recognize not only the rights of women, but also the responsibilities of women to defend their country if necessary," Mims said. "Women, up to this point, have been given very little chance to pursue careers or disabilities under military situations." --- --- 2 Wednesday, March 5. 1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Vance takes blame for 'foul-up' WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance took responsibility for a U.N. resolution that was critical of Israel's occupation of Jerusalem. The U.S. vote in favor of the resolution touched off a diplomatic and political furor. President Carter issued a statement Monday night saying the vote had been an error and was cast with the mistaken belief that references to Jerusalem had been deleted. State Department spokesman Hodder Carling said yesterday that Vance was taking responsibility for the "foul-up" and that President Carter's instructions on how to vote on the issue were not transmitted correctly to Donald McHenry, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Following Saturday's U.N. vote, the Israeli cabinet, meeting in Jerusalem, formally rejected the Security Council resolution, which called for dismantling all old and new Jewish settlements in occupied Arab territory. The Israeli cabinet expressed dismay over the U.S. vote. Prime rate hits record high NEW YORK—With businesses still lining up to borrow money despite high interest rates, major banks yesterday raised their prime lending rates to a record 4.1%. The increase, first announced by the Chase Manhattan Bank and matched by nearly every major bank, came in response to new signs that the Federal "The Federal Reserve is now telling us it is aiming for a recession," said William Gibson, an economist with the Wall Street firm of Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co. "It's trying to do whatever it takes to slow down the economy." The prime charge is charged by banks on loans to their credit-worthy corporate borrowers. It stood at 15 % per cent in 2019 when the Federal Reserve raised its interest rate. Other industrial and commercial borrowers pay more than the prime rate, in some cases more than 28 percent. But the demand for loans has grown recently. The prime rate does not directly affect rates on consumer loans, but is watched as an indicator of short-term interest rates. ... change in rates this week came after the Federal Reserve acted to reduce the amount of reserves available to banks, and thereby reduce the amount of money lending. Khomeini consents to meeting Ayatollah Ruhbalah Khomeni yesterday overruled franilian militants holding American hostages inside the U. E. Embassy in Tehran, consenting to a meeting between the approximately 50 captives and a U.N. commission investigating the recourse of the elongated sheb. President Abbasban Rani Said said. The militants said earlier they would not let the five-member panel see the hostages, who began their fifth month in captivity yesterday. The militants have followed Khomeini's directives in the past. A spokesman for them, contacted by telephone after the council meeting, said they had not been informed of any developments. Tehran observers had said earlier that the panel members might leave Iran as early as today if they were not allowed to see the hostages. KPL files for rate increase TOPEKA-Kansas Power and Light Co. filed application with the Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday for a $37.7 million rate increase. If approved in the company, the increase would raise retail electric rates for KPI, customers by 17.3 percent. The residential customer using 750 kilowatt hours of electricity each month would see his monthly bill go up by about $5.80. KPL uses that usage as a guide for pricing. (KPC) The Topeka-based utility serves 270,000 retail electrical customers in 284 communities of Kansas, including Admonter, Abilene, Emporia, Hutchinson, Mansfield, Monroe, Nebraska, and Wichita Falls. Tom Taylor, KCC spokesman, said the commission planned to hear the KPL case in late April or early May. It was the second major rate increase application filed with the commission in 24 hours, with three more expected soon. The reason for the increase applications is the scheduled coming-on-line May 1 of the second generation unit at the Jeffrey Energy Center near SL Marys and St. Paul's Church in Burlington, VT. Bill to raise state waaes killed TOPEKA—The Senate Labor and Industry Committee yesterday killed a bill that would have raised the state's minimum wage from $1.60 to $2.40 an hour. The painet, headed by State Sen. John Verrillion, K-Independent, defeated the bill in a unanimous decision to break a tie. The bill was amended to state Sen. Barrerman, A Bernard Lawmeyer and The bill would have raised the minimum wage on jobs not covered by federal pay standards by 80 cents an hour. It also would have reduced the regular work/week from 46 to 40 hours, with any time over 40 hours eligible for overtime compensation. Opponents of the measure, including the Kansas Association of Commerce and Industry, said they thought the bill would hurt small businesses and "fan Warmth saves Florida fruit OHLANDO, F. a.-A surprise late-winter cold snap lifted in time to spare prove that the nation of the orange's accession to a Florida citrus region has survived. As temperature readings stayed above the damaging mid-20s, growers said it appeared that much of the crop was unharmed. They said the price of a glass of water at $14.99 per gallon was about the same. Although things in the 34-county citrus district seemed better than expected, growers and state inspection teams were out checking black-baked blooms from the market. Readings dipped near 20 degrees in some areas early in the coldest weather ever to hit the state so late in the year. The cold map was part of a heat advisory issued by the National Weather Service. Ice and slush found in the premium Valencia crop—vital for the taste and color of frozen concentrated orange juice—was the greatest immediate concern of the 82 billion citrus industry. Cell damage and dehydration could mean a increase in the yield of juice the rapidly maturing crop of 88 million Valencia oranges. Pupils ask state to honor fish Members of the school group, appearing before the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, said surveys had shown the catfish was the most popular fish among Kansas fishermen. They also extolled the table qualities of channel catfish meat. No one appeared in opposition to the proposal. TOPEKA—The channel catfish should be given official status as Kansaas state fish, a group of six-th Grade students from Rosevelt School in Hutchinson If the children's efforts are successful, the channel cat would join a list of items that have won official "state" designation from the Legislature. These include the state song, "home on the Range"; state march, "The Kansas March"; state tree, the cottonwood; state bird, the western meadowlark; state flower, the native sunflower; state animal, the American buffalo; and the state insect, the honeybee. Weather... It will be cold and cloudy today with a high in the mid 30s, according to the National Weather Service in Windsock. Winds today will be from the north at 10 to 20 mph. The low tonight will be around 10. The high tomorrnow will be in the lower 30s. The extended forecast calls for rain or snow on Friday with partly cloudy skies on Saturday and Sunday. Hights for the period will be in the 40s and lows Reagan, Bush get slim victories BOSTON (AP) - Ronald Reagan defeated Rep. John Anderson in Vermont's presidential early today by a margin so razor-thin that it was subject to an unofficial, morning-after recount. George Bush held an equally slender amateur match, as Anderson mounted a pair of surprisingly stiff GOP primary challenges. Reagan tied Anderson by 618 votes with 99 percent of Vermont's towns reported. Bush tied Anderson by just more than 1,000 votes of the precincts counted in Massachusetts. Massachusetts Democrats gave Sen. Edward Kennedy a landside victory over President Carter, but Carter swamped Kennedy in Vermont. The News Election Service, a votabulating service organized by major news agencies and networks, said it would "prepare for an event today because the margin was so small." The Vermont vote was so close that several news organizations—including the Associated Press—called Anderson the victor, or Reagan, only to pull back when final returns showed such a narrow margin. Though trailing narrowly, Anderson was the big gainer in a two primary day. After campaigning as a liberal outlawer, he confrontedentials as a contender in contests to come. Kennedy was gaining almost two-thirds of Massachusetts' Democratic vote. He told a Boston victory rally that his victory proved the voters' will not tolerate an inflation rate of 28 percent and an interest rate of 17 percent, wagering the wage-freeze price he advocates. Even as Carter conceded his first defeat to Kennedy, spokesman Jody Powell said Massachusetts "wast a real test" because it was the senator's home state. Anderson validated his claim that the Republican race has not narrowed to a two-candidate affair between Rush and Bush. With more than 90 percent of the Massachusetts precincts counted, Anderson and Bush were each gaining 31 percent of the vote, and Reagan 29 percent. In Vermont, Reagan had 31 percent, Anderson 30 percent and Bush 22 percent. That left the candidates short of the 40 percent required to win any delegates. They will be chosen later at a state party convention. The three GOP leaders were to divide about equally most of Massachusetts' 42 Republican delegates. Reagan and Bush, who had struggled for the relentless mantle of Republican leadership in recent years, could clear leader. This could make it easier for President Ronald R. Ford to enter the presidential race. Anderson's support was buoyed by a bait, turnout of independent voters in the Republican primaries in both states. That won't be available to him later in closed primaries where only registered Republicans can vote. With 91 percent of Massachusetts' precincts reporting, the Democratic contest stood: Kennedy 521,766, or 66 percent. Carter 229,856, or 29 percent. California Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 27,529 or 3 percent. or 5 percent. The rest were uncommitted. Kennedy stood to win 77 of Massachusetts' 111 Democratic convention delegates. Carter was leading for the other 34. On the Republican side, the Massachusetts numbers read: Anderson 107,072, or 31 percent. Reagan 100,041, or 29 percent. Bush 100,000, or 5 percent Anderson 107,072, or 31 percent. Tennessee Sen. Howard Baker 17,300 or 5 percent. Five other candidates had scattered. support Carter 28,622, or 74 percent. Kennedy 0.896, or 25 percent. The returns from Vermont stood this way with 98 percent of the 265 towns reporting in the Democratic primary: In Vermont's Republican primary, it was: Ronan 19.41, or 21 percent. Reagan 19,441, or 31 percent. Anderson 18,825, or 30 percent. Bush 14,006,or 23 percent. Baker 7.936,or 13 percent. Three other entrants were far behind them. $$ $ NEED MONEY? $$ $ NOW THAT I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION, BUDGET HEARINGS FOR THE STUDENT SENATE ARE APPROACHING. REPRESENTATIVES OF GROUPS PLANNING TO REQUEST FUNDING FOR FISCAL 1981 NEED TO COME BY THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, B105 KS UNION AND PICK UP A REQUEST APPLICATION. THE DEADLINE FOR REQUESTS IS MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1980. PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MFG LIST $79 ELVIS COSTELLO and the ATTRACTIONS GET HAPPY!! 20 SONGS! 20! MFG LIST $99 2-Record Set Specially Priced The Clash LONDON CALLING including: Lost In The Supermarket of The Card Cheat Jimmy Jazz Spanish Bombs London Calling $459 Columbia THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. ELVIS COSTELLO and the ATTRACTIONS GET HAPPY! 20 SONGS! 20! Find it in Kansan classified advertising. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. Going South? We have just what you are looking for. CLOTHES ENCOUNTER Holiday Plaza 843-5335 Wednesday, March 5, 1980 Topekans charged with murder University Daily Kansan By JENNIFER ROBLEZ Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Shawnee County district attorneys filed a first-degree murder charge late Monday against a Topeka woman in connection with the killing of a 22-year-old Lawrence man last week. A second Topeka woman also was to be charged with first-degree murder yesterday. Kathleen R. Cobb, Topeka, remained in Jakupa in topteake year for $100,000. She returned to Topeka and Davis, whose body was found last Thursday in a alldown area the southeastern limits of Topeka. Another Topeka woman, Ramona Moon, is being held on a charge of first-degree murder. She has not yet posted a $100,000 bond. Sally Pokorny, assistant county attorney, said Davis was shot once in the head. She said coroner reports estimated the time of death to be sometime Wednesday night. SHE SAID that the shooting was not accidental or self-inflicted. healed of self-injuried. "He didn't commit suicide," she said. "There are so many motives running around that we don't know what caused it." However, Shawnee County detective Gerald Foldgreen said there might be some evidence that Davis was attempting suicide. "We have information that Mr. Davis was trying to commit suicide at the time of the incident," Federgedeer said, "but we have not seen what about kind of drugs he may have used." "All we know is that somebody put a shot through his head." Federegreen said one of the two women in custody gave his department directions to the gun's location. He said the gun was found at Lake Shawnee in Topeka, but he would not say which suspect gave the directions. "This is really an odd case. It wasn't so much someone assisting another in a suicide as it is the taking of that person's life," he said. POKORNY SAID that the two women and Davis were in Lawrence the day of the murder and that they returned to Topeka Wednesday night. Pokoryk said Cobb and Moon were questioned by Shawnee County detective Friday after Davis' body was found in a driveway. She said the women came to identify Days. Pokorny said drug paraphernalia were found near Davis' body. Davis reportedly lived at 161 Lincoln St. in Lawrence. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Rumsey Funeral Home, 601 Indiana St. 919 IOWA ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 Mass. "Where Cards & Gifts Around" CARDS CARDS HANDS CARDS ('tis the priority date for applying for financial aid, 1980-81) BEWARE THE IDES OF MARCH APPLICATIONS STILL AVAILABLE in 26 STRONG Beasley, executive director of Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity) in the Kansas City area, spoke on "Why Jesse Jackson went to South Africa." persist in the direction they're going, I'm afraid there is going to be a bloodbath. Operation PUSH, hended by Jackson, is a civil rights organization dedicated to "making our Constitution a reality" for minorities, Beasley said. Blacks in South Africa cannot vote, own property, live in cities, or assemble and protest, he said. The few jobs available to blacks all navy low. "You have an option if you're black," he said. "Low wages or no wages." Americans can have a direct hand in ending the aparthied system in South Africa, Bees Payless said last night in a speech sponsored by the KU-Y. Americans called on to end apartheid Krugerrand sales in the United States provide South Africa with $60 million a year and the oil used by the government. If that revenue were cut off he said, "the government should buy." Staff Reporter "We're saying, without fear of contradiction, that the United States is in a partnership with South Africa." But he said that the apartheid system was bound to change sooner or later, either by peaceful or violent means. "It's up to the government of South Africa how it comes," he said. "If they He said U.S. companies, which employ about 60,000 blacks in South Africa, could help in the fight against parachied by North African holdings of their South African affiliates. Beasley said Americans could significantly help end apartheid by By BRIAN VON BEVERN Kruggerrands are South African units of money, made of solid gold, that are being bought by investors in the gold market Lawrence Open School Lawrence Open School A STATE ACCREDITED PROGRAM MISS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS IHN PUBLIC OPEN School stopping the sale of Kruggerrands in the United States. FIRST DAY OF KINDERGARTEN? Your child is going off to kindergarten next year, and you both are a little excited and nervous. At the Lawrence Open School, we believe that the attitudes developed during these first days will influence children all through elementary school. That's why we begin Open Education in kindergarten. So children can develop independence, self-direction, and love of learning — from the first day. Lawrence Open School. We're a private, cooperatively-owned, fully-accredited elementary school, grades K-5. We're located at 14th and Monterey Way (3/10 mile west of Kasold). Curious? Then call us at 841-1669 so that we can give you more information and arrange a visit. We are now enrolling for the fall semester. Equal opportunity. Scholarships available. Sliding scale tuition. TEACHING STAFF: Mr. Michael Bryant, M.A., Educational Coordinator Ms. Amanda Vanhoozier, B.A., Teaching Coordinator Ms. Paula Whicker, B.A., Kindergarten Coordinator AWSTATE ACCREDITED PROGRAM Steering Committee: Dr. Sandra Crowther Dr. Frances Horowitz Mr. Jeffery Davis Ms. Karen Jeltz Dr. Thomas Erb Ms. Robin Naramore Dr. Karl Edwards Dr. Gene Ramp Advisory Board: Dr. William Balfour Dr. Paul Friedman Ms. Dan Holmes Ms. Molly Vantee Ms. Flora Wyatt Advisory Board: Dr. William Baitour Dr. Paul Friedman Ms. Deb Holmes Ms. Molly VanHee Ms. Flora Wyatt MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Submarine $1.50 reg. price $2.25 served with potato chips and dill pickle spear. offer good Mar 5 to Mar 9 Enjoy Coke no coupons accepted with this ad call us at 841-1669 14th and Monterey Way offer good Mar 5 to Mar 9 Enjoy Coke no coupons accepted with this ad BALDI I am not sure if I will fit this dress well, but it looks like a good choice. Spring '80 at Mister Guy just in time for spring break hours hours m t w f sat 10-6 th 10-9 sun 1-5 L MISTER GUY 920 massachusetts UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanan and Signed columns represent the views of only the writers. March 5.1980 Aid standards pitiful Scholarships and financial aid programs have helped put many deserving students through institutions of higher education—students who otherwise never would have advanced their educations beyond high school. Unfortunately, somewhere along the line, standards for some financial awards sank too low while the stakes rose too high. The financial aid policy at the University of Kansas presents a prime, and pitiful, example. Essentially, a financial aid program awards money to financially needy students according to the extent of their need and according to their ability to academically justify their receiving aid. The standard for academic justification at KU now requires a student receiving financial aid to have a cumulative GPA of 2.0, or a "C" average, at the end of his ninth semester. The GPA he has to maintain only a 1.5 GPA, starting from his fourth semester, to continue receiving financial aid. This standard supposedly represents "reasonable academic progress." However, the standard is clearly unreasonable and ridiculously low. It requires the sake of academic progress and fair distribution of funds for all. Last week the Senate Committee on Financial Aid to Students, recommended that the standards be changed to require students to obtain a degree or to take fourth semester here. The recommendation is sensible and justifiable. Why should students receiving financial aid not be expected to do at least average "C" work? College "culture shock" is an acceptable excuse only when offered by a freshman or transfer student. The thought that a person has to be a graduate student requires a certain degree successfully maintain a 2.0 overall GPA is overwhelmingly depressing and unrealistic. For those sophomores who have taken a free and easy ride on financial aid, reality is looming around the corner. If they try to pursue majors in the fields of journalism, education or liberal arts and sciences next fall as juniors, they will be rejected. All of these schools either do, or will, require overall GPAs of 2.0 or higher for admission. The standards for financial aid eligibility should be raised. Any student who needs nine semesters to adjust before he can produce average academic work does not belong in college-at anyone's expense. Numbers lack strength in student evaluations Student evaluation of teachers at the University of Kansas, as it is now, has only one fault - it doesn't make an av sense. For years, a student evaluation of instructors has been a prerequisite for faculty members for tenure, sabbatical leaves, merit salary increases and promotions. KU instructors, for the most part, want feedback from their students. However, many of the surveys used at KU do not COLUMNIST david lewis measure reliably a teacher's competency or effectiveness. In fact, many of the surveys are no more than a confusing collection of numbers added up by a computer. In one instance, students are asked on a scale of one to five whether they agree or disagree that their professor was "dry and humourless". First of all, a professor doesn't have to be Steve Martin to be an effective teacher and second, the one-to-five scale is ridiculous. For example, take the Curriculum and Instruction survey, used by about 40 percent of KU's faculty members. The survey does not assess objectivity; it is basically popularity poll. ON THE SCALE, (1) means disagree, (2) moderately disagree, (3) neutral, (4) agree, or (5) a student marks (3) with his No. 2 pencil, it means he is neither disagreeing nor agreeing with his professor. or maybe he moderately disagree or moderately agrees. Who knows? KU of- fice. Many of the survey's questions are geared to the class material, which is blatantly discriminatory for instructors who teach classes that all students are required to take. The influence of these surveys on students' interest and promotion is impossible to determine. VET, THESE important decisions are in part based on the results of the one-to-five scales, which are tabulated by a computer. The resulting data do not depend on meanless set of numbers. Students don't benefit from these surveys, either. The computerized surveys tend to be more difficult than the ones so ambiguous. Because they can't justify their criticisms, students are not as likely to assign a bad number on a computer to a student or to criticize a teacher in a written statement. Moreover, the surveys do not distinguish a bad teacher from a good one. In a written test, a student is judged by criticizing an instructor and be more honest in his assessment. On a computer sheet, a student cannot express his opinions with a question-and-answer system. Both the students and the teachers lose. CONSEQUENTLY, student evaluations should not be a prerequisite for promotion to faculty positions. In addition, considers that tenure is granted more on the basis of a professor's research contributions than on experience. This is not to say that student evaluations of teachers should be banned, only that they should provide feedback and that students should provide feedback to an instructor in a communicable manner. Students should use words in their assessment of an instructor, not pick a random number that makes little sense. Otherwise, the teachers should be given a one-to-five scale of their own to judge the validity of the numbers: (1) exaggeration, (2) big white lie, (3) big white lie, (4) big white lie, (5) gibbocky. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Number Newsroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4358 Postmaster: send changes to the University Daily Kanan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Lagrange, KS4095 Editor James Anthony Fitts Managing Editor Dana Mellon Manager Editor Jeff Mullen Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Art Director Sport Director Associate Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Internship Editor Staff Photographer Staff Photographer Writer **US$ 60,469** Published at the University of Iowa daily August through May and December and Thursday January 14th. Subscription prices are $85 for six months, $125 for nine months, $175 for a year, a December issue and $245 for an annual issue. Subscriptions are负担为 $25 per month for a year, a December issue and $245 for an annual issue. Business Manager Vincent Coultis Vincent Louisis Retail Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Classified Representatives National Manager Shell Floor Management Artist Manager Team Manager Graduate Assistant Sales Team Manager Sales Team Manager Bart Light, Karen Hazlett, Hope Rhoddurg, Shelley Howell, Rosanne Hargrave, Sasana Barmah Bart Light, Karen Hazlett, Hope Rhoddurg, Shelley Howell, Rosanne Hargrave, Sasana Barmah General Manager Don Kingman Advertising Manager Inflation used to be likened to the common cold—an uncomfortable but temporary malady that everyone could suffer through without too many complications. Inflation is 'cancer' that awaits cure But as the pace of inflation steepens, the rhetoric of politicians and economists is beginning to take on the grave tone of a political climate in which the term is terminally ill. Nobody has said it yet, but it only a matter of time before somebody starts calling inflation "a cancer" eating away all of us. "Cancer" just may be the most appalling crop, but it is also propagated by nearly every facet of the economy. Hardly a day goes by without the announcement of a new day, herefore First it was the government's profligate deficit spending, then it was farm price supports, then it was the loose credit that enabled so many people to overheat, then it was the OPEC oil oughe, then it was a debt relief program, then it was the greedy labor unions... And now, politicians and economists tell us, our 18 percent annual rate of inflation is the result of inflation itself. How perceptive! We are not as much acquainted with acceptr damp inflow as a reality, they creating a self-funnel of disposable income to get their hands on something real, instead of leaving their money to languish in their account to await imminent evasion. ALL THIS spending stokes the fires of businesses that spinning ever higher, the economists tell us. So, what does President Carter do? He asks for business and wage-earners to help pay the bills. guidelines, and asks Federal Reservo Board chairman Robert Volcker to raise interest rates into the stratosphere. Meanwhile, the inflation rate has soared six percentage points. The therapy Carter prescribed hasn't done much to hold down our fever, let alone cure the disease. brenton r. COLUMNIST schlender Although no consulting physicians have yet been called in, unsolicited medical opinions are pouring in from a spate of Republicans and a couple of Democrats, who coincidentally, are yying to evict the White House, who presently occupies the White House. THE REPUBLICANS, excluding John Anderson, are reciting a predictable titility of curses—receded federal spending, tax cuts, and other policies like Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Howard Baker and John Connally argue these relatively mild treatments, hinting that a balanced budget is all it takes to re-establish the current state of our own, personal "deficit spending." Anderson agrees that a balanced budget would help, but he ties inflation to the OPEC oil gouge. His remedy is to place a 50 centage tax on gasoline, to cut our dependence on foreign oil and thereby reduce our nation's vulnerability to grating oil prices. ALL THESE REMEDIES, like President Obama's policy of inflating air as the result of an economic cause—either loose credit, or federal deficit measures—gouges, or living陋习 brings. Jerry Brown calls for a 'new austerity', which sounds great philosophically, and addresses the responsibility of the in-love family. But he doesn't say how a society obsessed by One candidate, however, recognizes that inflation is a cancerous disease that needs comprehensive treatment, not stop-gap surgery. Interestingly, he also is the candidate who seems most concerned about the physical health of the citizens of this country by providing it with as traumatic as the disease, but if inflation indeed is a cancer, we have no choice. No one would argue that these are all symptoms of inflation. Together they are responsible for it. But by attacking only one symptom, we can only have ooep for a limited cure at best. materialism could learn en masse to limit its consumption. ALSO, EFFECTIVE enforcement of controls requires a bureaucracy of panels and boards and regulators and investigators who turn into a costly and negligible nightmare. And it can be argued that a large part of our economy is still competitive—that most price changes are the result of changes in demands and costs in the marketplace—so any control or regulation will create new challenges and further diminish productivity. But worst of all, wage and price controls are invariably unfair, especially to low-income workers. The worker lucky enough to own the job has little control over much better off than the worker who, by some luck of the draw, didn't get his raise before controls. Furthermore, low-income workers don't have the opportunity to earn a good wage, or benefit benefits and expense accounts. EDWARD KENNEDY suggests that it's time to consider wage and price control. By limiting increases in wages and prices, Kennedy says his plan would achieve "a mutual agreement among workers and manufacturers" as the burden of rising raw material costs. workers and producers scramble to jack up wages and prices before the deadline arrives. He contends that controls are the only means of harnessing all the elements that contribute to inflation. Instead of asking for volunteer help, or using prohibitively high prices on certain commodities, or cutting spending and taxes to indirectly pour more money into the hands of consumers, Kennedy is advocating a more direct approach. Kennedy's proposal may sound drastic, but it is one of the government monitoring and monitoring every phase of our economy, but it's patentery obvious that nothing mild or neutral The arguments against wage and price controls are nearly overwhelming. For one thing, even idle talk about the possibility of control triggers anticipatory inflation, as ALL THAT sounds bad, but our inflation rate is higher than it has ever been since 1990. We should be inflated prime lending rate, and twice as high as interest for a conventional savings account. And we are so accustomed to inflation that our spending habits take it into account. Kennedy's cure could kill the patient, but the patient might be on its deathbed already. At least his cure holds some hope for recovery. Jor Buntos KANSAS, MO Kansan misinterpreted poll results To the Editor: I was amazed to read the article entitled "Student Senate turnout lopsided" that appeared in the Feb. 25 Kansan. Because I am afraid many of your readers will fail to see the flicks presented in this article, I feel compelled to write this letter. I also would allow this article to have front page publicity, which adds to credibility. I believe that the title of the article should have read, "Why did so many of the students vote for me?" sororities, and residence halls fail vote?" Upon examination of the list of polling places which were made available to the students, one quickly noticees that all of them voted. It is not favored. Seven of the nine residence halls had polling places set up in their lobbies during one of the two evenings (this includes seven of the residence halls residents voted. Ten different fraternities and sororites had polling seats, yet only 27.8 percent of their residents voted. Only 10.5 percent of their residents voted in polling places, but then one realizes that Frasher Hall, open all day on both days, is only half a block from all these halls. Still, what has happened to school spirit? In comparison to the above figures, which came directly from the Kansas' election results, college students in ZERO polling places at their disposal. One might say that they should have voted while attending classes, lyzed, holds no water. How many polled places did you see in Learned Hall (Engineering), Murphy Hall (Fine Arts), Mayer Hall (Music), Lauley Hall (Law), Baley (Education), Find Hall (Journalism), Malott Hall (Pharmacy), or above schools are represented on the Another reason why off-campus pupils failed to vote may be the following; they felt that it didn't matter whether they voted. There is only one seat on the Senate which is designated as representing the off-campus electorate, and 36 percent of representative out of one hundred and seven? Besides, it is obvious that with 40 percent of the polling places in fraternities and sororites and 36 percent of the polling places in residence halls and scholarship colleges, the people who are represented on the Student Senate, not the off-campus voters. As you can see, I feel strongly about this issue and I was offended by the Kansan's view of the opportunities afforded them. I would say that the poor showering by the off-campus voters was not as pathetic as that of the rich who were sharing their fair share of choices to vote. Student Senate. Why weren't they the students at these places? Including the Graduate School seats, where 6 people run for 24 seats, this amounts to a percent of the total seats on the bench. Phillip Wilhelm Lawrence sophomore Senator, School of Engineering Nuclear waste issue muddled in column To the Editor; Bob Pittman's Feb. 28 column on the storage of nuclear wastes was poorly conceived and a sophomore reaction to something he clearly does not understand. In contrast to attempts to "be levé" nuclear waste not with the fight 10 years ago to store "high" First, this is not an attempt to store high level wastes from other states' nuclear research. Instead, the issue is whether we store the low-level nuclear wastes from cancer research and radioactive waste from our own worthy uses. These wastes are generated by level'! wastes from nuclear power plants. The two situations are not comparable. KANSAN letters Second, unlike 10 years ago, the decision not to use in the hands a pro-nuclear bomber was made. The National Guard named an advisory group comprised of governors and state legislators from those states with potential waste storage sites to deal with the problem. Kansas San. Paul Hess was named vice chairman of the panel as this state's representative. He explained the problem, and does. The NRC cannot make the decision to open a dump in Kansas until the Presidential Commission has made a decision. The NRC cannot nuclear power, but unlike Mr. Pittman, it can factually distinguish between the two such places as the KU Medical Center and Wesley Hospital in Wichita. It is ridiculous to contend that we should be unwilling to help children with special needs our own hospitals. Furthermore, I hear no outcry over the low-waste currently stored a more 18 miles away in DoeSho. Mark Dickerson Pasadena, Calif., law student To the Editor: One Vatican II document, "The Church in the Modern World," devotes one sentence to conscientious objection, commending laws that permit it. This commendation merely recognizes that the Church has legitimate conscientious claims and that nations should provide laws to exempt such persons. Quakers, for instance, should have no authority to refer any dies not refer to Catholicism, however. Pope Pius XIII said that when a government is acting morally, "a Catholic covenant may not make an appeal to his own conscience as ground for refusing to give his services to fullfilled fixed by law. And" what does the right to service to the state and of the right to state to arm itself for self-defense are traditional doctrines of the Catholic Church. Vatican II position cited by professor James Scaly (Kansan, Feb. 25) claims that Vatican II overturned the traditional doctrine of consistent objection to military service. No doctrines even were considered by Vatican II because it was not a doctrinal law. It is a doctrine of Catholic Church does not reiterate its doctrine. The New Catholic Encyclopedia article, written after Vatican II, reaffirms the traditional doctrine; so does the Rev. J. Courtney Murray, S.J., in his essay "Morality and Modern War." This is of particular interest, not only because he was a leading figure in the church but especially because he was the author of "The Church in the Modern World." Dennis B. Quinn : Dennis B. Quinn Professor of English Work on Clinton Reservoir nears completion Wednesday, March 5, 1980 University Daily Kansan By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter The Clinton Reservoir is all but officially open with only cosmetic work remaining on the 25,000 acre flood-control and recreation area. Conservation of the lake is scheduled for July 5. Although the date for total completion is in 1891, area residents have been using the lake and for the past year, Victory Counts, Army Corps of Engineers, said yesterday. Several phases of the project are com- including a site visit, a treatment inter- view that was dedicated on Satu- rday. The state park that covers two miles on the northern side of the park will be opened to the reservoir will be open this spring for boating, fishing, sailing and picnicking, Counts said. "Everything is going great," Counts said. "We are opening up and trying to turn over the facilities to the public as quickly as we can. "We want to make it accessible to the public. All that remains are the finishing tracuces." The opening comes after years of work on the project by the Corps. Planning for the lake started in the 1960s, and construction began in the early 1970s. Located just west of Lawrence, the Clinton Reservoir is expected to have a sizable impact on the city. Kansans are expecting that the reservoir will nearly 10,000 a day during the first year of THE LAKE will be among the largest in the state, with 7,000 acres of water surface. Lake Perry has about 12,500 surface acres and Pomona Lake only 5,500. operation, according to Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission figures. The recreation area will be under the supervision of at least three agencies. The Corps will maintain its operation, and the teams will provide its camping, and recreation area. The Kansas Fish and Game Commission will operate a fish and wildlife habitat in the western sector of the lake. The habitat will be used for licensed hunting. Fishing in the lake will fall under state laws and no special lake permit will be needed. The lake has been stocked with fish indigenous to the area, bass mainly, and with walleye and northern pike, Counts said. RECREATION POSSIBILITIES in the Clinton Park include biking, sheltered picnicking and swimming at a park beach. But the swimming beach might be nothing more than a wading pool unless the water level in the arches to the necessary 7½ feet. Count said. A marina is under construction with 132 boat spaces available for leasing by the public. Several areas overlooking the reservoir have been authorized for private development. Approximately 15,000 acres of land are available for public recreational use, which Counts encouraged. Clinton will be the site of the first Kansas State Orienteering championships on April 20. Orienteering involves cross country and a wooded terrain with a map and a compass. The competition will be divided by skill and by sex. Applications are available at SUA. Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES A neighbor reported the fire, which was confined to a small area of the two-story house, about 7:25 p.m. Granada Downtown 843-5788 Kramer vs. Kramer PG Staring Dustin Hoffman and Mirel Stree Eve 7:30 and 9:00 Sat and mat. s.20 Lawrence firemen quickly put out a small blaze that broke out last night in a vacant house at 1022 Ohio St. Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 2. The Fog Staring Jane Leigh and Hal Holbrook Five 7.45 and 9.45 Sat and Sun, mat. 2.3 3. "10" R Staring Derek and Dudley Moore Eve. 7/15 and 9:30 Sat and Sun mat 2:00 1. Foxes R Eve 7:30 and 9:40 Sat and Sun. mat 2:15 Cause undetermined in vacant house fire Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. The Fifth Floor 2. Last Married Couple in America Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Submission Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 Sat and Sun mat 2 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 Where in town can you see a great Reggae Lieutenant Larry Stemmerman said that damages to the house were listed at $100 and that no cause for the fire had yet been determined. movie and then dance to the finest live Reggae AND sit back and enjoy an ice cold beer or your favorite cocktail? . . . Where else but the Lawrence Opera House! Thursday Night Opera House Productions Jimmy Cliff in the first "genuinely Jamaican" film THE HARDER THEY COME Plus PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND all for only $2.00 Doors open at 8 Film rolls at 9 Downstairs to own for $1 50 customers and $1 100 customers & $1 100 customers from 8-9 ★★★ Coming Soon ★★★ The nightspot ach 12 - PAZZA HAZEL & THE MOTHER BLUES BAN 13 - 4-PAT METTEN at #30 & 0.42 14 - 4-PAT METTEN at #30 & 0.42 15 - THE REGULATE GUYS 16 - THE BEATLES IN MAGICAL 17 - 21 & 22 - THE SECRETS * 18 - *GOGY POOP* 19 - NO PAPER is available in kefas. Better Days, and the 7th Spirit Club for you? Where else but the . . . Tokent Lawrence Opera House Call for concert info. 842-6930 RUSH SPRING FORMAL March 21 22 23 sua films call: 864-3559 mornings For KU: Freshmen Sophomores Juniors Special Presentation 864-4861 8-5 MEN'S KU REGISTER NOW! Contact Interfraternity Council Wednesday, March 26—Emst Lubitsch Double Feature HOMEBODY A new short film directed by KU alumnus Steve Johnson' and starring KU alumni Roger Nolan and Duane Ladage. Original music by Mark Hart, former pianist for Justice. "Homebody" was the only student film from USC to be accepted for showing at FILMEX, a prestigious film festival held annually in Los Angeles. We will show "Homebody" before the following regularly scheduled SUA Films: Friday, March 7—14th INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION Monday, March 17—NOTORIOUS NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN FETTUCINI with WHITE CLAM SAUCE Dinner includes entre, garlic toast, crisp tossed green salad coffee or tea Tonite Featuring - Homemade - $4.25 For more information, visit www.houseoftruth.com. Special good tonite ONLY 5:30-8:30 Succulent ocean clams with finely chopped herbs and vegetables in a wine-based white sauce laid over a generous serving of Italian Fetucini pasta. SAVE AT KING of Jeans LEVIS reg. $12^{99} LEVI'S RECYCLED JEANS Today thru Sunday only $999 KENNINGTON CAMPUS SHORT SLEEVE KNITS (values to $23) $1222 WOMEN'S TOPS up to 50% OFF DEE CEE PAINTERS PANTS White,lightblue,khaki,yellow $9.99 Navy '13** ONE RACK KNITS, FLANNELS, WESTERN SHIRTS 2 FOR $20 LEVI'S MOVIN' ON CORDS AND DENIMS reg. up to $24 $1597 slight irreg. KING of Jeans revis 740 MASSACHUSETTS 843-3933 6 Wednesday, March 5, 1980 University Daily Kansan the GRAMOPHONE the audio division of KIEF'S RECORDS & STEREO SUPPLY, INC shop STEREO DISCOUNTERS $95,000 STEREO SALE NOW! STATEMENT: All Amplifiers, Receivers, Turnables, Tuners and Decks are top quality stereo components. All units are in excellent condition and will be completely checked, cleaned and repaired with complete new factory warranty. In order that we may provide the above services, all units purchased may be picked up the day following purchase. None of the above equipment is being sold as a means of rotating new demonstration equipment. --- GRAMOPHONE shop Tape Decks Item MFG List Kiel's SALE 1 AIWA AD-1260 270°00 199°00 2 AIWA AD-1000 210°00 158°00 1 AIWA AD-2000 270°00 199°00 1 AIWA AD-6700 650°00 440°00 1-JVC- KD-65 399°00 249°00 1-Kenwood KX-760 350°00 238°00 1-Kenwood KX-550 235°00 188°00 1-Nakamichi 480 495°00 445°00 1-Optionica RT-6005 270°00 229°00 1-Pioneer CTF 500 195°00 119°00 1-Pioneer CTF 800 480°00 288°00 1-Sharp RT-6511 270°00 199°00 1-Sony TC-K4 280°00 219°00 1-Technics- RS-M-11 200°00 149°00 1-Toshiba PC-4460 299°00 189°00 1-Toshiba PCX10 169°55 155°00 1-Teac A-103 260°00 179°00 2-Yamaha TC-320 240°00 187°00 1-Yamaha TC-720 450°00 325°00 Speakers | Item | MFG List | Kiel's SALE | | :--- | :--- | ---: | | 3 pr. Acculab 320 50% off | 175" ea. | 87" ea. | | 1 pr. ADS-L-500 | 150" ea. | 128" ea. | | 1 pr. ADS-L-710 | 285" ea. | 175" ea. | | 1 pr. ADS-L-810 | 369" ea. | 255" ea. | | 1 pr. Small Advents | 140" ea. | 99" ea. | | 1 pr. AR-16 | 129" ea. | 94" ea. | | 1 pr. Bose 601 | 249" ea. | 154" ea. | | 1 pr. BiC Formula 4 | 169" ea. | 109" ea. | | 1 pr. B&J S-25 | 100" ea. | 88" ea. | | 1 pr. B&J S-45TT | 169" ea. | 155" ea. | | 1 pr. B&J S-75 | 285" ea. | 259" ea. | | 1 pr. Bolivar 125H | 130" ea. | 88" ea. | | 1 pr. Bolivar 64H | 200" ea. | 149" ea. | | 1 pr. Essies 200 50% off | 100" ea. | 49" ea. | | 1 pr. Essies 300 50% off | 150" ea. | 75" ea. | | 1 pr. Herald Beverage $7,000/pr. | | $5,900/pr. | | 1 pr. Jawszen Electrostatic (Used) | 300" ea. | 100" ea. | | 1 pr. Infinity Qe | 129" ea. | 99" ea. | | 1 pr. Infinity Qa | 179" ea. | 148" ea. | | 1 pr. JBL-L19 | 179" ea. | 148" ea. | | 1 pr. JBL-L40 | 250" ea. | 179" ea. | | 1 pr. JBL-L50 | 325" ea. | 249" ea. | | 1 pr. JVC-SK-500 | 100" ea. | 55" ea. | | 1 pr. JVC-SK-700 (used) | 180" ea. | 99" ea. | | 1 pr. JVC-SK-1000 | 279" ea. | 149" ea. | | 1 pr. Marantz 7 | 200" ea. | 109" ea. | | 1 pr. Mitsubishi MS-20 | 275" ea. | 200" ea. | | 1 pr. Opticaion CP-2121 | 200" ea. | 149" ea. | | 1 pr. Pioneer HPM-40 | 180" ea. | 125" ea. | | 1 pr. Pioneer Project 100A | 125" ea. | 60" ea. | | 2 pr. Phase Research | 125" ea. | 180" ea. | | 2 pr. Sony SSV-1250 | 125" ea. | 84" ea. | | 1 pr. Technics SB-6000A | 135" ea. | 190" ea. | | 1 pr. Yamaha NS-4 | 100" ea. | 88" ea. | | 1 pr. Yamaha NS-500 (Used) | 260" ea. | 200" ea. | | 1 pr. Yamaha NS-1000 | 560" ea. | 469" ea. | Turntables Item MFG List Kiel's SALE 1 BIC 980 260** 139** 1 B&O 2402/20E wf $70 Cart 455** 299** 1 B&O 3400/20E wf $70 Cart 495** 438** 1 B&O 4004/EU wf $125 Cart 895** 844** 1 Hitachi HT-320 139** 99** 1 JVC-QL-A-2 220** 119** 1 Kenwood KD-1500 120** 89** 2 Kenwood KD-S070 295** 188** 1 Pioneer PL-200 159** 114** 1 Sanyo TP-1020 159** 114** 1 Sanyo O25 209** 129** 2 Technics SL-D2 150** 114** 1 Technics SL-D3 170** 129** 1 Technics SL-1700 MK2 350** 239** 3 Toshiba SR-A-270 139** 99** 2 Toshiba SR-F-450 169** 119** 1 Yamaha YPB-2 149** 134** Receivers Item MFG List Kief's SALE 1 Optonica SA-5201 45WXZ 395** 288* 1 Pioneer XS680 300** 169* 1 Pioneer XS780 - 45WXZ 375** 199* 1 Pioneer XS980 - 80WXZ 650** 314* 1 Sanyo Plus-55 - 55WXZ 449** 270* 1 Sony V25 - 25WXZ 260** 187* 1 Sony V55 - 55WXZ 500** 348* 1 Technics SA-300 35WXZ 300** 199* 2 Technics SA-500 55WXZ 430** 269* 2 Technics SA-800 125WXZ 800** 496* 2 Yamaha CR-240 20WXZ 250** 219* 1 Yamaha CR-440 30WXZ 320** 288* 1 Yamaha CR-640 640 WXZ 395** 354* 1 Yamaha CR-1040 80 WXZ 660** 550* 1 Yamaha CR-2040 120WXZ 860** 695* 2 B80 1900 Rec. 550** 485* 1 B80 2400 Rec. 650** 585* 1 Hitachi SR-304 18W 235** 168* 1 Hitachi SR-604 35W Class G 359** 277* 1 JVC JR 61W 18WXZ 199** 139* 1 JVC JR 81 35 WXZ 299** 169* 1 JVC JR 201 35WXZ 389** 293* 1 Kenwood KR-4070-40WXZ 350** 199* 1 Kenwood KR-5030-60WXZ 460** 269* 1 Kenwood KR-3010 30WXZ 280** 197* 1 Kenwood KR-4010 40WXZ 330** 298* 1 Kenwood KR-5010 50WXZ 400** 295* 1 Kenwood KR-6050 60WXZ 500** 398* 1 Luxmon R-1030 30WXZ 425** 377* 2 NAD 7030 30WXZ 330** 288* 2 ONYK TX 1500I 18WXZ 225** 177* 2 ONYK TX 2500I 40WXZ 360** 299* 2 ONYK TX 4500I 60WXZ 479** 379* YAMAHA TC-320 CASSITTE DECK $1879.00 Our ideal Yamaha audio component in their audio compartment. Reliability. Check the deck with silky smooth hard head and Dirty to spot, normal record condition. 1/2 OFF SPEAKER SALE ESSEX GROUP Shadow of TECHNOLOGIES 1/2 OFF SALE Essex 200...Reg. $100 **49¥** Essex 300...Reg. $150 **75** NO DEALERS PLEASE maxell TAPE SALE LNC-90 LOW-NOISE 90-MIN. BLANK CASSETTE TAPE $2.99 ea. LOW-NOISE LN TOSHIBA BEST VALUE TURNTABLE Toshiba's SRA 270 Belt Drive, 3-Shape Tone Arm. Semi-Automatic. A BEST VALUE TURNTABLE AT THE GRANDPHONE SHOP $99 Cartridge not included JBL L-19 SPEAKER SALE Save $140 KIEF'S SALE PRICE $148 KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO P. O. BOX 2 / 2100A W. 25th St. / 913 842-1811 / LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 5. 1980 -UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. 7 Police Beat Compiled by Jennifer Roblez William Norris, 420 N. St., was charged; with aggravated injury in Douglas County 'District Court yesterday. He was arrested for a traffic violation on Monday in connection with the shooting of a Lawrence man, Ren Beauchamp, at a farmhouse northwest of the city. At least five officers arrived at the scene were served arrests at the time the arrest. He is also wanted in Swainton county. on a theft charge. Beauchamp underwent surgery Monday for wounds to his shoulder and side. Group's vacation deals questioned About $6,400 of equipment was stolen from Ivan Aanx's 2434 Iowa, early dayern morning. Lawrence police said that a rear garage window was broken and that a motor charger, compression tester and fuel pump charger were removed from the service station. BvCINDY WHITCOME Staff Reporter The Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association is advising consumers not to use prepaid cellphones in Nevada Travel Service, based in Roseville, Calif., Calif. the Grieksoope, education center in Durham, North Carolina. The company has been uncooperative in supplying the association with information about unsigned letters Lawrence residents and to send them the letters solicited money for vacation trips. The letters printed on stationery bearing the name International Travel Service, instruct students to give $2.20 to their recipients for "handling and distribution costs." "It is unclear exactly what the $57.20 pays for," Griekspoor said. Within 9 days, the letter says, "vacation certificates" with details and reservations for the trip will be sent to the readers. The lack of information in the letter and the company's resistance to giving more information to the consumer group raised the association's suspicion, she said. "I have tried to get in touch with the company since last week and they have been very uncooperative," Griekspoor said. "I finally reached a member of the company who is now working for himself. He said a member of the company would get in touch with me but no one has." THE BETTER Business Bureau of California did not have information about the company, but told Greksko that the company was Nevada Travel Service. "The bureau told me they had tried to get information on the company, but that it was uncooperative with them too," she said. Grieskpoor said the Kansas attorney gave the firm an offer to investigate the company if it continued to refuse to give information to the association. Although the association has not been contacted by anyone who had actually given their money to the company, Griekspoor said the office had received 10 inquiry calls from Lawrence area residents during the week. The letters say that the recipients have been selected to receive the vacation deal, but Grieksprout said she had no clue as to how the selection process was done. "That is one of the things I would ask the company if I could get hold of someone," she said. "That's a lot of calls about one company in a week for our office." she said. The letter offers vacations in one of five resort cities: Las Vegas, New; Lake Bridgeport, Texas; Miami, Fl.; the Cat Mountain's in New York; and Orlando, Yellow Sub house reflects 1960s By KEVIN MILLS IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MASS. 9:30-8:00 M.W. Thurs. till 8:30 p.m. Staff Reporter can be describing Viewed from outside, the house at 1408 Kentucky St. is a model of 19th century architecture. The inside of the "Yellow Submarine House," however, is a monument to the student-protest era of the late 1960s. Built in 1870, the two-story house has been the home of a professor, many students and now, Mike and Kim Fountain, both 197 KU graduates, who graduated it last year. The house acquired the Yellow Submarine label in 1986, when its ten painted the stairwell walls with scenes from the Beatles' movie "Yellow Submarine." Judy Bailey, Lawrence sophomore, lived in the house in 1989 and participated in the painting. She said that half of the residents were not students then. The words on the wall reflect the student message of the late '80s: "All you need is love." course, there's the yellow submarine, outboard propeller and all. Dou McDonald, a 1970 KU graduate whose signature on the wall is undersigned by the friends of Pepperland," drew pictures of the figures with a magic marker, Bailey said. Then everyone chipped in and painted it like a "big coloring book," Bailey said. FLIORESCENT COLORS and swirling psychedelic drawings surround the images of John, Paul, George and Ringo. And, of after the movie was released and he bought a book with illustrations from the movie. Bailey said McDonald's inspiration came "I think it started with him drawing a yellow sub on the bathroom wall, and it just kept expanding," she said. "I remember one night—we refer to it as "the night of the Turks," she said, "there was a professor on the hill who wanted to eat there." He put the paito for a dinner party, and we said sure. BAILEY HAS fond memories of life at the 'ellow Sub house. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schehrer, 1411 Kentucky St., have been neighbors of the house since 1915. "As it turned out, he had invited the entire department, something like 300 people. The first 168 brought their own booze and started slapping it around. "When the second 150 arrived, they said, 'Gee,' look at how these hippies live.'" OVERALL RENOVATION of the house has been no easy task. The large structure, 942 square feet, is expected to be ready for occupancy by late April. "I was here when Prof. Ernest Bales bought the house and raised his four sons there," Mrs. Schreiber said. "I used to sell groceries. I knew everyone around me." TRAILRIDGE - studios - apartments - townhouses 843-7333 2500 W.6th "It used to be a beautiful house until those students moved in and ruined it." a touch of CONNIE connie® so many brand new styles that one is not enough Flats and stockings, buckles and shoes and perfume and more new style. Connie's elegant combo in so many styles and so many looks will suit any girl you choose. You won't need to be too concealive, but you'll feel comfortable that these new styles meet for you. To received additional information, please call 864-3661. Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa J. J. Angela's Shoes BUY ONE . . FISH SANDWICH GET ONE FREE LIMIT ONE W/COUPON REGULAR PRICE $1.15 COUPON WHEN YOU PRESENT THIS COUPON AT YOUR LOCAL VISTA RESTAURANT. Vista RESTAURANTS Coupon Good Wed. 3/5 Thurs. 3/6 Fri. 3/7 Sat. 3/8 Sun. 3/9 842-4311 1527 W.6th The withdrawal policy of the College states that the period to withdraw from spring semester classes and receive a W instead of a letter grade ends Wednesday, March 5, 1980 at 5:00 p.m. Thereafter, withdrawal petitions must be submitted and approved by the College. TO ALL COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES STUDENTS AND TO ALL STUDENTS TAKING LIBERAL ARTS COURSES. NOTICE: SPOFFORD ANTIQUES SHOW Exhibition Hall Kansas City Market Center 1-435 and Front Street Kansas City, Mo. 甲 MARCH 7,8,9 Advance Tickets $3.00 Available until March 1 General Admission $3.50 at door Make Checks Payable To Spofford Home Antiques Show PO Box 24551 P.O. Box 24551 Kansas City, Mo. 64131 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Precision At A Discount. (For students only.) Come by for a special student discount card. It's good for a whole year, and entitles you to 10% off any Command Performance service. Including our precision haircut. Precision haircutting is our technique for cutting the hair in harmony with the way it grows. So as it grows it does not lose its shape. Your hair will grow good after five days as it does after five minutes. A precision haircut with shampoo and blow-dry costs just fourteen dollars for guys or gals, less 10% of course. We also offer permanent waves, and we provide conditioning. No appointment needed, just come in. Take advantage of our offer, it's precisely what you need. 53 Command Performance 23rd & Iowa in the South West Plaza M-F: 9-8 Sat: 9-6 Sun: 12-5 Phone: 843-3985 films sua Wednesday, March 5 GREED (1826) Dir. Eirich von Strohman, with Jean Herasi, Haza Pits, Gibson Howon and Robert Gleason a silent film, GREED is a powerful story of people whose values become distorted when faced with a passion for art. The novel *Nats' native* novel MTEAGEU (1956) Thursday, March 6 A HOUSE OF GEISHA Dikio Mikurose, with itsuzu Yamada, Hideko Takamine, yinkanu Yakana. Aya Koda's original story of geisha Center for East Asia Studies. Friday, March 7 THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION Our annual showing of the Tournee is a series of 18 animated films which reflect some of the most inventive techniques and artistry in animation. The selections are chosen from the word by Film Wright. Dir. Alfred Hitchcock, with Cary Dalton, stars in *One of Hitchcock's most romantic films*, NOTORIOUS has a US agent to spy on to spy on a German agent in Rio (1946) Monday, March 17 NOTORIOUS Unless otherwise noted: all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R I films are $1.00 and $2.50; LR films are $1.50 and $1.50 start at 3:00, 7:00, 8:00 and midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday; tickets available at InfoOn or Office, Union 5th Level. Information on smoking or refreshes allowed. - NO SATURDAY SHOW DANGER! body suits White, brights and earthtones in 100% cotton. Scop necks, v-necks and muscle back styles with assorted trims. By Eclisee. $450 Elsewhere $^{14-16}$ It's Spring... Catch the Fever! Don't miss these specials: fashion dress slacks Junior and missings pants in a wide range of styles and colors. Poly-gab and cotton blends. **NOW** Elsewhere $16.18 $6 T-Shirt dresses Junior and misses in solids and stripes of 100% cotton, cotton blend. Quote blends from Quote Me and Ecco Bay. NOW *10 Elsewhere $18.28 FADS FASHIONS 717 Mass. Downtown 842-9988 Open Mon-Wed, Fri, Sat: 9:30-5:30 Thurs.: 9:30-8:30 Sun: 1-5 Mastercharge/VISA Accepted --- 8 Wednesday, March 5. 1980 Speakers argue merits of draft University Daily Kansan By JON BLONGEWICZ Staff Renorter The draft, bulled as an "Issue for Our Time," was opposed and defended by three speakers at an open forum last night in Green Hall. Although they said they were not experts on the draft, Carl Lande, professor of political science at the University of the Kansas City chapter of the National Organization for Women; and Ion Kuby, president of the National Organization, gave their views on draft registration before a crowd of 30 persons in St. Louis. Laude cited pros and cons of the present all-volunteer army and concluded that the main problem was a lack of reserve military strength. He said that the present armed forces had nearly enough active troops, but that "reserves have a serious problem." Lande, who supported the draft, said that a million of those 25 million reserves, but that they actually had only 800,000. Thus, according to Lande, is compared to the Soviet Union's 25 million. "Registration won't send a message to Russia, but a strong and ready reserve will," Iande said. Lande said that the Soviet Union was in a period "of willingness to seize opportunities." "It seems to me, war is least likely if Budget Seminar Sponsored by Minority Affairs Subcommittee Purpose: To familiarize organizations with Senate Budget procedures. Kansas Union, Big 8 Room March6 7:30-9:00 For more information contact: Kuby answered his own question by listing Jimmy Carter as one person who benefited from the policy. He had learned that if one kept the public thinking about foreign involvement the public would not think about domestic problems such as inflation and unemployment. Leon Brady, III 842-9541 864-3881 Kuby questioned the draft and registration for the draft, by asking "who benefits from the draft?" circumstances approach a balance of power," Lande said. Rita Holmes 842-6894 The third panelist, Thurston, said that she and NOW were opposed to war, but that if a draft were instituted, women should be included. Paid for by Student Activity Fee Kuby said others that benefited from the draft were "the people who make bombs," or the people who had "fat Defense Department contracts." "Dr. Dande argued that we had learned our lesson from Vietnam." But Kubu said that the same people who pushed us into Vietnam are pushing the draft on us. Thurston called the present military "racist and sexist." BREAKAWAY "Men and women should be drafted according to their ability and not their gender." Thurston said. 1980 SPECIAL VALUE ON PAINTER PANTS Now Only $1199 TODAY: THE STUDENT OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ASSOCIATION will hold a meeting and potluck superat at 5 p.m. in the Occupational Therapy Lounge in Blake Park, Cedar Rapids, IA, in Pariors B and C of the Kansas Union. The HEARLAND UNITY CHIRLY will hold chair rehire for Duncan Chapel. A faculty lecturer for the HEARLAND UNITY Chair, by Albert Gerken, university carillonier, in the Campainae. Eric Sunderland, professor at the University of Durham, England, will speak at the Genetic Studies of the People of Wales," at 8 in the Council Room of the U. A. PHILOSOPHY LECTURE, "Consent to Medical Education." At 8 in Washington University, will be at 8 in the Forum Room of the U. The Kansas Brass Quintet will give a FACULTY LECTURE, "The Eyes of the World," at Murphy Hall. Gary Yousey, Dowling室, will give an ENGLISH LECTURE, "The Writer As Preacher—Or worse: Opinion," at 8 in the International Room of the U. Many sizes to choose Store Hours M-F 9:30-6:00 Sat. 9:30-5:30 Sun. 1:00-5:00 Thurs. Open till 9:00 TOMORROW: THE ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in Room Council of the Union. Enjoy our wide selection of colorful spring pants Great Comfort Many sizes to choose Store Hours M-F 9:30-6:00 Sat. 9:30-5:30 Sun. 1:00-8:00 Thurs. Open III-9:00 LITWIN'S "Where Clothes Are For Fun" 921 MASSACHUSETTS -KANSAN—— On Campus LITWINS Time: Wed., March 5 - Fri., March 7; 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. Place: Kansas Union - Student Senate Office - 3rd Floor DON'T BE A FOOL! Register to Vote for the April 1 Primary 6 Presenting Sandra L'Ecuyer Corn's Studio of Beauty Sandra Specializes in Haircuts for both Men & Women Specials cut, shampoo, blow dry Reg. $15^{10}$ NOW $9^{10}$ We carry ♥REDKEN♥ manicure manicure Reg. $5⁰ NOW $3⁰ hair and skin products 9th & Vermont Call Sandra for an appointment 843-4666 843-4666 Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri, Sat 8-5 Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra + PRESENTED by the University of Kansas Concert 8:00 p.m. Thursday, March 6 Hoch Auditorium Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office KU Students: $1.50/$1.00 MAYMA A Mid-America Arts Alliance project. Sperm bank experiment said to advance genetics By DON MUNDAY Staff Renorter A controversial and very selective sperm represents the most radical step in the advancement of genetics research, according to Andrew Torres, professor of systematics The controversy centers on millionaire Robert K. Graham, who recently announced he had implanted sperm from three Nobel scientists into highly intelligent women. Graham has said that his intentions were not to develop an elite master race, but to add a few more intelligent individuals, who may not have been born, to society. Torres said that Graham's work might be based on an erroneous assumption, because the chances of intelligent children being born were not necessarily increased. The probability that a particular sperm will meet with a particular egg in a specific combination and produce the desired result, is extremely low. "Torres said." ALTHOUGH BOTH the donor and the recipient of the sperm are above average intelligence, the nature of the offspring, if possible, would be largely dependent upon chance. "Of course, on the average you will enhance the probability if you start off with favorable combinations," he said. He said, "but without an exact probability would be impossible." There's no way to assign a probability value to it, such as saying the chances are 8 in 10 or 9 in 10," he said. The Graham experiment has some similarities to the grafting of healthy plant specimens in the hope of creating healthy plant offspring, Torres said. ALTHOUGH THE chances of producing very intelligent children are not necessarily greater in the experiment than if the mother and father were of average intelligence, but Graham facility is not "elitist" but the sperm banks already in existence. "Sperm banks on the East coast have been fairly selective as to the state of health, the physical characteristics and the sperm content of the donors." Torres said. Graham has said that he used artificial insemination in three women about two months ago, but that it is not yet known whether any have become pregnant. "The principle is good. It's inevitable that someone will try the idea, which Muller advanced nearly 25 years ago." HOSPITAL Artificial insemination does not represent genetic engineering as most scientists would view it because no actual removal or addition of genes has occurred, he said. HERMANN J. M. MULLER was a Nobel hermanian of science, conceptual of selecting intelligent donors for artificial inseminations. Torres said that Muller, too, was criticized for being "crazy." BASED EYE CARE — KANSAS CITY COLLEGE SCHOOL OF NURTURE PHARMACY - SOFT CONTACT LENS * HARD CONTACT LENS $150 $125 In most cases, the soft contacts receive the same day. Complete Eve Examination with Glaucoma Exam. $20 ( 'includes exam, lens & kit ' ) in most cases, the soft contacts received the same STAFF V7SA* mountain charge STAFF Ophthalmologist & Optometrist 283-2258 CENTER FOR HEALTH SCIENCES Kansas City College of Osteopathic Medicine 2105 Independence Blvd., Kansas City, Missouri EST 1957 PIZZA & PASTA now... the best pizza becomes more convenient: call 843-9111 for delivery the best pizza delivered hot to your door! 106 NORTH PARK 843-9111 WWW.NORTHPARK.COM POLYBILLET THE NEW YORKER PREMI ITALIAN PIZZA $2.00 OFF Any Large or Medium Pizza with this ad (minimum 2 toppings) Offer Good Wed. through Sun. Mar. 5-9 Grey Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer 1 Wednesday, March 5, 1980 Salter wins Senate committee chair 9 University Daily Kansan By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER and CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporters After careful scrutiny, unsuccessful Bendover presidential candidate Tim Scaler was elected chairman of the Student Senate to serve as chair at its organizational meeting last night. The seven Senate committees met consecutively to elect committee chairmen and chart future concerns. Salter's presidential platform had challenged the Senate's credibility and promoted graduate student issues. Salter with more than half the committee votes. Salter said under questioning by committee members, that he would not be partial to graduate student issues and would support the development of a consistent budget philosophy. "Last year a lot of people didn't understand just exactness the biggest impact. Sasar said, "Some groups got money that maybe shouldn't have, and some groups slipped by without them." Matt Davis, student body vice president, said Safer approached him after the election and asked a number of questions about running the committee. "I think they've quit fooling around, I think they're ready to get down to business," Davis said. THE FINANCE and auditing committee Committee member David Bruns said he was pleased to have a liberal viewpoint to balance other conservative opinions. is responsible for approving the final budget of the entire Senate. The Senate needs a more positive position on public representation like Lisa Kanarek, who is responsible for promoting the State and handling communications between the State and the Senate. "I think it is really good. Before it was the same old people that ran everything," Bruns said. In a record-breaking six-hour and 35-minute meeting, the Lawrence City Corrion Hospital issued issues that had hainted it for weeks. But still, it still lingered, and one new was raised. "People think Senate doesn't do anything, but they really do." Kanarek said. "I didn't know very much about Senate, but I'm learning very quickly." The issue of participation of city officials in the financing of revenue hearings on the use of industrial revenue bonds for downtown development, including the financing shopping malls, was the focus of a study. Long meeting clears city issues Recent reports that Lawrence city officials would appear at the hearing to lobby n support of bonds as development tools oithered Management Marc Francisco. steps are being taken, what tools we're looking at," Francisco said. Staff Reporter By LYNN ANDERSON The city has been working closely with Action 88, a group of private citizens supporting a downtown mail, she said, without the official mandate from Lawrence citizens. Mary Banker Clark and Buford Watson, city manager, said they would participate in the hearing because they wanted to take advantage of this "one shot" to obtain what they called an important development.ool. They were also giving the oil's funding, they said, would come later. The commission approved 4-1 rezoning of the area in the Pinckney neighborhood between two adjacent units to be augmented by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission. Bluffs "It's important for people to know what inconsistent with the city's master neighborhood planning guide and with the Punckney neighborhood plan. The rezoning will allow the building of multi-family residences and offices in what is now a single-family residential area. The commission also accepted a proposed budget for community development funds targeted for low- to moderate-income areas, and several controversial items in the budget. The commission agreed that the Bert Nash Mental Health Center house, which was a decade in June, will be moved and renovated. The commission also hired Lawrence social service agency. The decision on who will use the house, they will wait until the renovation is complete. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten twelve thirty four hundred thousand one million two million three million four million five million six million seven million eight million nine million eleven twenty-three forty-four fifty-five sixty-six seventy-seven eighty-eight ninety-nine ten thousand one hundred thousand two hundred thousand three hundred thousand four hundred thousand five hundred thousand six hundred thousand seven hundred thousand eight hundred thousand nine hundred thousand eleven AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Friday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kaiser Business office at 841538. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864.4258 ANNOUNCEMENTS *Watch for trunk packed at 9th and Illinois, Iowa, Missouri and Minnesota.* **The Holt-Toe-Wall.** Fresh fruits from the tree in the wall. Peaches in skin shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available every Sunday. Also selling wood pulp. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA (formerly Sachem) This special honorship is now accepting ap- plications from qualified junior students. This honorary scholarship is awarded in academic excellence, and campus variety. It can be awarded in vari- able in 216 Strong. The application must be filed on March 7 at 5:00 p.m. Return all ap- plications to an official, transcript, to 216 Strong. Rabbi Fred Reiner The Kanan 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. Intensive Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Led by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes. $25.84 - 702.10. 3-6 K.U. Hillel presents "Religious Conversion" Temple Beth Shalom, Topeka speaking on the topic of Where: Cork 1 3rd Floor, Kansas Union When: Wednesday March 5, 12-1 p.m. Join us for Lunch—Bring a sack lunch or go through the line. presents a six week series at 149 Pinecone Drive 7:30-9 P.M. Thursday evenings Inter Pratermity班 will sponsor WFRING FDERNAL RUSH March 21, 22, & 23 for Law-enance campus students. Contact PC Office at 864-359-3128 Mount Bule Skil Ski店 is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 924-3600. UNITY CHURCH OF CREATIVE LIVING Both ancient and modern techniques will be taught in the EEG class, using methods using the EEG and mental meditation; centering for relaxation; and Unity with Mindfulness. The Western practices in a method called the WEB are taught. Learn the arts of Bronies's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone; for information, write: Harper, Kansas 76058 UNIVERSITY - reduce stress - relaxation - peace of mind - expand awareness - spiritual growth - improve sleep - improve health MEDITATION Sunday Service 11:00 1520 Haskell LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Tower Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-493-8 By highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong serv-taries. 3-7 SKATE TO CLASSES THIS SUMMER! On campus, 2 BR apartments furnished or unfurnished, all utilities paid. 843-4993 ENTERTAINMENT AMERICAN DADJUS FOR RENT LIVE IN CONCERT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 842-9579 or 842-1435. ff 4A16MTH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. If Jiahawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at a242 Foster Road. Next door to Russell's East. **tf** THE PAT METHENY GROUP Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to Woodland. Located in Reasonably priced property at 432-829-7658, 432-829-7658. Buy your Wednesday tickets at Kefir, Bethlehem at Kefir, Bethlehem Where else WHERE else but the TRAVEL HOUSE New 2 bed townhouse A/C DW Appliances cable 1 box from the unit Call 842-3579. 8379. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. T2 A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf ROOMS NOW AVAILABLE at the Sunflower House—a 30 student member cooperative within walking distance of the KU campus and downstairs. For more information, even if **842-9421** Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 9212; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upstairs and or lower rooms 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 8324104 or 832477-077. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING These all new and contemporary jowhouses are designed to complement your home. 3 blocks from XU and downstairs at Starting at Sunset, 4 blocks from XU and downstairs at Hanging Out, 2 blocks from XU and downstairs at Home Gallery with speaker, with custom built-in corner display. With your private residence call: 812-455 or 812-5252. Need to suburbite 2 bedroom Apartment. Need to furnished 2 off-street parking, Fullly equipped, cable TV, AC New and refrigerator, 30-inch flat screen, and stove on 3-4 beds. Call 800-641-8019. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union phone 843-9579. tt Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this super 2 year old house in April. 4 bedroom, 2 bathrooms, recreation room, laundry room. 9 beds, references needed, key references. 8D2-319 Sublease 2 BR app. w option for next year. Reasonable rent. low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 811-5699. 3-7 One and two bedroom apartments carpeted and AC. Some utilities paid. Close to campus, on bus 3-5 442-4641 or 841-3018. Must. sublet=2 bedroom furnished apartmen... Cable T.V. hookup in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. 195pm on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-0496. 3-7 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 814-726或814-7476. 3-7 1 new bedroom apt. Beautifully furnished, on bus route. Sublease at $210 m.o. Keeping Apt. 1509 #2-81-5255 or 842-2908. Keep trying. 3-7 REWARD: $50.00 if you can turn on to a small inconvenient house to rent in May or June, 841- 4398 or 842-7597. 3-20 842-6930 Alternator, starter and generator specialty. Parts service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-960-3900, 2900 W. 6th. ht. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make sure you have your books! Use them to use them. 1a As study guide, 2i For class preparation. For exam preparation. New book for the class. For library class at Town Ct. Library, Alabama Bookstore and Oread Book Store. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1380, TPF New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat- set sets. 180 Width x 80 Height. Pledge of Leodon Towels. 1 New York St. 89-22225. SunSports—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. ¶¶ Must sell-Electric Epiphone guitar and a Loin Guitar. Good condition plays like new. 843-6372 Cabin fever? Try a T-A Top Cullas, red, with black top interior; PSP air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road train. 822-5313. 346 1972 Celica ST, 25 mpg—W/AC. Overhauled, new tires, dependable. Must sell, Call Mike. 843-2516 2 a.p.m. 1973 Datsun 240 Z Michelin Radials. AM-FM楽 Many extra tires, one owner, 842-456- 842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456-842-456- Cable-Neigh, Grand Plano, excellent tone & condition. Natural finish finalt Wirthe Electric Piano 10 yrs. TSL 4 Speakers, still warranted. Guitar Guard. Waltman Bed & Breeze. 842-4730. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Rickie Bike Sales. 103 Vermont. 841-6642. - 90 Olds merchant, B8 81. Clean, good condition, excellent merit, $695. b64-4072 before 19 a.m. 3-6 72 Dodge Challenge-318 2 Bbl, AT, PS, AC- $1.000 PHI. 641-8154. 3-5 P.A. awnings. Four Mitchell model MULTI- (aun- tos for Box 801, over 100 watt each, Excellent power stereo, use in the office or home), increase to be better to have belts to best or offer best. Elevations 82-112. Keep trying 3-7 Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap $35 or best offer. Call Denise 814-2750. 3-6 Jensen 500 3 walk speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- epsilon controls. Excellent condition. Call 3-11 841-2182 Brand spanking new 1980!; Datsun 210-$402.02 x delivered Call 842-0444 ask for Bob Smith at Tony's Datsun. HELP WANTED Nikon 80-200mm lens. Zmll $350. Call 841-6072 after 6 o'clock. p.m. 3-7 FOUND Rossignol. Salomon skis $120, 69 VW $250, roller skates 9. 11; oak pew $100, 842-8422 or 842- 6900. Marantz 4200 stereo with EV 16A elec谣vv high power speakers. Good buy. Call 841- 573-9326. Wedding dress and veil, $100, size 10. 842-7281. 3.7 Found a calculator in Wesco Hall Call 141-615-753-758 evenings & ask for Ask for Bob-5 Found=small dog dog. Tan blonde, curly hair, work=suit. Tan blonde. J Sankey, work= b422-905-843, home 843-883-754 Black cat in area of 9th & Emery Rd. Call 842- 2782 or 844-2033. 3-5 Male German Shepherd. Black with tan legs—found near Hawkwaters Tower. Call 843-6639. 3-7 A black male cat with white feet and black legs. TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER, ORDER: Will you share your work experience with us? Please provide your experience in the following areas. Improve of Nurse Training (KNI1) and improve of Nursing on nursing and condition and your onboarding in nurses and correspondence will be kept constant. Nurses and nurses will be between time and B or write an KNI, 9211; between time and B or write an KNI, 9211. Summer Job for Student Couple! I am looking for a summer job in the summer setting, keeping and maintaining at my summer home. Prepare a detailed resume, including the August Salary; $125 weekly for couple. Proof of employment and great opportunities for swimming, poolside activities, applying in writing, and be sure to give times of practice. Apply for job by contacting me for you write. OCCUPANT. 100 SUMMER HOURS. Part-time. Day-time dtwinter must be able to work from 10:30 to 3:00 Monday thru Friday Apply in person only at Border Bandide. 1528 W. 23rd St. Man's watch, 222 Snow Hall. Found last week. 864-3790. 3-7 Midwestern Camps at the University of Kansas have students should have experience with justice and human rights in inuit art journalism, speech and debate, or inuit art journalism. Camps are small camp营业 or 14K camp. Call mkcamp.org for details. Summer june at camp near Ottawa, Kansas. Director, Counselor, lifeguard, nurse, cook June 15-28 Star Pa Trail Council of Girl Scouts 541, Santa Avenue, Kansas City, Kansas 663-7-281 917-283-628 Now taking applications for door floor and waitress. Must be 21. Apply at the Sanctuary, 101 W. 7th after 8:30 p.m. Ask for Shelley. Burden of Child Research Achievement Place has opened a new position available. Salary range from $25,000 to $48,000 and position can be to conduct behavioral observation and assessment, to provide travel and have flexible schedule for afternoon travel and have flexible schedule for afterschool skills essential Application deadline Mar. 31st. Position requires Bachelor's degree. Contact Mildred Jill Iles 1-800-967-3242. Typist—half or full time should be able to type at least 60 points. Excellent pay and super work environment. 842-2001. 3-7 CRUISEHISPHERS/SAILING EXPEDITIONES*SAIL- MINERY WORKS/BOAT SUMMER CAREER NATIONWIDE NATIOWEAR FOR APPLICATION INFO REFERALS* FOR APPLICATION BOOK 0019. Sacramento 055600. www.sacromet.com FINDING, TEACHING TEACHING POSITIONS- from school administration. In- formation from school administrator with experience in providing resources to designeer, resume, queries, interviewing, more dosers, resumes, queries, interviewing, more order to teach-13, 164 Deerfield, Balcony B Counselor, 226 Eighth Avenue, Balcony B Need someone to organically farm 2 acres of ground located in Lawrence. Have market for anything produced. 841-4144. 3-7 Spring break jobs—full-time lasting one week, possible part-time position continuing through spring. Outdoor work. Apply in person at The Garden Center, 15th and New York. 3-7 College Students need summer jobs and love to work. They are often in need of a job that is involved). Make $8,000 Guaranteed. No transportation费 LOST Lost! A brown Irish cap in or between Haworth and O-Zone. Reward offered. Call 842-1629 after arriving. 3-7 One pair twin eyeglasses, four foot Woven If found. Please 844-689-301 Lot of keys on brace rectangular key chain, one leather case and one plastic. Least Lot K with a leather case of leather and Doc K with a leather case of leather. Gold check book-book please return. Loc id 843-689-301 LP K 1 piece. 7-27 on Woven (25 cm) NOTICE HELP! 5 keys lost 2/27 on Mercedes-Benz key call. Call 814-6194 now. 3-7 Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado State University campus, where students working with children in a camp setting develop skills, wildlife knowledge, and many other programs. At Western Camp, Foundation, Colorado, 81061. 410 SPOPFORD II装March 7, 8, 11-15 410 SPOPFORD III装March 7, 8, 11-15 grants from Brentwood Inge. Ion 410 & Front $1 grants from American International Inc. American International English furniture & home appliances American International Jewelry Orlean's church Tickets $20, $25 with American Orlean's church Tickets $20, $25 with PERSONAL VOYAGERS-Fellowship-Christian Alternative for Single Adults-First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd, Sunday, 9:30 a.m. 843-417-17. TENNIS PLAYERS - Planning to play during a major tournament, players at David Cuellar 64-288. Member Professional Stringing and Dancing team in the Reasonable rates on good strings and grip. 3.5. Reasonable rates on good strings and grip. 3.5. Reasonable rates on good strings and grip. **ENGAGEMENT ASTA BINGE TINELY** *Reasonable rates on good strings and grip.* FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-updates up to pregnancy, pregnancy treatment, Birth Control, medications, hospital appointments, appointments * 8 AM to 5 PM (912) 460-3110 19th ST. Overland Park, KS. 652 NEED EXTRA CASH. I'm paying top prices for old gold & diamonds, class rings, etc. Call 842-9737 or 841-7476. Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid. 864-5564. If Confused and frustrated about taxes or-outstate state income? Call Rick 842-4650 for tax planning as well as preparing. 3-7 The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cold beer, pool ball, and unique harbours. Color TV can show you what to wear are away. You can get your ship together on the Harbour Lite 101 Mass. A first-class div class POETRY WANTED for Anthology. Include stamped envelope. Literary Arts Press, 122 Nassau. Suite 212, New York, NY 10028. WE ARE THE ONES by Ann Law. Intelligence works like greased lighting, using thought and will good to promise both. RJS, paced book. DIB. Intelligence Books. Book 29, Bedford. M01730 M01730 INTERESTED IN FRATERNITY² Participate in men's spring formal rubric. March 21, 22, 23. To register, contact Inter-Faternity Council Office at 864-3559. 3-21 NEED CASH GAY COUNSELING REFERENCES THROUGH Head- quarters, 841-2345 and KU info, 864-356f. - 309 --- FOR SPRING BREAK? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS... Female nursing student wanted to share apartment near Med Center next fall. 864-658-36-6 Interested in learning how to read Hebrew, only. Class beginning Thursday, March 6th at 130 at the L.J.C.C. For more information call 864-3844. CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 The Corps is coming! The Corps is coming! The Corps is coming! 3.7 Entrance! Entrance! 3.7 You don't have to walk alone on campus at night. Call Campus Safety Services at 844-8484 for an excertion team. The exertion service is available 5 p.m. to 1 a.m., Sunday through Thursday, 3-7. To whomever found, borrowed or burried my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Allen Field House or the Kanman Photo Lab. CALL ME I READY TO DEAL. M41-572S - 3 Are you dating more and enjoying it less? Are you dating less and wanting to more? For some answers come to College Life. 7:00 Wed, March 5 at Dartmouth Scholarship Hall. 3-5 GURDIEFFE - OUSPENSKY Center accepting students (913) 685-149. 3-7 Dancing in the light of JAH love this weekend. Please join me. 3-7 **DRAT!!** Gotta sell my Padre ticket—but there are limitations. Call Dr. B. 843-645 ASAP. *please?* 3-7 Help me find the orange car that left me with the fireball. Rescue man helped a burnt orange car with a damaged rear windshield. Accident happened early Sunday 845-1091 $2. Reward. Guaranteed. Call 318- 5-18 You know who. You stinking student-elect You sure have been a big p-*...chow-hound. You sure have been a big p-*...chow-hound. Mr. KU." KU GI! GI! GI! GI! around del庸 gift. Ground you with the oil spill. Come in and register for our Grand Opening Giveaway! March 17-22. Mate2 includes electronic games remote control robot, stuffed toys and much more. Fun and Games, 102 Massachusetts. Shop at PRO AM SPORT over your spring break. Located in the heart of Mission, Ks. SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 - call 843-906-7555 STATISTICS (all courses) | MATH 000-102 - call 843-906-7555 STATISTICS (all courses) | CAS 903-906. CSA 903-906. 7585 PHYSICS 100-500 call 843-903-ENGLISH TIF IMPROVE VOICE (all courses) | IMPROVE VOICE (all courses) TIF IMPROVE VOICE (all courses) IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 30-page catalog of college literature, 10.20 books listed, BOOK 5297G, Los Angeles, CA, 90025, (213) 477-8226. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House or Mouse Quick Center. Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM on Friday, 9AM to 1 PM on Monday at 88M Room. For legal assistance, including Municipal court inquiries, call 844-301-6255 or visit the law return package Dawn Davis & Lester J. 307 East St. Davenport, Iowa 52830. Call 3433 collection 3433 collection Cell 844-6015 late events Office 615 West Avenue 9th Floor 375-7127 Face-to-face Accept Master Charge TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-146 .. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980 TF Experienced typist-theses, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correcting electric. Bath After 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf Why cuss about typing? Experienced evil service secretary does regular practice with professional typing. Gramerman, 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Threes discussions welcome. editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127. TF Aaccurate, experienced typist IBM correcting Solellic Catell, Bornam 842-7247 ff MASTERMINDS professional typing, Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3287. ff DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980 Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selecetric Quality work. Referees available. Sandy, ifem and weekends. 748-9818. Experienced Typed=manuscripts, papers, themes Scientific and technical experience. IBM Correcting Selectric. 841-4228. If Experienced Typed—term papers, thesis, mire, electric IBM Siliconite, Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-9544, Mrs. Wright. !f WANTED Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, Self-recreetting Selective. Call **Tilen or Joannam 841-2172.** Catt 3-7 Neat, easily typing, IBM selectric, delivery & pick-up on campus. 842-3521 after 6:00. 3-6 ROOMMATES. Naismith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day.ff. PSCHATRIC AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICE Clerk, 915-328-7400. Job location: Pepery Humberville, Job Service Center, W. 5th St., Toronto, KS. Phone: (131) 926-5380. Resume to: Emily E. Knight, an equal opportunity employer. Female roommate for apache townhouse living, nice, quiet neighborhood. Fireplace, garage, Nonsmoker $110 + 1.3 utilities. 842-606. Keep try-ing. Don't pass this up. up; March rent paid. Own furnished bedroom. Only $119 per mo. 3- utilities. Call 843-0352 3-6 Garage space for car. 864-4072, before 9 a.m. 3-6 Wanted: One good-humored, responsible roommate through May. Own room. $115 a month. Jayhawk Wst. Call 841-0483. 3-5 Male roommate to share space two-bedroom apartment from spring break until the end of amester $120 month plus 1^{st}$ electric. Call after p. 842-1356. 3-1 Roommate to share 2 bedroom apt. $109.50 + util. Call 843-6849. 3-5 Female roommate. 2 bedroom apt. $122.50 mo & ½ utilities. Call Barb. 841-3260. 3-18 Going to Ft. Lauderdale for spring break? Were looking for people to share room with (yours or others) at the Fairmont Grand. oura, Call Tarii 841.-8928 3-6 go near Yellowawnts' National Park, Jackson Hole Woyne, Billings, Montana? I need a ride- over spring break. Billings, 811-755 3-5 Executive Director for Associated Students of University College of Medicine and the associated university managing the several instructional programs, manages the overall student learning, and loading on the office before the Kaiser Medical Center in Los Angeles. Contact College of Podiatry, Kauai 6621, by March 17. College of Podiatry, Kauai 6621, by March 17. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELLIT! If you've got it. Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Hall. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got! Sell Power! AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Friday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm 1 time $2.25 .02 CLASSIFIED HEADING: Writing advice: ___ Write ad here: ___ 2 times $2.50 .03 RATES: 15 words or less additional words C-LASSEMID DISPALY = 1 Cal. x 1 Inch = $3.75 3 times $2.75 .04 DATES TO RUN:_ 4 times $3.00 .05 ADDRESS: PHONE: KANSAS CLASSIFIERS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- 10 Wednesday, March 5. 1980 University Daily Kansan Rec officials uncertain how to resolve Greek conflict By KEVIN BERTELS Picture a KU Hill Championship intramural tough football game in Memorial Stadium. Excitement is in the air as fans embrace their favorite independent or Greek teams. Sports Writer That was not the picture at this year's Hill Championship. Not only were both teams in the men's final Greek, but both were from the same fraternity. Two teams from the Beta Theta Pi Fraternity advanced to the finals because of an inconsistency in the intramural system. The inconsistency, which does not prohibit Greek teams from playing in the independent league, took Recreational Services officials by surprise last fall. THEY HAVEN't HEARD any formal complaints about the situation, but they would rather it not happen again. According to Tom Wilkinson, director of recreational services, and Ron Richardson, director of a facility where children are that they don't know how to protect it. "We had 4,000 people play intramural basketball recently. If we would into政行pingging people who could play, we would have to drop one entire program. I don't think it would be worth it." The only way to keep the Greek and independent leagues separate, Richardson said, would be to limit fraternity teams to play only in the Greek league. "I would hope that the frat teams would stay in their leagues," he said. "We've really never had any reason to separate the leagues before." The rule to limit fraternity teams to the Greek league, Wilkerson said, would be almost unforcible because of the large number of people who play. IN THE PAST, few Greek teams had taken advantage of the rule allowing them to play in the independent league. Until last fall, two Greek teams had never met in the independent teams from participating in the independent team keeps the situation from being reversed. The same situation does not apply to independent teams that might have their own rules for the league. The Greek teams can police their own ranks since most Greek are familiar with the rules. A GENTLEMAN's agreement might be forcoming between Greek teams, the Interfaithstream Council and Recreational Athletics. Services student assistant said. The IFC has an agreement now with all the fraternities that says each house can enter only one team in the Greek football league. Because of that agreement, the Beta Dragons, the second team from the Beta house, decided to take the independent league and also had a team in the independent league. Although no rule changes are planned at the present, Recreational Services officials are considering some new rules. MAYBE WE SHOULD re-classify it as an open league," Wilkerson said. "For administration, we must be easier if we can use the basis of skill and not on where they live." Purdue's Carroll highlights All-America team NEW YORK (AP)—Once an awkward high school player in Denver, Joe Barry Carroll took his time developing at Purdue. But once he did, the sky was the limit for the giant they call "Rocky Mountain Hue." "I can see him becoming an outstanding pro player," says his coach, Lee Rose. "I believe he'll make a good living at it. He's big and strong." teams playing in independent联赛. One reason is that the IFC allows each fraternity more than one team in Greek competition in every other sport. The Purdue skyscraper, Carroll, was named yesterday to the first team by a national panel of AP writers. Louisville's Darrell Griffith and Kentucky's Kyle Macy guarded and DePaul's Mark Aguire and Maryland's Albert King were the forwards. ROSE'S ADMIRATION IS shared by many and reflected in Carroll's selection to The Associated Press All-America college basketball team for 1979-80 yearend. Carroll's arrival as a player in his junior year last season signed a turn in Purdue's draft, and he became a team team from the year before to 7-7 and a tri-championship in the big Ten. The team was a strong contender. points and 10 rebounds a game, to keep the Boltermakers among the nation's leading teams. This season, the 7-0 star averaged 22 GRIFTHITH IS ONE of the nation's leading military actors in the war, the chief operator of the US Armed Forces. One of his specialties is a reverse dunk, which he put home with as much fervor and excitement as possible. Griffith averaged 22 points, five rebounds and three assists per game for the Metro Conference champions. But recreational officials still are surprised that two Greek teams met for the Hill Championship. The six foot three Macy has been Coach B. Hall's "coach on the floor" at Kendall College in North Carolina, the NCAA championship in 1978. Among Macy's best qualities is his ability to thrive with a big smile. "WE DON'T HAVE any crossover in basketball, Hurricanes, who act as the link between the IFC and Recreational Services, and the Cyclone teams our teams in the Greek basketball league." Macy, one of the nation's top foul shooters with a 92 percent average, had a 16-point and 5-ask average this season. AGURRE WAS THE main reason for DePaul's success this season, helping the Blue Demos build a 26-game winning team that them atop the polls for most of the year. "Maybe we should eliminate leagues altogether." he said. "It kind of just happened this year," Hinrichs said. "We didn't think it was a problem." The 6-7 star has been called the best power forward in the country by many observers. OFFICIALS SAID they did not want it to happen again. They said it took away from the excitement of the Hill Championship. DefPaul Coach Ray Meyer adds, "He may be the best all-around ballplayer ever to come to DefPaul." Aguirre, the only sophomore on the first team, averaged 27 points, eight rebounds and three assists a game. KING, A JUNOIR, finally blossom into me in the summer but before predictable success for him, leading Maryland to season Atlantic Coast Conference championship. His season included a 22-point, 7-1 record. TITLE TEEN Joe Battery Carroll, 1-4; Hunter Anderson, Albert King, 6-8; marriages; Mary J. Martinez, 4-6; Mountsore DePaul; Darael Griffith, 6-4; senior, Louisville; Kiley Mc, 6- senior, Karen Mumby. NORWALK FIRM Mike Grizzle, 64, senior; Gary Grizzle, 64, senior; Washington State; Michael Brush, 62, senior; Las Vegas Reggie Carter, 64, senior; St. John's; Ray Blumie, 64, junior; Oregon State "It takes away a lot of the excitement of a team sport," said Ms. Kruse, for Recreational Services said. "As soon as the girl's championship game was over, the crowel left, basically, from the Beta team." Herb Willman, 6-10 junior, Otsego State; John Stress, 2-8 mississippi, Missoula Lovis, 4-14, minors; Drake, Rolando Blackman, 6-14, junior, Kansas State; Sam Worth, 6-12, marrié, Montana BIG EIGHT PLAYERS MAKING HONORABLE MEN TION The 1979-80 Associated Press Division I college Richardson, first-year director of infrastruals, said, "I'd want to talk with the students about it. It really stretches independent or fraternity leaders then there is no reason for us to have them." Steve Stapleton, 61; fullman, Missouri; Curtis Berry, 61; senior, Missouri; Jack Moore, 5; junior, Nebraska; Andre Smith, 67; senior, Nebraska; Larry Kasra, 61; junior, Davenport; David Karmat, 62; junior, Kansas like the othrs ability to us have them. So far, only touch football has had Greek WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES J WIN 249 SONY'S AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! Museum of Natural History Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS - Part Shop 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 HABITAT A PLACE FOR $1.50 March 5 WILDLIFE AND MAN 7:30 p.m. BENJAMIN MCDONALD GATOR Rent it. Call the Kansan. W.C. & Me Pizz 544 West 23rd 841-6181 Starting at: W. C. & Me Pizza Largest Selection in Town Men's and Women's We also carry Izods with the Jayhawk Emblem Call 864-4358. Ken Roper's Golf Shop The "Deepest" in Town Whole Wheat Deep Dish Pizza It's Delicious Try it for a real Wheat Treat Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Izod Shirts $18.00 $14.00 843-2938 Lawrence Country Club 400 Country Club Ter. Come Hear THE MOFFET BEERS BAND THE ENTERTAINER 2025.12 w 8th st Thursday, March 20th From 8-12 p.m. $4 at the door for all the beer you can drink PROCEEDS GO TO ARTHRITIS RESEARCH Thursday-Sunday March 6-9 UP TO 50% OFF selected yarns, beads, looms sponsored by AOI EVERYONE INVITED COACH Bring this in Air 20% OFF all other non- yams & accessories expres. March 1, 1980 D 730 Massachusetts D YARNBARN OLD CARPENTER HALL All Our Meats Are Slow Roasted Over a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbeque Flavor Pork Spare Rib Special Every Coke 719 SMOKEHOUSE HALF SLAB BIG END $7.75 HALF SLAB SMALL END $4.75 Massachusetts OFFER GOOD March 5-9 WED THURS FRI SAT SUN CALL TODAY! Maupintour travel service **AIRLINE TICKETS** * HOTEL RESERVATIONS* * ERALE PASSES* * ENCLOSED VISION* *ESCRORED TOURS* air service 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION 843-1211 VISA MALAYA CHARGE FOR MORE INFORMATION CITY OF SAN JOADE New Additions Glu-Stick Rub-on glue for paper, cardboard, fabric photos, polystyrene by Faber Castell 79¢ VISA pen&,inc. 623 vermont 841-1777 pen&,inc. art supplies 623 northeast 941-177 open 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT in Overland Park & Topeka Available For TYPISTS • STENOGRAPHERS • FILE CLERKS KEYPUNCH OPERATORS • BOOKKEEPERS Bossler Temporary Help in Overland Park Contact: - NO FEES - Overland Park Contact Ann Duwe Bossler-Hix Personnel Overland Park, KS. 66202 everland Park, KS. 66202 913/262-8633 913/262-8633 In Taopen Contact: In Doterra Bingos Bonaire 1035 S. Taopka Ave Kaizer KA 60612 KOE 78748 THE GREAT GIVEAWAY SALE COATS • JACKETS • DRESSES PANTS • SKIRTS CO-ORDINATES SWEATER'S BLOUSES LEATHER PURSES 50 to 75% all sales final. entire stock not included. the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts 1 Student loan misuse tempting, profitable but illegal By DAVID WEED Staff Reporter Instead of using the guaranteed student loan for education, he deposited it in the bank and let it accumulate interest for four years. When he graduated, he immediately paid the loan back - just the principal, because he did not owe any interest on the loan. The government took care of that. The interest the loan had accumulated for four years in his savings account was his to keep. This is an example of how people are saving and investing their guaranteed student loans, such as those from the Higher Education Loan Program, instead of spending them for educational expenses, or supporting their hard Hawk, president of HELP in Kansas. "There have been a few cases," Hawk said this week, "and some have been prosecuted. But to the best of my knowledge, none have been prosecuted in Kansas." TO MISUSE THE LOAN is a violation of federal law, Hawk said, punishable by fine, imprisonment or both. "I bought a stereo with my HELP LOAN," he said. "I got $2,000 loan and I spent 600 of it on new stereo. I should have done it before I needed the money for school." One of the problems with prosecuting students who misuse loans, Steve Dorsson, student financial and program specialist for the Chesapeake Bay City, Mo., said, was catching the offender. FOR EXAMPLE, courts have decided that purchasing an automobile is an acceptable use of a student loan, Dorssom said. "They've got to have transportation to get to school and back." he said. He said unless a student blatantly misused the loan, such as making a and investment, the courts would not find him guilty. Jerry Rogers, director of KU financial aid, said that catching student misuse of financial aid was hindered by the nature of student finances. "Students don't separate their finances like businesses, so student funds tend to all be in one or a few accounts," Hawk said. "It's hard to prove which money is the Obtaining or holding cash will not need the money to meet expenses are getting loans. Royers said. "People no longer have to list their adjusted gross income on the application "PARENTS OR STUDENTS invest this money," Dorsass said, "and use it, invest it, for three or four years. If the loan is paid back within a nine month period after graduation, the federal government pays the taxpayer. Congress has chosen to ignore these facts." because of the Middle Income Student Assistance Act," he said. Hawk said more people would invest financial aid loans, 'but the amount of money earned plus the risk one takes in finance a law makes it not very profitable'. Students also misuse short-term financial aid loans, a KU student who asked not to be identified, said. "A LOT OF PEOPLE take out small loans around spring break," she said, "and finance vacations with them. "I went to Padre Island last year. I went in and said I needed some money for living expenses. I pointed out that I needed the money for living expenses, and I was really never questioned about the use." Jeff Weinberg, associate director on financial aid and "we know not everyone is trying to rip us off. we students tell the truth when they tell us what they need Another KU student, who asked not to be identified, said he was with a friend when the friend got a small financial aid loan. He said the student bought a pound of marijuana, sold it, paid the loan off, and kept the profit. "We make about 6,000 of these small loans every year," Weinberg said, "for over $1.5 million." "The student can use it for luxury items if he wants to lie, but it says on the contract that if he lies he can be suspended or expelled. "The program was designed for students to use for tuition, books, and living expenses." ROGERS SAID the number of KU student loans had tripped in the past few years, partly because no bank in Lawrence made student loans anymore. Bill Lienhard, vice president of the First National Bank of Lawrence, said, "We could be swamped with student loans, but they aren't the right loans to land from a lending institution standpoint." Karen Gaulke, student loan assistant at the First National Bank, said the bank had trouble collecting past student loans. Lienhard said the volume of student loans forced them to stop making them. "Most banks had the same problem," said. "We woke up one day and found we were flooded with student loans." Out-of-town students are sent to their hometown banks to get loans through their parents. Lienhard said. "Some students," Gaulke said, "just didn't understand the loan, what they were doing and the importance of paying it." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Thursday, March 6, 1980 Vol. 90, No. 107 Mall promoted by Action 80 By LYNN ANDERSON Staff Renorter Is a proposed downtown shopping mall at "Hollies-Royce in a Volkwagen town?" A diamond tiara would have to mortgage the property. A monster that would control its master? These questions were all raised yesterday in the aftermath of a Topeka legislative hearing on the use of industrial resources to finance a downtownwerenever evacuation. At the hearing Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson testified in support of the use of bonds for mail construction. Watson is an ex-officio member of Action 80, a group of private citizens promoting mail development. HIS ROLE in the hearing was questioned at Tuesday night's city commission meeting by Commissioner Marci Fran- 102 Mall talk JEFF HARRING/Kansan sta Lawrence City Manager Buffalo Watson (right) discusses the proposed downtown building with Barbara Wagher, 7211 Louisiana St., following a Senate Local Government Committee hearing on a bill that could provide the law for financing of the project, Watson, who testified in favor of the bill, spent more than a half-hour following the hearing discussing the mall proposal with Waggoner and another Lawrence resident also against the proposal. Finance bill for mall criticized By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter TOPEKA - A bill that pave the way for financing a proposed downtown Lawrence shopping mall was sharply criticized by local Government Committee hearings. Meanwhile, Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager and Warren Rhodes, president of Action 88, a private group that is leading the downtown development project, presented their reasons for asking him to return German, DALawrence, to sponsor the bill. A downtown merchant, a member of the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association and a concerned citizen urged the committee to reject the proposal. The committee is expected to vote on the bill today or tomorrow, according to committee chairman Jan Meyers, R-Overland Park. Under current state law, only tax increment bonds—which are repaid through property taxes—can be used for downtown redevelopment. THE BILL would allow Kansas municipalities to issue industrial revenue bonds as a low-interest source of money for downtown redevelopment projects. Proponents of the bill insist that it would be easier to attract investors with bonds because of low interest rates available. If the proposal becomes law, city of officials say, industrial revenue bonds could be used to finance the building of the mall, and financial bonds could be used to clear the site. "I have not asked the city government to finance through bank contributions of money, but the financier would be unaffected to established businesses. If I need money today, I have to walk into a bank." "We're looking at 15 to 17 percent in the bottom line. It looks be feasible with rates like this. It's all a matter of the bottom line. But if we're able to get money at 10 to 16 percent, it might be better." "It is quite evident that the money market is going to have a tremendous effect on whether we are able to redevelop and improve our buildings in an important option that we have to look at. Larry S. Flaunny Sr., president of Learny's department store, said that Weaver's had spent $100,000 on imitations and planned to spend pro-business $150,000 in 1980. OPPONENTS OF THE BILL charge that the issuance of industrial revenue bonds to mall developers would be unfair to existine retailers. "If you can't use industrial revenue bonds, then the interest rates might be so high that they would be private investors," said Gary Sith, downtown redevelopment coordinator for Manhattan. "Without private investment, downtown development doesn't mean a business." Suburban development, they say, would be significantly cheaper than urban redevelopment. The bill's backers, however, contend that without the use of industrial revenue bonds, downtown development might not be possible in Lawrence. the suburban plan, saying that it could cause the demise of downtown. A 500,000-square-foot suburban mall south of Lawrence had been proposed originally by developers. DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS and many city officials have been strongly against Two Lawrence residents who testified yesterday said that arguments about financing were ridiculous until an actual plan for the mail had been announced. She cited a recent study, commissioned by the Downtown Lawrence Association, which stated that 60,000 square feet would be needed in Lawrence by 1985. The Cleveland development firm of Jacobs, Viscansi, Jacobs has released no information about the project except that it will be used to install a temporary airstore and controlled temperature storage. She said she had asked last summer for the matter to be placed on a commission agenda and someone "forget to add it." She also said that 25 residents had left the meeting, the issue was raised and voted on, she said. Francisco cast the only dissenting vote in the 4-1 vote. "The real question is," Lawrence Roberta Barbara, manager 728 Louisiana, told me. "I talk about the financial matters of the plan when they haven't even come up with a plan." cisco, who said the move was an example of the cloud of secrecy Action **Action** has hidden in while nearing its nexus for a mail Barbara Willits, a board member of Citizens For a Better Downtown, and a member of the East Lawrence Neighboring downtown mail.wallace.com She also complained that residents were not being informed of the group's deliberations. The membership of Watson and Mayor Barkley Clark in Action 80, Francisco said, has never been open to public scrutiny. "Action 80 has gone through at least six alternatives in developing the mall site," she said, "and no one knows what they are." FRANCISCO SAID she was glad the members of Action 80 were excited about mall possibilities and were preparing a whole team of them to fully whole needed to discuss their possibilities. "Building too much new retail space too soon would likely result in the forced closing of existing businesses," she said. "It's hard for them to know what the public concerns are if they've never asked." she said. At least two downtown Lawrence merchants echoed Francisco's sentiments about Action 80's lack of concern about public opinion. Jack Arensberg, president of the Downtown Lawrence Association and a member of Action 80, said yesterday that if faced with a choice between a downtown mall and a suburban mail, he would choose that some options were being ignored. "I know for a fact that the possibilities I've been explored to our surprise are enormous. People are concerned we'll end up with some kind of monster without realizing the conundrum." Arenssberg said one problem was that the major department stores being considered for the mall refused to locate in a city with an office space provided with a clalrized, populated mall. IN THE PROCESS, he said, local department stores and specialty shops "dry up" and consumers lose. "For the last 25 years, Sears and Penneys have dictated to urban American what will hannover to it," he said. Arensberg said he had studied mall buyers and that he was including Pittsfield, Massachusetts. There was, as citizens backed out of a proposed mall when they consider the consequences "The replacements, with their mass merchandizing and hot specials, just can't replace a good local store," he said. "More and more towns," he said, "are looking at the devastation of their sister cities and saying, 'Let's look at alternatives.'" The president of Weavers department store, Larry S. Fliarrery S., said he thought that by the time Action 80 presented its proposal it would be too late. "We don't owe JVJ anything," Flannery said. "I can't understand why Action 80 is tied to the one firm." RATHER THAN singing out the developer firm of Jacobs, Viscioni, Jacobs, he said, Action 80 should present a number of options to the public. A Lawrence architect, Robert E. Gould, wrote down the layout of downtown mail wheelbailers, but that other ways of planning it might work better than those being pursued by Action News. Gould said Manhattan was considering a similar project, but six months had been devoted to evaluating potential developers. "The process was much more public, with public hearings on cable television," he said. "It has resulted in a much See MALL page nine State tentatively OKs KU, Regents budgets By SCOTT C. FAUST By SCOTT C. PAUS Staff Renorter The Kansas House yesterday moved to grant the Kansas House budget a greater priority, stepping closer to legislation by giving both tentative approval as amended last week in the House Ways and Plans. After final action tomorrow, the budgets will be sent to the Senate Ways and Means Committee for evaluation. In its action, the House refused to adopt the full salary and fringe benefit increases for unclassified employees requested by the Regents. Unclassified employees include faculty members and some administrative officials. The House approved the committee's recommendation to hold the unclassified salary request to the 8 percent recurrent rate, instead of instead of a Recents request of 9.9 percent. The House supported Carlin and the House committee in not approving a Regents request for a fringe benefit increase. The budget includes an additional 2.3 percent salary increase. For tentative approval also was given for Curtius's recommended 7 percent increase in the student enrollment of Regents schools and an 8 percent increase for University of Kansas Medical Center. THE BENEFITS included a 2.5 percent increase in retirement benefit for professors, an additional 3 years tenure, a percent retirement increase for those with live or more years tenure, and additional benefits. The Regents had requested an 8 percent increase in OOE for Regents schools and a 9 percent for the hospital. Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, said the University was not displeased with the House action. Vogel said he thought the $1,450 limit was sufficient to hold down the amount of state funds provided to private school students. Vogel said he did not "have any gripes" with the budget legislation tentatively approved by the House. Carlin had recommended that the limit be set at $1,700. "WE'RE FAIRLY PLEASED." Vogel said. "It was pretty much what the governor had recommended. You never get everything you want." "I sometimes wonder if maybe we could have given the faculty more than an 8 percent salary increase. You just have to set the priorities and that's what the committee does." In other action affecting the Regents budget, the House backed an amendment by State Rep John Vogel, R-lawrence, to allow grants on state grants to private college students. The House tentatively approved KU's budget completely as recommended by the House committee. "Those two committees (House and Senate, and Means) do complete independent investment in the assets," she said. "They look closely at the funds provided in pre-jury years. We have to justify the new and improved plan." The House Committee had recommended a $1,200 allowance to allow redistribution of State Scholarship funds to Regents school students. This would be difficult because they were not needy enough. "In this time of high inflation, 'Von Ende said, "the increase for faculty and for OOE could be a little larger, but we appreciate the support provided." VON ENDE SAID the committee recommendations were not a rubber stamp process. Responding to KU statements that more classified personnel were desperately See BUDGET page nin Several deans of KU schools say that without more full-time faculty members and space, their schools may not be able to handle the demands of increased student enrollment. KU enrollment increase outgrows faculty, space ByGRANT OVERSTAKE UNDERSTAFFING HAS ALSO been a problem. Dickinson said. At a time when experts are predicting nationwide declines in university enrollment, KU students at 25,173 students enrolled at KU this semester—1,100 more than were enrolled a year ago. But some KU deans said their students have limited and no room for more students. THE BIGGEST PROBLEM in the School of Business is a shortage of full-time faculty, he said. Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, said Green Hall was already operating at near capacity. The enrollment of 555 is expected to increase with the building was built to accommodate he said. "Over the past six to eight years, the enrollment in the School of Business has increased." We added resources so we can add to our faculty and staff. But resource additions are not limited. A $2 million expansion of Summerfield is being planned, but funding for the project was cut. The Telfson team. If the funds were raised, the School of Business would be able to handle more students. "We seriously need more faculty," he said. "We have the highest rates of students from low-income families, and just aren't offering nearly as good of curriculum as we should because of the lack of funding." In the School of Business, John Toffleson, associate dean, said the undergraduate business program offered by UWL, 1,011. But Toffleson said the figure was projected to increase 13 percent over the previous year. According to Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, only 144 students out of more than 380 applicants are accepted into the school each year. "We have more teaching than we would prefer using part-time grads and graduate student instructors, Tolleson said. We should also have a teacher who would prefer to do in a mass-leisure mode. "We're full. We're always full." Kahn said. THE QUOTA for next year's new students was reached two weeks ago, he said. An upcoming renovation of Marvin Hall will not solve the school's space problems, Kahn said. "We're already bigger than we can handle effectively in the School, both in terms of space and faculty resources," he said, referring to how he deals with the programs we have now." The School of Engineering's 1,608 students represent a two-fold increase in enrollment from six years ago, according to David Kraft, dean of the school. HE SAID THE FACILITIES were tight but the school was running smoothly. Growth in enrolment was highest in the electrical machinery, and chemical manufacturing. "We're short on faculty," Kraft said. "The section sizes have increased but so far we're getting by. "I think we’re getting toward the overload side, but the academic affairs office has placed more faculty in the school, so they are helping us meet our teaching requirements." The School of Pharmacy will be moving into the Malot Hall addition next fall, accolades that he made to the school's school. He said the school's enrollment of 285 underclass may grow to 250 over the period. But an increase in pharmacy students would not create a problem, he said. "I think we could meet the influx of two students with some planning and a year or two lead time," Mossberg said. "Physically we could take care of those needs." "Our problem would be getting the personnel in the budget to meet those needs." THE 458 STUDENTS in the School of Social Welfare is "right at the limit" of the students that the school could handle with a staff of 200. Dr. Hardie Macleod, dean of the school, said. "Taking five more wouldn't hurt the quality, but beyond that, I think we'd get to the point where there would be a difference," he said. "The fact that any school in this University has made progress is contrary to economic laws. "We have less in real terms than we did five years ago, less real money in the school and the University." See ENROLLMENT page ten --- 2 Thursday, March 6. 1980 University Daily Kansan NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Meetina with hostages denied The militants at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran rebuffed a new bid yesterday for a meeting between the U.N. commission on Iran and the american hostages, despite Ayatollah Rubailah Khomiemi's reported approval of such a meeting, Iranian officials, however, said the meeting would take place. A top Iranian official said Khomeini would have to intervene more directly if the showdown between Iranian officials and the militants were to be resolved. the showdown between Iranian officials and the militants were to be resolved. Foreign Minister Sadegh Gholzattheb, in an display of anger and frustration, was quoted by the Tehran Techno Azadegan as saying that communication Zionists were irish against the U.N. mission. This was evidently a reference to the militants. It was the 123rd day of captivity for the 50 American hostages in the U.S. Embassy, and the U.N. Commission's 12th day in Tehran. The purpose of the commission's trip is to bear Iranian grievances against alleged crimes by the deposed shah and the United States in Iran and to seek a peaceful solution to the Civiletti attempts to plug leaks WASHINGTON—Condemning "the flood of leaks" from criminal investigations, Attorney General Benjamin R. Civilietti warned Justice Department employees in two special meetings yesterday that he would fire anyone caught disclosure confidential information. He said his efforts were sparked by the leak of the FBI's Abscam investigation of political corruption and by two other leaks. Eight members of Congress have been named by sources as being implicated in the Abscam case, although no charges have been brought. Gavietti explained the harm that leaks cause, methods that reporters use to get information and ways of deflecting inquiries from reporters. He said however, that he thought it was proper for reporters to try to get such information. He said reporters had every right to seek such disclosures and to appeal to car, ear, pride, ideals,动机, interest, anger, unfairness, stupidity, laziness and other reasons. Civletti has already begun an investigation under Richard Blumenthal, U.S. attorney for Connecticut, to find the source of the leaks. Balanced '81 budaet improbable WASHINGTON—President Carter could fail to balance the 188 federal预算 in a subsequent Congress, a congressional study indicated yesterday. Alicia Richin, director of the Congressional Budget Office, said that if $2 billion and could be pushed to $25 billion by higher military fuel and paylol Carter ordered a review of federal spending to help him reach his goal of balancing the 1981 budget and to demonstrate his determination to control inthe winner, only to pull back when later tallies showed no one with a conclusive lead. He headed for a win in the heats in the two Tuesday primaries. President Carson and Sen. Howard M. Warner had won each. Carter's original 1981 budget, *study to Congress on Jan. 28*, called for $516 billion in spending and a $1.8 billion deficit. However, many economists called it "inadequate." Rivkin said the larger deficit would probably be a result of higher interest on the public debt, increased spending for benefits tilted to inflation, higher fuel costs and higher interest rates. Last fall, Congress approved a 1980 budget calling for a $23 billion deficit. Budget office projections five weeks ago put the deficit at $40 billion. The budget office study also showed that spending already approved by Congress had exceeded the 1980 roof ceiling of $474.7 billion by $10 billion, a development that has led to a Senate freeze on new funding for government programs. Bogota terrorists offered deal BOGOTA. Colombia-Government negotiators offered a deal yesterday to the terrorists holding U.S. Ambassador Diego Asencio and about two dozen diplomats, sources close to the government said. The deal may have included safe conduct out of the country. The sources said the proposal was made during the second round of talks in a windowless van parked outside the Dominican Republic Embassy, where the meeting took place. The terrorists, who have been holding the hostages for a week, demanded $50 million in cash, the release of 311 political prisoners, worldwide publication of a newspaper, and other demands. The terrorists, who are members of the M-19 guerrilla movement, have threatened to kill their hostages—20 foreign diplomats, two Columbia foreign ministers and four U.S. officials—by embracing the embassy if their demands are not met. They say they are willing to wait as long as two months for a settlement. Government spokesmen have said they will try to get the agreement before the end of the year. Dipolitic sources said three Latin American countries—Mexico, Costa Rica and Panama—had offered political assylum to the terrorists. Federal project funds okayed TOPEKA - The Senate Ways and Means Committee yesterday unanimously enforced a proposed constitutional amendment to permit the state to accept "unilateral" contracts. The resolution approved by the panel was not acceptable to Gov. John Carlin, who wants the constitution changed to allow the state to spend its own funds on the military. If two-thirds of the Senate and House members approve the proposed amendment, it will be placed on the November election ballot for adoption or veto. The amendment approved by the Senate panel on a 9-0 vote would allow the state to accept and disburse federal funds for such things as railroad bed improvement, airport development and mass transit—but still wouldn't permit the spending of state general fund money. Carlin wants an amendment to allow the state to put up matching funds to obtain federal funds, or to spend its own money if projects are considered The governor has said Kansas is losing out on available federal funds for railroad track repair because of the constitutional prohibition against Atchison institution investigated TOPEKA—A psychologist employed at the Youth Center at Atchison told an investigative committee that the greatest impediment to treatment at that center was overwork. "They both go back quite a way in the history of the institution and there is lots of animosity between them," Ray said. Learning resumey before the Special Committee on Social and Rehabilitative Institutions, Darrel Ray said conflicting orders issued by Chief Social Worker Ellen Cameron and Youth Service Director William Vigola divided and confused the staff. He said Vigola and Cameron have attempted to intimidate their supervisor, Terry Kearns, program director and acting resident director. - overcrowding—23 boys in a 20-by-29-foot room in some instances; + overcrowding—18 boys in a 25-by-26-foot room in some instances; - Other problems at Atchison cited by Ray were: - lack of community involvement in the administration encouragement of destructive behavior by vindictive staff members. - one shortage of clinical staff; - lack of community involvement in the institution; "I've not seen an institution quite as bad as this in all my experience," Ray said. "The attitude of some of the people in negative, they are always after me." The committee scheduled additional hearings for today. Weather... Skies will be partly cloudy today with the high in the mid- to upper-20s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be southerly at 10 to 20 mph. There is a 40 percent chance of rain or snow tonight and the low will be in the 30s. Race reassessed after primaries BOSTON (AP) -George Bush gained a hairbreadth victory over Rep. John Anderson Tuesday in the Massachusetts election. He won with 40 percent of Republican leader Howard Baker quit the race, and former President Gerald R. Ford said the contest for the GOP nomination was over. Ford said the razor margins by which Bush won Massachusetts and Ronald Reagan edged Anderson in Vermont were a small step away. There was no consensus among Republicans. FORD HINTED in Lauderhill, Fla., that he might enter the league for the first time. Barbara Warren of ABC News Ford said late yesterday that there was a "9-30" chance he would try for the He said there wouldn't be such a consensus before the GOP national convention, and thus forecast just the kind of campaign he wanted him to an opening for another White House bid. Baker conceded in Washington that he was out of the race. "It's pretty clear the campaign isn't going anywhere," he said after lagging far behind the leaders in the first Republican campaign tests. Because Anderson had taken the lead, several news organizations declared him KENNEDY WON his home movie, the 25 percent of the vote to Carter's 29 percent president swept Vermont's non-binding primary with 74 percent of the vote to 28 percent. Kennedy, saying he had a lift for his campaign and his issues, turned his effort to New York State yesterday, to seek support in the primary which is one of his major targets. Carter said he was ready to compete for 418 Democratic delegates in 10 states, where primaries will be held or multistate delegation caucuses will get under way next week. wrote house press secretary Jody Pewley said in Boston that Massachusetts didn't do Kennedy much good nationally because the factory came from his Senate constituents. "I don't believe folks would view a Carter win in Georgia as a major event on the political horizon," he said. CARTER EXPECTS a victory there next Tuesday, when adjacent Florida and Alabama hold their primaries as well. Kennedy captured 77 Democratic nominating votes in Massachusetts, to 34 for Carter. That gave him the lead nationally, with 113 delegates to Carter's 89. But that margin won't survive the South, and Carter campaigners said the president already was guaranteed another 65 delegates in Iowa, although they had not yet been formally selected. Kennedy is investing little effort in those contests in the president's home territory. While the Democrats argued about their race, the Republicans shredded theirs. Anderson, the white-heaired liberal congressman from Illinois, said he had been told in a campaign contenders for the GOP nomination by coming so close to the early leaders, Bush and Reagan. In Massachusetts, Bush urged him by 1,280 votes out of nearly 400,000 cast in a GOP primary by a margin of 368 ballots in a governor that drew more than 62,000 voters. THESE WERE the returns in the Tuesday primaries: Massachusetts-Republicans Bush, 124,316, or 31 percent. Anderson, 123,086, or 31 percent. Reagan, 154,196, or 29 percent. Baker, 19,437, or 5 percent. Ford, 4,776, or 5 percent. Hillary Clinton, 4,034, John Connally, 4,014, or 1 percent. Rep. Phil Crane of Illinois, 4,054, or 1 percent. Three other candidates and uncommitted Republicans divided the rest. assachusetts-Democrats Kennedy, 582,144, or 65 percent. Carter, 200,656, or 29 percent. California Gov. Edmund G. Brown or 1 percent. The rest were uncommitted. Vermont-Republicans Reagan, 19,374, or 31 percent. And Americans, 18,776, or 30 percent. Bash, 14,093, or 23 percent. Bake, 7,584, or half. No matter had 2 percent and Connally 1 percent. vernmont-Democrats Carter, 28,708, or 74 percent. Kennedy, 9,913, or 26 percent. As it turned out, the Republican primary didn't award delegates either, because no candidate got the required 40 percent of the vote. The Democratic primary there was purely advisory, awarding no delegates. In Massachusetts, Bush got 14 Republican delegates. Reagan and Anderson 13 apache. In both states, independent voters flocked to the Republican primaries and boosted the GOP's total vote. In the GOP, turnout was only 31,000 fewer than the party's total registration, evidence of a weakening of support. Reagan said the crossword vote rendered Anderson's shows meaningless. The former California governor said his show was a boost in alien political territory. Student Senate votes yes on bill to increase salaries of officers A Student Senate staff pay increase wi- sidetracked by lengthy debate on an amendment designed to push the Senate secretary salary up to the level of University-employed employees at a Senate floor. The original bill was passed by the senate. The amendment, which would have increased secretary Bonnie Dey Neilles' salary from $65 to $700 a month, was based on the university secretary pay scale. The Senate secretary, if classified as a former government minister, benefits totaling more than $700 a month, according to Mikl Gordon, Engineering Senator. GORDON SAID De Noyles had served as Senate secretary for four years and merited the increase. He said he arrived at the monetary figures by obtaining the salary and asking 35 percent of the number. De Noyles works three-fourths time. Senators voted 50-31 in favor of the original bill's salary of $620 a month, about a 10 percent increase. Tim Salter, graduate student senator, disagree with the vote saying, "I don't think it is fair, as graduate students are living practically below the poverty level, why should we vote all that money for the city? I am easy to live on what we have to live on." The bill also funded a salary increase for the new Senate treasurer Brenn Abbott. The salary for the treasurer position was increased from $200 to $250 a month. The bill introduced funding for the position of Student Executive Committee chairman Robin McClellan, recently appointed by President Obama to provide a salary of $100 a month. MATT DAVIS, student body vice president, said the salary was cut under student body president Mike Harper's term two years ago. Dessin par J. M. Reynolds k's EVERY TUESDAY - It’s Ladies Night. Ladies get a ticket at the door for a free daiquiri from 9 p.m.on. EVERY WEDNESDAY - Fresh Fruit Daiquiris. Choose from Bonanna, Peach, Pineapple, Cherry, Strawberry And don't forget... Aye, it's the St. Pat's day Costume Party at the SANCTUARY. And the SANCTUARY is serving up a free drink ticket to every costume costume. Don't miss it. Only at... Make Plans now for St. Patrick's Day at The SANCTUARY Memberships always available The SANCTUARY 1407 W. 7th 843-9703 Free Hors D'oeuvres every Friday during happy hour. Happy Hour 4-7 pm Every day of the week Leon Brady, Minority Affairs chairman, said the promotion would permit increased visibility and recognition. Brady said participation in minority affairs subcommittee had jumped from five members to nearly 30 members. Deadline nearing The deadline is 9 p.m. Tuesday. In other business, the Senate minority affairs subcommittee was promoted to a standing committee. Students who want to vote in the Kansas presidential primary on April 1 have less than a week left to register. The deadline is 9 p.m. Tuesday. Registrants do not have to declare party affiliation to vote. Students and others can register at the Kansas University, the fourth floor of Wescoe Mall, or the main entrance to the city clerk's offices and the three Rusty's grocery stores during regular business hours. sua films sua films Presents THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION POLITICAL ACTION Scenes from two Tourneau features: 'Special Delivery,' from Canada (left), and Richard Williams' 'The Power' Plus: "Homebody," a short film by KU alumnus Steve Johnson Friday, March 7 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 pm $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium ★ No Saturday Performance — no refreshments allowed — WE NEED YOU!!!! Student Senate is looking for INTERESTED STUDENTS to serve on the following STANDING COMMITTEES: - Communications - Finance and Auditing - Culture - Sports - Student Rights - Student Services Apply in Person at the STUDENT SENATE OFFICE B 105, KANSAS UNION --- Thursday, March 6. 1980 Leben says faculty running scared on Forer issue 3 By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter Faculty members at the University of Kansas at Chandler, Ariz. Dyps for fear they will be punished. Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, said these measures were necessary. Leban petitioned the University Judiciary Tuesday to examine it charges alleged that the Justice Department prejudicially in actions against Norman Foster; associate professor of social welfare at the Lebanon Institute. social welfare, for their trips to Iran in the past three months. "The faculty are terrorized," he said. "They're all hunkering down in their foxholes." University Daily Kansan Most faculty members contacted for comment on the matter preferred not to make statements until they had seen Leban's charges. However, Dave Willer, professor of sociology and a member of Forer's American-Iranian Crisis Resolution Committee, said that all members of the AURH has ashtray glut University should operate under University rules. A few ashtrays have already been handed out piecemeal, but no plan for mass distribution has been approved, he said. Give or take a few. Dahlman said he rejected a proposal to give the ashtrays to students voting in the upcoming AURH elections. Bv BRIAN VON BEVERN BUT NO ONE wanted to distribute them, so they were stored in the tunnel under Oliver Hall. Then, along came Bill Dahlman. "That would be like buying votes," he said. "I don't think one should be rewarded with a present for voting." Staff Reporter Dahman, as chairman of housing services for the KU Association of University Residence Halls, is in charge of ashtry dispersal for AURH. Dilhah Dallah has to find homes for a few astrahs. If he puts one on the desk, and, say one on a nightstand, he'll still have 9,646 of them. "My sentiment is that if anyone has broken University rules," he said, "they should be held accountable." About a year ago, J.J. Wilson, KU director of housing, took $5,000 in surplus housing funds and bought 10,000 black plastic ashtrays, which had Association of Housing Agencies on hand and "Put Litter in its Place" on halls for placement throughout the halls. The ashtrays probably will be sent to the approximately 4,600 residents of the halls by Willer said this included both sides involved in the dispute. Leban said that by selectively enforcing University faculty regulations against Forer and Dillingham, Dykes had created a "rein of terror" among faculty members. "Over the years the chancellor has replaced competent school administrators with yes-nin', he said. "We have a tame environment," he said, that's why the chancellor overreacted. putting one in each room's mailbox. Others will be saved for distribution at an AURH conference at KU this summer. Dahman said he wanted to make sure residents understood the austrahs were meant to stay in the rooms, and were not gifts to residents. Both men said they had no fear of being accused of promoting smoking by distributing the ashtrays. WILSON SAID he was "tickled" that someone was finally doing something about the ashtrays. "We've been needing AURH a little bit," he said. "I'm delighted that they're going to be distributed." "I don't see that it's a promoting smoke." Wilson said. "We're simply trying to encourage people who do smoke to take better steps, so we don't do tobacco waste. There is no message intended." "I am a strong non-smoker." Dahlman, also a non-smoker, agreed. "I don't see that we're promoting smoking," he said. "They don't have to use them as an ashrav." "The cemetery atmosphere was violated." The ashtrays can be used for small trash or to hold keys, coins or anything else that will fit into a three-inch wide, one-inch deep space, he said. In all, there are probably 9,648 possible different uses for the ashtrays. Give or take a few. University faculty regulations state that instructors who do not meet their class requirements will be considered on leave without pay. Faculty members in this situation must apply to be received. LEBAN SAID the regulation violated by Forer and Dillingham had been violated "hundreds of times" by faculty members without the enforcement of penalties. However, Leban said, there are many faculty members, who, for one reason or another, missed classes and never were penalized. "It's not right," he said. "The purpose was to find something to punish them for, to single them out because they attracted attention." "The chancellor is the kind of man who would fire Copernicus because he was a troublemaker." Dykes will not release a public statement on the matter, according to Jim Scally, administrative assistant to the chancellor. For information on Jerry Brown's already remarkable achievements and presidential candidacy, please call Chris Hamill 842-9697 However, Vicki Thomas, assistant University general counsel, said the general counsel's office would probably handle the case. The office had not yet been contacted by Dykes. "RETALATION SUPPRESSES all kinds of dissension," he said. "It produces a very quiet campus. Leban said that although "a great many people on campus" shared his sentiments, they might be afraid to speak out for fear of retaliation from the administration. "In 1970 the Legislature punished the faculty by depriving them of a salary increase because some union areburned the Union. That what's people are afraid of now. "We're in a dangerous time, and it's like a graveyard around here. Nobody asks any questions." Leban said many faculty members were content to let Forer and Dillingham suffer their punishment as long as they themselves were not affected. "Some are scared speaking out will make things worse," he said. "More than one person said we have to let them (Forer and Dillingham) be scapegoats. "I think nothing but contempt for that viewpoint. I think it was discredited at Dachua and Buchenwald." During their December trip to Iran in an official attempt to help resolve the crisis with Tehran, Mr. Khaled was suspended without pay by Dykes. Forer was granted a leave of absence without pay for the spring semester, and went back to Iran in February. Of the 48 other Americans he renews his efforts. Forer's son, Robert, said Leban's actions came as no surprise to him. FORER WAS out of town yesterday and could not be reached for comment. The times call out for discipline and vision. Edmund G.Brown Jr. "We were aware there would be some action," he said, "My father felt it would not be prudent to engage in action against the University at this time." DAVID HARDCASTLE, dean of the School of Social Welfare, said he didn't think Leban's actions deserved comment, but sided with the chancellor's actions. 'My position was then and is now that he acted appropriately.' Hardcaste said. Leban said he was surprised that no other action had been taken against the chancellor. Robert Shelton, associate professor in the Department of Computer Science at a resolution at today's University Council meeting concerning due process for faculty members who have been punished by the university. "The chancellor has been lucky," he said. "He hasn't been the target of civil and criminal actions. "We are going to work this out intramurally. This is a real test of whether the Judiciary can work on its own." "I think he (Dykes) will try to quash it one way or another," he said. Leban said he doubted anything would come of his charges. "If the University attorney is involved, I assume his job is to get his boss off the hook. "That's not a university up there, it's a corporate boardroom. First they'll try to get you to work on the approach. They could say that only they have the standing to bring these charges." headmasters We wish all of you a great time vacationing next week—but while you're taking a break from school, don't neglect your hair and skin! Why not take along some reconditioners to moisturize and protect you from the sun and/or water? Stop in and see us before you leave and come back relaxed. 809 Vermont 843-8808 refreshed and ready! open most evenings till 8:00 p.m. *REDKEN* Nucleic A JOIN NOW Paul Gray's Jazz Place will be a Private Club after spring break Enjoy great Jazz and be a member of the most unique club in Kansas. Complete the membership application below and send $15.00 membership fee to: Paul Gray's, Box 753 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 FREE! Paul Gray's newest record album . . if you join before spring break. YOU MUST BE 21 YEARS OLD. Name Birthdate Address Phone Drivers License # and State Signature Why Not KU Look for the bright neon Jayhawk in our front window facing lowa, and when ever it shines, fantastic values are available for you. Just present any current college ID and take advantage of our surprise special. Our bright neon Jayhawk shines this Spring Break weekend with “You never know when we'll shine" Look for the colorful Jayhawk Western Sizzlin is giving away fantastic steak values to any group or party presenting a current college ID. "Treat the whole Family"! THIS WEEKEND ONLY GO FOR IT! Now that Spring Break has finally arrived, Treat yourself and anyone else in your party, to the finest in sizzlin steak. FRI: Load up on our salad bar normally $1.09, This Friday only enjoy one visit with any meal for only 49¢ SUN: Try our Big 1/3 lb. Texas Hamburger; Order of fries, and a medium drink, for only $1.49 SAT: Enjoy our finest Western Sizzlin Steak dinners with all the fixins Enjoy hot potatoes, salads you name it. 20% OFF ENTIRE BILL "Look often" More specials to come. Western Western Sizzlin STEAK HOUSE 2620 IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 PHONE 843-2550 MASTERCHARGE VISA VISA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of other editors. March 5,1980 No-star John shines John Anderson began the 1980 primary season as a presidential candidate with less support than Bob Dole. When the Kansas City Star ran a preview of the candidates before the Iowa caucuses in January, Anderson included even though such luminarys as Dole and Philip Crane were. But now, Anderson wouldn't be left off anyone's list of viable Republican candidates. He finished barely second to Ronald Reagan in the Vermont primary and to George Bush in the Massachusetts primary. Anderson has emerged as a brightening dark horse in a Republic race that Reagan was supposed to have won by merely entering. Anderson's near-victories in the northeastern primaries are not surprising when the man and the states are considered. Massachusetts, the only state George McGovern won in November 1972, has voted for the more liberal candidates for the last 38 years, with the exception of Eisenhower. And Vermont, although a strongly Republican state, rejected the ultra-conservative Barry Goldwater by a 2-1 margin in 1964. While Reagan and Bush alike agreed as far to the right as Galloway when they are far to the right of Anderson. This success in Massachusetts and Vermont is not the result of a massive media campaign. Anderson has slowly and persistently been spreading his moderate message across the nation. And people have been getting that message. An Associated Press-NBC News poll of voters in Vermont and Massachusetts indicated that most of those who voted for Anderson won for him on the basis of his stands on the issues. These stands on the issues are attracting many non-Republican voters to Anderson, according to the poll. In Vermont, Democratic voters could cross over and vote the Republican ticket. In Massachusetts, Anderson received many votes from independents. Anderson and the pollsters think that his stands on issues like handguns—he favors gun-control laws—and choice—and the Equal Rights Amendment—he supports its passage—pulled a lot of these votes to his side. Reagan says that such crossover votes won't help Anderson in coming primaries, but others say these votes would help a Republican in a general election. But he bypassed the next primaries—in South Carolina, Florida, Alabama and Georgia—and concentrating on Illinois, his home state. He has been criticized for this, but it may be a smart move. If he concentrates on the job, he will do a good job in them, he may be able to afford to lose some of the smaller states. And there is some indication that he is getting more and more help in his campaign. Earlier this week, Anderson for President offices opened in Lawrence, and a number of students had volunteered to help his campaign. Yesterday, Anderson was cheered by a crowd of Yale University students as he asked them for their help. It looks like the 1972 McGovern campaign. Maybe Anderson won't get as far as McGovenn. A liberal candidate in the Republican party doesn't have much of a chance of getting the nomination. But at least Anderson is one candidate who is addressing the issues and not resting on reputation as a politician, a minister or on a movie-star smile and a big name to get his votes. It refreshes to see a politician take a stand. Wild wind of Kansas should be harnessed It is the wind, perhaps, that is best remembered about Kansas. It is strength and girth,柔情 and peace. The wind is the very spirit of the state—independent, The wind comes knitting across the Flint hills in winter, bringing snow that defts 20s of snow onto the ground. Drop the temperature far below zero, drop the Kansas indians to sit out the storms in The wind rolls cold down the Colorado Rockies or swows up warm from the Gulf of Mexico. It blows, tropical and spring-like, in storm churning, changings, mischievously in a few hours. And then, the storms of winter change to those of spring and summer. The storms of the warm months blow with electric fire, dry soil, and wind that they will. Trees fall against the wind and kate kate COLUMNIST pound house lose roofs. The Kansas wind has been, known to topple barns and slam boats against their docks. Power. The power of it is aawing. There are days, however, when the wind blows soily, just enough to cool houses and move the humid air of summer. These are kite-flying days, frisbee-playing days. And there are times when there is no wind, and there are times for it, to cool the burning August days. THE WIND CAN BE an enemy—driving range fires across pasture land, freezing cattle in the hills or tearing buildings as if it were a weapon. Some are known to drive people mad with its incredible howling. It once moved the topsoil on a hill, causing a snowbowl in the moon. It can be choking, frightening, killing. Yet Kansans have come to accept the wind as they have accepted the heat of our world. They learned to live with it, learned to love it. They never have let it conquer them. They have endured the setbacks that given them fire and fighting. They ever have learned to use it. WINDMILLS. Long used in Europe to grind grain, windmills came to Kansas with immigrant farmers, and new uses were found for them. Too inefficient and slow to operate, they were pumped the windmills pumped water to keep farmers and their stock alive and to irrigate the arid western plains. Before the beginning of this century, most farms in the state had windmills. They became familiar parts of the landscape, and windmills were in the middle of fields and on top of hills. After World War I, another purpose was found for the windmills. They transformed the energy of the wind into electricity and brought the lightbulb and radio to farms. BUT BECAUSE the wind was not a constant source of power and the electricity from it was not available, windmills were traded for rural electrical systems after World War II. Farmers and ranchers then became, like all other Kansan farmers, on fossil fuel-generated electricity Now the fuels are expensive and in short range. The companies that are dangerous and expensive. Scientists are exploring other energy sources and their studies have brought them back to one of the few that exist now. There are few places in the United States with the steady, strong winds needed to generate electricity. Kansas is one of them. In fact, Kansas winds average a rate of more than 10 mph. An average speed of 7 or more mph could provide electricity production. Windmills probably could provide electricity for Kansas and several neighboring states. WINDMILL HAVE BEEN restored in Kansas as energy generators, but on a large scale. They have been built and they barely resemble the abandoned mills standing in pastures. They have the potential to produce electricity less exertion than it would have been particularly as fuel prices continue to climb. However, small scale production and storage can keep their price above that of other sources. The windmills have one other drawback. Because the Kansas wind is capricious and wind speeds can vary, the windmills cannot run constantly. What is needed is a way to store the electricity produced by the windmills. RESEARCH IS NEeded to refine attempts to use the wind. The state and federal departments of energy offer in-mindy training in windmills. A nationwide evaluation of wind power possibilities has been set up, and universities all over the country have begun studying the wind's energy potential in engineering and geological departments. Scientists are looking to the skies, and for the first time they are beginning to see what has been known all along—that the wind that blows through a canyon crashing is the most powerful of all nature's forces. The winds that last Friday blew energy for the needs of future generations. If a successful and efficient storage system can be developed for energy, kerosene or other non-energy supply. It would be a non-polluting and non-nuclear or nuclear energy source; none of the three types of nuclear energy. If the University residence hall system were a series of motels, "no vacancy" signs would glow from Daisy Hill every night of the school year. Full rooms plaque students each fall The halls have been filled to capacity for years. This fall the trend apparently will continue. Fewer than three weeks have passed since the programs began accepting contracts for the new buildings, and already have been contracted. According to University housing officials, the residence halls are filling up even faster than they did in previous years; officers aren't surprised by the browning students. After five years of increasing demand for rooms, the Housing officials have grown accustomed to the problem. Every August and January the scene is the same: the K.U. HOUSING Zoe Bartos KANSAN 1980 bob COLUMNIST pittman office of residential programs becomes awash with people who are desperate for a place to live. The forms early, formats late, formats early through the worn corridor of Strong Hall. MANY OF THE PEOPLE eventually end up living in temporary housing—in residence hall laundry rooms, ironing rooms, lounges and even saunas—and are assigned a permanent room in one of the University's eight residence halls. The red tape, the waiting, and the problem remains the same. Only the faces of the students and the length of time that they must wait for a room changes from semester to semester. Because contrary to statements made by University housing management of University-owned housing is a problem that won't go a way in the near future. J. J. WILSON, director of housing, and Fred McElhene, director of the office of the hospital, said that he is looking for rooms. At demand for rooms in residence halls has sharply increased over the last several years, both men have been charged with assault. Housing officials are gambling on the fact that housing prices decrease in the future. Nothing is being done to expand the University's present housing system, although the resources for such an expansion THE UNIVERSITY OWES less money on its existing residence halls than does any other big Eight university, but only two universities offer less university-owned housing. The future quality of University-owned housing for students is being based on projections that are as reliable as those that could be drawn from crystal ball gassing. The University should wake up to the fact that it has no accurate way of predicting campus enrollment will be 20 years from now. UI students will then be clamoring for rooms. By their lack of planning for the future and their indifference to the present housing shortage, KU hospital officials are showing a remarkable loss of foreseen. state birth rate is declining, enrollment at the University has increased with each semester. The Lawrence campus offers a Master's degree and 842 students from last spring's enrollment. As residence halls become overcrowded, the quality of life in the halls will decline and students will seek other forms of housing. Forer smears Carter, spares Iran THE UNIVERSITY'S residence halls are nearly paid off. Housing offices are raking in millions of dollars from student housetanks. But unless planning is started now, the eventual obsolescence of KU's halls will take the University by surprise. To the Editor: IT MAY BE A long wait. Although the It appears as if in our day and age if you want to attract cheap attention all you need is a video of your government or industry officials of diabolical evil action with no evidence in them. ditional residence halls on campus. Instead, Wilson has said, the University plans to cool its heels and wait until the effect of Kansas' drought reaches the University and cuts demand for resources. He portrays himself as "the champion of the oppressed" and President Carter as a disgusting evil figure who is allowing the government to minister on his behalf, ministration has milked the last bit of political capital it can." Why Forer needs to hold this perception of our government accountable? He does not相似 intentions only Forer knows. Maybe he perceives Iranians to be like children in that they have no control over their fate and do not childlike. To think otherwise is fascist. If Fever wites to become the McCarthy of liberal KU, he is on the correct path. The techniques are similar: smear the oponent, cake your side in righteousness and smear the Fever. Upon reading this letter you feel an emerger, you apologize to the President. Roland DeSoignie Topeka graduate student Last Thursday night I heard a talk by Norman Forer on the Iran situation. It was compelling in its clarity, humanity and courage. The lines of students waiting for a room in a University residence hall lengthen each spelling word, and the room turns into temporary rooms are found each semester. But the demand continues and increases. Saturday morning I woke to the voices on my clock radio—voices suggesting that we get tough, that it is time we show our stuff, and that we must be four of our people. There must have been four of our people suggesting the same thing. It was call-in time on KY102. It was the thoughtless twitch of a sleepy giant holding on to its dreams, wishing when it wants to and threatening me. To the Editor: At a university of KU's high caliber, it simply shouldn't happen. Then Forer accused pressure came in using the hostage crisis for his own personal reasons. He said he would rather whether the converse is not also true than wonder how many people had heard of Norman Forer a few months ago. He sure did believe the ongly nighties. I just feel that deep fear. Forer's diplomacy should be questioned To the Editor: Forer said that Americans have become pleased with the hostage situation without realizing that they were even legitimate grievances are no excuse for taking a foreign embassy and its emissaries. I think some of the comments in the Feb. 2014 Kansas about the trip of Norm Foster and Daniel Beyer to Mexico was interesting. For example, Muriel Paul stated: "I was never a moment when we did this." I would like to poll the hostages to see if they have similar feelings on the subject. Truths about Iran must be recognized I tried to wake up, got some coffee, tried to get up, and went for a walk. I was nervous and not as clear as I would have liked. My understanding, in part based on Forer's talk, is more clearly stated Dave Pontious The Iranians are not in the embassy because they think the United States is weak and afraid to act. They feared American troops, who had been sent to revolution, which cost them tens of Dave Fountous El Dorado senior UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN thousands of lives, would be swept away by a coup directed by the CIA and that the sleeping soul of the United States might never realize what had been done. They're trying to pinch us, trying to awake our understanding and morality by making us look up from our local concerns in front of others. The conscientious directed press would sedate our understanding and arouse our wrath. Through the corporations we have been reaching our material dreams. That doesn't mean they may oppress us is not comfortable to hear. At any rate, what can we do? Can we take the responsibility of admitting to ourselves that we have already knows—that in reaching for our economic and political interests we have used methods that we would not like used on ourselves? This would be no more than the When yet an offer was 'made last December by Sadegh Ghotzbazdar, Iranian foreign minister, to release the hostages on no more than such an admission by our government, Mr. Ghotzbazdar matter at a later date, it was ignored by our press and by our government. According to Forer, who was in Iran at the time, this offer made headlines for days in Iran, did not request the return of the shah and was not allowed to visit any of these involved. Why was the offer invoked? Our politicians and press have aroused us to take a stand against blackmail. Haven't we the responsibility to bend to the truth? Peter N. Baird Columbus, Ohio, graduate student U.S. hockey victory rekindles patriotism To the Editor: Over the years people have begun to have doubts about this country. We have begun to question our government, and to lose faith in God. We have lost faith in God. What we had lost faith in was faith itself. People were asking "Who cares about people country?" People were beginning to believe that no one did. The unity in our country was all many believed it would never be found again. But things changed on the night of Feb. 22. I ice hockey, yes, ice hockey brought the country back together. I ice hockey, a game I had never really watched. A game I really didn't care to watch and something I knew nothing about. And on the following Sunday, the U.S. team reached another impossible goal. They came back to score three goals in the But on that night, my ideas about that sport changed. Our hockey team defeated a team from the Soviet Union; a society队 composed of much older players who had not been born to the Soviet Union and had not lost an Olympic match for 12 years, a team that carried home the gold for the past 18 years. The U.S.队 was composed of 20 college and minor-league players who not given a chance to beat the Soviet team would have been beaten by the Soviets had we beenited 10 us a few days before. On that Friday night, the United States grew closer together. People who had never before seen a hockey game danced in the streets. Chills ran up and down the spines of many Americans and people wept for joy in the crowd. The sore arms the Soviets were the losers, 4-3. This was really just a little achievement in a day when there are many more serious world problems. Problems that are affecting world peace. "U-S-A, U-S-A, U-S-A" yelled people in many streets, in many bars and, more importantly, in the heart of many Americans. final period to defeat Finland 4-2 and win the gold medal. A gold medalion that really costs so little for what the United States had gained. But this triumph proved that Americans do love their country, that Americans can pull together and that Americans will win in the United States of America-united as one. It was a great day for America. It will be in our hearts forever. Tracy Utz Plains junior A progressive, a wise decision, Owls. My condolences—uh, that is, congratulations, to any woman academically excellent enough to be permitted to roast among the Owls. Owls vote doesn't compliment women To the Editor: Bernard Brown I understand the honors society known as Allow, which changed its mind and decided to allow me because, because, because it did, it could not stay away from it. "And we decided we wanted to operate within the University because there are some advantages," the society's president wrote in a letter. Any female Owl-to-be should consider the high compliment being paid to her in that she is being allowed to help the Owl society reap the advantages of operating within the University. She should be especially interested in the facts for accepting her in spite of the fact that she is (just between you and me) inferior, a detriment to the organization. s Iran Owl Society right in becoming co-ed Bernard Brown Overland Park law student To the Editor: I would like to congratulate the members of the Owl Society for their unanimous vote to change their constitution to allow women to vote in all elections, and to increase the number of Cwens (now Lambda Sigma), Sachem Circle (now Omicron Delta Kappa) and Mortar Board to co-educational honaries. I have been one of many critical of the Owl Society and discouraged discriminatory membership practices. As a charter woman initiated into the world of leadership in laying the foundation for a proposed co-junior society that would recognize the achievements of outstanding junior leaders. I am very happy that this year's group of 6lW owl Society men have alleviated the need for a competing junior honorary that would include both men and women against each other. Gretchen Schmitt Kansas City, Mo. graduate student One stomach recalls results of Joe's runs To the Editor: Yes, indeed, the recent editorial on the coming demise of Joe's Bakery certainly did bring back memories of a couple of years ago when he was Lawrence-runs from the bedroom of my apartment to the lavatory to rid my stomach of some of Joe's greasy little food consumed during an earlier, ill-advised establishment. It didn't take long, however, before my mind realized what my stomach knew instinctively—that these concoctions with white flour and vegetable fat had about the same amount of an O-der sponge soaked in motor oil. I realize that my opinion is probably treasonous, flying as it does in the face of popular opinion. But I still maintain that we are the tactical nukes of the out-bomb world. Goodbye, Joe—I'll remember you every time I drink a glass of Pepto-Bismol. J. D. Willhite Lawrence resident THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN U.S. 978-562-4100 Published at the university of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday. U.S. 978-562-4100 Published at the university of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday. U.S. 978-562-4100 Published at the university of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday. U.S. 978-562-4100 Published at the university of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045 Editor James Anthony Fitts Samantha Annaway Price Managing Editor Diane Miller Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Art Director Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Associate Management Editor Editorial Editor Brenda Watson Judith Woodburn Amy Hollowell, Ellen Traiano Cynthia Hughes Mike McGarry Gene Myers Hunter Meyer Business Manager Vincent Coatis Retail Sales Manager Cataguas Sales Manager Advertising Sales Manager Classified Representatives Sales Manager Staff Photographer Staff Activist General Manager Rick Musser Advertising Manager Check Chowin --- Thursday, March 6, 1980 5 B.G.S. work too easy,profssay By RICK HELLMAN Staff Renorter Many KU faculty agree that requirements for degree candidacy should be tightened in the College of Liberal Arts according to Robert Colb, dean of the college. Cobb said yesterday that proposal tightening requirements now under consideration by the College Assembly would probably be modified at an Assembly meeting March 24, but that he hopes the students "butter the baby out with the batwater" Cobb said he hoped a proposal would be ready for a vote before the Assembly's next regularly scheduled meeting April 1. The proposal now before the assembly would make minor changes to the course requirements for a B.A. degree in English, or complete three courses in English, a course in Speech Communications and Human Relations and at least one math course beyond Math 002. THE MAJOR CHANGE in the proposal would be the extension of these same requirements to the B.G.S. degree. As it stands now, candidates for the B.G.S. degree, the traditional distribution requirement and have a total of 124 hours with a 2.0 grade point average. There are more than 10,000 students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, one third of whom are pursuing a B.G.S. degree, and two thirds of whom are Jerry Lewis, associate dean of the college. Gerald Mikkelsen, associate professor of Slavic languages and literature, said yesterday that "the B G.S. degree is not an academically acceptable degree as it now exists." people (in that program) are not receiving a true liberal arts and sciences degree. Mikkelson said he favored "some stiffening of requirements for the B.G.S. degree BUT WALTER CROCKETT, professor of speech and drama, said he would like the degree structure to remain at it is. candidacy including the addition of a foreign language requirement He said the B.G.S. degree "offers the flexibility that undergraduates in the college need." WALLACE JOHNSON, professor of East Asian studies, believes that the B.G.S. degree is not working out. Crockett said, "Until we get some kind of information that would lead me to believe the program is failing [would be for it." But Crockett is in the minority. According to Cobb, most faculty members favor tougher requirements for the B.G.S., if not the elimination of the degree. "My feeling is that students need a certain amount of guidance," Johnson said, yesterday, "and with the B.G.S. there is no guidance." Johnson said, however, that only a few Anthony Genova, chairman of the philosophy department, said he thought that even students favored tightening degree requirements. faculty members supported his stand on the B.G.S. "I realize students would like to avoid foreign language, for instance, but more and more students are becoming aware that their secondary part of their education." Genova said. Genova also expressed concern that the B.G.S. degree would be a detriment to students who plan on graduate study. "I think it's a fact," he said, "that graduate and law schools look askance at the B.G.S. degree." J ♥ C K K SWEEPSTAKES RULES: Business executives of Cities Service Management classroom desk this week as they attend the third Cities Service Management Development Program, sponsored by the City of New York. old to win The Sweepses may be content as many times as desired, but only once per day if the Sweepses are audited. Autoreship cards can be one playing card from any Auditoria. The 23 executives of Cities Service, an industrial chemical and oil corporation, will take classes in organizational behavior and administration, marketing, and management, economics and ethics, the legal environment of business, decision Executives to attend KU to take business classes 4. All Sony Sweepstakes prices will be displayed throughout the store, if the playing card corner on the prize matches the playing card entry, the prize is yours! 8. Contacts start March 1st and end April 12th or until all prices have been awarded 9. No purchase is necessary. All prices will be 10. No purchase is necessary. All prices will be if a match exists the price will be awarded and that auto automatically entered in the Las Vegas Seesaw Steaks Grand Prize Driving - your choice of two steak dishes - Guns 'N' Speeds 48 Steak Server with Sonic BS 152 Speakers if no match exists, the customer may return it to a salesman for a lucky SweepsSales Coupon Book full of exciting discounts on all types of electronic products. ...and must match exactly the cut, stale, color and corner to win. SONY LAS VEGAS SWEEPSTAKES NO PURCHASE NECESSARY ENTER TODAY! WIN A SONY TV, STEREO, RADIO, TAPE RECORDER AND 246 SONY PRIZES!! Pinet said that Cities Service, one of the country's largest corporations, approached the School of Business for help with the program. "The management development program is designed for executives who have important management responsibilities." Pinet said. analysis and marketing, according to Frank Pinet, associate dean of the School of Business and director of the program. The school offers similar programs for other businesses. SONY TFM-6160W SONY ICF-7750W VHF TV/VHF WEATHER Las Vegas Sale Price LNX 90 SONY 90 2 FM/AM PORTABLE WITH AC $52^95 Reg 64.95 Las Vegas Sale Price SONY LNX-90 CASSETTES Buy Two Save...25% DAD 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN THESIS BINDING — XEROX COPYING LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE 512 EAST 9th St. at NEW JERSEY THE PLACE YOUR GRANDFATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS Old World Quality Handwork AUDIOTRONICS CHOICE OF COLORS: Black - Maroon - Navy Blue Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Pyroxylin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry. GOLD FOIL STAMPING ON COVER AND SPINE OF BOOK FAST DELIVERY OF FINISHED WORK, 4 DAYS OR LESS QUARTEEED SPECIAL SERVICES AVAILABLE - pockets for maps or engineering drawings - hand sewn binding, with sufficient lead time - processing of mail orders, delivery to Post Office, no charge - built-up layers to allow for thickness of photographs - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge - combination Xerox copying / binding discount prices Patronize Kansan Advertisers AND NOW! XEROX COPYING SERVICE! We offer special "combination discount" if we do the Xerox copies for you. Yes, that's right, a lower total cost if we do the Xerox copies for you. Visit our modern plant at 512 East 9th and see samples of our work. All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 Budweiser TASTEBUDS IN "NO PLATE LIKE HOME" OH NO! HE'S EATING AT HIS FOLKS' PLACE TONIGHT! REMEMBER YOUR MANNERS! DON'T PLAY WITH YOUR FOOD! EAT ALL YOUR VEGETABLES OR NO DESSERT! WHY DOES HIS MOTHER WAIT TILL HE'S COMING TO DINNER TO TRY ALL THESE WEIRD "101 WAYS WITH LIVER" RECIPES? HANG IN THERE GUYS... MOM JUST SAID THERE'S APPLE PIE NEXT! T AND POP JUST ASKED HIM IF HE'D LIKE A... AND POP JUST ASKED HIM IF HE'D LIKE A... BUDWEISER! YEA!! FAR OUT!!!! GOOD OL' POP! HE ALWAYS DID HAVE TASTE! CLIC! THINK IT'S HEREDITARY? BUD BUD WHY DO YOU THINK THEY CALL 'EM TASTEBUDS ANYWAY! KING OF BEERS® • ANHEUSER BUSCH, INC • ST. LOUIS 6 Thursday, March 6, 1980 University Daily Kansan SPRING BREAK ACTION SOUTH PADRE ISLAND EVENTS: Ride! The Bud Bus The Budweiser Shuttle System will take you up and down South Padre Island Beach. Cool air, rock'n roll and lots more will be inside the bus. And who knows, you might even get lucky on a cruise. Michelob & Michelob Light Sponsor Live! In Concert At The Pavilion River City (March 8) Johnny Dee & The Rocket 88's (March 9 et 10) The Pavilion is located on the southern tip of the island. PORT ARANSAS EVENTS Beer Empties Trade-In We'll swap empty Bud, Michelob or Michelob Light beer cans for some great stuff. A dozen cans gets you a t-shirt, beach towel or sunvisor. Look for more details in South Padre Island & Port Aransas Spring Break '80 is co-sponsored by the Jaycee's and the Emergency Medical Service. and the Emergency Medical Service. (Thanks guys!) Greetings From SPRING BREAK Greetings From SPRING BREAK 12 FL. OZ. (355 ML.) Budweiser. LAGER BEER Driven by our original process from the Chicest Kops Rice and Best Barley Malt MICHELOB Light Superior Taste in a Light Beer Greetings From PRING = BREAK MICHELLE MUSEUM OF CHINESE HISTORY CHINA CHINA AB CHINA BRIEFING BOOKS REFERENCE GUIDE EXPLANATION ANNOTATION DESCRIPTION CONTENT INTRODUCTION EXPLANATION CONCLUSION CHINESE ART CHINESE MEMORIES CHINESE FILMS CHINESE LITERATURE CHINESE WORKS CHINESE SCIENCES CHINESE SOCIETIES CHINESE CULTURE CHINESE TRAVEL CHINESE HISTORY Budweiser. LAGER BEER Driven by our original process from the Cheviest Keps Rice and Best Barley Malt Budweiser. LAGER BEER MICHELOB Light Thursday, March 6, 1980 7 University Daily Kansan Stouffer Place rent up despite 'in the black' budget By TOM TEDESCHI Staff Reporter Inflation and rising maintenance costs are making Stouffer Place rents rise, according to KU housing officials. But some residents of the 200-unit complex say they can't see much of either -inflation or maintenance -around the University housing complex. At a meeting with Stouffer residents last week, J. Wilson, director of housing, said the 9.5 percent increase was designed in the hope that money lost on last year's 5 percent jump If you look at Slufter renters for the last 15 years, you will see that they have risen by 75 percent, while the Consumer Price Index rose by 250 percent," he said. But according to Alen Hebert, chairman of the Stouffer Neighborhood Association's board, it is important that we, as heavily weighted by food and petroleum products, all of which Stouffer residents pay for. Maintenance also is a poor excuse, according to residents, because they simply are not getting the amounts of services they pay for. At the same meeting, one Stouffer resident complained of a leak in her roof that had been "temporarily" fixed time and time again, with negligible results. WATER LEAKED from her bedroom and bathroom ceilings when a little moisture built up, she said. "What is meant by temporary repairs? You've been making temporary repairs for the last two years! I have black mold on the ceiling. How do you call the building inspector," she said. According to Dean Milny, the housing physical plant supervisor, the leak was in a difficult place to reach—because of a foam ceiling. He recalled during the last "temporary" repair Wilson said when warmer weather came, they could be more "reckless" in learing out the portions of the ceiling needed to get to the leak. Another recurring Stouffer Place problem concerns snow removal. According to Tim Sterling, a spokesman for SNA, after a recent snowfall Stouffer residents were encouraged by the maintenance department to clear their own walks with shovels that been provided by the housing department. ANOTHER STOUFFER SNOW removal gripe is that the apartments are relegated to last place in the housing department's priorities for parking lots clearance. "We have no priority schedule." Wilson said. "If we have a heavy snow accident, we'll go ball tosses and eight ball. It is hard to establish priorities because snow comes in different directions and blows in different ways. We have a dust on hills, but simply for safety and convenience." A major problem in clearing Stouffer lots was that with heavy equipment there was the danger of blocking in residents' cars with plowed snow, he said. Residents in Stouffer buildings 1, 2, and 3 have also complained that they are paying charges for full-size refrigerators even though they do not have them. Thirty-seven of the 300 Stouffer apartments have small refrigerators. When the apartments were remodeled a number of years ago, the new larger units that had been installed served in time, so the old ones were kept. Wilson said there were no plans to replace them. Yet another Stoffler complaint is that they have inadequate sidewalk and outdoor spaces. Most of the storefronts have surfaced so frequently in Stoffler Park every year—that they are almost quiet. SA CHAARMAN Kent Frohlis said that the U.S. Stouffer Place had been sketched out years ago, but that year after year the University used the excuse of not having enough money to build it. Dissatisfied with the rent increase, Sterling started his own investigation six months ago, and in January the SNA formed Hebert's committee for the same purpose. But according to Sterling and Hebert, recent investigations into Souffler finances have revealed that year after year their investments were in the black, in effect, making money. Sterling and Hebert said they found that eight quantities of money left over after all operations had been completed were being carried over each year, in both the Stoffler Place and in the Chestnut Street. ACCORDING TO KU financial records, the whole KU housing system in 1977 showed an unmancumbered cash balance—access more than $1.7 million. This is more than 20 percent of the total operating expenditures and including maintenance and improvement costs. In 1978 this dropped to a little more than $740,000 and last year dwindled to a little For the same period, the records show, The Soulfer balance went from about $3,000 to more than $5,000, then down to about $46,000—a net drop of 16 percent. What is most important for what is known as Soulfer III, the last five buildings to be built in Soulfer Place. more than $300,000—a net drop of $1.4 million, or 83 percent. Sterling last week asked Wilson for the cash balances for Stouffer I and II, the 20 other Stouffer buildings, which were buried in a housing subtotal. Wilson refused, on the grounds that it would take too much time. He told Sterling to get a letter from David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, and Lora Grunz, director of the student assistance division at the university formation. After obtaining legal counsel. Sterling balked, on grounds that the records were public information and the letter would set a bad precedent. THE RECORDS, which presumably are in the University computer, have not yet been released, to either Sterling or the SNA. Hebert, Sterling and one Stouffer students complained that a disproportionate share of the burden in pushing the year-end cash balances back up to their former Stouffer residents were subsidizing the students living in the residence halls, which were losing much more money to inflation than they were, they said. In addition to the $36,000 in rent increases that will flow into Stouffer accounts next year, and the fact that the apartments after year after age “in the black,” the K-State married housing cheaper By TOM TEDESCHI Staff Reporter Soon after the Board of Regents approved a monthly rent increase for Stouffer Place from $105 to $115 last January, Regents chairman Jordan Haines said, "I persevered in the world where a person could live and rent a single bedroom for $115 a month." But 70 miles down Interstate 70 in Manhattan, furnished one-bedroom apartments were going for $100 a month. Next year they are scheduled to go up to $102 a month or a percent increase, compared with the Shafer Place increase of 9.5 percent. MARRIED STUDENTS in k-State's Jardine Terrace pay $8 less per month for one-bedroom furnished apartments, who mirror-image mirrors of those in Stouffer Place. difference between them seems to be in what the rent covers. Not only do Jardine residents pay less for their apartments, but all utilities except electricity are included in the monthly rent. Also, about one-third of the Jardine apartments are offered unfurnished at lower prices, something the Stouffer's management association has sought without success. The similarities between Stoufier Place and Jardine Terrace are striking. The only Although a Jardine Terrace one-bedroom furnished apartment costs less than a comparable unit at KU, a two-bedroom unit at St. Charles costs more a month than a comparable Stoffler unit. IN DESIGN and the two apartment complexes are almost identical. Built from the same floor plans at about the same time—the late 1950s and early 1960s—the main difference is that each Jardine building is like two Stoffer-type buildings in an configuration. A Jardine building consists of many apartments as one in Stoffer Place. but the K-State system and Jardine travel to New York. The university un- numbered cash balances a money jet over each year after all operating expendi- ture and fund transfers, that the KU pay for, are paid in installments. Jardine Terrence is somewhat larger than the 4,300. The whole K-1SHA housing system is of comparable size to the one at KU. There are about 4,300 spaces at KSUA and about 5,100 spaces at KTSA. According to recent K-Sate financial reports, many components of that system lose money. This does not happen at KU. Each year the K-Sate system shows a decrease in the charged cash balance, as does KU. KU's budget, however, is considerably larger. In 178 and 179, the KU system showed unencumbered balances of $41,603 and $34,477. The K-State balances for the same years were $10,299 and $108,563. University seems to be making money on the interest accruing in the Stouffer sinking funds and repair-replacement reserves, Sterling said. He said the money in these funds—more than $150,000 in each—was generating 10 percent interest vb. the interest due on the loans was $150,000. Wilson also refused to release these records. "If that's true, or closely true, why are we continually increasing our rents with so much money available?" he asked. WILSON SAID any extra money in these williams are not stipulated in the bill agreements, which prohibit this money from being used for operating costs or for fuel. "It is not intended in any way that goes into operating funds," he said. "We are just redeeming our interest costs. It behooves us to go right along the way we're providing for opportunity and our responsibility, as quickly as we can . . . to invest that money." ACCORDING TO Randy Tongier, director of state agency audits, which checks KU bonds, Mr. Tongier said the bond accounts of the types being used for Stouffler Place is virtually locked up "until we get a report from the district," he said, it would be to the University to use the money in whatever way it chooses, unless the bank approves. The bonds taken out on Stouffer Place are due to mature in a five-year period from 1966 to 2001. As for the large unencumbered cash balances, Tonger said, here also there was nothing prohibiting the University from setting them as it chose. There is legislation that prohibits deficit spending called the Basel law, but there are no specifies set down as to how much "in the black" an institution was allowed to operate. "It is a function of receipts, rate of occupancy, revenues and expenditures as well as the size of the system," he said. "It is important that it be made by the individual universities." 25TH & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO THE SEARCHERS. $4.59 SIRE MFG. LIST $8.98 $5.49 MFG. LIST $8.98 "med love" $5.49 MFG. LIST $8.98 $5.49 BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358. MASS. STREET DELI INC. 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Submarine $1.50 reg. price $2.25 served with potato chips and dill pickle spear. offer good Mar 5 to Mar 9 Enjoy Coke no coupons accepted with this ad served with potato chips and dill pickle spear. offer good Mar 5 to Mar 9 Enjoy Coke no coupons accepted with this ad 1980 Loyd Lythe Ent 925 Iowa 841-8848 Back by popular demand! JASPER G.P. LOYD'S WEST G. P. LOYD'S WEST presents T.G.I. ROCK The best in LIVE ROCK & ROLL! Don't miss this Rock & Roll Night tonite at G.P.LOYD'S WEST Plan for the future. View: Take your pick! Closets: 11 feet wide, dresser built in. Two Sinks: No waiting for your roommate! Bath Bedroom 140 square feet Big Picture Windows Location: On campus. on bus route. Thermostat: You set the temperature. we pay the bills. Living Room 240 square feet Cable TV Hookup Podi! Just plug in your set. Private Entrance: Super locks on doors. Carpet: Wall to wall. several colors. Leasing now for summer and fall. jayhawker towers apartments 4603 w. fifteenth 843-4993 8 Thursday, March 6. 1980 University Daily Kansan Anniversary of Pluto's discovery to be observed By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Twenty-four-year-old Clyde Tombaugh was born a party photographer plate on the cover of *The Athens* and like all the other plates he'd examined during the previous 10 months, this pair was between 39 and 45 years old. This particular pair, however, was different. On one of the plates, a tiny speck of light was to the left of a certain star. On the other plate, the speck was on the right of the star. Clearly, it had moved. THAT TINY SPACE of light turned out to be the ninth planet of the solar system, Pitom. Tombauma's discovery brought him to the University of Kansas for a scholarship to the University of Kansas. Next week, Tombaugh will return to the place of the discovery, the Lowell Observatory year Flagshaft, Arzi, to celebrate the discovery of the announcement of Pluto's discovery. Now a professor emeritus at New Mexico State University at La Cruces, in 1930 Tonnaugh was an astronomy buff from the little western Kansas town of Bardett. Tornbaugh had become involved in the planet search in 1929, after he had sent some sketches he'd made of Mars and Jupiter to the Lowell staff. They were so impressed by the detail of his drawings, all done while he was using a home-made telescope, that they invited him to work at the observatory. THE SEARCH for the ninth planet had been going on since the astronomer Percival Lowel had built his observatory around the moon that had the inexplicable motion of the planet Uranus must have been caused by the orbit of Neptune. When the Lowell staff tomhaugh, they had a full-time job in mind for him—the search for that undiscovered planet. In fact, when it was constructed especially for the search. "It it was until I got there that they told me what they wanted." Tombaugh said in a recent telephone interview. "It was quite a surprise." For nearly a year, Tornbaugh spent his night taking picture of the sky in an abandoned house, examining the photographic plates. His goal was to find a planet, probably extremely distant. The search was especially slow because each pair of photographic plates, which were of the same area of the sky but taken THE MICROSCOPE PROJECTED THE plates alternately, so that the fixed background dart clear objects, such as dinosaur orsters or planets, would seem to have moved during the time between exposures. The plates are designed to jump "from one position to another." "I saw it move instantly," Tombaugh said. "It was much slower than an asteroid, and I exclaimed to myself, 'That's it.' It was a very exciting thing." On Feb. 18, 1930, Tombaugh was blinking two plates which had been exposed in January. It on was these plates that the elusive "Plant X" had been captured. "It was a grim job," he said. "So many times where the results were negative, I felt like I was poised-chaunch. But I decided to learn even if to learn易 yes or no about the planet." WITH A POUNDING HEART, Tornbaugh tackled the discovery by examining other planetary bodies in a smaller telescope. The speech was faint, but it was there—and most importantly, it had been delivered by a woman. "They were electrified to have found it, because they'd worked on it since 1905. But I PHIL THOMPSON/Kansan Staff THE MUSICIAN Pat Methenv . . . Opera House Productions Presents . . . ECM Recording Artists The "IF YOU GO OUT ONLY ONE TIME IN MARCH . . . GO OUT FOR PAT METHENY!" In Concert The Pat Metheny Group " . . . A simply overpowering performer . . . " " . . . A humbly fluid style, rich with resonance " . . spiced with warm lyrical melodies and gently soaring harmonies." Thursday March 13th Two shows at 7:30 and 10:45 Buy your tickets NOW at Keif's, Better Days, and the 7th Club Spirit only $7.50 in advance Don't miss your only chance to see Pat Metheny in Lawrence. Where Else But The . . . Lawrence Opera 7th & Mass. Where the stars are 842-6930 Call for concert info. Spirit Cafe House SUA NEEDS YOU! sua films We are looking into expanding and improving in our collections. Midnight series, Classical Series, Genre series, Directed series. We need creative minds and people power to promote these programs and develop new ideas. Just like the big shows downtown, only better because we offer so much more for a lot less. The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for raking workshops, performances and art displays in the arts areas ... literature, art, music, and dance. SJLA Travel offers a fun, open and inexpensive way to experience the beauty of Aprilia Island, Florida, and Colleton Springs, but also offers a variety of resort options. sua outdoor recreation Fine Arts Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of hiking, swimming, biking, golfing, dining Club as well as many special events. We SUR TRAVEL We want your new ideas and input for the tsm literature series. Student Union Activities is now taking applications for committee membership. You can be a part of the exciting plans of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas... Special Events We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our favorites is the *Latin Jazz* ensemble, which includes seven plays and lasts as long six hours. SUA iR *Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to presenting information, so we have light and bright areas that are must for every show.* FORUMS Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge, Baggamoon, Foosball, Go. Arm Wrestling and Ultimate Warrior. We're looking for people to help coordinate events and others. We are looking for individuals who enjoy chess, bridge, go and ultimate warrior. indoor recreation ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forums. The Forum委员会 brings rationalized recognition to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people in and around the local community who have something to say in a University audience. After the discovery came the inevitable question what is call the new planet. An 11-year-old suggested "Pluto," the name of the dwarf planet, a particularly fitting title for such a lifesize planet on the fringes of the solar system, where the temperature forever must hover above 500°C. It was on March 13, 1930, the 75th anniversary of Percival Lowell's birth and the It soon became evident to astronomers, however, that the little planet did not have the mass to be the cause of all the deviations in Iris's orbital motion. HE FOUND A COMET, hundreds of miles away from our planet. It clusters—but no more plants. He finally concluded that there could not have been any large planets within range of his. We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs. pr public relater Thus, throughout his college years and into the early 1940s, Tombaugh worked at Lowell searching for a 10th planet. SLSA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone interested in applying to SLSA should contact: When he concluded his 14 years of planet-hunting, he worked with the army to develop a tracking telescope capable of following rockets in flight. He then worked on various other space-related projects and in 1861 built a telescope astronomy and geology at New Mexico State. date of Uranus' discovery in 1781, that the observatory announced to a startled world that the ninth planet had been found. Fame and a KU scholarship came quickly. "It was real pandemonium," Tombaugh said. He said his parents were "just about bowled over" when they read about it in the newspaper. This coming year's activities includes tail and summer orientation and the Madrigal Dinner. "AFTER THE DISCOVERY I was awarded the first Edwin Emerson Slosson 4-year scholarship. That was in 1831, but the planetary search is in such a critical IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS We need your help in these programs. Experience is not a necessity, however interest is required. Deadline for sign up is March 21. For more information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. 738 MASS. 6:30-5:00 M-5 Thure till 8:30 p.m. Get involved—SUA is for everyone! At KU he studied astronomy and geology. In 1938 he returned to get a master's degree. It was also at KU that he met his wife, Patricia Edison, daughter of former KU football coach Oliver Edson. In 1964 Tom Distinguished Service Award. QUICK STOP 1 PHOTO SHOP stage that I entered as a freshman in the fall of 1932, getting my bachelor's degree in 1936." MALES SHOPPING CENTER 711 W. 23rd 841-2778 MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 W. 23rd But perhaps it shouldn't come as a surprise that the youth from Burdett would be the one to find Pluto. Now, 59 years after the initial commotion, through it is once again a celebration. A British composer will be presenting a documentary on his work, and astronomers from all over the world will meet at the concert. After all, when he had graduated from Burdett High School in 1928, his sister had written a rather remarkable prophecy about him in his yearbook. "He will discover a new system," she wrote. Maybe it wasn't a whole new system—but he expanded by one planet the system already in existence. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS Part Stop 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 Off the Wall 841-0R17 Pure rock & roll with THE REGULAR GUYS plus the rockabilly sounds of DALTON HOWARD & HIS GOCATS See them both Friday, March 7 37 New Hampshire $2.00 9:00 pm Find it in Kansan classified advertising Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE All Our Meats are Slow Roasted Over a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbeque Flavor Pork Sp Rib Special Cola HALF SLAB BIG END $3.75 HALF SLAB SMALL END $4.75 OFFER GOOD MARCH 5-9 WED. THURS. FRI. SAT. SUN. Thursday, March 6. 1980 9 Budget... From page one needed, the House committee had recr mended 6.3 more classified positions than the 10 allowed for in Carlin's proposed budget. University Daily Kansan The additional classified positions had been subtracted from Carlin's recommended faculty positions. An extra $100,000 was added to the budget by the committee to pay for unclassified positions as vet unfilled by the University. Capital improvements included in the KU building renovation for the construction of renovation for the KU building $18,100 planning a $12.3 million addition to Haworth Hall and $12,000 for scholarship hall steam THE HOUSE APPROVED $70,000 for the care of a child in need who is hospitalized, but did not differ with the House committee recommendation not to provide $4.6 million for a new medical library in the county. Von Ende said he was especially concerned about the denial of funds for the medical library. - Von Ende said the improvements approved were the most important to KU. He requested renovation and the $84,500 for replacement of a storm tunnel from Murphy Hall to Allen Field House, both KU requests not yet made by the House committee, could be delayed. Von Ende said, "We do think there do need to be some new faculty nursing positions." faculty positions to the 10 recommended by Carlin. MORE NURSING FACULTY are needed, he said, to handle enlarged graduate and undergraduate nursing enrollments, to help prepare students for higher education program and to provide opportunities for diploma school or community college education to get their full baccalaureate degree. Other KU, med center and Regents appropriations tentatively approved by the House include: - A $39,011 reduction in Carlin's $161,184 recommendation for the Master of Science nursing school graduate program. - $160,000 for an energy conservation audit of the Med Center. - A $100,000 reduction in Carlin's recommended $450,000 Tuition Grant funds increase. The $300,000 would give the A $14 million grant a total of $4.1 million. - A 100 percent fee waiver for Regents schools graduate student teachers. - An increase from $2.90 to $3.10 for the minimum student employee wage at all Regents schools. - A $0,000 reduction in Carlin's recommendation to $100,000 increase in State Scholarship Program funds. The $0,000 would give the program a total of $900,000. Where in town can you see a great Reggae here in town can you see a great Reggae movie and then dance to the finest live Reggae AND sit back and enjoy an ice cold beer or your favorite cocktail? . . Where else but the Lawrence Opera House! TONIGHT Opera House Productions presents Jimmy Cliff in the first "genuinely Jamaican" film THE HARDER THEY COME Plus PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND all for only $2.00 Doors open at 8 Film rolls at 9 Ballet lowermy for 1 $2.50 each + $1.00 baggage from 8-9 ★★★ Corning Soon ★★★ March 12 - Pinick HAZEL & J - MARY MILLER BLUES BAND 13 - PAT METHENY 7 at 30 & 45 14 - PAT METHENY 8 at 30, 45 15 - THE BEATLES in MAGICAL 16 - 21 & 22 - THE SECRETS! 17 21 & 22 - THE SECRET! * Advise students about a visit to Better Days, and the 7th Spirit Club. The nightspot for you? Where else but the . . . Lawrence Opera House Call for concert info. 842-6930 Fairmont House Hand with star symbol Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra Presented by the University of Kansas Concert Series 8:00 p.m. TONIGHT Hoch Auditorium -KANSAN On Campus Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra Univer 8:00 Hoch Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office KU Students: $1.50/$1.00 1 A Mid-America Arts Alliance project **TODAY:** THE GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP will meet from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Cork Room 2 in the Kansas Union. There will be a SYMPHONISM ON MURASE TO attend, and the artist, at 3:30 p.m. in Room 211 in the Helen Foresman Museum of Art. TONIGHT: There will be an SUA FREE MOVIE, "A House of Goose," at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium. The CAMPUS CHRISTIANS will sponsor "Bread for the Children" in the Union. The SCIENCE FCTION CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor C in the Union. The ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Room in the MEETINGS OF KANSA will have a general meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor A in the Union. Mall... There will be a meeting of the AN- DERSON FOR PRESIDENT COMMITTEE at 4:30 p.m. in the Oread Room in the Union. From page one stronger community consensus than we have here." Gould said approximately eight developers had approached Action 80 and had been told that the Jacobs firm had "the first shot." "So Action 80 has gotten locked in with JVJ, even though there is no written or other message from these people," he said. THE TEXTURE of the existing downtown is Gould's other concern. Gould said he had serious doubts that they could do it successfully. "But people focusing on things from a business and economic viewpoint," he said, "don't want to think about that." "JVJ has left 15 or 20 mails," he said, but " never one like this that is integrated with the downtown rather than being an independent unit." Flannery pointed to a study financed by downtown merchants and done by KU's Institute for Economic and Business Salad Bar Special $1.95 reg. price $2.25 NEW YORKER 1021 Mass. Offer good 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. (Mon.-Fri, till March 28 THE CROSSING OPENING SPECIALS PITCHERS $\beta$1.25 DRWRS 35c 4-6 Mon.-Thurs. 2-6 Friday (F.A.C.) Formerly CATFISH BAR N' GRILL, THE CROSSING now open 4-12 (except FRIED AFTERNOON CLUB) THE YELLO SUB'S East on 23rd, across from WENDY'S Food Coming Soon. THE CROSSING-AT 12TH & OREAD YELLO SUB OPEN 11-2 A.M., SUNDAY 11-12 MIDNIGHT BUT AT LEAST one group of Lawrence residents says it is making an attempt to bring the mall proposal out of the darkness into the daylight. "The study said the mail, as planned, is not feasible in terms of what the economy of Lawrence can support," he said. Research, that anlayzed downtown retailing in Lawrence. The group, citizens for a Better Downtown, was formed recently by a group of residents who say they want to discuss how the city can develop the development of Lawrence as a whole. Barbara Waggoner, a member of CBD, testified at yesterday's hearing on revenue bonds as a private citizen and as a member of the group. "They treat us like a bunch of beetles lying on our backs with our feet in the air," she said. "They're going to run right over us." RENTAL RATES SPECIAL BRING THIS AD 4 Blocks South 2 I-70 Exit 267 4121 Kipling, Denver $5.50 per Day (Skis, Boots, Poles) CBD, SHE SAID, wants to raise questions about who would benefit from a mall and what kinds of stores were needed. She said that there were being ignored while planned proceeding. "The mail proposal may present Lawrence residents with the choice of putting a mail south of Lawrence and extending it into a densely with a wrecking ball by putting a mail downward and wincing out an entire area," she said. "We expect death or slow death our only options!" Larson's Ski & Sport 2nd Year Anniversary! COLORADO SPRING SKIING $5 off on Perms and Bodywaves With This Coupon (Includes Shampoo, Cut & Blowdry) Plus, Free Shampoo & Blowdry With Every Prime Cut Brime Cut Hair Co. REDKEN® Jan Sanders, Owner, Stylist Jayce McCauley, Stylist 13 E. 8th 841-4488 Monday Saturday 9-8 Thirsty Thursday TIME OUT Our business is going DOWNHILL! If Thursday leaves you down and dry you can't pass these specials by. 7 - 8 p.m. $1.00 9 - 10 p.m. $1.50 10 - 12 p.m. $1.75 10 - 12 p.m. $1.75 6 - 7 p.m. 75' 8 - 9 p.m. $1.25 T SPECIAL PITCHER PRICES TONIGHT take TIME OUT 2408 IOWA It takes a good head to make it through college. Old Milwaukee BREWED BY © 1979 Jpn. Schinja Brewing Co., Mlhjnken, Wu., and others For unbeatable prices on kegs call David O'Hara 841-0092 10 Thursday, March 6, 1980 Enrollment From page one According to James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, the school has room for expansion in areas for the music sequence. His own art admissions must be controlled. "I wouldn't want to see additional growth occur without equivalent full-time faculty rising in art or music," Mosser said. "A lot of people come to one basis or with very small classes." FORECASTERS SAY there will be a shortage of teachers by the mid 1980s, according to Dale Scanney, dean of the School of Education. The 1.49 undergraduate education students enrolled this spring are undergraduates and may not have the school over the past two years, he said. "We think we have a heavy load for the nature of our instruction," Scannell said. Bocky's 5 Cheeseburgers for only $2.25 with coupon One coupon per customer Bocky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 VOID 21080 --to K-State again, 79-74, in the semi-finals of the Region VI sub-regional. Then they lost to Missouri in the consolation game, 77-73. "BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE WORLD," said director Franco Brunelli reveals himself as the new giant of the film, which is a performance to treasure. "ONE OF THE BEST FOREIGN FILMS OF THE YEAR! A lovely blend of comedy and pathos." *TOWERING ABOVE ALL LIS* *HOLOGE, THE GREAT EARLY EILFS* *OF DE FES ROSSELINI* *MIND. Mantrel is unfor- tunate!* "I JUST LOVED THIS MOVIE! Manfred is perfection as he walks the fightrome of tragedy comedy in *Bright* and *Gentleman tramp*." - Leslie Carlson ★★★ The movie gloves with intelligence. Hilarious, engaging and bittersweet." - Matthew Cameron, Daily Mail "A WONDERFUL FILM."—Rex Heyes FRIEND BRENNAN'S BREAD and CHOCOLATE You'll Laugh Till Your Heart Breaks Scannell said there was not enough space at the school's home in Bailey Hall. "But the ratio of students to faculty is lower than it was a few years ago." Hillcrest 9th & Ilawood 842-8400 Evenings 7 and 9:35 Sat and Sun mat: 2:15 "We don't think it is a crisis but we'd like to see it improved," he said. The admissions department also offers equipment and additional help with our staffing problems. But they are limited. This semester, there are 647 students in the School of Journalism, including graduate students, according to Dei Brinkman, deaf of the school. "We've been at our current level for several years," Brinkman said. "We are about at capacity now. Our teaching loads are about the heaviest on campus. I don't think we want to project an enrollment like that. We are able to cope with what we already have." Brinkman said it was difficult to determine the number of students that would create an overcrowding problem in the School of Journalism. When we start getting complaints and people think they are being cheated, then we look at the quality of the people who are involved. The people make Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints THE BEST FROM HOLLWood COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Kramer vs. Kramer PC Starring Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep Eve, 7.30 and 9.40 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. Cruising Starring Al Pacino and Paul Svenson Eye, 7:30 and 9:45 2. Bread and Chocolate Saringine Nano Mari缅迪和Anna Karenina Feb 7, 2010 and 9, 35 3. "10" **In** Starring Dudley Moore, Blo Derek, and Julie Andrews Eve 7:15 and 9:30 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. The Fifth Floor Eve, 7:30 and 9:30 2. The Electric Horseman Starring Robert Redford and Jane Fonda Eve. 7.40 and 9.50 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 The China Syndrome Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-8418 MEN'S SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21 22 23 For KU: Freshmen Sophomores Juniors REGISTER NOW! 1980 SPRING ENROLLMENT BY SCHOOLS SCHOOL/C CLASSIFICATION TOTAL ENROLLMENT College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 9,453 1980 SPRING ENROLLMENT BY SCHOOLS Graduate School 5,472 School of Allied Health 642 School of Business 1.011 School of Architecture and Urban Design 415 School of Education 1,497 School of Engineering 1,698 School of Fine Arts 1,135 School of Journalism 598 School of Law 517 Contact Interfraternity Council at 864-3559 or 864-1861 School of Medicine 1,154 School of Nursing 246 School of Pharmacy 236 School of Social Welfare 458 University Specials 695 Applied English Center 151 Less Duplicates 154 TOTAL 25,327 NET TOTAL 25,173 Kansas Union, Big 8 Room March6 7:30-9:00 For more information contact: Sponsored by Minority Affairs Subcommittee Budget Seminar Purpose: To familiarize organizations with Senate Budget procedures. Leon Brady, III or Rita Holmes 842-9541 842-6894 864-3881 Paid for by Student Activity Fee Patronize Kansan advertisers. THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA $2.00 OFF Any Large or Medium Pizza with this ad (minimum 2 toppings) Offer Good Wed. through Sun. Mar. 5-9 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer KU women's team out to snap slump By PAM CLARK Sports Writer Kansas, trying to break a three-game losing streak, will have to beat Central Missouri State or be eliminated from the playoffs. A state final at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa. The KU women's basketball team goes into the AIAW Region VI tournament tonight in a must-win situation. The Jayhaws losing skid started in Manhattan last Monday with a 61-52 loss to Manhattan State. On Friday, the Hawks lost KANSAN Sports Foul trouble, a lack of team play, a porous defense and a bunch of turnovers contributed to the Jawhaws' slump. "A NENSE A game. I think we needed the old team back." Washington said. "I'm beginning to see and feel the old team again. We're starting to get back on track. We're ready." But it's do-ride for the Hawks now. KU will have to win the regional tournament, so the Hawks will play one of the four sectional rounds. But KRUs no. 8 is ranking and B5-1 record in the league, so they will gain the Jayhawks an at-large berth in the sectional if the Hawks fared well in that. "But we've got to be in the top four, which means we have to win that first game." Washington said. "The kids want to win and they've worked very hard all season long. We've had a relatively smooth season until now. I guess we got down at the wrong time. "So, if they want to go on past regionals, they have to get back to their game." Kansas' game fell apart last week. THE NUMBER OF fast breaks KU had in its past three games could be counted on two hands. KU's normally aggressive defense, which has held opponents to 70%, now turn the field this year, yielded 53 percent shooting in its losings last week. In the sub-regional, KU fouls sent both KState and Missouri to the free-throw line 22 times. Against Missouri, KU went to the line only eight times. Turnovers also proved costly. This year, the Jayhawks had been averaging 22 miscues a game. But last week, the mistakes came at all the wrong times. In Manhattan, KU was behind by only three points with two minutes remaining in the game. But three turnovers prevented the Jayhawks from capitalizing on K-State's missed scoring opportunities. Kansas now must meet a Central Missouri team that peaked last week, winning the sub-regional tournament. Washington said t'at her team was going into the tournament with a "nothing-to-lose, everything-to-gain attitude." THE JENNIES are 28-3 and are ranked third. They were the best of the Jennies lost on their home floor to Kansas at the beginning of the season. The Hawks won that physics battle 74-65. The Jennies are led by a pair of high-scoring seniors, 6-1 center Margie Nielson and 5-9 swingman Kathy Anderson. "A lot of the teams may overlook us because we've been on stealing the press band during our trip to Central Central Missouri might feel the pressure. And if we beat Central Missouri, we'll be happy." "We have to tighten up our defense inside," Washington said. "They're going to look for the loft pass and we have that of that and keep pressure on the outside." "The important thing is to be in position. We've got good leapers who can get them coming over our backs. "BUT WE'VE GOT to keep pressure on the ball. All of them like to run. And they'll drive to the basket any time they get the baseline or a hole in the zone." Central Missouri likes to run the fast belt. The Hawks' advantage, Washington had said all season that she welcomed an team who would try to run with KU for 40 KC Kings lose to LA Lakers KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Rookie Earvin "Magic" Johnson scored 28 points last night to lead the Los Angeles Lakers at 117-101 triumph over the Lake City Kings. Jamal Wilkes and Kareem Abdul Jama Leading 64,58, the Lakers went on a 10-1 surge to put the game out of reach. Six players scored in double figures for the Lakers. Otis Birdsond had 32 points and Phil Ford 21 for Kansas City. HOSPITAL BASED EYE CARE — KANSAS CITY CUSHLING & HOSPITAL - SOFT CONTACT LENS $150 * HARD CONTACT LENSES $125 眼 BROADWAY COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICAL WASHINGTON CITY COLLEGE MEDICAL SCIENCES In most cases, the soft contacts received the same day Complete Eye Examination with Glaucoma Exam $20 VTSA* mature choice STAFF Ophthalmologist & Optometrist 283-2258 CENTER FOR HEALTH SCIENCES Kansas City College of Osteopathic Medicine 2105 Independence Blvd., Kansas City, Missouri --- Hundreds of fine hardcover and paperback books from our regular stock. Our Annual Spring BOOK SALE Reduced 40% - 75% C Open evenings and Sundays Mon.-Sat. 9-9 Sun. 1-5 Sun.1-5 ADVENTURE a bookstore 843-6424 1010 Mass. St. Thursday, March 6, 1980 11 Indoor hopes ride on 9 qualifiers By TOM GRESS Sports Writer KU women's track coach Teri Anderson hopes that nine is not too soon's number. hopes that nine is her team's lucky number. Tomorrow Anderson will take nine to the AIAW National Indoor Track, and will go to Columbia, Md. in search of KU's first indoor title. Last year, KU finished second at nations and Anderson said that she team should again contend for the championship, but she isn't ready to proclaim victory yet. "'Nationals are funny meets,' Anderson said. 'You never know who's going to be there.' Anderson figured KU will battle Nebraska, the Big Eight champion, and Texas for the championship. She added the University of California at Northridge to that list if it entered the meet. Because of low budgets, many schools from the East Coast may not make the trip to Missouri. "There are so many variables at the national meet," Anderson said, "that it's impossible to accurately predict how things will turn out." Anderson said that her team not only had a chance for the championship but also for a relay title and several individual titles. The distance medley team has the best chance of coming home with a title. The team, comprised of Lori Lowrey, Pam Schubarth, Deb Hertzberg and Michelleown, has been clocked in 11.50, which is one of the fastest times in the nation this year. Brown is coming off a fourth-square finish in the mile run at the National AAU Indoor Women's Track Championships held last weekend in New York's Madison Square Garden. She finished fifth and five seconds off her school record. Magee Keyes of Washington won the mile in 4.38. Anderson said she expected good performances from Robin Small in the shot put, Lowrey and Gwen Poss in the 62-mid hurdles and Brown in the 2,000 meters. Brown was pleased with the showing but said she was disappointed that several of the top's miters failed to show, including Mari Decker, the world record holder. "It was exciting to run in the race," Brown said. "There was a lot of strategy, especially because of the banked track. I was pretty happy with my race." The rest of the squad going to Missouri is Shawn Corwin in the high jump, Halcyon McKnight in the long jump and Linda Babbitt in the double barbill also run in the 600-yard dash. The race was Brown's first at an AAU Indoor. Last summer she ran on a relay team in the AAU Outdoor Championships. The meet will close out the Jayhawks' indoor season. The team was scheduled to go to Arizona during spring break, but Anderson canceled the trip. "BAYLOR IS A very competitive team." "We've got a lot of girls from out of state and I think it's important for them to have a chance to go to her," she said. KU will return to action on March 28-29 in the Memphis State Invitational to open the outdoor season. Men's tennis season starts with tough dual By JIM SMALL Sports Writer Sports Writer KU tennis coach Mark Hasking and his team have had to show a lot of patience in the last few months. The team has seen the resignation of two coaches and had two its matches postponed because of snow. KU tennis has also regular intercollage match since last [all]. But it looks as if the Jayhawks' waiting is finally over. Kansas will open it's 1980 campaign Sunday against Baylor University in lawrence. University Daily Kansan Following Sunday's match against Baylor, Kansas will head to Texas for one of its toughest matches of the season, against the University of Houston on March 12. said Hosking. "Most of the teams from the Southwest Conference are." With the aid of former Topaek prepa standout Jool Hoffman, the Cougars are ranked among the top twenty collegiate tennis teams in the nation. HOSKING ALSO said that KU would have to remedy a few nagging problems in order to beat Baylor and Houston. “Consistency and strategy are our two biggest problems. Hosing said, “All of our guys and girls know how to hit the shots but they can't hit them that way every time. What we are aiming for is to be those good players.” We have time. We have to become more consistent. "Another problem is our strategy. Some of the guys don't think enough out on the court. If a player on another team is having problems with his backhand, we have to learn to serve to his backhand more often. With the way our matches are set up if one of the guys quit thinking, it could mean the difference between winning and losing the game. KU'S WOMEN'S team will also have a busy weekend. Kansas will travel to Iowa City, Iowa to face the Universities of Wisconsin and Iowa. "We lost to Wisconsin last fall, 8-1, but the girls seem to think that it was a fluke," said Hosking. "They know that Wisconsin is a good state and are sure that they can do better than 8-1." Men tankers seek third straight crown The Jayhawks are in Lincoln, Neb., today for the Big Eight Championships in Bojain Devney Complex. KU is for its third straight conference crown. KU's men's swimming team broke out the razor blades last night, a sure sign that a very important meet is coming. As is the team's custom before the Big Eight meet, they shaved most of their bodies. KU's main challenge should come from the Iowa State Cyclones, a team that the Jayhawks barely defeated in a dual meet at Robinson Natatorium. The Jayhawks, who have won the title with ease the last two years, will need every advantage they can get to repeat this year. "They shave their legs, arms-everything," KU coach BSpahn said. It is psychological, but it does help. It helps them and gives you a better feel for the water. "WE'VE GOT TO have a good total team performance," Spahn said. "We can't just rely on individuals." By CHICK HOWLAND Sports Writer Iowa State finished second to KU in last year's Big Eight meet. But Spain said the Cyclones were tough this season, and might be favored to dethrone But despite Iowa State's faster times, KU has overall depth to place high in several events, plus some extra incentive. "They did a cheer following the last meet that mocked us," senior tr-)captain Jim Sauer said. "It got us mad." Mad or not, the Jayhawks will have to be at their best to retain the crown. The Spahn team is very strong they swam against this season, Spahn said that the conference meet was dif- "With the two-week rest prior to the meet and shaving, everybody usually swims better," Spahn said. ONE TEAM THAT Spain said his team must not overlook is Nebraska, the host team. Although the Jayhawks had no trouble sinking the Cornhuskens earlier this season in a dual meet, they are not quite swimming in their home pool. Nebraska has the top divers in the conference, led by Steve Elliot. Kurt Anselmi is the only KU diver who plans to do well. KU because of the better times they compiled this season. Leading KU's swimming attack is Leading UK, the university's most valuable swimmer by league coaches. Despite Spain's plan for a team performance, he said that KU's title victory was worthless. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer... Each additional word one two five two three four five six seven eight nine ten $1.75 $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 $6.00 ken ken ken ken ken ken ken ken ken ken ken $1.75 $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 $6.00 AD DEADLINES ERRORS 40. 78 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Monday Thursday 9 a.m. Tuesday Friday 9 a.m. Wednesday Monday 9 a.m. Thursday Friday 9 a.m. Friday Wednesday 9 a.m. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in newspaper or mail, be collected by the $800 minimum offer offered at AMERICAN EXPRESS. The Kansan 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. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4328 ANNOUNCEMENTS Formal Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING INFOR. MULTI RUSH March 21, 21 & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at n4-3598 3-21 Innovate Zen meditation retreat March 8-10. Lead by Master Dharma Teacher Barbara Rhodes $$$ 942-7010. 3-6 Wackles for trunk marked at 9th and Illinois, 8th, with a long, pointed end. The Holio-To-the-Wall. Sweet fresh fruits plains the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry peppers are in stock. Every Sunday. Also selling wedge tomatoes. Weekl Mount Bivio Skil Lake is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 3-18 3-18-360 highest proclamation, this is the first annual apreciation week for room 118 Strong se- creatives. 3-7 Nigelalea's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, 166 perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone; for information, write: Harper, Kanaan 62538 4-4 10.3 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities padded. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 832-9579 or 842-4185. *t* Lovely new 2 bk. townhouse and apt. next to cuphart Beautiful equipped kitchen. Reason- ably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and apts. Phone 841-5000. TF LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! 1.230 Jayhawk Tower Apartments 1603 W, 15th 843-4993 New 2 bedroom townhouse A-C D W Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 853-9379. On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jaghawk West Apt. 91. New Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment Bkd: 4842-4444 or see at a24 Front Room Bkd. Next door to Russel's East. If A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. iff NASHIMI HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. Furnished or unfurnished. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building. 92% Max. The inner offices can be changed to fenced. Upstairs the 282 sq. ft. or 80 sq. ft. Contact 824-2634 or 847-0777. Ned to subway 2 bedroom Apartment. Comfort furnished, OE-street parking. Pully-capped, cable TV, AC. New store and refrigerator. Kitchen, laundry, and stove room. Bck. 841-091-691. 7/2 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING This all new and contemporary two storey house is located in the heart of the town and downtown. Starting at 3 Mkts from Balmoral Station, this property offers 2 bedrooms and all appliances window coverings, bamboo flooring, high gloss finish and balconies. Call 841-4455 or 841-2525. 3-31 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. If Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualifed tenants to rent this super bldg 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studiosums. recreation. laundry. 2 bedrooms. 3 private references. referrences: 422-0221. . . 3-19 Sublease 2 IRB app, w option for next year. Reasonable rent, low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 841-5699 3-7 Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. $185pm on 9th St. & bus route. 842-2850 or 843-696. 3-7 SKATE TO CLASSES THIS SUMMER! On campus, 2 BR, apartments furnished or unfurnished, all utilities paid. 843-4993 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476. Must sublet-2 bedroom furnished apartment. Cable T.V. hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 811-4250. 3-7 FOR SALE Cabin fever? Try a T-Top Cullas, black back top/interior PS/PB, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette, high MPG. Beautiful road, Craig. 842-5313. 3-6 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Make Sale! Use these notes to use them 1- As study guide, 2- For class analysis of Western Civilization, 3- Analysis of Western Civilization available at Town Creek, Mala Bookstore and Oread Books. REWARD: $0.00 if you can in turn to a small company or to rent in May or June, 3-20 848 or 749-777. Alternator, starter and generator specialties. Pats service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 93-569-3000. W. 60th. tl New 1 bed room apt. Beautiful furnished, on 20th floor of 153rd Street. Appt No. 802 ff. 841-245ss or 842-249s. Keep in view: 700 West 26th Street SunSure--Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TP WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.99, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-136, TPU New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic mat- tress sets. He sure by check on prices. Ledermor- nise mattresses. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $29.95 Rickies Bike Racks. 103 Vermont. 841-6642. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall and summer. Apply now. Call 842-253-80 at 6:00 p.m. Cable-Nilei Grand Plano, excellent tone & condition, dark-natural finish Wurlitzer Electric Guitar. 10 yrs TSR 4 Speakers, still warranted. Dark-green guitar. Wurlitzer Band & Drest-7 *82-4270* 1972 Colica ST. 25 mpq-WAC. Overhaul, new tires, dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2536 after 2 p.m. Ladies size 8 finely styled brown leather boots. Excellent condition. Too small must sell cheap! $35 or best offer. Call Device 814-2750. 3-6 '99 Olda Delta 88. Clean, good condition, excellent companion. SSRG 146-1672 before 9 a.m. 3-6 Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-6072 after 6.00 p.m. (808) 295-2222 Rossignol Salomon skates $120. 69 VW $250, roller 6900. 11 oak peek $100. 840 or 3-17 6900. 11 oak peck $100. 840 or 3-17 fensen 500 3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ fre- e speaker controls. Excellent condition. 3-17 M-2129 Wedding dress and veil. $100, size 10. 842-7381. 3-2 P. A. sauvegard. Four Mitel model MULT-MLT (a mobile power supply device that powers a wireless power shaver, the Hawkeye wireless charger, or best pair of batteries) evening: Earnings 842-1142. Keep trying 5-7 times. Earnings 842-1142. Keep trying 5-7 times. delivered Call 842-4444 if Bob Smith is online. Marantz 4200 stereo with EV 16A elecTVon- power high speaker speakers. Good buy $250 Call 81- 439-570-5876 For sale: FM converter 825 or best offer, Call 842-7259 for Terry. 3-7 Ski boot, Nordica Alpina for women, size 6 to 7 Good shape, used 2 seasons, 814-4349 3-19 FOUND Found—small female dog. Tan blonde, curly hair, long tail. West of Hallmark, contact J. Sankey—work 842-250; home 843-8088. 3-6 Male German Shepherd. Black with tan legs. Found near animal Transport. Call 841-290-6322. them just yankerwinter, call 843-669-341 A black male cut with white and feet long. Found between the Union and Spencer Art M. on Friday. 844-1692 or 843-253-37 Man's watch, 222 Snow Hall. Found last week. 864-3790. 3-7 HELP WANTED Found pair of gloves lives in front of Fraser. Claim in Kansas Union information booth. 3-17 *STO TUDENT NURSING HOME AIDE/ORDERER* Likes to share your work experiences with our customers. We provide our customer education. Kansans for insurance help and input on nursing home conditions and residents. All nurses and correspondents will be trained by both the nurse and lvl. write up. KNISH 9237 (between time and lvl. write up) or KNISH 9238 (between time and lvl. write up). Midwestern Campus at the University of Kansas should have dates to participate with junior and senior students in music, art journalism, speech and debate or library services. Visits may be arranged as a summer camp offer or 24 Hour Camp call. More information: midwestcamp.org. Summer jobs at Camp near Ottawa, Kansas Director, Counselor,历教员, cook. June 1- July 19. Santa Fe Trail Council of Girl Scouts. Kawanaka, Kansas. Kawanaka, Kansas. KK5 621-917 825-363. Part-time, Day-time dishwasher must be able to work from 10:30 to 3:00 Monday through Friday. Apply in person only at Border Bandide. 1528 W. 23rd St. Biocare of Child Research Achievement Place has located a new location in the position available. Salary ranges from $20,500 to $43,500. Duties are to conduct behavioral observations on children and adults with special transport for some travel and have flexible transportation for some travel. Apply online at www.biocare.com/schools/care/schools/care-application deadline March 18th. Email emily.mcgraw@biocare.com Contact Mollie Jolly Jolly. FENDING, GETTING TEACHING POSITIONS- FROM SCHOOL administration with experi- ence in school administrator with experi- ences, duties, queries, interviewing, more- diners, queries, scores, interviews, more- diners, teaching, 13, 19 Dcr Teacher, BALO, Teaching-1, 13 Dcr Teacher, BALO Now taking applications for door-floor and walk- in. Must be 12. Apply at the Sanctuary, 1401 W. Th after 8:30 p.m. Ask for Stipley. CRUISHOURS/SAILING EXPEDITIONS: SAIL- CRUISHOURS/SAILING EXPEDITIONS: SAIL CAREER PROMOTION, pay, summer CAREER PROMOTION, pay, summer NATIONWIDE NATIONWIDE for APPICATION FOR REFERALS to APPICATION FOR REFERALS to NATIONWIDE WORLD BOOK 60129. Sacramento 93460. COMPUTER SERVICE ABDYENY, needa computer program to perform all audits of Data Management and Data Occupancy techniques. Res. are DOD/MOD/COORDINATION training. Applicant at Office Admin, Depth 1, Training Center, 1200 Broadway, NYC. Spring break jobs-full-time lasting one week, possible part-time position continuing through spring. Outdoor work. Apply in person at the Garden Center, 13th and New York. 3-7 Typist-half or full time should be able to typ- e, 60wpm excellent pay and superb wage. Requires good communication skills. Need someone to organically farm 2 acres of land. Need someone with 1 year of anything produced. 841-4144. 3-7 LOST Lost! A brown Irish cap in or between Haworth and O-Zone. Reward offered. Call 842-1629 after five minutes. One pair rimless eyeglasses, fourth floor Wescue. If found, please call 864-8598. 3-7 Lost—set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says 'available'. Reward 824-4274. 3-7 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and Dsw stamped on it. $5 reward. Call 864-2830 3-7 Green check book—please return Lost id. 842- 8187 CHarper. 3-6 HELP! 5 keys lost 2.27 on Mercedes-Benz key call. Call 841-6194 now. 3-7 NOTICE Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Desert, where students work with children in a camp setting, study geology, write poetry, engage in other program activities. Writes short stories from Western Campus. Fills field trips. Colorado 88184. 2415 W 2nd, surrogat FOX HILLS HURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks Pregnancy training birth容 continuum care 9:45 AM to 5:30 PM (831) - 6400 411 W 9th, surrogat P 831 Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. If The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cold beer, pool, pailhall and unique harbors. Color TV and urethro for when the Hawks are away. You can watch the Harbour Lite in 1031 Mass. A first-class class diving GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through H. ad-quarters, 814-2345 and KU info, 864-3566. . . . . INTERESTED IN FRATERNITYS* Partiunce in men's spring formal rush. March 21, 22, 23. To register, contact Inter-Fraternity Council Office at 864-3590 3-21 POETRY WANTED for Anthology. Include stamped envelope, Literary Arts Press, 123 Nassau, Suite 212, New York, NY 10038. HAPPY 22nd BIRTHDAY, PIPER From All The Guys WE ARE THE GINS by Ann Law. Intelligence works like grenades using thought and good will to promote both DIB, paperwork, DIB, book cover, Book Box 201, Bedford, 03120, 03128 Female nursing student wanted to share apartment near MD Center next fall. 844-6600, 3-6 The Corps is coming! 0.00 Confused and frustrated about taxes or-out-of- state income? Call Rick 842-4650 for tax plan- ning as well as preparing. material change Enjoy our wide selection of colorful spring pants. Great Comfort. Many sizes to choose. Aboveaupour our colorful spring pants. Dress and Matern. BREAKAWAY PAINTER PANTS Now only $11.99 BREAKAWAY 1980 Special Value LITWINS VISA "WHERE CLOTHES ARE FOR DUNN" he Corps is coming he Corps is coming VISA Encore! Encore! To whomever found, borrowed or burried my Olympus camera and 24mm lens, last seen at Alfrin Field House or the Kuman Photo Lab. CALL ME I READY TO DEAL. 831-5725. 3-7 Dancing in the light of JAH love this weekend. Please join me. 3-7 GURDJIEFF - OUSPENSKY Center accepting students. (913) 648-1490 3-7 for don't have to walk alone on campus at Call Camp Calgary Safety Services at 864-8488 for an exert coat. The exert service is available 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sunday, Saturday Thursday. Cons in and register for our Grand Opening Giveaway! March 17-22. 17-22 include electronic games remote control robot, stuffed toys and more. Fun and Gizmos. 1022 Massachusetts. Help me find the orange car that left me with a broken license plate for a burnt orange car with a damaged front fender. Acident happened early Sunday at 8:43 100-1. $2 RMWD 483-1001. $2 RMWD PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843- 4821 4-10 Shop at PRO AM SPORT over your spring break. Located in the heart of Mission, Ks. tf Jay Dec, Mark, and Mark. Is Pat there? Bear PS—Jay Dec. What's that on your lips? Bear THE REP. (chip) Prince Charming! HAPPY without doing anything along the way? S章愿意 Come listen to the MOFFET BEERS BAND 20th at The Entertainer Sponsored by ABGFT. SERVICES OFFERED IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $10.00 for your 39-page catalog of college衍展, 10.20 tonies listed. BOX 50297, Los Angeles, CA. 90025. (213) 477-8236. **EXPERT TUTORING** MATH 000-102 call 684-5785. MATH 1157-700 call 684-5785. STATISTICS lab (courses) call 683-9086. CS 100-690 call 684-5785. ENGLISH lab (courses) call 683-9086. ENGLISH and SPANISH lab 684-5785. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uwhara Quick Center Center. Alice is available from AM to 5 MFD Monday to Friday; 9 AM to PM on Saturday at 838 Ms. TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476. TP Why cusss about typing? Experienced evil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammner, 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends tf MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. TR Accelerate, experienced tynist, IBM correcting Satellite, Caller Donna, 842-2744 tf Experimented tytoil-thesis, dissertations, term improvers, notes, correcting selections. Barb 882-210 Typical Editor, IBM Pica! Elite. Quality work, reusable rates. These, dissertations welcome; editing layout. Call Joel J82-9137. Examined: Typist—term papers, thesis, mice, electric BM S-licite. Proofreading, spelling corrected. 840-3554, Mrs. Wright. Experienced KU tvsist. IBM Correcting Selectric. Quality work. References available. Sandy, evening & weekends. 748-981. DISCOUNT TYPING: 841-4980 Experienced Tytler-manuscripts, papers, theses Experienced Tytler-expertience IB Correcting Selective 841-3228 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, self-correcting Selective Calc Ellen or Jaanam 812-272. 3-1 Neat, easy typing. IBM elecricle, deliver & disk-up on camvas. 842,5211 after 6 p.m. 2 ft. WANTED Formal rooms: age 23-30, trailer house; $100 formal room; office room, washer, dryer, dishwasher; $150. Nerd a typist for mid-term papers? Avoid them make an app, with a pro Linda Lindsay 812-720- 6450 PSYCHATIC AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICES PHYSICIAN ADES & SHAPE SALES Shoe hospital ades apply to Peggy Harrison, KS Phone: (192) 206-3580 312 W. 8th, Topkaka, KS Phone: (192) 206-3580 encouraged to appl for An equal opportunity ROOMMATES. Nainithth Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 813-8539 any time of the day. If Male roommate to share space two-bedroom apartment from spring break until the end of summer. $215 month plus 1$ electric. Call after p. m. 822-1336. Don't pass this up. 1) March; rent paid. Own furnished bedroom. Only $110 per mo.. utilities. Call 843-0352. 3-6 Female: roommate: 2 bedroom apt. $125.00 mo & \ 'u' utilities: Call Barb. 841-3260. 3-18 Garage space for car 864-4072, before 9 a.m. 3-6 Going to La. Leagueade for spring break? We've got you! Team from with (years ago) Caller: Ttlr 841-8928 Executive Director for Associated Students of Kansas, will serve as the associate director (including) coordination for several associations managing the administrative and fiscal affairs of the institution; and bobbing on the knees before the Kansahorsky Association to Associated Students of Kansas. To be assigned to: Associated Students of Kansas, Topeka; College Kansas, 64622; By March 13, 2015. Student to do clean-up and motorcycle delivery or part-time. Call 841-3333 for appointment. Hurricane Haze and Hurricane Davidson. 7-9 a.m. at the Hunters Point HOA. Will share gas charge. Call 841-7699. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS AD DREADLINES Monday Thursday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Tuesday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 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 Kint Fiat Automobiles and figure costs. Now you've got it Selling Power! CLASSIFIED HEADING: ___ Write ad here: ___ 1 time $2.25 .02 RATES: 15 words or less Write ad here:___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ additional words 1 3 times $2.75 .04 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 DATES TO RUN: to NAME: ___ ADDRESS: ___ PHONE: ___ PHONE: KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- 12 Thursday, March 6. 1980 University Daily Kansan Timmons hopes to end 10-year drought By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer Bob Tommins is proud of KU's track program, traditionally one of the nation's most powerful. But two years ago, Tommens, KU men's coach for 15 years, prided hurt when the Jayhawks dropped to the NCAA Indoor Championship. But last year, the Jayhawks moved up to a fourth-place tie. This year, the team has its best chance in a decade to bear the title of NCAA Champions. The national champ will be crowned next week in Detroit. The Jayhawks have qualified in 11 events. "I CAN'T REMEMBER when we've sent a greater number of athletes to the nationals." Timmons says. "We know of at least 10 players who have fully we can boost that to 12 this week." This weekend, Fimmons will send 15 athletes, primarily freshmen, to the Kansas State Invitational in Manhattan. The plan is to qualify the distance medley relay team. After that meet, all eyes will be set on nationalists. The 'Hawks last won the national in 1790, but that team had a different character. Relay on the strength of shot putter Karl Rely,趴 down to the ground and relay them to the Jawkahws to be dispose of Villonava to gain the crown. This year, their hopes ride with the jumping and the passing. ALREADY QUALIFIED for KU are high joel Jool light, triple jumper Sanya Owolabi, long jumpers Warren Wilhote and Bokhani, and pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham. In the running events, the Jayhawks have some of the nation's fastest feet. All- America and U.S. Olympic Trial qualifier battled in the second round of events: the 440-yard dash, the 600 and as part of the mile relay team. Mike Ricks, another spinner, has qualified in the 600. The first time they faced each other. "Of course it will be impossible to run Mickens and Ril in all three events, so some choices will have to be made there," Timmons said. KU's other fleet feet belong to Deon Hogan and Stain Whitaker. Both were injured last week when KU won the Big Eight game, both will be able to compete at nationals. "This team is definitely one of the best I've ever had," Timmons said. THE FINAL KU enty, at least so far, is its two-mile relay team. But Tum Jansch, Leonard Marti Martin, Ray Marks and Rick Emsz have only run the event twice. And Timmons has had some good ones. In 1966, 1969 and 1970, Timmons coached the Jayhawks to NCAA indoor titles. The 1970 squad shared the NCAA outdoor title. Hogan has met the NCAA standards in the 440 and as part of the mile relay. Whitaker completes the mile relay. "This year, we don't appear to be as diversified a threat as in the past. But I have noticed we've started to show some versatility." "I'd have to say the other teams were a bit more versatile," Timmons said. "We had to rely on harders and strength events like the shot put and hammer throw." the flexibility wasn't there last year. With athletes qualifying in only five events, the team wasted too much talent. But Buckingham, then a freshman, captured second in the pole vault. Mickens, then a junior, tied for third. RICKS HUCKENS BUCKINGHAM TIMMCNS OMOLAB HOGAN Jim Ryun regains amateur status By MATT SEELEY Jim Ryun has been born again. Sports Writer Only this time he doesn't know whether he wants a new life. Ryun, the famous miler, recently had his amateur status returned by the Amateur Athletic Union. But unlike the other sports leagues that are on hold, Ryun has no plans to use his returned status. "I've been reinstated as an amateur, but I wouldn't say I'm going to return to amateur running. Ryan said yesterday in a video that he'd "I'll go wherever the Lord wants me to go." RYUN'S REBIRTH IS his second in less than a decade. He has since been led by Jesus Christ. Immediately after a disastrous finish in the 1972 Olympics, he was spiritually reborn. He has been received by Jesus can be. "I have accepted Jesus as my personal Savior," he said. But the second time around, Ryun is not ready to be saved on his mind, so the groundbreaking race, something Ryun says is a legitimate and legal way to make a buck without induction. IT IS A GOOD bet that unless amateur athletes clean up their acts, Ryun's amateur days are a thing of the past. "The corruption that goes on has turned into a batilian situation," he said. "I don't want any part of that. Right now I'm running for the glory of God." Ryun recalled an incident that occurred while he was working as a CBS correspondent for a race in Houston. "There was a runner who ran well in Los Angeles," he said. "I overheard him tell the players in Houston that unless he got $500, he would not disappear, he got the money he became." ALTHOUGH HE WANTS no part of the present amateur scene, Ryun is知ingly and willingly accepting money as a promoter of professional running... "Basically, I'm competing in fun-runs and celebrity-type races for charities and like," he said. The nation's premier milier in the mid-1960s, Ryun now runs the 10,000 meters. But these days, he finishes further back in the pack. "One race this year in Charlotte, N.C., I finished 15th," he said. "I was really pleased with my time. And its all legal and honest." RYUN'S CAREER has been like a roller coaster ride. The prodigy of KU track coach Bob Timmons was at Wichita West High School. In high school, he became the first American prep to run the mile in less than a minute. He came to KU after Timmons became head coach and immediately became the talk of the nation. In 1967, his sophomore year he led the team's mile and 1,500-meters within a 16-day span. FOUR YEARS LATER, in the 7,800-foot altitude of City City, Ryan, weakened by a pulled muscle, finished a distant second to Kip Keim of Kenya. Ryun was a five-time NCAA champion and ran in three Olympics, but he never brought home a gold. In 1984 at the Tokyo Olympics he did not finish. He had a cold and did not earn a spot in the finals. His last try in Olympic competition proved to be a dismal finish to a brilliant career. Rounding a curve in a preliminary race and then winning the final was tripped by Ghana runner Billy Forjunr That was the end of Ryun's illustrious amateur days and the beginning of what was to be a drab professional career. "I'm happy I did it and have no regrets about it," Ryun said of entering the professional track circuit. THE SHORT-LIVED pro circuit was a legal alternative to the violations Ryun saw in amateur athletics. "There is no way that taking money under the table could be justified by me," he said. "But there were others who were doing it openly. "I saw pro trac to be great in the beginning. There was the framework of a viable product. I imagined in the end, that we weren't interested in long-range goals." Ryun was hampered by a recurring achilles tendon injury and a back injury in 1975. It was that achilles tendon that broke Ryun. "I PRAYED and prayed my prayers were answered," he said. "He told me that I had fought a good fight and had run a good race, but I was through now." after reinjuring it in Salt Lake City in 1976, Ryun officially retired from running. At that time, the rumor mill had Riyan accepting an assistant coaching position. He replied, "I don't know what he has in mind." And he had the victory and is leading my life." Ryun's beliefs have not changed. "There are very limited opportunities with coaching and I don't see myself in that kind of situation. We're alumni and administrators. You are a pawn of the feelings and emotions of people and families." RYUAN IS EQUALLY outspoken on the course of the Olympic boccit movement. "It's an ivory tower situation," he said. "It's a political issue and I don't see anything the matter with that. There is no separation of sports and politics." "I'm definitely for the boycott. Sure, I feel saddened for the athlete, but isn't what were doing prolonging life instead of killing it." "I know that what the Russians do is a political showcase. They will take all opportunity to further their views. This is a challenge for the U.S. to stand up to the communities." Ryun's life has been engulfed by numbers since adolescence and even though the competitive career is over, numbers still are a big part of Ryun's life. low of timings, Ryan concentrates on high ratings as a disc jockey and commentator for a Christian radio station in Santa Barbara. BUT VERSATILITY IS the key to the title and Timmons knows it. He also is concerned with the opposition. "Our main competition will come from UTEP, which is tremendously powerful, and Villanova," he said. "Those two schools have to rate as the rime favorites." Timmons has been one of the more vocal opponents of the trend toward foreign athletes. He still refuses to recruit foreign talent. a fifth-place finish in the 690, took second in the 600. He then anchored the mile relay team to second place. Villanova won the championship last year by edging the KU mile relay team for the NCAA Championship. It was also to UTEP's and Villanova's success lies with a superb collection of foreign athletes who were part of the squad. By PATTI ARNOLD Snorts Writer Softball team ready for long road trip "I'ts tough on them," KU coach Bob Stanfield says. "But from that point, we have at least 20 games in. It will put us in good shape for playing the other teams." A long road trip starts Sunday with the annual spring break swing to the Southwest Come April Fool's Day, the KU softball team will open its home schedule. But before then, the Jayhawks will hit the road. One road trip starts Sandy with the And The Jayhawks will need to be in good shape. Five of the top 10 finishers in last year's College World Series are on KU's (24) and Chicago, the year, the Jayhawks made ninth in the season. Texas Woman's University, the defending national champion, sponsors a tournament March 28-29 KU will also face Texas A&M, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, all ten teams. The graduation of last year's first class of the University of California, Kelly Phipps was left KU short of infidelity. To tackle the trouble, Stancill has tried seven outfriends and a reserve catches at her home. THE SEASON opens Sunday with a double-header against New Mexico in Albuquerque, then it on its to Los Cruces, where the game is played twice, two games both Monday and Tuesday against New Mexico State and then play in Santa Clara State Tournament Thursday through Sunday. During the trip, Stallieu's team may be at a disadvantage because of the weather in Lake Geneva. The team will keep the Jayhawks practicing inside most of the winter. But the bit of outdoor action was limited on Saturday. June Koleber will probably win the first base job after three years as starting centerfielder. Second-string catcher Karil WIllberg will backup Koleber. SHORTSTOP IS the biggest question mark for Stanclift. "We need someone to emerge from the spring trip and prove they can handle that position," he said. However, the rest of the infield is set winters returning players. Jale Snodgrass, an Al-Biq Aziz last year and co-captain for the Mets against second base job and Jil Larson second base. Ali is ready for ring return From the Kansan's wire service From the Kansan's wire services CHICAGO—Muhammad Ali will fight again. Ali's representatives and Top Rank, Ali's agreement yesterday for a fight between Ali, three-time world heavyweight Tate, Tate, the World Boxing Association champions. Arum and Jabir Muhammad, Ali's manager, said the pact was signed last night in Muhammad's downtown offices. He said a formal contract would be signed later. Bob Arum, president of Top Rank, said that the purse would be a record sum and that the bout would probably be held in late June. All has not fought since September 1979 when he outpointed Leen Spinks to be crowned for a record-setting third time. Muthamad's attorney, Charles Lomax, who was contacted before the signing, said the $14 million figure was "approximately correct." He also said he had spoken by telephone with Ali, who approved the action. Neither Arum nor Muhammad would confirm reports that the fighters would split $14 million. Muhammad said possible sites were Taiwan, New Orleans and Houston. Muhammad would only say, "I did it again." By then, Timmons will know whether KU will pocket national title No. 5. "All I will say is that the compensation to both fighters is a world record for any boxing match in history." Arum said. 843-7333 2500 W. 6th "VILLANOVA HAS usually carried foreign athletes, so their distance runners are nothing new to us." TRAILRIDGE - apartments But the rest of the UTEP and Villanova's squads are new. Timmons said he had not checked to see what events their athletes had qualified for. - townhouses - studios "We aren't sure where the other schools stand," he said. "We usually don't know ahead of time and as of now, we haven't had a chance to check them. We'll know next week." "Back in the late 60s, there weren't a lot of teams with a lot of foreign leaders leading them," he said. "Today, it is a different way," he continued. "You can't get a shot in their own meet. It’s a shame." DON'T BE A FOOL! Register to Vote for the April 1 Primary Place: Kansas Union - Student Senate Office - 3rd Floor Time: Wed., March 5 - Fri., March 7; 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. Meisner Milstead Liquor Store Wishes to share with you our finest wine discoveries to complement the simplest or most elegant of meals. Holiday Plaza 25th and Iowa Maupintour travel service - **AIRLINE TICKETS** - **HOTEL RESERVATIONS** - **EURA PASSURE** - **EURORACING** - **ESCORTED TOURS** CALL TODAY! travel service 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 sua films Special Presentation HOMEBODY A new short film directed by KU alumnus Steve Johnson and starring KU alumni Roger Nolan and Duane Ladage. Original music by Mark Hart, former pianist for Justice. "Homebody" was the only student film from USC to be accepted for showing at FILMEX, a prestigious film festival held annually in Los Angeles. We will show "Homebody" before the following regularly scheduled SUA Films: Friday, March 7—14th INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION Monday, March 17—NOTORIOUS Wednesday, March 26—Emst Lubitsch Double Feature The catching duties will be Gay Bonang's, who had a 988 fielding average, allowed no passed balls, had 143 putouts and 102 turnovers. She committed only two errors in 41 games. Laim Sanmint, the other co-captain, heads the pitching corps this year. Stanwyn Shelley Sanmint, who graduated. Shelley Sanmint, also pitch this year, will freshen Darla for the 2016 season. "OUR PITCHING is young and inex perienced, but talented," Stancliff said. "We need Lakam to stabilize things while we learn to defend ourselves beneath them and gain strength and confidence." The starting outfield depends on who is assigned to first and short. "I'm getting a look at two outfielders at first and short," he said. "Those two could be starting in the outfield." Those two are Koleher and freshman Pam Cox, who has been working at short. That would leave Rose Rader as the only returning outfielder. Christy Posey, a transfer from Wichita State, is a centennial but is recovering from back problems. "SHE'S JUST get back to where the doctor has given her the okay to go all out." Stancliff said. "In the last two weeks, she has shown tremendous progress. She's a close friend and competitor. She's close to being ready to play and should be able to help us." (1956) sua films Thursday, March 6 A HOUSE OF GEISHA Mikio Makiure, with itszu Yamada, Hideko Takamine, Kiyanoko Tanaka. Aya Koda's original story of girla seeking a place to live in East East Asian Studies, Japan/ublittles. (1980) Friday, March 7 THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL TOUREE OF ANIMATION Our annual showing of the Touraine is one of 18 animated films which reflect techniques and artistry in animation from around the world by Film Foundation. Plus: "Homebody," a short film by KU alumnus Steve Johnson "NO SATURDAY SHOW Monday, March 17 NOTORIOUS (1946) Dir. Alterl Hitchcock, with Cary Whitman and Diane Keaton, One of Hitchcock's most romantic notoriouis has a US agent forcing a woman to apy to on a German spy. (Lily Franklin) Tuesday, March 18 JOHNNY GUITAR (1954) Dir. Nicholas Roach, with Sterling Hayden, Joan Crawford, Mercedes McCambridge. One of the most successful wanderers, singer-songwriter meets his former lover in an isolated saloon. **Museum Room** 1980-2006 1 Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Wooldruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R I films are $1.00 and $1.50; A-M films are $1.50 and $1.50 start at 3:30, 7:00, 8:00 and midnight on Fri. & Sat., and at 2:00 on Sunday. Tickets available at the UOA Office, Union 5th Level. Smoking is allowed, smoking or refreshments allowed. EAGLE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY COLDER KANSAN Vol. 90. No.108 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Jayhawks slip past Jennies, 72-71 See story back page Drinking bill canned by House committee By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter Kansas '18 to 20-year-olds will be able to continue drinking 3.2 percent beer legally, at least for now. The House Federal and State Affairs Committee yesterday voted 12-8 to report unfavorably on a bill that would raised the 3.2 beer drinking age in the state from 18 to 21. An unfavorable report in committee all but kills a pronosial because it rarely proceeds to the floor. "The committee decided that the bill just doesn't address the real problem—drinking among high school girls," committee chairman Neal Whaitarak, R-Wichita. "They are not having alcohol illegally now would still be able to retit." The vote cools more than a month of controversy over the proposal, which drew one of the largest crowds in recent years. IF THE bill had passed the Legislature, Kansas would become the 12th state in the last three years to raise the minimum wage. The proposal was one of more than 50 bill calls for the raising of the drinking age under consideration in a degree. INSPIRATION OF THE CITY In spite of the report, the state's dry firey conditions in southeastern Belfast, with a heat wave hitting the city, beaten by rain and rainfall. Belfast is one of the cities that face some of the worst conditions in the country. The temperature rises to 38 degrees Celsius (98°F) and drops to 24 degrees Celsius (76°F). The air is extremely dry and dusty. The proposal could be amended onto a similar bill already messy by committee. "I don't think it is dead yet," State Rep. Dean Seller, D-Minneapolis, one of the bill's five sponsors, said." I fully expect someone to try to amend it onto another bill on the House floor." Many legislators have said that the proposal could receive significant support in the full House. The Federal and State Affairs Committee has been known to have a liberal attitude toward lenient issues. EVEN SOME opponents admit that the bill could nause it if it is to the House floor. "If it gets past post委员," Robin McClellan, "Kansas director for the Associated Students of Kansas," "will go after him." Nevertheless, news of the bill's fate brought cheers among the state's young people yesterday. Clint Nelson, Overland Park senior, was tending bar at Cafe 1348, Calabas Valley OH, when he heard of the shooting. "Everybody here was clapping," he said. "It's a pretty big deal." An estimated 183,000 persons between the ages of 18 and 21 would have been affected by the bill. Eighteen-year-olds have been allowed to buy beer in Kansas since 1937. "Have a drink on us," bellowed one 8-year-old, who was downing pitcherics of beer with a half-done friends at the Hawk when she heard the news. "It's great. I'm so happy." If the proposal had passed, hundred of student employees would have been out of work, dozens of bars would have closed and college students would have had to find new ways to spend their time. TAVERN OWNERS estimated that 420 students would have lost their jobs in Lawrence alone as a result. One manager predicted that 75 percent of the city's 3.2 beer baskets would have closed. Student groups and tavern owners lobbed heavily against the bill circulating fliers, talking to legislators Five thousand students signed opposing the bill when they were circulated on campuses by the campaign. Wittaker said he received more than 500 letters concerning the proposal, more than he had gotten on any bill since the Equal Rights Amendment was under discussion. Most of the mail was from bill opponents. VESTERDAY, the proposal was reported unfavorably after only 10 minutes of discussion. "It's my livelihood, you know I happy about it. The people don't have a tough time getting through Hawk, said I have a tough time getting through it." 120453 But proponents were disappointed by the proposal's fate, and talked of new strategy for raising the drinking rate. Taylor said yesterday that if further efforts to get the patient back on track will be his Best will make the drinking age an issue in the country. Every one of Kansas' 165 legislators is up for reelection this fall. "We just can't ignore the problem," he said. "We'll ask every candidate his position on the drinking age and let everyone know what it is. Anybody who votes for it, or anybody who votes in voting for more teenage deaths on our highways." Awed onlooker Frank Domici, Kansas City, Mo., and his daughter, Rozanne, 4, examine a part of an exhibition titled "Space: The Fund Focal Point" at the Kansas City Museum. The exhibition explores the impact of space on culture. Council backs Forer's rights By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter The Faculty Council yesterday passed a revised resolution supporting the rights of Norman Forer and Clarence Dillingham to engage in the activities which resulted in their suspension without uav last December. The resolution, proposed by Robert Shelton, associate professor of religious studies and speech and drama, also affirmed the faculty's commitment to students and the University, and requested that the Faculty executive committee make recommendations to safeguard Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and Dillingham, instructor in social welfare, were suspended without pay during their December trip to Iran, which they said was an unofficial attempt to help resolve the hostage stalemate there. At a February Council meeting, several members expressed concern that Forer and Diblighham's rights of due process were violated. SHELTON'S ORIGINAL resolution contained an additional sentence expressing faculty concern that the administration response to Forer and Dillingham's trip raised "serious questions" regarding due process in their punishment. But the passage was deleted when several Council members said it was too vague. "I'm not sure the information available to the general committee shows whether or not due process was observed," said Laurence D. Bentley, chief executive of the committee. After more discussion and several changes in the language of the remaining sentences, the resolution was passed. "The results speak for themselves," he said. "One thing it tells us is that a lot of people don't think they have enough information." "I'm not surprised. I don't think it (the final resolution) says anything." Robert J. Friel, professor of physics and astrometry, agreed that the final version of the resolution was not as good as it could have been. "But it's better than nothing." he said. GERHARD ZUTHER, FacEx chairman, said an administration timetable of events surrounding the trip, with references to objects and activities. "We should attempt once and finally to establish the facts." "If something needs to be done," he said, "we are the people to do it. In other business, the University Council approved an amended request for early class dismissal for homecoming, the fall 1800 final examination schedule, proposals for a plus and minus grading system and Senate rule revisions. The Homecoming Committee had requested that classes be dismissed at 1:30 p.m. on Oct. 17 so that students could participate in homecoming activities. The Council approved a statement saying it would resume dismissals classless early, rather than one "requesting" early dismissal. Campus hours set for break Some KU buildings and offices will have different hours during spring break. All KU buildings will follow regular schedules today and changes will begin tomorrow through March 16. The inviaries will be closed regular hours tomorrow, but will be closed Sunday. The libraries will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on March 15. They will resume their regular schedule on March 16. The Law Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on March 20. They will resume its regular schedule on Monday. Militants yield hostages to Iranian Council The Kansas Union will follow its regular schedule today, but will be closed tomorrow. The Union will serve branch from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. Union food services will have different hours March 10-14. The cafeteria will be open from 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., the deli from 11 a.m. to 14 p.m. and the soup and salad bar from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The craft room and the trainee Room will be closed March 18-4. robinson Gymnasium will be closed tomorrow and Sunday, but will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 10-14. The gym will be closed March 15 and will begin on Friday at 6 p.m., beginning at 1 p.m. March 16. The pool will be closed for repairs March 8-16. The Satellite Union will close at 7 p.m tonight through March 16. The Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art will be closed Monday and will be open from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m and from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on March 16. The Natural History Museum will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 16-15 and from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. March Wescoe Terrace will be open from 1 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 10-14. The Murphy Hall Box Office will be closed March 8-16. But some practice rooms will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. tomorrow, from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. March regular hours will resume on March 16. All other buildings, services, administrative offices, the Post Office and Watkins Hospital will follow regular hours during spring break. By The Associated Press Moslem militants in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, have held some 50 Americans hostage for four months, said yesterday they were ready to relinquish their captives to Iran's Revolutionary Council. Carter administration officials fearful of "blowing" the possibility that an unanticipated breakthrough thus far in the 128-month trial may be the most significant breakthrough thus far in the 128-month trial. A spokesman for the militants, contacted by telephone from Bonn, West Germany, would not indicate either when the hostages might be transferred or whether the move would soon lead to freedom for the Americans. IRANIAN FOREIGN Minister Sadegh Ghobzhadze, who emerged from a meeting at which the Revolutionary Council accepted the militants’ offer, said authorities still viewed the Americans as a threat. "Our conditions are rather clear" for their release, he said, apparently referring to President Abolahassan BaniSi's three demands that the U.S. government acknowledge past interference in Iranian affairs, that it pledge not to interfere in the future, and that it promises not to block efforts to have the deposed shah and his family moved. PRESIDENT CARTER has said the United States has no intention to interfere in Iran, but has ruled out any action. Ghostzdzeh said the transfer of the hostages to the custody of the Revolutionary Council, which includes the ambassador and the revolutionaries who rule Iran, would be arranged by a special "commission" that would meet today. The president's request is He said he could not answer questions about whether the postages would be removed from the embalm and by mail. Ayatollah Ruballab Khameini and other Iranian revolutionary leaders have said recently the hostages' revolt in Iraq began as a result of the crisis in office in April. But it has been assumed that the necessary first stage in resolving the crisis would be for Iran to withdraw its forces from Iraq. between the U.N. investigative commission on Iran and its hostages, something the militants had blocked for years. And when they were prepared to leave Tehran yesterday without having visited their hostages, but after the militants' decision to withdraw, the U.N. investigated. A FURTHER sign of progress might be a meeting The militants' spokesman said they agreed to relinquish control of the hostages because of "pushing" from the Bani-Sadr government for a meeting between the U.N. panel and the hostages. In the statement announcing their decision, the militants said they had faced a dilemma—they still opposed such a meeting but they did not want to undercut the revolutionary government. "What can one do when the officials and those in charge in the commission accept that whatever the commission wants must be done?" the militants asked. "Since we cannot bow to a view we do not accept and do not regard as in keeping with the Imam's Ayatollah Ruhailhah Khomeini's line, and since in charge of those in charge we are not willing to contribute to their weakness, and speak of a government within a government, we wish to allay my misunderstanding." WES ORZECHOWSKVKansan stat "While regarding our responsibility with regard to the hostages as at an end, we are confident that the Israeli national security forces have responded appropriately and that it will eventually correct with the necessary decisiveness any deviation and error," the statement The militants have consistently demanded return of exiled Shah Mohammad Razha Pahai to Iran in request of freedom Iranian authorities have announced their intention to bring the tradition from Panama, his current home, but the two countries do not have an extradition treaty, and Panamanian law forbids extradition to a nation that has Reflecting the cautious attitude in Washington, national security adviser Zhigun Brzeznyk would say that "the United States is not going to be JOHN ROSS Joe Lee Bartfield, 8, and Delbert Tolbert, 7, enjoy mild temperatures and gasty March winds as they ponder a way to get the crippled kitteh back in the air. Kite capers BUT the militants added an implicit warning to *Sadr* that the nation would not tolerate such conduct in the United States. delivery of the hostages—that is, the American spurs from us and deal with them as it emerges.** Staff Reporter Slow learners cope with fast-paced world By ANN SHIELDS The construction paper calendar splattered with gold stars on kathy Lobb's door is the first hint one gets that something here is not quite normal. It's a piece of grade-school discipline in her furnished one-bedroom apartment. But Kathy, 24, invites her guests in, talks of her boyfriend, her job and her latest Tupperware party. She rarely mentions her problems. "Sometimes it baths me that I'm slower than others," she said, "but I have to realize that's just a part of me." BUT THOSE things that others might see as a sign of weakness are, to Kathy, signs of strength. Kathy is one of 80 clients of Cottonwood, Inc., a non-profit residential and vocational organization that trains minds retarded to become as self-sufficient as possible. She and other residents are continually setting goals: As soon as she learns how to "At Cottonwood now I have my own life to live," she said. "People don't need to tell me what to do." Kathy needs the construction paper calendar to encourage her to keep her apartment clean. She needed five years of work and she's her best suit to work as a motel maid. use taxi cabs, she is encouraged to fill her pockets with quarters and find the downtown bus. She struggles to solve her problems rather than immediately calling "Kathy really has the desire to live independently," said Anita Junkhe, Kathy's apartment supervisor. "She is also motivated by her desire to get married." KATHY IS engaged to another Cottonwood resident and is working to become emotionally mature enough to get married. "I hope sometime she arrives there," Stanley Lobb, Kathy's mother, said. "I would like nothing better for them to do that" and "not just be friends with her, but just as it is for my other daughters." Kathy's efforts, however, sometimes like a game of let-sent-pend, because they are not completely independent. Their institution is a buffer between their lives and the fast-paced world. Cottonwood works to help its clients overcome stereotypes and become a part of the world. "I think the need will always be there," Mrs. Lobb said. Kathy has taken a trip to Colorado, sponsored by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department. She is enrolled in nano classes taught at the University of See KATHY page seven 2 Friday, March 7.1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services : Gerald R. Ford inched closer yesterday to entering the presidential race, as a national draft-Ford committee was formed to encourage him to make the Committee urges Ford to run If enough people ask, the former president said, "I'd have a hard time saying no." Creation of the draft Ford committee was announced by former Air Force Secretary Thomas C. Reed, who said Ford should know that many Americans agree he “offers the best alternative to the bankrupt policies” of the Carter administration. Reed urged Ford partisans to express their support in cards and letters to Ford's Palm Springs, Calif._home. The former president said in St. Petersburg, Fla., that he had received pledges of support from Democrats and independents as well as Republican leaders in the state legislature on his behalf. In a flurry of activity that indicated he was laying the groundwork to announce his intentions, Ford made plans to meet Monday with John Sears, who was ousted as Ronald Reagan's campaign director Feb. 26, the day of the New Hammishire primary. Ford also was reported to have agreed to meet next week with several Republican leaders and former congressional colleagues in New York and Washington to "discuss the political situation." One aide hinted Ford might make an announcement as early as next week. In Connecticut, the day after Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee abandoned the GOP race, his two top state campaign chiefs announced yesterday they were switching their support to Ford. They said they would support a Ford-Baker ticket at the Republican National Convention in July. In New York, formation of a Delaware Committee to Draft President Ford was announced at a news conference attended by chairmen of similar committee. The Austrian Ambassador Edgar Seizer, free to return to Vienna to see his gravelly wife, wife, appeared to be in good condition when he changed planes in the airport. The writer has received a kind answer. One hostage freed in Colombia BOGOTA, Colombia - Terrorists holding the Dominican Embassy oggetta released one hostage, as negotiations focused on the leftists' demand The hostage, Austrian Ambassador Edgar Selzer, freed to return to Vienna to see his gravely ill wife, appeared to be in good condition when he changed planes in Caracas, Venezuela. Selzer reportedly said that he had not eaten in eight days. An unidentified government official said the guerrillas had practically abandoned their demand for $50 million in ransom. The guerrillas claim the inmates are political prisoners. The government says it is holding no political prisoners and that any guerrillas in Colombian cities have been killed or taken hostage. "They only want to get the guerrillas of the subversive groups out of jail, but the government cannot give in without violating the constitution and laws of Columbia's constitution permits the president to pardon only political prisoners. A military source said the armed forces firmly supported President Obama's policies. Kassebaum's rail bill passed WASHINGTON—The two Republican senators from Kansas passed a bill that would keep the bankrupt Rock Island Railroad alive for at least 48 years. Senator Bob Dole, R-Kan., voted Thursday in favor of a bill sponsored by Senator Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., to extend directive service on the Rock Island for 45 days so companies can finalize purchases and arrange alternate means of transportation. The shippers, farmers, railroad workers, businesses and consumers of Kansas and Great Plains must have continued service on the Rock Island Railroad. The bill, which now goes to the House, would continue government-subsidized service over the 13-state system into May when negotiations are concluded for the final version. It also forms a government-financed compensation plan for Rock Island employees who lose their jobs once the system is sold. Federal officials say uncertainty over employee compensation has been the major obstacle to sale of the 128-year-old railroad to other carriers. Panel OKs arain planting cuts WASHINGTON — A House Agriculture subcommittee yesterday endorsed a multimillion dollar paid diversion plan to cut the nation's 1980 grain production. But several subcommittee members called the move only "a gesture" because it comes after farmers in some sections of the country have already planted their feed grain and wheat crops and because the Carter Adherent refused to impose a paid diversion program administratively, calling it coercive. The bill, approved on a voice vote by the livestock and grains subcommittee, authorizes the Agriculture Committee, also in an attempt to protect farmers from low prices caused by the embargo, endorsed a bill that would expand participation in the 1979 grain reserve program, which encourages farmers to isolate grain Under the House proposal, feed grain farmers would be encouraged to reduce their production this year by 15 percent in return for federal payment of $1.24 a bushel and 10 percent in return for federal payment of $1.03 a bushel not to plant 10 percent of their land in return for payment of $1.50 a bushel. Officials estimate the diversion should reduce payment by at least the 12 million metric tons of corn and the four million metric tons of wheat the U.S. Department of Agriculture Soviet Union this year because of its military intervention in Afghanistan. Reagan will speak in Wichita WICHITA—Ronald Reagan, one of the top contenders for the Republican presidential nomination, will be the main speaker at the KFI Salute to The former California governor is scheduled to speak at 2 p.m. at the Colliion Ballroom, according to Patrick Hill, 4th district co-chairman for the Reagan A KFI spokesman said every political candidate for the presidency has been invited to the program, but Reagan is the only one who has accepted. Mennonites plan draft seminars Reagan's appearance will come eight days before Kansas' first presidential primary, April 1. The Mennonite Central Committee has created a "Christian Peacemaker Registration to help draft-age youths think through their convictions about war." Bob Hull, secretary for peace and social concerns for the church, said the Mennonites historically have opposed the use of force to resolve disputes. NEWTON-Area Mennonites are planning seminars for draft-age youth to discuss the revival of draft registration and options to military conscription, a hardship on young people, and other issues. Correction... The headline at the top of page 3 of yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. It should have read "Leban says faculty running scared on Forer issue." The It will be cloudy and colder today with a 40 percent chance for scattered snow and rain in the afternoon, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high will reach the mid-to-upper 30s today and tomorrow and 10-28 mph winds will be from the northeast. Weather... Mild temperatures in the 30s and 60s are forecasted for Sunday, but temperatures are expected to cool to the 30s and 40b by Tuesday. Validity of neighborhood plans questioned By ANN SHIELDS Staff Reporter The City Commission voted Tuesday night to allow development of the Bluffs, plaving the way for offices and apartments in the primarily single family area. Richard Spear, president of the Pinckney Neighborhood Association, said this week that the city's decision to rezone the Sixth Avenue branch of all of Lawrence's neighborhood plans. Association, the Oread Neighborhood Association and the Old West Lawrence Neighborhood Association all supported the Bluffs zoned for single-family residences. "We are not concerned with the Bluffs as an individual issue," he said. "We're concerned about the absolute disregard for the energy that went into the neighborhood Dick Dunham, president of the East Lawrence Improvement Association, said he thought the commission's decision called for a reassessment of neighborhood blans "If the plans can be changed at the whim of five people—the city commissioners—then they don't seem to be worth much," he said. "You can't plan for 1956 today and not get some changes," he said. were not binding because it was only a guide for development. THE EAST Lawrence Improvement Plan 95, which outlines city development through 1965, and the Pinckney neighborhood plan opposed the rezoning. Commissioner Ed Carter said at the meeting that the plan's recommendations Spear disagreed and said that the city had used the wrong process to change the zoning. Neighborhood plans can be reviewed and updated annually, he said. He said he was most annoyed that the developers were so confident of city commission support that they did not significantly change their class. STOLIA Ski the developers had agreed to drop their request for an extension of the commercial strip along Sixth Street and Fifth Street, but be reviewed before a building was finalized. The review, which has never been done in Lawrence before, would ensure that the developers solved the drainage and traffic problems, he said. Office Wall 137 841-0817 Kansap Hall University Drink & drown Spring Break Progressive Rock EXODUS $3.50 cover - Free beer all nite! Open 8 p.m. 9 p.m. showtime The times call out for discipline and vision. Edmund G. Brown Jr. For information on Jerry Brown's already remarkable achievements and presidential candidacy, please call Chris Hamill 842-9697 Did spaceships land in ancient Peru? Now the story can be told! "CHAMPAKOU" Starting in the April issue of HEAXC on sale at your favorite newsstand WE NEED YOU!!!! Student Senate is looking for INTERESTED STUDENTS to serve on the following STANDING COMMITTEES: - Academic Affairs - Communications - Finance and Auditing - Culture - Sports - Student Rights - Student Services Apply in Person at the STUDENT SENATE OFFICE B 105, KANSAS UNION SOFTWARE ENGINEERS SHAPE THE FUTURE... GTD 5 É A X Come to GTE Automatic Electric Laboratories where you will be taught the principles of operating allow you to explore your talents and have a hand in developing the communications systems of the future. You will be introduced to the system and see the results of your work first hand and to receive the training. If you have a BS or MS in Computer Science, Electrical Engineering or a related discipline investigate the Development Support Software Responsible for the development of tools which aid and support the software development of advanced digital telephone switching systems. Pascal experience and/or programming skills. Data Base Administration Software Responsable for developing a data base administration system for advanced digital systems. Perform logical and numerical analyses. Test Utility Software Involved in design and software implementation of an system evaluation and laboratory prototypes for sensor development. 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Execute configuration management and control of all hardware. GTE offers an excellent salary and benefits package Please send your resume and salary requirements to WE'LL BE ON CAMPUS ON MARCH 18. SEE YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR GTE Research and Development GTE Automatic Electric Laboratories Dave Crowley Employment Dept. DCP 1228 N 23rd Avenue Phoenix, AZ 85029 Phoenix, AZ 85029 We are an equal opportunity employer m/f Friday, March 7, 1980 3 Space show exciting but flawed By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter "Space: The Final Frointer" is probably one of the most overworked phrases in the dozen or so years since Captain James T. Kirk's Starship Enterprise toured the galaxy. The cliche has been called upon again, this time as the title of an exhibition at the Kansas City Museum. Marking the 30th anniversary of the R.A. Planetarium, which is next to the Planetarium atrium, the largest airspace exhibition en el Kansas City, Mo. Featuring displays, models and other visual attractions, "Space: The Final Frontier" runs through March and is free to visit. The exhibition is intended to be a blend of the past, represented by the Apollo moon program displays, and the future, with the space shuttle program as an example. The focus of the exhibition is definitely on the shuttle, as there are three mockups of shuttle vehicles, one filling up half a room and showing the cargo bay doors of a shuttle open as they would be for Earth orbit experiments. CHILDREN WILL probably be fascinated by the models, and exclamations of "Look. Unfortunately, two rooms are about the extent of the display, except for a model of the Apollo lunar module, one-third the acce- ture on display near the museum's entrance. Perhaps the most interesting part of the exhibition is a truly not-of-world item, appropriately encased in a transparent box. It can be found by up astronaut Gene Cernan in the lunar Daddy, a big plane!" pierce the spacey music piped into the exhibition rooms. KANSAN Review There's something romantic about having a such care albeit almost within one's touch. highlands during the Apollo 17 mission in December 1972. such a rare thing almost within one's touch. THE EXHIBITS were provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Rockwell International and the New York corporation no doubt in hopes of rekindling public interest in the space program. But some of the information panels are outdated. One prohbs that the maiden spaceship can fly is 1979. Three months into 1980, the shuttle has to飞, and NASA is still hoping for a new spacecraft. The exhibition does serve to note the absence of American astronauts in space during the Apollo mission demonstrated by children peering into a model of the Apollo module command seems to show that there is a generation on earth who might go aloft while going no man has gone before. Aid eligibility confusion alarms director BY CINDY WHITCOME Staff Reporter A misunderstanding about an appeals clause in proposed financial aid eligibility standards was a cause for alarm for the associate director of financial aid this week. The associate director, Jeff Weinberg, said he opposed new academic eligibility standards because they contained no provision for appeal. But Max Sutton, chairman of the University Senate committee and president of a coalition, although committee originally had considered abolishing appeals, it later decided that the committee would not accept them. "I think Mr. Weinberg thought the initial discussion about appeals was final, but it wasn't," Sutton said. At a University Council meeting yesterday, the proposed standards were referred back to the committee for further study. Weinberg said yesterday that he was relieved to hear that the committee had decided to leave the appeals system as it was. The proposed standard, which would require students to attain a 2.0 grade point average by their fourth semester, would increase the number of appeals, Weinberg And Weinberg said he was concerned that students were not informed about the new standards. The standards we have published in our pamphlets are the only ones student leaders can learn to use. When raised, they should be widely publicized as soon as possible, so students have a chance to use them. The discussion of the eligibility standards has put the financial aid office in a state of limbo, according to Weinberg. TGIF at THE HAWK Foreign & Domestic Parts DON CHICK AUTO PARTS -Port Size 1209 Fast Eat 12" 441-2200 Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints Gatehouse Phone: 843-6446 2166 WEST 26TH STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 AVAILABLE NOW Drapes, Carpet, AC, All Appliances, Carports Pool, Conveniently Located, On KU Bus Line. Rents Starts At: $225.00 1 & 2 Bedrooms KING CALL OR COME BY TODAY Professionally Managed By: GOLD CROWN PROPERTIES, INC. Discover the voice behind Kansas. Discover Steve Walsh. On his first solo album, "Schemer-Dreamer," Kansas' lead singer Steve Walsh takes you to a new state where rock dreams become reality and the night never ends. Stay up for it. "Schemer-Dreamer." The premier solo album by a man from Kansas. On Kirshner Records and Tapes. STEVE WALSH SCHEMER DREAMER Buy it once. Enjoy it a more Recorded musi is your best entertainment vau STEVE WALSH SCHERM DREAMER Every Day You See Me, Every Night You Sleep With Me, With Me, With Me You Walk In Our Life With Me Tomorrow. University Daily Kansan BS Records. © 1980 CBS Inc. © Coca-Cola Biscuit Co. "AVAILABLE AT YOUR FAVORITE RECORD STORE" Available at Kief's Records and Tapes Changes hamper Law admissions The school is missing Law School Data Assembly Service reports for about half of their applicants. The law school is a month behind in graduation because of changes in the process of entrance test reports, according to Lilian Sis. director of admissions for the law school. "This is true for all law schools across the country," Six said. "We are still in a holding position." The problem arose this year because the Law School Admissions Service (LAS) took over the job of processing the reports from the Education Testing Service(ETS). ETS now only adhere to the Law School Aptitude Test (LAST) The LSAS reports are a mathematical calculation based on the students' LSAT scores and transcript. According to Six, SLAS bought a new computer when it took over from ETS and is having difficulty with the com-puter and getting the reports out on time. "Everything has turned to mud," Six said. "It is not a good situation." EST 1957 PIZZA & PASTA now . . . the best pizza becomes more convenient: call 843-9111 for delivery the best pizza delivered hot to your door! 106 NORTH PARK 843-9111 ELECTIONS!! Association of University Residence Halls 1980 General Elections President, Vice-Pres., Secretary, Treasurer Open to any returning hall resident Election materials available at front desk of each hall Filing deadline is Wed. March 19 5:00 pm Elections Tues. March 25 and Wed. March 26 Winners take office at AURH general assembly meeting Thursday, March 27th For more information call 864-6732 or AURH office 864-4041 SINCE 1970 Q. WHERE DO YOU FIND ONE OF THE WORLD'S LARGEST ENERGY, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTERS WITH CAREER OPPORTUNITIES ALLOWING YOU TO GET INVOLVED? A. In Idaho, at E G & G... WHERE YOUR CAREER WILL HAVE ENORMOUS ROOM TO GROW. E G & G is the operating contractor for the Department of Energy's vast Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL). The INEL covers about 900 square miles and employs some 7,000 people, of whom roughly 4,000 hold degrees. If your career plans include contributing to the development of alternate energy, E G G I dIdaho, Inc. offers you a unique opportunity. We have openings and are hiring personnel in the following areas. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING • NUCLEAR ENGINEERING GENERAL ENGINEERING • METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENGINEERING AND CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Please address: *Please address:* Technical Employment-Dept. CS E G & E J GG, INC. PO. BO 1625, Idaho Falls, Idaho 83401 B. Circulate Requirement. We Are An All-inclusive Opportunity Employer CAMPUS INTERVIEWS, MARCH 11th UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MS. D. BARNEY EG&G Idaho, Inc. PO. Box 1625. Idaho Falls, Idaho 83401 --- --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editors. March 7,1980 Bill treated unjustly A house of cards is collapsing under the heavy hand and bias of House Majority Leader, Robert Frey, R-Liberal, and his fellow landlords. Frey, who along with Speaker of the House Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, will decide which bills will be brought to the floor of the Kansas House of Representatives, said Tuesday he was against bringing up for debate any bill passed by the 1978 Landlord-Tenant Act. The bill is designed to give tenants a legal tool for making repairs when negligent landlords refuse to do so. The bill was first proposed last year by State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, and will die if the full house does not act on it by March 12, the last day the House can consider its own motion. The bill may be he has stated in so many words—that his "personal intention" is that the bill will not be brought to the floor and will not be debated; i.e., Frey's "personal intention" is that the bill will wither and die without benefit of at least a weakest in a democratic voting process. Frey's "personal intention" is not at all surprising in light of the fact that he is a landlord. But if he is so confident that the bill is unnecessary and that the Landlord-tenant act is "fine" the way it ought to be, then to the test by letting the full House debate and vote on the bill? What is he afraid of? He couldn't be concerned that some representatives in the House, perhaps even a majority of representatives, had been heard more, less biased hearing than he could? Although there are other ways that proponents of the bill could get it to the House floor, including making a motion to bring it to debate or tacking the amendment onto a bill already scheduled for debate, their chances of succeeding against the "personal intention" of Frey are poor. The landlord lobby assault on the amendment has been loud and forceful. And Frey, who owns apartments in Seward County, is among those who contend that the amendment would give an unfair advantage to tenants. If there were time one could suggest that Frey try living for 10 months to a year in a $735—a month, two bedroom, four-bathroom apartment and window saisons let rain in; where the ceiling sprinkles plaster over breakfast, lunch and dinner; where the toilet backs up every other time it flushed; where cracks in the walls are wide enough for mice to crawl through. She would ultimately assess the balance of fairness. But there isn't time. The only hope at this point is that Frey's conscience will open his eyes to the unmitigated misery and continued helplessness his wife will perpetuate among a group of people who want only a decent place to live. Quiet, winter sounds make house a home Winter is best for this because the world keeps its distance. Inside is everything. You know, a house can be a creaky door and loose floorboards that tell you a house is alive, breathing, recycling its materials. New York Times Special Features RYE, N.Y.—One way you know a house is by the sounds it makes. In their curious way, other things entertained. Among the marvels of our house was a china cabinet that vibrated when you moved it. We demonstrated this magic to visitors. THE MYSTIFYING, furtive sighs we dare at night were different from the ones we might see in the walls, to the secrets of closets. I don't think we know where half of these sounds came from, but I know they should silence them. Perhaps they belonged to the previous owners and should not be taken. By DIVIN DEM SET New York Times Special Features The house I grew up in tapped out a steady flow of these messages. The shudder of pipes in the morning, steps springing back into motion, was the one that When the curtains whispered we knew the wind was blowing hard, and at times the whole place seemed to lean against it, beams and risers straining in unison. Even the light that all was well, that action was being taken. This "body language" of a house gives predictability. My mother lived alone for the last seven years of her life and rarely did anything to me. The house, she claimed, kept time for her. The modern family has become deserved to the inner voice of dwellings. The touch of a processor and vacuum cleaner, the dishwasher and garbage disposal, from which we vainly seek escape by turning up the TV and opening the door. We tend toention to this problem. They confuse acoustics with what its worth hearing. The sound of a well-healthily will use sonic additives as sparingly as they use food containing sugars that house shoulder reverberate to its own rhythm. OLD FRAME structures are best for this. The music of their loose parts is what we put together in our minds. It follows that to By DAVID DEMPSEY restore a neglected house you should not make too many improvements. Let the timbers creek and floor grease. Let the wind blow across the walls. Let the errant handwork of some long-gone artisan. If the kitchen must be modernized, make it a vault, separated from the rest of the house by a steel door. Give the field mice access to all areas of the house invite the neighbors in to listen. The nuclear family above all needs evidence that frailty as well as robustness, however disembodied, is present in structures. An apart-ment-generated environment cannot know these things. **THIS IS THE PROBLEM with suburban developments, retirement colonies and the like. They are too new, too carefully built, to survive. The problem is that both mothers they lack of their individual inflection. If you've seen one you've heard another. Your outage is disastrous in such houses, not because light go off and the machines stop running but because we are left with the hollow rooms they have. There has nothing to say. Rather it stands mute before the occupant's eager strain to catch some suppressed complaint, someurrence of time passing and things unsaid. AN OLD HOUSE should tell you when winter is coming to an end. It will let the seasons rub against each other for attention. The walls became less brittle, more distant. The mice had fled the walls and the fluttering of birds barely carried from the eaves in which they were sleeping. The dampness the dampness and there came a day when the china cabinet no longer rattled on command. It was time to open the windows and let the street sounds mingle with our neighbors. Gee, it's great to know our legislators have done such a wonderful appreciation of humor and comic performance by bouncing into Osawatime Slate State on Monday for a surprise event. Editor's note: Kate Pound cared for retarded persons during the summers of 1978 and 1979. She was employed as a co-tutor in the Hospital and Training Center in Parsons. Real estate agents don't understand these things. Looking at houses to buy I've asked them if I may listen to the place for an hour or so. This draws a blank. "You'll find this a very quiet neighborhood," the agent says, and you see in the furnace nausey, I can assure you. But that is not what I mean, and there is no way to explain. They did a wonderful impersonation of three comic legends. Their attempt to ferret out abuse and mismanagement was a great impersonation of Larry, Merry and Curly Joe. David Dempsey, a writer who lives in a frame house, says that he lets his wife investigate all sounds after midnight. Demands for an investigation state mental institutions begin late last year to review records and drug use at Owasawatne were made public and cries to cries that something be done about the reports, the Legislature formed a committee to look into conditions at the in-patient facility. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 103864664656 Published at University of Newcastle daily August through May and November and now available online. The first book is for six months and the second book for eight months or more. Books are £9 for six months or £12 a year in December and £6 for six months or £8 a year in January. For further details please contact us on 0800 745 6300. Postmaster: Send changes address to the University Daily Kanaan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Lawrence. KA6005 If Monday's inspection of Osawatomi was any indication, God help the patients of the Kansas mental hospital system, because the Legislature isn't going to. Editorial Edito Brenda Watson Editor James Anthony Fitts Elaine Strahler . Dean Troxel Mike Panthere Managing Editor Dana Miller Business Manager Vincent Coultis Inspection a Three Stooges comedy Retail Sales Manager ... Campus Sales Manager ... Advertising Makeup Manager ... THE INSECTION, by state senators Mike Johnston, D-Darsons, Robert Talkington, R-Iola and Rep. Joe Haggand, R-Overland Park, just proved that the game found a scandal in the Watergate Hotel, much less a case of abuse in a state institution. Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins The committee's method of inspection was to pop in unannounced with a lock of reporters. According to Talkington, the police had hoped to catch hospital personnel off-guard. Come now, gentlemen, surely you aren't so naive as to believe it is possible to sneak up on a hospital staff of more than twenty General Manage Rick Musser Supplies are stolen from hospitals—one paper, hand clothing, food and food intended for patients. Small potatoes, butters, may be donated from all the state hospitals are added. people, many of whom were carrying cameras. Silly boys? Of course, the committee and its entourage were discovered. However they were undaunted and pressed on with their search for crime and corruption. They learned from the experience questions about the amount of illicit and illegal drugs available in the hospital. THEE ARE other abuses-perhaps less sensational than sex with patients and supplying them with drugs. IF YOU gentlemen are truly concerned with activities inside institution walls and if you want to find and eliminate abuses, you should ask for the records, notice the turnover rates and the understaffing. hiring practice, see how inadequate they are. Most of all talk, or request that someone else be patients, employees, former patients and former employees. But the talk has to be done individually, unobtrusively. Bouncing off only get your plattudes and half the picture. YOU DID NOT see, most likely, staff shortages, particularly among the direct care staff, the aides who are responsible for providing care and making sure aides turn rate is high, because of low pay, poor benefits and administrative indifference. Male aides, desperately needed in several institutions, are in short supply—it really make more money doing factory work. Aides are usually under-trained, under-educated and under-supervised. Almost anyone can be bined to be an aide; there are no special training requirements. If an applicant can complete aid training courses, they can work, whether or not darn about providing good, effective care. There is emotional abuse and neglect, particularly of children in the institutions. The staff would not spot it spotted—but it does exist. Patient is punched, pulled, jerked and dragged. It's faster to pin a patient into walking than to convince him to go willingly. THE INSTITUTIONS have other problems. Paperwork drows staff members. Nurses at some institutions do little more of their time is spent filling out forms. kate COLUMNIST pound Administrators, psychologists, physicians and teachers are too removed from the day-to-day experience of teaching to integrate treatment and education programs conducted in classrooms with life experience. ONE COMMITTEE member was heard to have nailed one staff member with "Hi. I'm from the Legislature, do you have anything to say to me?" Not all aids are abusive or neglectful. Most are careful with their charges. Some even care about them. But the abuses exist. Most of all, there is too little concern from the Legislature. Despite your lark on Sunday, gentlemen, the Legislature has not been involved with the state mental institutions. What courage our fearless lawmakers demonstrated! And what stupidity they displaced. It used to be said that Kansas was a forerunner in the development of effective mental health treatment. The statement is rarely heard now. The support for our mental hospitals is lacking and the care provided is substandard. This is not to say that the reports of criminal acts at Osawatome are accurate. But if they are, your inspection wouldn't be complete unless you have abuses in the mental institution system. The Legislature can improve the Kansas mental institutions. The forerunner status of some states is necessary, and it is needed is some time and some concern. None of these stoope arrests are necessary. Gentlemen, did you actually believe that staff members of the hospital, and its administrators, would bare their souls and reveal negligence, mismanagement and felonious acts? Did you believe that patients must admit to having access to illegal drugs? Of course you did. You trust those people. After all, they are employees of the state. You believed them so much that your boss asked you to work with the hospital but "blowing acclaim" for the医院. It's nice to see trust in government—unsettling to see idiocy. IF THERE are abuses in state mental institutions, your sneak attack approach is less likely to waste of time. Five minutes after you entered the hospital grounds, probably every employee there knew about your arrival. What would you do? "structured to 'act normally,'" the word passed to be friendly and answer questions in a positive manner. Your committee could not have received an accurate view of the hospital, I LIKE JOHN ANDERSON. I ADMIRE THE INTELLIGENT WAY HE TACKLES ISSUES—THE WAY HE STOOD UP TO THE GUN NUTS AND THE WAY HE REFUSES TO SPEAK OUT OF BOTH SIDES OF HIS MOUTH. HE'S ARTICULATE COURAGEOUS, FORTHRIGHT AND DECENT! NOT ME! I WANT A REGULAR REPUBLICAN! Care center offers valuable service The Women's Transitional Care Center has recently come under attack by the Kaw Valley Pro-Family Forum. As a concerned member of the community, we would like to take issue on this matter. The WTCS has been providing a valuable service in this community that must not be in any way delayed. We also want women working long hours without pay to help other women who are in desperate need of help, and support. The majority of the women in our community measure of their dedication to the project. KANSAN letters Many of their clients are referred to them by the police. This is a measure of their effectiveness, and provides services. Finally, many women in need use it, and that is a measure of their effectiveness. WTCS is one of the many new services that have spring up all over the country, such as Rape Victim Support Services and the Women's Coalition. Their common theme is to help women in this leoparded patriarchal society, where women are second-class classes. As a concerned male, and there are a lot of us, I applaud their efforts and I believe that they success the world will be a lot lot more as well, and as a man, I am thankful. Barbara Hanna tells us that she does not think it is the type of lifestyle that Lawrence citizens would promote. Well, I'm a Lawrence citizen and it doesn't bother me a lot. I know it takes a house is an important service but that it could be handled better in someone else's hands. Surely the problem of battered women should be addressed, why don't they. Why didn't those "battered hands" start the project? Why they probably didn't even think about it. After all, the father is the head of the family. It says so in the book. That's the first time the Bible has been missed. The Pro-Family Forum is one of the man- groups that have risen to oppose change, and to resist its influence on the mainly of women. They are anti-choice, anti-ERA, anti-'forcing' and anti-bom- All and all, to meet me the Pro- Family Forum prized its righteous ears at the word lesbians and is goosestetting them. Another step backward for society. Costas Orountiotis Lawrence resident Compared to the existing Robinson Center weight area, it will be six times as large. Compared to the Allen Field House lift ing area, it will be three times the square 'odage.' To the Editor: Please tell Brian Boyer his worries is over and that he need not consider giving up his first born child for a weight room. The new addition to Robinson Center will include a new weight facility. This new fitness center will be more than 2,500 square meters and will feature an Olympic lift machine and weights. The Universal equipment will be the newest on the market. There will be a total of 34 individual stations designed for both pre-school and elementary school programs. Each station is in accommodation, therefore, will accommodate a personal desk. New York Olympic equipment is also being ordered, and an area has been selected in this new faculty that should more than meet Mr. Bover's needs. We thank you for your concern. However, if you are to feel sorry for anyone, it should be the graduating seniors who will never realize this new area. Tom Wilkerson Director of Recreation Services To the Editor: Coach encourages better weight room This is a reply to the letter written by Brian Boyer of Topeka. I Brian would like to direct my comments to Brian's concern about the workout facility provided by the University of Kansas at KU. I have been working with Brian's concern for a decent and adequate workout facility. Presently, the weight room that is provided is no doubt less than average. I have given a guest lecture at KU and will be presenting that Brian's concern is truly a legitimate one. I would encourage Brian and others who share his feelings to look into what is being done to correct this particular situation. With the new addition that is now been completed at Robinson I would have to advise him not to alleviate this problem. I have talked with several instructors at Robinson and their comments have indicated that the weight facility is, in part, one of their areas of improvement. To verify this report, I would again encourage Brian and fellow students to pursue this concern with Wayne Osness, charisman of the school. Students are happy to update anyone with such an interest on what is in fact being done. Should I be able to of any assistance to Ossens or the students at the University of Krasna in developing this facility, I I'd be happy to do so. Keith Kephart Strength coach End of 60s class lamented by student To the Editor: I really enjoyed Amn Shields' story on Alan Milsenhurst's class. I was, however, impressed by the level of work he did his last class. I consider his 56s and 96s classes as two of the more enjoyable classes at AIS. He was also a great student at KU. It is indeed a shame that future students might miss Alan Milsenhurst's class. Lee Reynolds Overland Park senior Editorial prompts bus system praise To the Editor To the Editor: Steve Leben's editorial on the many accomplishments of the Student Senate has encouraged me to write a comment. Thanks for the bus system. John McLeese Lawrence junior --- Friday, March 7. 1980 Common sense can deter crime 5 University Daily Kansan By JENNIFER ROBLEZ Staff Renorter Forty-five minutes after his last class, he was driving on the highway heading south. As he drove, he stopped for a moment whether he had locked his back door. Twenty days later, tired and sunburned, he returned to school. "Students can avoid being ripped off if they use some common sense," said Mark Brothers of the Lawrence Police department. "The burglary is a big business in Lawrence. Most students like to leave town when they can, but returning to an empty apartment doesn't mean it will be safe." Several precautions should be taken before leaving town. Brothers said. One of the simplest to do, but most often forgotten, he said, is to lock all doors and windows. If a apartment does not have glass door locks, a tenant may want to install them. SLIDING GLASS DOORS - a bit more maneuver for patient rooms - should be secured by padded doors. Doors can be locked, he said. Window locks should be checked to see whether they are functioning correctly. - Another important thing to do, Brothers said, is to lower the volume of all telephone bells so they cannot be heard outside. "Most of the time the phone bells are left on the loosest setting. **Bring** said, "When it rings, and burglaries like to check and see if anyone is home, can be heard through,么hrough most apartment com- OTEN A burglar can be fooled to think people are still at home. Small electric timers can on turn lights at various times of the day to give an apartment a lived-in look, he said. An alarm clock radio could also be set to go off at certain times, he said. But Brothers said the best way to secure new orders is by being in touch. It newspaper and mail deliveries need to be picked up and any expensive or hard to replace values should be left in a friend's address. ALSO, ANY suspicious activity noticed by neighbors who stay in town should be reported immediately to the police department, Brothers said. "It helps to have a license tag number, too." he said. A list of all model numbers and serial numbers of valuables should be made and kept in a senator place. The Oread Neighborhood Association provides a safe house for Oread Neighbors who are on the move or break. Residents can bring their valuables to the neighborhood headquarters at 407 W. Polls influence votes, donations Staff Reporter Like a knife's edge, the political opinion poll slices through inexact voter opinions and attitudes and comes up with numbers. It has been called winner-kite-a journalism. By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER "The opinion poll doesn't tell people what to think, but it does tell people what to think about," said Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science. "It can't make a somebody out of a nobody, but it can keep a nobody a nobody." "Polls have been given a great deal of skepticism by the candidates—particularly those behind," Gettar said. The opinion poll is one more straw in the fickle winds of public opinion. And like a straw, it can be bent and twisted to fit a candidate's need. Russell Getter, associate professor of political science, said candidates trailing in the polls were not to dismiss them. Many of the pollsters are hired by the candidates themselves. The aim is politics, not information, according to Cisler. CIGLER SAID public opinion polls have little effect on the public but did serve to rally elite financial support. Everyone likes to cheer a winning team-and elections are evidently no exception. Sarah Towes, Kansas press coordinator for the George Bush presidential campaign, said success in the polls attracts dollars. KANSAN Analysis Contributions to Republican John Anderson's campaign have doubled since his ratings began to climb in national polls, and his deputy press secretary Susan Starr. Starr said Anderson's campaign office had been flooded with phone calls since Anderson's strong showing in Tuesday's Massachusetts and Vermont primaries. "The media has an incredible impact on voters," Starr said. "Before the Iowa caucuses nobody knew who we were, and they had no clue how to win, only the small names would cover it." "It was a circle we couldn't fight. We couldn't get support without the national press, and we couldn't get press coverage without support." Polls have been a staple of political campaigns for two decades, but only in the past few years has the use of polls in the mass media become widespread. And the press keeps its eye on the polls because they offer something measurable amid the rhetoric of candidates jockeying for national press. Thomas' Patterson, a Syracuse University expertess in marketing said that if eight candidates were vying for press attention, the opinion poll was a convenient tool. But Carter had a 4 to1 news coverage advantage in the weeks after New Hampshire won. In addition, Time and Newsweek magazines devoted 2,000 lines of coverage to Carter and only about 600 for Carter's own work. PATTERSON SAID, for example, moun- purely played a large role in Prez. Gov. Harris' re-election bid. She got 28 percent of the primary vote in New Hampshire, beating Rep. Morris Udall of Ames, beat Rep. John Kerry of Conn. Yet Cigler said political opinion polls and press coverage of them could only significantly sway opinion "when people's guards are down." TGIF at THE HAWK IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS 738 MASS. 9:30-8:00 M-S Thure, till 8:30 p.m. ICELANDAIR TO EUROPE ON A BIG BIRD AND A LOW FARE J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! ICELAND s499 s533 Roundtrip from New York to Luxembourg Roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg No restrictions Confirm reservations * free with dinner, gifted after*. no restrictions on stairs to 1st or advance purchase. Price valid from U. S. from March 10 th to May 14, 1980. All schedules and dates apply and government approval. Purchase tickets in the U. S. For more details, visit www.GoG.com Your travel agency or write **deck #** NC Iceland, FIA IAF, ICAO West Hempstead, NY 1052, Call at NTC, 755-8585, elsewhere, call 800-5581-1212 for you. Please send me: *An icelandair flight timetable* *Iceland Airlines log book* Name... Address... City... State...Zip... ICELANDAIR Still your best value to Europe Still your best value to Europe ICELANDAIR Pure rock & roll with Off the Wall Hall 841-0817 737 plus the rockabilly sounds of DALTON HOWARD & HIS GOCATS THE REGULAR GUYS See them both Friday, March 7 THE 9:00 pm $2.00 NEW YORKER PREMIOMITALIAN PIZZA $2.00 OFF Any Large or Medium Pizza with this ad (minimum 2 toppings) Offer Good Wed. through Sun. Mar. 5-9 Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Bucky's 5 Cheeseburgers for only $2.25 with coupon Buckys 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 One coupon per customer Little Kings The Schmalein Brewing Co. Connecticut, CT Buckys THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD! COMMONWEALTH THEATRES IT'S TOO GOOD TO BE BEER Little Kings Granada Downtown 843-5788 Kramer vs. Kramer PG Staring Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep Eve. 7.30 and 9.40 Sat and Sun at 2:30 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. Cruising 2. Bread and Chocolate Staring Nine Mantrafried and Ana Karnina Eat 7:20 and 9:25 Sat and Sun mat, 1:25 1. Cruising *Staring At Pacino and Paul Sonvino* Eve: 7:30 and 9:45 *Sat and Sun mat.* 3. "10" Stuart Dudley Moore, Bo Derek, and Julie Andrew. Evil, 7, and 90. Sat and Sun mat 200 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 Pippi in the South Seas Sat and Sun 1:30 2. The Electric Horseman Staring Robert Redford and Jane Fonda Eve. 7:20 and 9:40 Sat and Sun.mat. 1:4 Varsity Downtown 843-1085 1. The Fifth Floor Eve 7:30 and 9:30 The China Syndrome PG Eve, 7.20 and 9.30, SaLand, mat. 2.20 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 Financial Aid----1980-1981 APPLY NOW Office of Student Financial Aid: 26 Strong Hall Because it will soon be too late . . . Priority Date: March 15, 1980 "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 "The age of the heathen, or unbelievers, in the God of Gods, is the age of the Martyrs, especially blinded at his Moral Law. His Ten Command- ments." The Ten Commandments have a special claim for authority, because they contain several reasons that none of the other Scriptures have. They instruct us by God to the nation of Israel out of the midst of the terrible "terrible" that they heard entreated that the word should be commanded. "There was terrible which was commanded" . . . and so terrible was the sight, that Moses said, "i exceedingly fear and quake When Moses got back down to the camp he found the people worshiping an idol, a golden gaiten in his anger he Consider what sights may be in store for you and me when our spirit leaves this 'house of clay' for it; 'I’m long gone.' It’s all too much to remember the two tables of testimony, tables of stone, written with the hand and stamped with the ink. The mount and the two tables of testimony were in his hand, the tables were written on both their sides on the tablets, the tablets were worked on, and the writing was the tables were the work of God, and the writing was the work of God and the 32-15 and 32-16. Again we say, in view of the way they were given to man, spoken and written with the finger of God, threw the two tables on and broke them! However, in spite of his anger at the people he pleaded with God not to make Moses a great nation! God heard his prayer, and spared them utter destruction. "And the God said unto them, let us make Moses a great nation," and I will write upon these words that were in the first tables, which thou breakest." Exodus 5:17. After ordering himself to have two tables of stone and present them to God for His living to write upon them the same words. Here we have a good, and easily understood explanation of Christianity. Adam broke God's law and all have been made holy." God now calls upon Adam - the man - to bring Him the "tables of his heart!" That he may write in his Men Commission (1 Corinthians 2:8) to give men "the same ones given Moses, the sum of which is to 'Love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, mind, soul and strength; and thy neighbor as itself.' The offer is to 'Whoowers be done because of the work of Jesus Christ who came in the flesh and perfectly kept God's Commandments for us, the same as Jesus himself, punishment, even death, that we might be made righteous of God. In Jerusalem 3:11 read: "I will put my laws in their inward parts, and write in it their P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 7, 1980 For high-grade rock, look to Britain By RICK HELLMAN Staff Renorter The most exciting rock music made today is once again coming from Britain. A new crop of bands, nurtured in the hothouse and making it intelligent danceable rock. As usual, it has taken the American public some time to catch on to this trend, so it's taken a look at the cream of the crop of some new releases by these groups. The Clash "London Calling." This record has been compared to great two-record sets like "Exe on Main Street," "Tommy" and "Mommy." It, it blows, it blows all right off the turf. AND THE PRICE is an attractive feature of this package. Two records' complete with lyrics and great photos, for less than eight backs! But that's just a tamer for the powerful songs inside. The Clash has matured from the street-punk person of their first two albums, and the maturity looks good on them. "London Calling" is a mixed bag incorporating reggae rhythms, rockabilly and mid-'90s soul influences into a coherent, vital whole. For the first time the Clash has made extensive use of instruments other than drums, bass and guitar. On "London Calling" they add horn sections, organ and piano to their palette, and they are worked with mattey and naturally by producer Gay Stevens. Joe Strummer's lyrics touch subjects from the apocalypse to commercialism without being heavy-handed. His voice has never sounded better. With more control, he reveals the browful growl that was just under his face of the earlier carrk/eggro shouting. THE AMAZING THING about "London Calling" is the consistent quality of its four sides. This is an album with no bad songs. More than a few of the nineteen tracks have the revelatory, inspirational quality that great rock 'n' roll is about. Elvis had it. The Beatles had it in their early days. The Clash has it. Get it. The Pretenders-"Pretenders." This The Pretenders = Pretenders. This British-American aggregation is led by Chrisie Hynde, a former rock journalist who decided to quit carpeting and put her money where her mouth was. Hynde possesses one of the most voices this side of the late Billie Holiday, and the hard rocking of her backpack band shows it off to unique advantage. Hyde comes across as tough, self-asserted and in firm control of her own sexuality, motivating force in the rock genre. THE APPEAL TO the sensual is reflected in the band's musical style as well. The rhythms of song like "Space Invasers" and "Beehive" are grounded and groove and wallow into its jazzing in the dance. Pretender James Honeyman-Scott's guitar is a versatile instrument. He can play a litening melody line or strike power chords with the best of them. All the songs on this album (no duds here either) have a classic quality to them, recaling another, previous British invasion. A fine first album from a band who are just lust for today. The Specials' The Specials.' This record has come in for a lot of criticism because the skai, the precursor to reggae, is this year's fad in England. White youths, including the Specials, have taken to sporting pork-hats and suits in emulation of the "rude boys" of the mid-1960s. Some call it shameless blackface, others just dance to the beat. AND THE BEAT is, indeed, danceable. The Specials sound like the bastard offspring of Pat's Blue Riddm Band and the Sex Predals. Their approach to ska is noteworthy. They don't play pop movement, owing, not least, to the production of Elvis Costello. "Nite Klub," for instance, reveals the Specials' ironic sense of humor. "Nite Klub, what am I doing here... watching the girls go by, spending money on beer." "Do the Dog." "It's Up to You" and "Stupid Marriage" all contain the Specials's snide comments on society while maintaining that punchy beat. What it all adds up to is a good time. You can dance and not think about the lyrics, but they're always there when you sit down and listen. That is, finally, what these three records have in common, a fresh, intelligent approach to rock 'n roll that strikes a delicate balance between the assertive and pandering poejo "tooobie" and "party." That's something sorely needed in the sea of mediciety that passes for the rock scene today. SX THE CROSSING OPENING SPECIALS PITCHERS $1.25 DRWRS 35c 4-6 Mon.-Thurs. 2-6 Friday (F.A.C.) Formerly CRTFISH BAR N’ GRILL, THE CROSSING now open 4-12 (except FRIDAY AFTERNOON CLUB) THE YELLO SUB'S East on 23rd, across from WENDY'S Food Coming Soon. YELLO SUB OPEN 11-2 A.M., SUNDAY 11-12 MIDNIGHT THE CROSSING-AT 12TH & OREAD sua films Presents THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION A man pointing to a creature. KING KONG Scenes from two Tourneau features: 'Special Delivery,' from Canada (left), and Richard Williams' 'The Power' Plus: "Homebody," a short film by KU alumnus Steve Johnson Friday, March 7 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 pm $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium ★ No Saturday Performance —No refreshments allowed— MASS. STREET DELI QAI MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Submarine $1.50 reg. price $2.25 served with potato chips and dill pickle spear. Other good Mar. 9 to Mar. 9 enjoy Coke two imports accepted with this offer One good Mar 5 to Mar 9 Enjoy Coke no coupons accepted with this offer TOM AND JIM (For students only.) Precision At A Discount. Precision haircutting is our technique for cutting the hair in harmony with the way it grows. So as it grows it does not lose its shape. Your hair will grow good after five days as it does after five minutes. Come by for a special student discount card. It's good for a whole year, and entitles you to 10% off any Command Performance service. Including our precision haircut. A precision haircut with shampoo and blow-dry costs just fourteen dollars for guys or gals, less 10% of course. We also offer permanent waves, a conditioning and no appointment needed, just come in. Take advantage of our offer, it's precisely what you need. 2 6 5 Command Performance 23rd & Iowa in the South West Plaza M-F: 9-8 Sat: 9-6 Sun: 12-5 Phone: 843-398 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN the arts Original-music band strives for success By SCOTT FAUST Staff Reporter In Strong Hall records, most of them are listed as "former students"—droonouts. Members differ on the band's function. Equipped with $15,000 in musical paraphernalia, they work to tighten their progressive rock, to hone it to a more advanced level for local clubs and recordings. But in the cramped basement where they practice daily, members of the Lawrence band, Kara, are musicians. "It's fun," Dave Frederick, electric guitarist, said recently. "We have long range goals, but fun is definitely the motivation." But Bass guitarist Glenn Elmer said, "We're seriously into making albums, we don't do this for fun." The band's soundman, Ed Rothrock said, "But if this all flaws, what the hell?" The group did a benefit for National Health at the Lawrence Opera House in New York, and they ended them by a $1 admission bash in Fredericks and Rothrock's apartment, 1147 The band, begin last summer, has given a demo tape to KJHK radio. They expect their music to receive some play in the next couple of weeks. However, they are far from monetary success. They must pay for their equipment before they can make a profit on their work. At their January concert party, after paying for refreshments, their profit was only $9. Elmer said the band's all-original work had a very experimental emphasis, along the lines of European progressive groups such as Yes, Gone and King Crimson. "I think our ability to play all different types of music is one of our strong points," Elmer said. In their lyrics, products of fleeting inspiration, the band members said they strive for the positive. "I can't analyze that." he said. He said his music instructors told him, "Play these chords, don't play those chords." Elmer, originally from El Paso, Texas, said he left KU after the spring semester, 1979 because the KU School of Music was restrictive. Only Frederick, Shawnee junior, and Rothrock, Overland Park freshman, are KU students, but all have been at some time. "I learned more in a month out of school than in a whole year at college," he said. Jim DeRigue, drummer, originally from Fairway, gave up on KU twice, quitting both times two weeks into the semester. Karen Burfein the group's vocalist and acoustic guitarist, she departed KU after last week to spend her time creating with the band. She said she had been singing on her own for a long time and snapped the chance to join the band. She hesitated at first because of the band would be making some money good. But making it big isn't all that easy. Even in Lawrence, there are scores of bands whose musicians believe they have what it takes. All the Kara members spoke glowingly of the pot of gold at rainbow's end, and Elmer said there was delight in enjoyment too. "I try not to think about what it could become," he said. "I just revel in each moment. The chances of making money in rock and roll are 1000 to one. --- BOOK SALE Our Annual Spring Hundreds of fine hardcover and paperback books from our regular stock. Reduced 40% - 75% Open evenings and Sundays Mon.-Sat. 9-9 Sun. 1-5 ADVENTURE a bookstore 843-6424 1010 Mass. St. ADVEN Make Plans now for St. Patrick's Day at The SANCTUARY Aye, it's the St. Pat's day Costume Party at the SANCTUARY. And the SANCTUARY is serving up a free drink ticket to every genuine costume. Don't miss it. And don't forget... EVERY TUESDAY - It's Ladies Night. Ladies get a ticket at the door for a free daiqirqi from 9 p.m.on. EVERY WEDNESDAY - Fruit Daiqirqi. Choose from Banana, Peach, Pineapple, Cherry, Strawberry & Lime. Try them all! Only at.. Memberships always available The SANCTUARY 1407 W. 7th 843-9703 Free Hors D'oeuvres every Friday during happy hour. Happy Hour 4-7 pm Every day of the week Friday, March 7, 1980 Kathy... 2 From page one She does her own grocery shopping, and she's still looking ahead. Kansas and basic education classes at Cordley School. "Chambourd is really positive because without it clients would have to resort to a facility that doesn't give them much freedom," Junkle said. Gary Condra, Cottonwood director, said this kind of service became popular within the past 10 years. University Daily Kansan WHEN COTTONWOOD began its residential program in 1972, there were less than five similar institutions in Kansas. And when the company acquired 'Dendra associates with the special Finding a school when Kathy was six years old was not so easy. education programs now required of many public schools. "we had to sign a paper saying we were not good to foray Kathy so she could live with her grandmother and go to Cordley school," Mrs. Lobb said. Kathy went to school in Nebraska for five years until she was 18 and needed vocational training. THEN JOB placement coordinator Mary wave finds them permanent employment. At Cottonwood Kathy has worked in a cafeteria and day care centers, and other clients are trained for woodworking, janitorial and assembly line work. FEATURING FINE IMPORTED AND CALIFORNIA WINES AND 30 VARIETIES OF COLD BEER! MEISNER- MILSTEAD RETAIL LIQUOR which is not difficult once businessmen realize that not all handicapped people require total care, Condra said. Conda estimated that Kathy, who still is in Cottonwood's on-the-job training program, will work independently by next year. FOR KEGS CAL 842-4499 Work teaches Cottonwood clients how to set long-range goals and to accept more responsibility. Have said. Mrs. Lobb said, "I didn't expect Kathy to improve so much at Cottonwood. She is quite capable, more than I give her credit for." ViN "She would like to have it happen quicker," he said, "but we don't like to see a client get out in the community too soon and be overwhelmed." IN HOLIDAY PLAZA (2 DOORS WEST OF KIEF'S) But Kathy Lobb has learned how to pace herself—and how to wait. 9 9 Academy Award Nominations AT THAT JAZZ "An uproarious display of brilliance, nerve and dance..." "A masterwork. 'ALL THE JAZZ' is the year's most extraordinary film..." R www.academyawards.org STARTS FRIDAY, MARCH 14!! **AIRLINE TICKETS** **CAR RENTALS** **CAR RENTALS** **EURAIL RATES** **EXCEEDING PRICES** **ESCORTED TOURS** Maupintour travel service Aerol service 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION 843-1211 CALL TODAY! --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八九十 one two three four五六七八十 one two three四五六七八十 Our manager's IRISH and we've found a sister-tawrin in Ireland, ... the Harbour Lives is weaning the green on $15. ANNUAL ST. PATRICK'S DAY GALA Turn your post-spring blues green at THE HARBOUR LITES' MONDAY, MARCH 17 (And we might even have a parade) AT THE HARPOON AT THE HARBOUR LITES, everyone's IRISH on ST. PAT'S DAY! 1031 Massachusetts The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4355 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word. 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 The Kanan 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. Found items can be advertised FREE: FREE for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kranan business office at 86438. ENTERTAINMENT KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4238 by highest proclamation, this is the first annual appreciation week for room 118 Strong secretaries. 3-7 AMERICAN GARAGE LIVE IN CONCERT Thursday March 13th your 7.30 and 10.45 Lawrence Opera House Today at Kelby, Bedes, or the 7th Spirit Club Where else but the 7th & Madison 842490 842-6930 7.30 and 10.45 city nyc lawrence opentheus ★★★★★★★★★★ ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for trickly basked at 9a, and Illinois. Watch the Heavy-Wailer at 10a, fresh Slices fruits and the Heavy-Wailer at 11a. Fresh Slices fruits, herb yellow. From varieties of dry beans, herb yellow. From varieties of dried beans, herb yellow. Also selling wood potatoes. Herb Almondenand. Mount Blu Ski Lodge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone 3-18 Roualek's Hotel, the Otis of the Bible Bell, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 4-084 LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid. Inter Preference Program will sponsor *SWING FORMAL* RUSH March 21, 22, and *23 for Lawrene campus students*. Contact IPC Office at 3-41-3599 Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th 843-4993 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Clos to campus, Utilities Reasonably priced, Reasonably priced, Call 843-9758 or 842-1818 Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt, next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-1185. Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-500. TF New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 847-350-6299. NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. Jiahawk West Apts. Now Resting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished to $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 254 Front Room. Next door to Russell's East. tf A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Office space for rent now at the area *b* building, 8293*Max*). The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Up and lower or lower floors 228 ft. sq. or 860 ft. sq. Contact 8214-2014 or 863-0717. Need to subdue 2 bedroom Apartment. Completely furnished. OR street parking. Fullly air-conditioned. AC new water and refrigerator. Furniture,水暖 and stove run on 7:52. $200 Call 841-0691. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this amubr 2 year old house 1 bedrooms. 2 studiosums, recreation. 2 bathrooms. Refunds accepted. ptts. references needed. 842-0221. 3-19 Must sublease one bedroom apartment on bus route. Available April. For more information call Terri, 841-7276 or 841-7476. 1 new 5 bedroom apt. Beautifully furnished, on 3 acres in a quiet residential neighborhood. 1599 f 84-3255 or 829-3609. Room Apt. 7-14 located between 18th and 19th floor, Kindergarten and 20th floor. Located in Manhattan located at 35% per month. Harper Plains Resort starting at $35 per month. Harper Plains Resort will be applied with appliance warranty, garage with owner, electricity, and water. Please contact your private phone: 914-455 or 914-8252. Must sub-lease 2 BR Furn. apt. A/C and pool. Brighton on 9th St. & bus. route: 812-250-850 823-740-7316 REWARD: $50.00 if you can turn on to a small desk or rent a May to June 3928 or 4897 to July Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 813-9579 tt Sublabs 2 RB apt. w option for next year. Reasonable rent. low utilities. Beautiful view. Children, pets allowed. 811-5699. 3-7 Must nubble-2 bedroom furnished apartment, Cable T-V hookup included in rent. Next to stadium. 841-4250. 3-7 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat fabric to check on prices. Bedding. Furniture. 1200 New York Ave. FOR SALE WATERBED MATTRESSES $56.98, 3-year guaranty WITHOUT LIGHT 704, Mass 643, 1386-TP Western Civilization Notes. Now on Make Makes. (Study guides for the Maker's Makers' Makers). Maker's preparation to use them 1-3. As study guides, prepare a new Analysis of Western Civilization. New Analysis of Western Civilization. River, Mills Bookstore and Great Book Store. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall and summer. Apply now. Call 842-2538 at 6.00 p.m. or visit www.christian.edu. COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperator located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 842-9421. If Alternator, starter and generator, specialists, Parts, service and exchange units, BELL ATO-MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9000, 3900 W. 6th. tf Sunspaces - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- porous, non-irritating, reasonable, restrained. 1021. Masonry 841. 771-770 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.00 Rikes Bike Shop 103.08 Vermont 841-662.14 1072 Celica ST, 25 mpg-WAC. Overhauled, new tires, dependable. Must sell. Call Mike. 843-2516 after 2 p.m. Nikon 80-200mm zoom lens $350. Call 841-607-3 after 6.00 p.m. Rosignol Salomon skis $120, $190, VW $250, roller 路程 9 11, ak pew $120, 68, 43, 32 or 17- 32, 17-32, 17-32, 17-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, 32-32, Jonien 530-3 way speakers. 15 woofer w/ frequency excellent. Excellent condition. Call John 841-2162. 3-17 Wedding dress and veil, $100, size 10, 842-7321, 3-7 P.A. speakers. Four Michel model MTL-4 time- improvement models. Five small heart device power sockets, small hand press. A large耳 road case. stands included. Hear to believe 8-30 or best offer. Earnings 82-129 (U.S.). Brand spanking new 1989! Datsun 210-$4,029 + tax delivered. Call 842-0444 ask for Bob Smith at Tony's Datsun 5-5 Mazantz 4200 stereo with EV 16A electrovice high power speakers. Good buy. $250. Call 841- 6327. 3-7 For sale: FM converter $25 or best offer. Call 842-7259 Ask for Terry. 3-7 Ski boot, Nordica Alpina for women, size 6 to 7 Good shape, use 2 seasons, 814-4349 3-19 Good shape, up 2 seasons. 414-61a-5. 1977 Detun 20th in excellent condition inside and out. AM-FM stereo cassette, new tires. Brown秋色 Brown clock. Steve Caple 835-732-3 2-27 FOUND Male German Stephan Bradley with tan leg- found near Jäwkower Tower. Call 843-6639 - 7- A black male cat with oil and long hair. Call 843-6639 - 7- A black male cat with oil and long hair. Call 843-6639 - 7- On Friday: Call 843-1928 or 841-2532 Man's watch. 222 Snow Hall. Found last week. 864-3790 3-7 Found pair of ladies gloves in front of Fraser. HELP WANTED Gold bracelet. Call 842-2625 after 5:30 p.m. tf Summer June at camp at near Owatonna, Kansas. Director, Counselor, lifejurist, nurse, cook J-1- July 19 Santa Trai Council of Girl Scouts, Kauai, Kauai, Kansas City, Kanada 601-273 815-287. Midwestern Campus at the University of Kansas should have students with junior and graduate degrees should have experience in music, journalism, speech and debate, or dance. Send resumes to: Midwestern Campus, 254 Murchie Street, Kansas City, MO 64109 or mail to: Midwestern Campus, 254 Murchie Street, Kansas City, MO 64109. Mail copy to: 254 Murchie Street, Kansas City, MO 64109. TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER ORDERS: a resume as a public service nurse to nursing home residents; provide of Nursing Homes (KCNI), needs your your opinion on the care and treatment of the senior confidant; please call us 913-842-3888 Mass. St., 2, Lawrence, KS 60544 CRUISHBIRDS*|SAILING EXPEDITIONS*|SALA- NISSANCE* No experience. Good pay summer student. Apply to our sales team. FOR APPLICATION INFO REFERRALS to APPLICATION BOOK # 00129, Sacramento 93860. Bursars of Child Care Achievement Place has a variety of positions available. Salary ranges from $20,300 to $34,500. All Duties are to be conducted behavioral observation. Employees must have a bachelor's degree and travel and have flexible schedule for afternoon hours. Skills essential Application deadline Mar 1st. Employees with an education of a minimum of a bachelor's employee contact Milford School T1 (312) 855-7996. Now taking applications for door floor and wall repairs, we have 4610 applicants. 601 7 w/2h at 9:00 a.m. #481 for Shelley. 3 w/2h at 10:00 a.m. #454 for Shelley. FINDING, TEACHING POSITIONS— from school administration with experience in from school administration with experience doubts, queries, interviews, more. From Teaching 15, 16 Deerhaven Balley, BC From Teaching 15, 16 Deerhaven Balley, BC COMPUTER SERVICE AGENCY needs Computer Programmer. Must have knowledge of Data Base programmer. Must have knowledge of Data Base must know COBOL and agripros. Osp. ex- p. must know COBOL and agripros. Osp. 2017. LA 714, 842-6222, EOE Spring break jobs-full-time last week, one-partible time-position continue through spring. Outdoor work. Apply in person at the Garden Center 5th and New York. 3-7 Typtit-half or full time should be able to type at least 600 words. Excellent work and super work skills. LOST Need someone to organically farm 2 acres of land located in Lawrence. Have market or search for a property. Loat: A brown Irish cap in or between Haworth and O-Zone. Reward offered. Call 842-1629 after 6. 3-7 One pair twin eyelashes, fourth floor Wescoe. If found, please call 846-8559. 3-7 Lost- set of keys on brass rectangular key chain. Says available. Reward 824-4274. 3-7 Lost: Keys with a piece of leather and D= stamp on it $5. reward $641-8230. 3-7 HELP! 5 keys lost 2:27 on Mercedes-Benz key- ring. Call 814-6914 now. NOTICE S THE DAM RUN IS COMING Additional Info. 864-3546 Recreation Services 99 Rewarding summer experiences in the Colorado mountains during camp, working with children in a camp setting. Backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife observation and nature study. Great international Western Mountains, Parks and Recreation camps. SKATE TO CLASSES THIS SUMMER! On campus, 2 BR, apartments furnished or unfurnished, all utilities paid. 843-4993 PERSONAL VOYAGERS—Fellowship—Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 32nd, Sunday, 9:30 a.m., 843-417-11. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-anclairs up to 17 pregnancy. Breeding treatment. Birth Control. Counseling. Tubal Treatment & appointment. HIV Testing. Inpatient 400, 480, 191st St., Overland Park, KS. 841 Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. If The Harbour Lines is where it's at for cool beer, pool, pinhail and unique bartenders. Color TV and stereo for when the Hawks are away. You can watch the Hawks on The Harbour Lines 1031 Man. A first-class club. GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head- quarters 841-2345 and KU info, 840-356. . . 306 POETRY WANTED for Anthology. Include Jessica Sullivan, 212 New York, NY, 10328 suite 212, New York, NY, 10328 *Inappropriate Content* INTERESTED IN FRATERNITIES? Participate in men's spring formal rush. March 21, *25*-Friday. To register, contact inter-Fraternity Council Office at 864-3559. 3-21 TENNIS PLAYERS: Planning to play during break? Be sure your raucers are ready. The ball is faster than the tennis Aum, and stringer KU Variety Tennis. Very reasonable rates on good strings and grip 3-7. WE ARE THE ONES by Ann Lau. Intelligence works like greedled law, using thought and will good to promise both, $50, paperback, DTB, *Neurobiology Books*, xxix, 287, Bedford, **01320**, 01730 To whomever found, borrowed or burried my Olympus camera and 20mm lens last seen at Allen Field Houses or the Kanana Photo Lab: CALL ME. I'm READY TO DALI_54-1378_3-7 All Corps is coming! The Corps is coming! Encore! Encore! Encore! Encore! Confused and frustrated about taxes or-out-of- state income? Call Rick 842-4600 for tax plan- ning as well as preparing. 3-7 Dancing in the light of JAH love this weekend Please join me. 3-7 DRAT!! Gotta sell my Padre ticket—but there are limitations. Call Dr. B. 843-645 ASAP. phrase? 3-7 GURDJIEFFE - OUSPENSKY Center accepting students (913) 684-1499 3-7 You don't have to walk alone on campus at night. Call Campus Safety Services at 848-888 for an exertion team. The exertion service is available 8 a.m., 1 p.m., or Sunday through Thursday. PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 823- 5821 Help me find the orange car that left me with a broken wheel. I parked it in front of a burnt orange car with a damaged right front fender. Accident happened early Sunday @8:39 AM. Call Calvin. Call 2-187- @8:39 101 85 RWAHD. * Connie in and register for our Grand Opening! Giveaway! Mar 17-22. May 12. includes electronic games remote control robot, stuffed toys, more fun Cam, Games, 102 Massachusetts. Coom listen to the MOFFET BEERS BAND 20 at the Entertainer Sponsored AOTI Jay Dec. Mark, and Jeff. Is Pat there? Beau- Fay Dec. Jay--What's What on your line? Beau- Fay Shop at PRO AM SPORT over your spring break. Located in the heart of Mission, Ks. iff Me!: Happy 21st. Have a great day without me. We'll celebrate later. Shell 3-7 Bill. Tampa, Kansas City, Spring Break "It's going to be too much for me! Happy 20th B-Day! 10am Drinkz If you've always wanted to be Irish on St. Patrick's Day, you should go to the Harbour Life Annual St Patricks Day County Fair at Harbor Village in Downtown Donau, special surprises from our sisters-in-law Denman, could we have a bad St. Patricks Day event? SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102-641 call 5785. MATH: 115-710-642 call 5783. STATISTICS (matlab) call 613-906-630 CIS: 105-600-641 call 613-906-630 ENGLISH: 105-600-641 and SPANISH call 842-705-707 PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Tuesday at S&R Mall. For legal assistance, including Municipal court services, call 844-327-6500 or visit www.municipalcourt.com. Fax returns can be directed to Laster & Lester, East Eust. Call 844-327-6500 or visit www.municipalcourt.com. Mcall collect Call 844-327-6500 to label the case. On Monday through Friday, 11:30 accept Master Calls. IMPROVE YOUR GRADE$ Send $10 for your 38-course catalog of college research. 10,250 lounts lift. RX 25097G; Los Angeles, CA. (213) 872-4578. cf TYPING Accurate, experienced typist, IBM correcting Sellectic, Call Donna, 842-2744. if PROFESSIONAL TYING SEDUCE GET ONLINE Why asks about typing? Experienced civil servants secretly do unsocial tasks. Betty Granmer, 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. | f I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-1476 TF MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-2387. Experienced, tyned-dresses, dissertations, term papers, nusb. IBM correcting selecirt. Birth After 5 p.m. 842-2310 Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reusable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome; editing layout. Call Enq 82-3127. MTP Expertized KU twist. HM Correcting Solettie Quality work. References available. Sandy, evening & weekends. 781-9818. Excoveried Typist—term papers, thesis, mice, electric SI stiltic. Proofreading, spelling corre- fected. 84I-8511. Mrs. Wright. DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980. Need a twist for mid-term papers? Avoid the rush, make an appt. with a prin. Linda: 842-5218 after 5:30. 3-20 Expert-used Typet-manuaries, panels, threes Scientific and technical experience: IBM Correct- ing Selective: 811-4328 WANTED ROOMMATES. Nasihah Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8529 any time of the day. If Familc: roommates, age 23-30, trailer house, $180, 6, children: room, wahier, dryer, dishwasher, B42-0569. 4-12 Reports, dissertations, remanues, legal forms, graphics, editing Self-recording Selective, Cal Ellen or Jeannam 811-2172 3-7 --- Male roommate to situate water two bedrooms from spring break until the end of summer. $810 month plus 1 electric Call after 9:43, p. 143-168. 3:4 PSYCHIATRIC ADIDS AND HEALTH SERVICES Society Hospital, New York. State: hospital society. Job: Psychiatric Adolescent Services 312. W 60, Topkaca, KS. Phone: (912) 258-750- 48. Applicant to apply. An equal opportunity employer. Female: roommate for spacious townhouse living, nice, quiet neighborhood. Fireplace, garage, garden. Amoraker, $110 | 1.3 utility; 822-4066 Keep trying. 3-7 Female: roommates 2 bedroom apt. $122.50 mo & 3 utilities: Call Barb. 841-2360 3-18 Executive Director for Associated Students of Kansas, a statewide student body. Responsible for the administration and faculties management, managing the administrative and fiscal affairs of the Kansas State University, and babysitting on the buses before the Kansas students return to. Associated Students of Kansas, 1700 to 1890. Kansas State, 60227. By March 15, 1890. Student to do cleanup and motorcycle delivery. Port or part-time. Call 851-3233 for appointment Horizons Honda and Harley Davidson. 3-7 Anyone who is Irish, who would like to go on the HARDHACKS LUNCH ANNUAL 3T PT PRESENTING AT THE KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! If you've got it, Kanan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or order to the below. Flat Hall. Use the above figure costs. Now you've got it Selling Power! AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Friday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm CLASSIFIED HEADING: RATES: 1 18 words or less time $2.25 4 lines or less time additional words Write ad here: ___ 3 times $2.75 .04 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.7 DATES TO RUN: 5 times $3.25 .06 NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: PHONE: KANSAS CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- 8 Friday, March 7, 1980 University Daily Kansan Woodard's late basket keeps 'Hawks' alive By PAM CLARK Sports Writer DES MOINES, Iowa—No one said it was going to be easy and Central Missouri State made sure it was not. But the KU women's basketball team got its game together in time to squeeze a 72-71 victory over the Jennies last night. The first win in the season ended VL Tournament at Drake University. Lynette Woodard's 8-foot tumoral jump shot in heavy traffic with seven seconds remaining gave KU the come-from-behind victory. THE JAYHAWKS, who had lost their last three games, now advance to the semifinals tonight at 6:00 against Nebraska. The team will be by Missouri 74-13 in overtime yesterday. Although Woodard was the heroine in the closing seconds, KU never could have raised its record to 26? if not for Sheila Legrant. Legrant, a 5-10 winner, was the key to KU's second-half comeback. He hit it of her game-high 25 points in the 10 minutes. KU lost to Iowa, then lead since the open minutes of the game. Legrant also pulled down 19 rebounds to NCAA results Thursday's College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press NCAA Tournament First Round Tennessee 80, Furman 69 Purdue 80, LaSalle 69 Missouri 75, Kansas 55 Kansas St. 71, Arkansas 53 Missouri 61, San Jose St. 62 National Invitation Tournament First Round First Round Boston College 8, Boston State 74 Duquesne 65, Pittsburgh 83 Michigan 76, Nebraska 69 Mississippi 76, Grambling 74 SW Louisiana 74, Alabama-Birmingham Texas-EP Paso 50, Wichita St 56 Texas-El Paso 58, Wichita St. 56 help the "Hawks to a 55-31 advantage on the boards. AFTER WOODARD and Legrant put KU up 7-2 in the opening minutes of the game. Central Missouri State, behind the scoring of Kathy Anderson and Karla Redo, came back to take a 10-7 lead. KU nevered again until Legrant's lay-in. Central Mount Shore at a 13-point lap from the ground jumpers by Cheryl Burnett and one by Chris Stewart as the clock run down brought KU over. The Kansas comeback was aided by the foul trouble of CMSU's 6-1 center Margie Nielsen. She had been averaging 20 points a game, but last night she was on the bench for all nine minutes. She finished with 40 points before folloout out with about 10 minutes left. BUT AS LONG as Anderson was still in the game, the Jennies were tough. The 5-9 senior, who is the sister of former Missouri men's basketball star Kim Anderson, had 17 points. KU began its rally with CMSI ahead 53-42 and about 16 minutes left. Woodward and Legrant led a KU rampage in the next six hours, saving the 'Hawks outscore the Horses' 14-12. Two free throws by Legrant with 2:14 left gave KU 76-09 advantage. But Redo hit a 17-footer at the 1:57 mark to put the Jennies back up by one. KU got the ball back with the score at 71-17. KU coach Marian Washington called a timeout when 22 seconds left on the game clock and 17 on the shot clock. EVERYONE KNEW WHO KU would go to | | PG | FT | REB | PP | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Barnett | 10 | 8 | 2 | 7 | 5 | | Mason | 3.0 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 2 | | Legrand | 9.5 | 11 | 19 | 3 | 25 | | Scott | 3.6 | 11 | 19 | 3 | 25 | | Stewart | 3.6 | 14 | 19 | 3 | 25 | | Stewart | 1.4 | 14 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Stewart | 1.4 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Dubois | 9.4 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | | 9.4-14 | 12-14 | 0 | 21 | 72 | | | FG | FT | REB | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Clark | 16 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 1 | | Norland | 26 | 3.3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | | Anderson | 21 | 3.4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | | Anderson | 21 | 3.4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | | Janus | 31.1 | 0.5 | 3 | 1 | 10 | | Janus | 31.1 | 0.5 | 3 | 1 | 10 | | Pauls | 1.2 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Pauls | 1.2 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Johnson | 2.4 | 3.4 | 0 | 3 | 1 | | Johnson | 2.4 | 3.4 | 0 | 3 | 1 | | Brannettm | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Brannettm | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | M.A.N.A. | 27.43 | 17.23 | 2 | 38 | 12 | M.A.N.A. | FG | FT | REB | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | M.A.N.A. | 27.43 | 17.23 | 2 | 38 | 12 | KANSAS CENTRAL MISSOURI STATE MOTOBECANE FRANCE 842-3131 Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts Presenting for its last shot. But it didn't matter. Woodard sank the short jumper with three players around her. Sandra L'Ecuyer Corn's Studio of Beauty Sandra Specializes in Haircuts for both Men & Women Specials cut, shampoo, blow dry Reg. $15xx NOW $9xx}$ We carry ⬅REDKEN' hair and skin products manicure Reg. $5^0$ NOW $3^0$ "I knew Mason was going to pass me the ball," Woodward said. "After I got the pass, I turned around. Then they didn't bump me. They hurried up and came. When they dripped thumpers, I fell like a rock." Call Sandra for an appointment 843-4666 "When it went in, all I could say was thank God. OLD GARPENTER HABB 9th & Vermont Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri, Sat 8-5 All Our Meats are Slow Roasted with a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbecue Flavor SMOKEHOUSE Pork Spare Rib Special Enjoy Coke "We stack together. I thought this was a test for us. We had to stick together to come back and we did." HALF SLAB BIG END $3.75 HALF SLAB SMALL END $4.75 Massachusetts OFFER GOOD March 5-9 Gulf Oil Corporation, a major energy company, has job openings for all types of graduating engineers who are interested in building a career in crude oil and gas producing operations. WED THURS FRI SAT SUN Duties include drilling, equipment installation and maintenance, subsurface reservoir studies, economic evaluation of producing properties, well conditioning, and enhanced oil recovery operations. ENGINEERS Individual development courses will be provided, including outstanding oil and drilling instruction. Positions are located in Gulf Coast, Mid-Continent, Midwest, and West Coast areas. Excellent employee benefits. Applicant must be U.S. citizen or hold a permanent resident visa. Gulf Please send resume and transcript to: TRAILRIDGE J. R. Ligon, Jr. QUICK Oil DILLOSPLATON COMPANY Sec. E. P.O. Drawer 2100 Houston, TX 77001 - townhouses An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F - studios - apartments 843-7333 2500 W.6th 'BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE WEEK' Director France Bruno reveals himself as the new giant of Italian filmmaking. Manifesto in Berlin. "ONE OF THE BEST FOREIGN FILMS OF THE YEAR! A lovely blend of comedy and pathos." _ARCIV_ "TOWERING ABOVE ALL IS LATE. THE GREAT EARLY FILMS OF DE SICA AND ROSSELLINI IND. MAND. Manfred is un- formable!" "I JUST LOVED THIS MOVIE! Mantlef is perfect as he walks the tightrope of tragedy in this movie. It shows the gentile tramp." *Louis Folembo* ★★★ The movie glows with intelligence. Hilarious, engaging and bitterwet!" - Matthew Cannon, Daily News "A WONDERFUL FILM." -- Pixar Record Doors open at 8.00 -- show at 9.00 BREAD AND CHOCOLATE BREAD and CHOCOLATE You'll Laugh That Your Heart Breaks You'll Laugh Till Your Heart Breaks Hillcrest Where else but the ... lawrence Opera house Call for concert info: 842 6930 9th & Iowa 842-8400 Evenings 7:20 and 9:35 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:15 you? March 26th Tickets available at Kief, Better Days, the 7th Club. Tonight and Saturday Unless otherwise noted: all films will be shown at Woodfair Auditorium in the Kansas Union; MF films are $1.00, 1.50 and $1.50 start at 3:30; 7:00 and 8:30; and midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday; tickets available at http://www.sifh.org/5th-Leve information-8644-8371. No smoking or refreshments allowed. IGGY POP PAT METHENY next Thursday AND Buy your advance tickets now for Come down early for $1.25 pitchers and $1.00 hibbits from 8-9. Dir. Aira Kurosawa, with Toshiro Milane as an industrialist who must pay the ransom for a kidnapping, but an Japanese film now in Japan subtitles. Dance ★★★ Dance ★★★ Dance PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND Admission only $3.00; $2.50 for club members VISA master card MasterCard VISA Valvespout Rubber cement thinner dispersers $6.99 The hotspot in town for Music starts around 9 BUT sua films open 9:5:30 Mon.-Sat. New Additions FRI./SAT MIDNITE 山路通未来 Wednesday, March 19 Kurosawa: HIGH AND LOW R Varsity Downtown 843-1065 pen&,inc. art supplies 613 vermont 841-1777 (1962) Diren. Nicholas莉, with Sterling Hayden, Joan Crawford, Mercedes McCambire. One of the most popular singers wandering singer-guitarler his former lover in an isolated saloon. *Gwen Roan* Friday, March 7 THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL TOUREE OF ANIMATION (1954) Monday, March 17 NOTORIOUS THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW a different set of jaws. Plus: "Homebody," a short film by KU alumnus Steve Johnson "NO SATURDAY SHOW Our annual showing of the Touisee is a series of 18 animated films which explore the techniques and artistry in animation from around the world by Filmmaker Michael Walters. Dir. Alfred Hitchock, with Cary Alonso, stars in *One of Hitchock's most romantic notorious films, NOTORIOUS has a US agent forcing a woman to spy on a German spy* (1946) (1980) Tuesday, March 18 JOHNNY GUITAR sua films Special Presentation HOMEBODY A new short film directed by KU alumnus Steve Johnson and starring KU alumni Roger Nolan and Duane Ladage. Original music by Mark Hart, former pianist for Justice. "Homebody" was the only student film from USC to be accepted for showing at FILMEX, a prestigious film festival held annually in Los Angeles. We will show "Homebody" before the following regularly scheduled SUA Films: Friday, March 7—14th INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION Monday, March 17—NOTORIOUS Wednesday, March 26—Emst Lubitsch Double Feature 891004 Swilling swine Grover, a beer guzzling bag owner by Larry Dohome, doubled another cool one in his pen near Garden City, Grover, a 400-pound boulder, began drinking about 1½ years ago when he guzzled the leftovers from Dohome's wedding party. Dohome said Grover could drink almost five six-parks in 20 minutes. He also said Grover, who is trying to get on television, three times a week, mainly on weekends, and has been drunk a hulk of drinks three times a week, mainly on weekends, and has been drunk a hulk of drinks not able to stand. But Dohome still says Grover's in his drinking buddy. Surveys encounter variety of problems By CINDI CURRIE By CINBREAKTH Staff Reporter The University Daily Kansas poll on the draft and registration is probably an accurate response to opinions of KU students about the draft, but it is not free from impertinent faces by all polling agencies. Allan Aitken, professor of political science, said recently. The Kansan staff surveyed a scientifically selected sample of students by telephone about the draft, registration and foreign policy. The reliability of polls depends on the number of people sampled and the amount of money and time the person com- mence to spend the will is willing to put into it, Cialier said. He said that in national polls 2,000 people from a selected geographical area of the United States were surveyed and that this had an error margin of two percentage points. The Kansas poll surveyed 270 people and had an error margin of six points. Jackie Nixon, marketing research manager for the Kansas City Star and Times, said the poll taken by the Times had a confidence level of 95 percent and an error margin of five percentage points. This means that there are 95 chances out of 100 that the poll is accurate within a five point range. The Kansan poll had a confidence level of 95 percent. CIGLER, WHO conducts eight to ten polls in an election year, said a survey that was based on the data presented draft and registration was not valid because it was not representative of the students on campus. "The Student Senate survey was not really a random sample," he said. "This (the Kansan survey) would be a better one." Cugler said the results of the Kansan poll could not be applied to other campuses because it was only a response to the draft and registration by KU students. "If the poll had been taken immediately after the Soviet went into Afghanistan, you would have made the decision 'Right now, the danger is less imminent and they need not be respond to patriotism.'" Nixon said that two weeks from now the results might be totally different. See POLL page seven THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, March 17, 1980 Vol. 90, No. 109 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Administration OKs litigation help By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Renorter Student Legal Services stepped closer toward expansion representation after gaining tentative administration agreements. The administration asked for modification of three causes in the Student Institute approved report on court resumes. The modifications would prohibit Legal Services from court representation of criminal misdemeanors, add a user's fee to cover additional service costs and restrict court representation to "those matters that relate to But the key areas of court representation, landlordtenant and consumer cases, met with administrative approval, according to Steve Leben, Legal Services Board chairman. Leben said that in a Legal Services survey, 93 percent of representation in landlord-tender cases. Eighty-six percent supported court representation in consumer cases, but court representation for criminal misdemeanor cases was lower. A criminal misdemeanor case "I'm very pleased with the general thrust of the program," Leben said. "The Board believes that our recommendations are superior, but you need to go forward with what you can." The administration's proposed modifications will be reviewed by the Senate before being sent to Senate. LEBEN SAID he objected to the administration's philosophy, restricting presentation to matters that are not directly related to student life. "Legal Services is treated differently than other University programs," Leben said. "If you come in for health care because of a broken toe they don't ask if you did it in class. "Our proposal is middle-ground. I'm disappointed the administration would choose to step in and put more The Legal Services Board had voted to prohibit suits against the University and suits involving one student against another student, and reserved the right for Legal Services to refuse cases. LEGAL SERVICES had reported that four of five KU peers institutions currently provide court representation Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, said Legal Services needed to more slowly and build experience. Earlier administration approval of Legal Services had hung on an agreement that program expansion would not be considered until after a year. Legal Services opened last week and only one full semester was completed before evaluation. Shankel said the administration opposed court representation of criminal misdemeanors because it affected a small number of students and was not specifically a student concern. GREG SCHNACKE, student body president, said the GREG SCHNACKE program was establishing credibility with the administration. "It is good that everyone is taking Legal Services as seriously as they are," Schnacke said. "By no means have we lost anything. We've gained. It is a step in the right direction." The Legal Services Board predicted that court representation would have a "minimal impact" on its budget. The only additional costs anticipated were paperwork costs for court documents. STEVE RUDICK, Legal Services attorney, said he didn't expect to be overloaded by expansion into litigation. The program was budgeted for four law student interns, but only three were hired. He believed that the potential for court Ruddick said he expected that the potential for court action would "settle a lot of issues" outside the courtroom. "This is a very conscientious and responsible act by the administration," Rudick said. "Offering court representation will alleviate a lot of legal problems for students so they can get back to schoolwork. Students say 'aye' to registration "Students won't have to go out on the streets and find somebody to represent them." By MARK SPENCER UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN DRAFT POLL Staff Writer Most KU students are ready to line up at the local post office to register for the draft, but they are opposed to taking the big leap. Students surveyed by University Daily Kansan poll. Of the students surveyed by telephone before registration of men and $3 percent owned it. Opinion on registration of women was more evenly divided. Forty-eight percent favored it and 52 percent opposed it. 1 Would you favor, probably favor, oppose, or probably oppose the registration of all young men? 2 Would you favor, probably favor, oppose, or probably oppose the registration of all vount women? 3 Do you think we should return to the military draft at this time, or not? Favor President Carter has asked Congress to appropriate funds for registering all 19- and 20-year-olds. According to most national surveys, the average broad support among all age groups. Probably favor Oppose Favor 4 If there is a draft, should young women be required to participate as well as young men, or not? [21] The difference between male and female opinions on registration and the draft was statistically insignificant except on the Should Probably favor In a survey done by George Gallop's organization in late 2014, a percent of men under-34 age group favored registration for men while 20 percent opposed it. The others were uninterested. 21 14 Probably oppose 10 Oppose Prebably should 34 Probably oppose Once again, registration for women received less support, with 51 percent in favor and 44 percent opposed. The margin of error for the Gallup poll is five percentage points. Should not Should Seventy-two percent of those polled oppose reinstated the draft and 28 percent said they favored it. Furthermore, 67 women were drafted; women should be drafted to. Probably should 18 Probably should not 44 23 Should not Apparently, KU students would like to see the situation stay that way. 18 15 The University Daily Kanan poll surveyed 270 random selected students by telephone Feb. 23, 26. The荷 has a con- dition of 15 percent. The registration proposal also has triggered debate on whether the draft should be reinstated—an idea that enjoy college学费. American registration enrollment college-Americas. Probably should not NO ONE has been drafted since Dec. 31, 1972. The Selective Service System has been in storage since Jan. 27, 1976, when former President Gerald Ford was 18-year-old men to register with draft booths. min 8 percent, which means 95 chances out of 100 are conducted by Reporting ID students. question of whether women should be included in the draft. On that issue, 71 percent of the women polled favored it while 61 percent of the men favored it. Although more students favored women's being drafted than favored women's being required to register, the difference could be traced to the way the questions were asked. STUDENTS WERE asked two questions—whether they were favored registration of women or registered registration of men. Therefore, blank opposition to the question was well as to the question, was it women? On the draft, however, students were asked, "If there is a draft, should young women be required to participate as well as young men?" National polls indicate that the 18- to 24-year-old group is the only age group that participated in late January found that people older than 25 had the draft 66 percent to 25 percent, with 9 percent undecided. The margin of error of 3 percentage points. Although most students favored women's being drafted, the majority did not want them sent to the front lines. WHEN ASKED to decide whether women should be required to take combat roles, be trained in self-defense, or be exempted from them, most said only women who volunteered should be given combat roles. For the other option, 14 percent said women should be required to take combat roles and 24 percent should be exempted. Because this survey was done three weeks ago, intervening events have undoubtedly influenced opinion on registration and the draft. THE FACTS that the Russians are still in Afghanistan and the hostages still in Iran could have changed opinions. Even concern about the economy could effect opinions. The results of the Kansan poll indicate that, at the time of the interviewing, opposition to registration and the draft was more solid than support. Students were given four answer options to most questions—they could favor it. probably favor it, oppose it or probably oppose it. The options were designed to test how users responded to the statistics cited earlier collapsed the favor and probably favor answers into one category, and probably and opportunity answers into other categories. MOST SUPPORT for registration for the swans, who swerved, while most opposed came from those who said they were opposed, rather than those who said they were probably against them. Students also said that if Congress approved funding for registration, the next step would be to reinstate the draft. Sixty-十八 percent said they thought the draft would be or probably would be the next step. Congress said it would not or probably not. Given the opposition to the draft, students have evidently decided not to nip the movement in the bud, seeing registration as being important in itself. See DRAFT page seven KU may file suit against publisher By STEVE YOUNG Staff Reporter "Jayhawk's: Inside Kansas Athletics," a glossy KU sports magazine which folded after two of 20 planned issues, may be gone, but it hasn't been forgotten. The KU athlete department is planning legal action to recover almost $7,000 in expenses from the publisher. Don Baker, KU sports information director, said yesterday that a team from the Bronx was on the way to Kansas City, MN, where he resigned on a pledge it made to reimburse the team. "We are prepared to take legal action if necessary." Baker said. "The likelihood of filing a suit against LeDu is a strong one." LeDuc Enterprises announced March 3 that it was "suspended publication" of about half of the individual sports magazines it has published. KU was among the schools dropped, according to Jim Sheldon, editor of the KU edition and former assistant sports information AND THOUGH the company has told the department that it would reimburse both the department and individual subscribers, Baker said, the legal action is being considered to ensure that the department will be reimbursed. Although about 1,750 $25 subscriptions were sold, the break even point at KT was 3,500. Shandon said One of the magazine's best customers was the athletic department itself, which spent $700 on subscriptions. The department also spent more than $6,000 in handling expenses which were to be reimbursed by LeDuc. Baker said. "It's just that they own a great deal of money and Mike Davis (University general counsel) thought it would be in the University's budget." Davis said yesterday that a suit was "under consideration," but refused further comment. Baker said that LeLuC pledged to reimburse subscribers in full for all magazines not delivered when it informed the athletic department. LOVENKIS UNSHE KANSAS ATHLETICS SET BACK AND ENJOY THE WIZARDS OF WICHTA For KU trivia buffs, a copy of this publication could be a valuable item in the future. That's because "Jayhawks: Inside Kansas Athletics" has folded. The magazine, published by LeDuce Enterprises of Kansas City, Mo. dropped the Jayhawks January after publishing two of 20 planned issues. The KU buildup required legal action to recover almost $7,000 in lost expenses. Collector's item Kassebaum used to Senate role By SCOTT C. FAUST Staff Reporter WASHINGTON—Little more than a year ago, she was a Wichita radio executive and a name on a bumper sticker. There to stay for at least five more years, her life has become filled with issues and decisions, ranging from budget balancing to registration for the draft. Now, Nancy Landon Kassebaum is the only woman in the nation's most exclusive men's club—the U.S. Senate. Seated in the understated elegance of her Senate office, the 1964 KU graduate said last week that she had settled into the routine, or the work that, with goes being a Republican senate. "It's been a big help have been on Sen. Pearson's staff," Kaebsaum said. "I was able to get a feel then for the nirty gritty, day-to-day frustration of the job." That frustration, she said, is a result of the long legislative process, and weeks like the last one in which the full Senate voted on nothing. Being the Senate's only woman member has meant a "meriod of festine." she said. "I'm sure that when he hears a female voice on the Senate floor," K萨基胺 said, "Sen. (Robert) Byrd (majority leader) who worries in the world is speaking." "I've found that everyone has been very considerate. I'm going to be judged on how we'll do my job." KASEAUME IS A member of the banking Committee, the Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, the Commerce, Science and Technology Committee, and the special Committee on Asking. Among bills she has sponsored are a successful bill to provide government services much of Kansas and will change in May, and a bill yet to receive consideration to limit Senate and treaty to 12 years. She also was an active supporter of a recently passed truck deregulation bill. "I have tried to not just introduce a lot of bills that had no particular hope of going anywhere," she said. If the bill and the subsequent program are successful, foster home care could become part of state care for the elderly. KASSEBAUM SAID she would introduce a bill this week to establish a federally funded test program for foster homes for low-income children, only limited care, but have parents to live. "I feel very strongly that we have to be thinking ahead to programs for the elderly," Kass猴au said, "because in there will be a major demographical shift." "It's important to show we can work in that direction and have the discipline to bring the budget under control," she said. She said pressure from special interest She said she supported President Carter's plan to balance the fiscal 1981 federal budget. But balancing the budget is not a panna-ca for inflation, Kassebaum said, because a decline in national savings and production are underlying causes. Besides legislation with long-range effects, such as the aging bill, Kassabum is also concerned with legislation which will affect the nation immediately. groups would make it difficult for Senators to make budget cuts. "All of us are just as guilty as the administration in not willing to be tough on it," Kassebaum said. ONE OF Carter's proposed budget cuts is a $1.7 billion reduction in federal revenue sharing to states. Kassabum said there was room for a cut in this area because many programs funded by revenue-sharing were automatically given annual budget increases. She said she disagreed with Carter's insistence on the defense budget remaining unscratched. The choice of guns or butter is an age old question, Kassebaum said. "I think you can make some cuts in the defense budget." For example, she said, between $700 million and $800 million could be saved by making the MX mobile missile system sea-based rather than land-based. Kassbaum also proposed cuts in executive and legislative branch budgets, where she said administrative spending had mushroomed. "I think it's a mistake to increase revenues to balance the budget," Kassebau said. "We need to tough up a far more cohesive budget framework." "All of us are promising a balanced budget, but we can't rob Peter to pay Paul." A PROBABLE new source of revenue for the government is the tax on windfall profits oil companies earn from deregulated oil prices. Kassebaum said the legislation for the tax See KASSEBAUM page seven --- 2 Monday, March 17, 1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Campaigns in Illinois intensified CHICAGO--With Gerald R. Ford out of the picture, Ronald Reagan and George Bush intensified their fight against blunt John B. Anderson's efforts to drive the illinois primary *assured by fresh trumpets in Democratic caucuses in South Carolina, Mississippi and Wyoming, President Carter was headed for his crucial test in Illinois.* Carter won Puerto Rico's Democratic primary by more than 10 percent over Sen. Edward Kennedy, but was only one delegate ahead in a race. Bush won Puerto Rico's winner-take-all GOP primary last month. Kennedy backers accused President Carter's campaign of fraud in the primary. The Kennedy camp said ballot boxes were left unlocked and the voting machines were broken. Premier Prime Minister, then president, primed a presidential nominee. He raised the tight race with its 102 GOP National Convention delegates, suggested yesterday that Anderson might Reagan, referred to the Illinois congressman's "inability to support Republican candidates, his inability to go along with the philosophy" of the Miller praises economic policy WASHINGTON—Treasury Secretary G. William Miller said yesterday President Carrie Johnson "will provide medicine" and predicted it will raise the inflation rate to 1 percent by year 8. "The first priority is to turn around this inflation psychology." Miller told interviewers on CBS's "Face the Nation." Last year's inflation rate was 13 per cent, which was the highest since 1992. The annual rate of increase has slowed in recent years, budget and tightening credit control policies. The president also has imposed an impact on the economy, according to a report. Two members of the Senate Budget Committee, who appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press," echoed Miller's assessment that balancing the budget was the first step toward stemming inflation. They expressed optimism that Congress will go along with Carter's plans to scale down federal spending. Miller said that despite soaring inflation an unexpected "consumer psychology" prevailed. "Behaviors began to change," he said. "Spending was being elected rather than saving; buy paw, rather than wait for another time." or saving; buy now, rather than wait for another time. Consumers persist in borrowing to buy and decrease savings, he said. Fuaitive tied to campaign raid The FBI said yesterday that one of the terrorists who ransacked Carter's headquarters in Chicago has been identified as a fugitive wanted in in simultaneous raids Saturday morning, small bands of masked invaders raided the Carter office in Chicago and the Manhattan headquarters of Mr. Trump's campaign. In both places, they tied up the campaign workers, searched the files, and spray-painted the walls with Puerto Rican nationalist slogans and the initials of their names. Campaign workers in both camps Sunday said operations were back to normal except for the rafters on the walls. An FBI spokesman said a campaign worker identified one of the invaders as Oscar Lover, a federal fugitive being sought on conspiracy charges in connection with the plot. Chicago FBI chief James Ingram said the attacks in both cities were carried out by at least four men and one or two women. The FALN has claimed credit for 100 bombings in the past six years in major U.S. cities, including New York, Washington, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Chicago. The group operates on the U.S. mainland but is linked to at least one coordinated bomb attack in Puerto Rico last October. The initials FALN stand for Fuerras Armadad de Liberation Nacional, the Armed Forces of National Liberation, a group authorities describe as a handful of people, who want independence for Puerto Rico, which now has commonwealth status with the United States. Militants vow to obey leaders The Moslem militants mottled the U. Embassy said yesterday they would obey the orders of Iran's new parliament, whose makeup was disputed by President Abbashah Bani-Sadr. Bani-Sadr last week's elections would be poulled if young firing allegations prove true. With half the returns from Fridays' polling counted, the fundamentalist Islamic Republican Party appeared headed for control of the 20-seat Majlis, or But defeated leftist and independent candidates protested alleged election law violations by the party, which is dominated by Moslem clergymen and is run by a far-right group. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini has ruled that Iran's new parliament will decide what happens to the hostages after it converts in mid-May. A second vote is expected. Sad-Stir, who said Friday that he had personally met instances of fraud while touring polling booths in Tehran, ordered an investigation of the voting. "Obviously, wherever there was extensive fraud, the elections shall be annulled, as no one can defend improper elections. However, I do not believe such fraudulent acts apply to all regions." Bani-Sadr was quoted by Tehran Radio as saying. Engine part lost before crash WAHSAW, Poland—The Polish jetliner that crashed killing all 87 persons aboard lost part of one huge turbofan engine minutes before it slammed through an earthen wall into a 40-foot deep mast, airport sources said yesterday. Capt. Paul Lipowczan, said to be one of the Polish national LOT Airline's most experienced pilots, had just enough time before Friday's crash to alert Warsaw air controllers and instruct the four stewardesses on board to dress themselves in fireproof overalls, the sources said. Virden identified one of the dual nationals as Christina Wisniska of Linden, N.J. Officers in Linden said Mrs. Wisniska's husband died shortly after receiving a telegram notifying him of her death. They said the 61-year-old Wisniska apparently suffered a heart attack. U. E. Ambassadeur spokeman Richard A. Wriden 29 Americans died in the crush, including 22 members of the U. S. anatomist box team. In addition, two Shah too weak for operation PANAMA CITY, Panama—the former sham of Iran returned to his island home yesterday after doctor said he was too weak for surgery. Famed Houston heart specialist Michael DeBakey, who toppled for Panamanian doctors for examination, helped the hospital recover. The shah was to have his enlarged spleen removed, but a team of American doctors said the 60-year-old monarch should return to Concordia island and be returned to England. Mark Morse, a spokesman for the shah, said the former ruler had suffered a swollen spleen "over the years." The shab underwent a series of medical tests over the weekend. The hospital received reports from residents and staff describing how decided to postpone the surgery after reviewing and analyzing the results-including the outcome of the scans and the results of the tests. "It goes up and it goes down," he said. "Right now it's not as bad as it had been, but it still swollen." Weather ... Skies will be sunny today with the high in the mid 40s and northwest winds gusting from 15 to 20 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Colorado. Tonight will be mostly clear with the low in the mid 20s. Tight will be mostly clear with the low in the upper 50s. Tomorrow will also be sunny with the high in the upper 50s. Paraphernalia ordinance studied Staff Reporter Do the visibility and availability of drug paraphernalia in Lawrence encourage the use of drugs by children and teens? Commissioner Ed Carter thinks so, and he is encouraging them to consider an ordinance that would prohibit the sale of paraphernalia to minors. By LYNN ANDERSON If the bill passes, it could face challenges to its constitutionality. Such challenges have besieged similar bills in recent months in Kansas and other states. An Overland Park ordinance that the school is modeled after was enacted just August 14, 2013. It was uplifted in Johnson County District Court of Arkansas; it is now in the Kansas Court of Justice. "At least such a law would show that it's not an acceptable thing, and sometimes I think that's important," Carter said last week. Whether he submits a local ordinance depends on the fate of a bill in the Kansas Senate that would outlaw the sale of drug-related items—such as roach clips, water pipes, and cocaine spoons—in stores within stores in stores that allow minors. The bill, sponsored by State Rep. W Edgar Moore, R-OLathe, passed the House 121-2 and is now in the Senate Judiciary Committee. Moore said that he had heard of no opposition to the bill and that he expected the legislature in two or three weeks. NEIL SHORTLIDGE, Overland Park assistant city attorney, said he expected the appeals court to uphold the ordinance, even though a similar Texas ordinance and a similar Texas ordinances had been struck down. Shortlidge said cities, towns and counties all over the country had requested copies of the Overland Park ordinance to try it on their own. He said Oathe and Lenexa had recently passed ordinances and that Kansas City, Mo. was considering one. "I assume the rationale is to find some way to discourage drug use by school children," he said. The most vocal supporters of the Overland Park ordinance, Shortridge said, are teachers in school districts, school districts, parents of school children, mental health experts, and city and county officials. OPPOSITION, he said, came only from three local head shops that sell drug parapheraemia—and from the National legislation for the Repeal of Marijuana Legislation. "They claimed it was unconstitutional, that items can have legitimate and illegitimate uses." he said. Shorttitle said he expected the Legislature to pass the bill. "If the vote of the House is any indication," he said, "I assume it will pass with flaving colors." He said he expected a number of cities to pass identical local ordnances to ease enforcement through municipal courts. With just a state law, he said, a violation in Carter said it was a possibility that Lawrence might get its own ordinance. Lawrence would have to be prosecuted in district court. "If it takes a local ordinance to get the local control we want, we'll try for one," he said. CARTER SAID that at last week's city commission meeting the commissioners authorized the city staff to lobby in support of the state bill. But Carter said he was realistic about the limitations of such an ordinance in soulechine drug use among minors. "I'm fully aware that if they're determined enough, they can get it," he said. "But I'm looking for those who wouldn't do it unless it was readily accessible. "You're not going to eliminate drug abuse. But if you stop 5, 10, 15 percent of use, or if you keep some children from startling, you're helping." Representatives of Headquarters, a local drug rehabilitation and crisis center, say they feel even less optimistic about the effectiveness of an ordinance. Doug Ramsey of Headquarters said he was sure they wanted drug paraphernalia he would它eit. "If they're 15 or 16 or 17, they'll know Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints someone 18 or 19 or 20 who can get it," he said. RAMSAY SAID it was hard to predict the value of paraphernalia laws because no studies had been done to gauge their effectiveness. He 'said the most important drug deterent was education that "kids know what a drug will do, how it will affect them." "Then the person can make up his mind from good information," he said. TRAILRIDGE Lawrence city attorney Celt Knoxson said he had not yet been asked to look into a paraphernalia ordinance. But assistant city manager James Evans told we were studying the Overland Park model. - studios Wilden said he would not be surprised if Lawrence enforced an ordinance to complement the law state. He explained that the city had "home rule" powers, by which it legislation patterned after a state law to strengthen it for local enforcement. - apartments - townhouses WE NEED YOU!!!! 843-7333 2500 W. 6th Student Senate is looking for INTERESTED STUDENTS to serve on the following STANDING COMMITTEES: - Academic Affairs - Communications - Finance and Auditing Culture Sports Student Rights Student Services Apply in Person at the STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, B 105, KANSAS UNION GRADUATING ENGINEERS: Sign up now for a look at one of the year's best job offers We offer civilian career opportunities that stress immediate "hands-on" responsibility—your chance for recognition, reward and professional growth. Mare Island is an engineer's kind of world. We're the third largest active naval shipyard in the U.S. and the West Coast's oldest and best known And, we're located in one of the world's best places to live and work—the heart of Northern California! San Francisco is just a bay away... the famous wine country is right next door... and sailing or skiing are as close as you can get. We provide information, contact your placement office and sign up for now on an interview. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MARCH 19th MARE ISLAND NAVAL SHIPYARD Vallejo, California An Equal Opportunity Emptoye. U. S. Citizenship Required VALLEJO BERKELEY SAN FRANCISCO 1 Monday, March 17, 1980 3 American-mined jewels highlight Spencer display By KEVIN MILLS Staff Reporter Thirty-one American-minded jewels compose a native treasure chest called the *Woolly Museum*, which is displayed through March in the North Balcony of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Jewelry. The American Gem Society, a non-profit professional organization of jewelers and educators, conceived the collection as a tool to educate the public about American gems. The gems are set in jewelry designed by Aldo Cipollino, a fashion consultant to the Society. Copilomo formerly was employed by both Tiffany and Carter designer designer. America is not a major gem-producing country, but it is the major source for turquoise, sahara and tourmaline. A 216 carat Arizona turquoise made the bread of an earl necked earpiece with Cipula for the collection. The eagle's eye is an .82 carat Montana sapphire. Most of the American turquoise is mined in the Southwest, where it is frequently used in silver jewelry fashioned by Indians. THE SAPPHIRE mine in Yogo Gulch, Mont., is the largest saphnite deposit in the world, stretching for more than five miles. It was discovered by gold miners in the 1890s, who at first mistook the gem crystals for broken bits of glass. America's third major gemstone, the tourmaline, is found primarily in California. It is rich in iron and is often found in bi-colored crystals. The watermelon tourmaline, for instance, has a greenish hue. ARKANAS HAS YIELDED most of this city since the last mining minas has ceased there. The Crater of Diamonds" in *Murfreesboro* is now a state park, and the public can browse and look for them. A flawless, colorless 2.31 carat diamond from the collection for an 18 karat gold for the set collect in a case was cut from a piece of rough stone that had been sitting in the Smithsonian Institution. The collection also includes rubles from the Carolina, Wisconsin, and U.S. owner-known semi-precious stones such as California benite, North Carolina kunzite and Connecticut After the collection tours the country it will be housed permanently at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. Lawrence fire officials investigated the Carpenter Hall Smoke House 19 Mar St. Saturday afternoon in an attempt to determine the cause of a blaze that destroyed a building. Downtown blaze being investigated University Daily Kansan The fire caused an estimated $100,000 to the restaurant, which is owned by Lawrence City Commissioner Bob Schumm. Fire Chief Jim McWain said the cause of the blaze was still undetermined. The fire began about 12:30 a.m. Friday and took firemen about five hours to contain. The firefighters received the building's roof collapsed as part of the building's roof collapsed. Two adjoining buildings housing a dress shop and a photographic studio were damaged by fire, smoke and water. The damage was covered by the restaurant, were also damaged. The kitchen area of the restaurant received the most damage, fire officials said. The fire collapsed during the fire. Water and smoke damage was heavy throughout the building. Schumm said he planned to re-open the restaurant as soon as possible. He anticipated about a month's delay. Sen. Bob Dole says there are "five M's" important to politics: money, management, manpower, momentum and the media. By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter But the last four, he now admits, are impossible without the first one. Lack of money ends Dole's bid Dole found out the hard way over the last 11 months as his quest for the Republican presidential nomination fell flat on its face. "I sort of felt like Chrysler," Dole said here Saturday, officially announcing that he was withdrawing from the GOP race. "I felt you were the product, but we also had a cash flow problem." "Money was the big problem. You just can't stay in the race with a million dollars when everyone else has nine, 10 or 11 million." No doubt most of the crowd woke up early to hear Dole, though. Reservations poured in when it was announced Thursday that he would be the keynote speaker. About 300 persons packed into a Holiday building at a m. saturday to oat scrambled eggs, hats, and grits at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce second "Eggs and Issues" THERE WAS no mystery surrounding the announcement, however. It was all but a formality after disastrous showings in the first five presidential primaries. Dole, Gerald Ford's running mate in the 1976 presidential race, never received more than 1.5 percent of the vote and won no delegates. "It has been clear for quite some time that I did not have the time, money, management or organization to remain a viable candidate," he said. "It was a long Dole also said that his involvement with KANSAN Analysis the $4 \frac{1}{2}$ month debate on the controversial windfall oil profits tax seriously damaged his chances for the nomination. "The basic irony is a bit painful," he admitted, "What I considered to be my greatest asset—a record of experience and experience—actually turned into my great liability." "I only had time to campaign on weekends and during Congressional recesses. I became a weekend warrior. But it wasn't what I was productive. Nobody were around." DOLE WAS in especially good spirits at the early morning affair, unlike his last appearance in Kansas. During an appearance at Kansas Day festivities in January, he treated the press coldly and refused to discuss his presidential plans. Dole, 56, had been expected to announce at that time whether he was going to continue his foundering bid for the presidency by getting the receiving-elected to a third Senate term. Instead, he told the overflow audience that he needed more time to make a decision. "I have nothing more to say," he said when approached afterward. But Saturday, the Senator was cracking jokes about everything from KU sports to Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Ted Cruz. He said he would be candidly indicted who have called it moot recently. Dole drew laughter when he jokingly explained the reason he had chosen Lawrence for his announcement. "We're used to losers" he said. The three-day visit was clearly the unofficial beginning of his Senate re-election campaign. His most likely opponent is former state Sen. John Simpson of Salina the only declared candidate for the Democratic Senate nomination. KING KING SWEEPSTAKES RULES SONY LAS VEGAS SWEEPSTAKES 1. All Sweepstakes entrants must be at least 18 years old. 2. The Sweepstakes may be held in any time of the year. 3. Customer will receive one playing card from any of all Sweepstakes prizes. 4. All Sweepstakes prize will be displayed on a table or at an event where the prize matches the playing card, the prize matches the player's name, the prize matches the playing card entry, the prize matches the match number, etc. 5. The card must match exactly the color shirt design. 6. 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Bookstores’ DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST Now thru March 28th The winning design will be printed and sold at THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main Store, Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop, Satellite Union 1st Prize—$25 Gift Certificate 2nd Prize—$15 Gift Certificate 3rd Prize—$10 Gift Certificate For details stop by one of the Kansas Union Bookstores We are the Only Bookstores to share profits with KU students. --- --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan writers. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers. March 17, 1980 City travel improves Last week Douglas County and local officials finally did two things to make getting around in Lawrence a little easier for everyone. Thursday morning they opened the new Massachusetts Street Bridge and Friday afternoon they announced plans for a low-fare transportation system in the city. The opening of the bridge was more than eight months late. Construction of the bridge fell six months behind schedule. And, when it was completed, county officials delayed opening the gate for two and a half months because the threat of snow and possible salt damage to the new road surface. Ironically, despite their efforts, the bridge was christened Wednesday night by a soft, wet blanket of snow. A light rain wasted and no salt was needed. What was needed, and provided, however, was a touch of traffic directing to keep meandering motorsist in the right lane and on the right track. Officials showed some foresight in not depending solely upon traffic signs to clear up the questions of confused motorsist. Officials also showed foresight in the plans for a low-fare transportation system in Lawrence. If approved and licensed by the Lawrence City Commission, the plan would be a Jitney—a small vehicle, in this case a van, that transports passengers for a low fare—and would provide low-cost transportation for all Lawrence residents, with special emphasis on serving the elderly and disabled. The door-to-door transportation anywhere in Lawrence for a fixed fee of $1.50. The planners' forestight shines in the provisions of the system. Jitney drivers would be trained in first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The Jitney would be available 24 hours a day to residents 60 years or older and disabled residents. Priority would be given to passengers with medical appointments or emergencies. Also, a wheelchair lift substituted for the wheelchair lift would dispatcher determines that the lift will not be needed or if the van cannot meet the requested time. The same $1.50 charge would apply to the taxi. The plans for the system were announced by Ward Thompson, president of Lawrence's two cab companies, and officials from the Douglas County Planning Council on Services for the Aging and Independence Inc., two local service agencies. The system would be a cooperative effort and would not be subsidized for operating costs, according to those involved. The people of Lawrence are going places, one way or another. But it would be boost to the city if more of them could get where they're going more easily. A night at the movies isn't a real night out Going to the movies used to be a great night out. Not any more. The overall quality of the movies probably hasn't changed much in the last 10 or 15 years. It was as variable then as it is now. You pay your money and take your chance. If the movie is good, you'll get your money's worth. If it's average or bad, you won't. If it's REALLY bad, you might- if you're going to movies with implausible plots and preposterous characters that will make you gace, groom, gasp and gag in sheer excitement. COLUMNIST david mould Although the silver screen has become brassy with erasey and bloody with violence, Hollywood continues to crank out the movies that are part of the movie program that is the letdown. really bad movies. They may serve an emotional need. **THERE WAS A** *s* **short**: Laurel and Martha were short, or perhaps Tarzan was taller. Jane, not necessarily in that order. There is a newness there was a cartoon. There is no newness there was a scratched, noisy commercials inviting you to stop by busy cafes on your way Some of us are old enough to remember the time when a trip to the movies occupied the whole evening. There was the main feature—the one you thought you wanted to be—was a supporting film, or B- feature, which sometimes better met the main feature. Today's moviegover is forced to eat on the way to the theater and on the way home if the whole evening is to be consumed. An you get at the theater is the main course: the trimmings off the menu. IF YOU KAW SKRAM vs. Krammer while it was in town, you may have felt as cheated as I did. The movie itself was well-produced and funny, but not all we saw, save for a couple of commercials the early evening show, there wasn't even a preview. The only way to spend that evening at the movies was to sit through the film on a couch or a chair and watch, or catch the late movie on television. Television is partly to blame. Many movies now go down the tube; that's to say, they are not as good as Hollywood or Oscar-scoring Hollywood director wants to earn a reputation as the maker of superb movies. NEWSREELS WERE another victim of television. After a couple of decades of rigorism—cinemaatically manifested in a hostile press and a daredevils performing animals and other cutesy stuff—the they finally succumbed. The last American newslew left the screens in shock to lose to pictorial journalism, but a sad day for investigators who want their money's worth. But you can't hang it all on TV. The disappearance of B-features, shorts and newsreels has allowed theater managers to schedule two performances an evening, and you don't need an economics degree to understand what that does to the box-office takings. And it's not if they don't have a choice. They can obtain other films. We may not see them, but the movies film, and the newsreel is surely gone. But the books and cartoons are available, and old comedy series still command a loyal follow-up. If they can't handle their objections, why can't we see them downstairs? THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--684-4180 Business Office--684-4358 USS 6456 (44) published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Second-class postage paid at Lawrence. Second-class subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas City and $18 for six months or $29 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester, passed through the student activity fee. Postmaster: send changes of address to the University Daily Kanan, Pint Hall, The University of Kansan. Lawrence, 6K044 Editor James Anthony Fitts Jam Miller Tomas Milner Editorial Editor Brandon Ridley Carya Miller Campaign Editor Associate Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Art Director Director Amy Billswell, Ellen Iwamoto Cindy Keller Skill Photographer Staff Artist Kent Geller Business Manager Vincent Coultis Retail Sales Manager Company Sales Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager Grade Associate Graduate Assistant Representatives Sales Representative Sales Representative Sales Representative Hope House, Hope House, Hope House Advertising Manager Chuck Chowans General Manager Rick Musser I met him in a bar. he wore a trench coat over his turndenck sweater, jeans and green Adidas. He perched at the back of the booth and ordered a Scout and soda. Leprechauns lose their Irish luck I waited for him to speak. He downed his drink and signaled for another. I nervously siped at mine. "For yer own sake, be tellin' the truth. Me men are watchin' ya. A false move, lass, and there'll be leprechans all over you. We need not takin any risks." He ordered us to drink a cocktail, drink and began a second. A server-racking business, this talking to a terrorist—a "Ye're alone, I take it," he said at last. I assured him I was, and he seemed to relax. They had kidnapped New York's Sen. Pat Moynihan and were holding them for murder. Last seen three weeks ago, Moynihan disappeared from a bar called Kelly's. ...and no more cracks about Ed McMahon's drinking. MARTIN by KANKAN B MOYNIHAN WAS still alive, the leprechaun said, and the band of tiny kate COLUMNIST pound terrorists were becoming impatient. There had been no government attempt to negotiate with them. "Yer own senator and a former ambassador at that, and the stinkin' government won't even bother lookin' fer him," thelepracha said. I explained to him that outside of an unusual quietness on Capitol Hill, few officials had even noticed Moynihan's disappearance. "Your timing is lousy," I said. "They're all upset about Iran and Colombia. Moynahan is small potatoes." *Potatoes! Potatoes!* There ye go with Irish jokes! *Potatoes! Small potatoes no longer to be insulted by cheap Mick jokes!* To be insulted, screamed leaping up and down on the booth. "Aye, I'm sorry," he said quickly. "It's just that I'm so tense lately, what with all this kidnapping and terrorist business. Ye'll never know how hard it is on us." Rattled, I slung back my fourth drink. The leprechaun calmed down, reached for his own drink and shook his head. "WILL YOU SHUIT up?" I said. "Want to attract attention? Copy the in country is just looking for suspicious six-inch-high people. You'll get your arrested." "Try me," I said. "But first, why don't you just explain what your grievances are and what you want?" and the you want. "Fair enough," he said, and then ordered two bottles of Scotch. "It'll be less MARTIN for DAILY KANSAN distractin' if we don't have to keep orderin' drinks." He was right. It was less distracting. I sat with him there in the bar and helped him carry his equipment, as he told the tale of the Leprechaun Libration Army, the Wee Power gang. "THINGS WEREEN" so bad back when he joined Patrick's Day Parade in New York. Then he and Irwin and everyone began paradin. All the taverners sold sellin' green beer after the weddings. "Green beer. Disgustin' stuff. Not an Irishman on earth who'd drink that green scum if it were the last drop o' booze on earth. Catholic jokes—they were just too much for us to take. Seems being' short and Irish is funny to some. "We could live with that, but the jokes—short jokes, Irish jokes, potato jokes, "Well, I tell ye, we are tired of it. And on that day we'll get in to gold. With prices掉 off all a few times, we just can't get the stuff. We six weeks behind in矿 of gold and the spring rain is coming." "SO WE TOOK Moyman. He's a leading IrishAmerican, a senator; he ought to be worth something. After all, how can they win? St. Patrick's Day Parade without him?" He took a swig from one of the bottles. I forget whether it was the fourth or fifth one we'd had. Shaking his head sadly, he went on. "All we're asking is some recognition, some respect and dignity. And four million dollars gold bullion. For that we'll return Moynihan." I thought quickly. A tricky situation I—would be a trickier one if my small adversary was more than a bit aggressive. As a matter of fact, he was slowing sliding down the back of the booth, his head nodding. "The respect and dignity I can offer," I said. "But you're welcome to four million Susan B. Anthony dollars and a supply of Irish Spring." "We'll take it," he said groggy, as he slid to the floor. I left the bill for the Scotch resting on his chest and walked with her along. I thought she would work the effort, I had just saved the world from the ravages of a burdle of leprechauns. Thank God for Scotch, I Financial aid standards flunking out COLUMNIST Students who are in need can receive financial aid. But they can continue Because of laugable academic stan- dard, students receive financial aid at the University receiving better offer than students who have their education paid for by scholarships or with receiving that aid even if they are virtually flunking out of their classes. Consider, however, the likelihood of a student's ability to financially support him if he was receiving financial aid, probably is nonexistent. His chances of staying in school would be much better if he were receiving financial aid. But the purity of not to keep poor children enrolled in school. david lewis A student receiving financial aid has nine semesters to accumulate a 2.0 grade point average. A 2.0 is a average-barely; a 2.5 is an average and a participant can hover around a 1.5 GPA in semester and still maintain his eligibility for financial aid. In other words, a student enrolled in 15 hours of classes could earn one D's or one F's and still be above the requirements required to maintain his eligibility. AFTER THEIR fourth semester, students often transfer to other KU schools, such as the School of Education or the School of Journalism. Many of these schools require students to have an accumulative GPA of at least 3.0 for the school. At the same time, the financial needs would require a 1.5 GPA, which is not even close to the schools' minimum standards. Financial aid students not only discourage academic excellence, but also encourage students to earn grades that would be unacceptable to enter some schools. Ironically, financial aid was set up to give needy students a chance to obtain a higher THE LOW STANDARDS, simply do not give you a grade if they do not give you a student any access to standards were higher, a student would have to produce reasonably good grades or a student would not be allowed to access standards were higher. education. In other words, the university would finance a student who needed money for school and who at the same time was academically deserving of the aid. The University Senate executive committee is urging tougher standards for financial aid to be applied. Should be allowed four semesters to earn a 2.0 accumulative GPA instead of eight or fewer, and grades of students who receive financial aid to be monitored every semester, instead of three? Financial aid, as the University now uses it, is a crutch to students. Financial aid may be an opportunity for academic advancement, not for economic exploitation. THIS WOULD FORCE all of the students on financial aid to take their grades seriously. And it's about time, especially because many deserving students cannot receive financial aid. For example, 3,000 applications for financial aid were rejected in 1976. These 3,000 applicants could have needied aid, too. And many of the applicants could have earned excellent grades. It is depressing to see academically talented students unable to take college courses and students earning horrendous grades can then the University for a costly, four-year ride. The University should do itself a favor and unanimously approve, unimpairedly worked by, for the sake of students who really thirst for an education, the results would be Students on financial and should value the money they are receiving from the college. Students in city's investment into decent reportcards. University is doing needy students a favor. University is doing needy students a favor. To the Editor. Our out-of-state friends who never have visited Kansas often dismiss it as a "backward state." "Until I read the March 5 article by Scott Staffa of State Sen. John Benton that raised the registration of women for the draft, I did not justified in defending Kansas' reputation I'm not so sure anymore. I am shocked and appalled that someone with Vermilion's sexist attitude could be elected to serve in the Kansas Legislature. Vermilion said, "It is time in Kansas to speak up and speak out and let the military industrial complex know that we will not kill us and granddaughters to the gods of war." I can only infer from this that it is all right for Kansas to sacrifice their sons and grandssons to "the gods of war." He also says, "Military discipline would be extremely cruel for most your students." You'll probably tell you that you give up your freedom to think for yourself and yourself—your beauty, your vanity and your creativity. As to his so-called concern for the American family and his statement that "young women are needed to bring comfort and stability," what kind of stability exists when the husband and father has to leave and go to war, perhaps never to return? Is that supposed to mean that it is easier men to give up their identities? Having people give up their identities would like to suggest that it is very difficult for any intelligent person to give up the identity. Vermilion says that "Kansas can be a leader." If this resolution is his idea of leadership, I am going to move some place progresse—like Oklahoma. Boca Largo Prairie Village sophomore Senate reorganization needed for fairness To the Editor: In response to the letter by Philip Wilhelm (March 5) I, too, was outraged by the voter turnout of students who live off campus. These students make up a majority of the student body, but this is the authority of Student Senate seats. However, this is not the issue that outraged me the most. I was a candidate for off-campus representative and lost the election by a 4-1 victory. I had money and money to put signs on campus and to place ads in the Kansas. My opponent, however, did no campaigning. She wore sheer stockings she had the backing of the Coalition. Isn't it about time we reduce the Senate to a more reasonable size, thus giving all of the candidates a chance to discuss the issues? David Zimmerman Leawood sophomore KANSAN letters Believe it or not, there are people on this campus who think the Student Senate can be a responsible form. However, this can sometimes be difficult to vote and vote for a responsible Senator. Maybe the off-campus residents were given an opportunity to be acquainted with the issues that affect them, and a fair share of the seats, they would make the effort to vote. To the Editor: Biblical prophecy no ignorant augury As one of the lecturers on Biblical prophecy who was criticized in a letter to the editor, I would like to respond to several questions about sophomoric charges made in that letter. First none of the lecturers for the prophecy series at the New Life Student Fellowship used "fear engendered by an imminent downsoway" to "scare people into action," and then the events are sobering and give cause for re-examining the prevailing philosophy that the world's getting better. But that in is not enough to cause someone to make a decision. That commitment comes through a realization of one's own moral poverty before God and an appreciation and acquisition of the weakness made possible through the crucifixion. Second, the Bible isn't a "Ouija board." References to end time prophecy in the Bible are clear and specific. For instance, the power world that invades Israel close to Egypt is called the Ezekiel to lie geographically to the "renewed Earth" of Israel, and has a name derived from the word "Rosh." Anyone who has a globe can see that only one nation north of Israel—Soviet Russia (Rosh). Also, we lecturers have very clear in point out that no one knows the border. Third, the student who wrote the letter insulted the intelligence of all who came to the lectures when he described how references on a level with those found in the "National Enquirer" when mixed with Bible verses would "invariably convince" As one of the lectures, I held a much higher opinion of the audience's intelligence. I convinced that everyone who came could have gone away with as much in knowledge and scholarship as a reasonable person, and reliability of Biblical prophecy. It obvious that the letter writer didn't even bother to hear the lecture he had so many ready opinions. The most serious error in the letter, though, is the claim that attention paid to a personal commitment to Christ is "marryable" and not "profound unforgiving" of the teachings of Christ that I'm almost at a loss for words with which to respond. Perhaps a statement made as plain as it is straight. He said, "Unless one is born again, he cannot enter the kingdom of God." However wrote the letter may indeed think we should obedience to Christ's own words is "selfish," but his argument isn't with us lecturers. His argument is with Christ Doug Lamborn Lawrence resident Monday, March 17, 1980 5 Mount Oread cyclists place in K.C. race By JUDITH LYNN HOWARD Staff Reporter The Mount Acre Bicycle Club competed in the Kansas City Bike联赛 in Kansas City, Mo. yesterday, netting four of the top 10 riders. Conrad, racing chairman of the club said Conrad said yesterday that the team showed a lot of enthusiasm not all of the 19 club members who started the race finished. The Kansas City Bike Series is an informal racing competition to train for bicycle racing. The race was 26 miles long and speeds varied from 15 to 45 miles an hour, Conrad said. Edwin Mortimer Hopkins, a KU professor, founded the Bicycle Club in the 1890s. The club was open to both boys and girls. The club was named Frances Snow served as the club's resident. THE CLUB Mount Bighorn founded is still active in KU. The Mount Bighorn Bicycle Club has 75 members and organizes events at the grazing the grueling October, tours, and as in close communication with other colleges. Jack Knops, Oread Bicycle Club president, said the club was trying to en courage participation not just by students, but by the entire Lawrence community. Knops said that now most of the club's members were students. One reason for the club's small membership is that cyclists can be discouraged by the advanced members of the club who use tenespeed "and" swift riding, Knaes said. But the club wants to appeal to all cyclists, even those with "rusty three- and five-speeds," he said. "Our racing program is on a real high right now in interest," he said. HE SAID the club held beginner, intermediate and advanced rides on Sundays. Cyclists can ride at comfortable speeds according to their abilities. The club also sponsors tours to places such as the Fint Hills—by car or bike—and takes picnic trips throughout the Lawrence area. Knox said. The club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight at South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St. Knows said Herriam a circle tour, would discuss bicycle vacations. TODAY: THE UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS OFFICE SELECTION offers programs from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. of Booth 1 in the main lobby of the Kansas Union. THE GRADUATE WOMEN'S MARINE CORPS OFFICE offers p.m. in Cork Room 2 of the Kansas Union. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN the Kansas Union. On Campus TONIGHT: THE LAWRENCE CHAPTER OF AMNESY INTERNATIONAL will meet at 8 p.m. in the Council Room of TOMORROW: THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 3 p.m. in the Dandelion Room at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union. TALG SIAM DANCE ENSEMBLE will meet at 5 p.m. in FESTIVAL WESTERN CIVILIZATION PROGRAM will present 'Grandeau and the Three Queens' at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3 of Lippincott Hall. Kahn resigns architecture post Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, announced his resignation last week, effective July 1. Kahn, dean of the school for the last 12 years, said he would stay in the school and teach a graduate design studio and other courses next fall. keep the details private until after today's meeting. An all-school meeting of architecture students will be at 5 p.m. on **in room 1938 Westcourt** Wednesday, February 26th at the residence of Kahn's resignation and the relocation of architecture students during the Marvin "I think what's important now is that we have a strong school. 'Kaaba said.' It's not the same as what they had in some sense of excitement and achievement. We have a young faculty and I think they are very capable." A nationwide search will begin soon for his replacement, but there is no critical time for filling the position, Kahn said. The office of academic affairs will conduct the search. Kahn refused to comment on the reasons for his resignation and said he wanted to University Daily Kansan Dykes asked for report on Forer discipline steps A letter sent by the Faculty Council, executive committee to Chancellor Archil R. Dykes last Monday requesting a detailed report of the events and his decisions before President Ferei's first trip to Iran had not been by Dykes as of yesterday afternoon. Dykes said he did not know whether the letter had arrived at his office because he had been busy with legislative matters. He had told him that until he had a chance to read it, he said. Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and Clarence Dillingham, instructor in social welfare, were placed on the staff during status during their trip to Iran in December. At its March meeting, FacEx passed a resolution requesting the report because of several members' concerns that not enough groundwork in surrounding the Fover matter were known. Gerhard Zuber, FacEx chairman, said that if the report was received it should be clarified, if necessary, so that it would be a recitation of the facts from the administration's point of view. The report probably would be presented to Faculty Council, be said, for any possible action or evaluation. However, Lawrence Sherr, FacEx member, said he did not want the report to be judged on its appearance. "It's not our intention to determine the guilt or innocence of either party," he said. "I hope we reserve the right to ask other parties their opinions." George Worth, FacEx member, said FacEx should not set itself up as an investigative body when dealing with the report. At the 6th meeting, FaeEx also commit to the principles of due process for faculty members, and a commitment of faculty members to their academic duties at the meeting. The resolution was proposed a day after the Faculty Council passed a similar resolution Our ship has come in at... Pier One is offering a boatorted full of exciting wicker and rotten furniture and accessories from the East for, at least prices you'd pay if you bought the dock. All are fine quality pieces from the Orient most renowned furniture makers. It is truly exceptional. The furniture is a fabulous fellow shipment of rotten furniture — our ship has come in! Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS 738 Mass. Furniture - Tea Sets & Tea - Kitchen Supplies - Brass - India Print Bedspreads - Incense - Posters - Rugs - Wicker & Rattan Furniture - Bamboo Boxes - Baskets - Straw Flowers - Blinds - Crystal - White Porcelain - Chests - Hardback Books Plus much more... Hours: New Merchandise Arriving Daily! rius much more... Hours: New Merchandise Arriving Daily! 841-7525 M-S: 9:30-6:00; Thurs: 9:30-8:30 sua films Fine Arts Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of many parks and nature reserves. Sailing Catch is well as many specialized events. We are a family owned business. Just like the big shows downlow, only better because we offer so much for a lot less. We want your new ideas and input for the 1980-81 film series. We are looking into expanding and improving in the Midnight Series, Classical Series, Genre Series, Directed by Robert B. Miller. SUA NEEDS YOU! The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and are exhibited in any of the arts areas. literature, art SUA TRAVEL sua outdoor recreation USA Travel offers a fun, and inexpensive way to travel for KU students. USA is well known for its padre Island, Florida, and Colorado trips, but the possibilities for other travel ideas are almost We need creative minds and people power to promote these programs and develop new ideas. SUA Student Union Activities is now taking applications for committee membership. You can be a part of the exciting plans of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas . . . 3UA Special Events We are best known to students for our excellent large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our groups and lasts as long as six hours. *Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to these classes. Special events and light tresses are areas that must be considered for every show.* iR indoor recreation indoor recreation We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and other New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities. FORUMS Chest, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon, Foosball, Go Arm Wrestling and Quarterfinals. Iraqs, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all part of SJL Forum. We welcome you to join us on campus in the local community who have something to say to a University campus and in the local community who have something to say to a University campus. pr public We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs. COUPON This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madrigal Dinner. SIAA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the activities and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone interested in pursuing this role should contact: relations LIMIT 5 W/COUPON We need your help in these programs. Experience is not a necessity, however interest is required. Deadline for sign up is March 21. For more information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. REGULAR PRICE 551 with programming Behaviors to the SULAIR and the University with creative ideas for promoting SAU is encouraged to apply. BUY ONE . CORN DOG GET ONE FREE COUPON set the name of your coupon enter the coupon number set the amount print your coupon code WHEN YOU PRESENT THIS COUPON AT YOUR LOCAL VISTA RESTAURANT. Get involved—SUA is for everyone! Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th COUPON GOOD: Mon. 3/17 Tues. 3/18 Wed. 3/19 Thur. 3/20 Fri. 3/21 Save $2.1 s G. P. Loyd'S 1980 ® Loyd-Lyfts Ent. However you spell it... P. Harkey G. P. Harkey Lyndon O. Lyndon 701 Massachusetts In Lawrence It still means a good time! YOU CAN $25,000 BE AN INSTANT WINNER! WIN $100 CASH! PLAY Wendy's hot n juicy Sweepstakes More than one million winners! Win exciting food prizes and $5 Wendy's Gift Certificates just by rubbing the spots off our Hot 'n Juicy Sweepstakes playing cards and coming up with a match. You could even become one of our lucky $100 cash winners and be automatically entered in our big Wendy's OLD FASHIONED HAMBURGERS You may obtain a Hot N Juicy Sweepstakes ticket by visiting your local Wendy's restaurant. No purchases necessary. Dr. a Hot N Juicy Sweepstake a tick may be obtained by self-addressing Hot N Juicy Sweepstake at 406-870-3900 or by calling 212-588-5100. BMC Wendy's OLD FASHIONED HAMBURGERS 523 West 23rd St.,Lawrence Copyright © 1980 by Merrill's international inc. All rights reserved. --- 6 Monday, March 17, 1980 University Daily Kansan Legislature busy while KU students take a break From Kansan Staff and wire reports "For Kane I don't have to open the Kansas legislators didn't get a break last week. In fact, they had their busiest week of the year." State lawmakers labored Monday, Tuesday and into the evening Wednesday to meet the deadline for consideration of bills by their house of origi- The Kansas Senate overwinningly approved a measure Wednesday that could pave the way for the financing of a concrete bridge, proposed be opposed for Lawrence, while the House passed a spending limit bill that sparked strong criticism from Gov. John The Senate Ways and Means Committee approved a $123.1 million operating budget for fiscal year 181 for the University of Florida's College of Engineering and continued discussion on the KU budget. In other business, an another Senate committee approved a bill restituting capital punishment in Kansas for seven specific felons. The bill has already passed the House. However, two bills of considerable local interest died when they were not acted on by the Wednesday deadline. A bill that would have permitted development of a Lawrence-to-Tonganone bike trail on an abandoned railroad line died in committee. THE PROPOSAL, sponsored by State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, was being pushed by O-eeet-Sha Trail Conservation Committee, a local group. As expected, a proposed self-help amendment to the Landlord Tenant Act, which supporters would have given to Mr. Reagan, would affordable means of settling repairs done. failed to reach the House floor by the Wednesday deadline. The bill had been approved by the House Judiciary Committee three weeks ago. But House Majority leaders, who decide which members are debated on the floor, opposed the amendment. "It's disappointing, but we expected it," said State Rep. John Solbach, D-Awrence, who introduced the proposal last year with three other representatives. City officials had better luck with a proposal they say is necessary to attract a shopping mall developer to downtown Lawrence. Under current state law, only tax increment bonds—which are repaid through property taxes—can be used for downtown redevelopment. The Senate voted 37-2 for the bill, which now faces hearings before the House Local Government Committee. Proponents of the bill say that it would be easier to attract investors with industrial revenue bonds because of the low interest rates available. THE BILL would allow Kansas municipalities to issue industrial revenue bonds as a low-interest source of money for downtown redevelopment projects. "It is an important tool we have to consider," Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager, said recently. Some residents and downtown merchants, however, have charged that the issuance of IRB's would create unfair competition against local businesses taking advantage of low interest money. crease in the Med Center's general fund budget over the current fiscal year. University officials were equally pleased by a Senate committee's approval of a $123.2 million operating budget for the Med Center. "We're extremely pleased," Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, said yesterday. THE ACTION provides a 3.3 percent in- The largest boost was a $329,400 package to increase the School of Nursing to 150 graduate students. The committee also approved a $213,953 appropriation for 13 more residen­ position at the Med Center. The House 和 Means Committee had approved only two. Recommendations on the KU budget are expected tomorrow. Last week, the committee recommended a 10 percent increase in employees' salaries at Board of Receivers schools. Berman, a member of the committee, predicted that the Legislature would compromise and increase faculty salaries 9 percent. --limited quantities in stock When the House and Senate differ in their recommendations, a conference committee of House and Senate members is selected to settle the differences. Carlin said Friday that he would veto the bill. IN OTHER issues, the House Wednesday approved 77-45 a Senate bill that would impose spending limits on state government. The bill will force a $10.4 million reduction in the $2.52 billion budget Carlin recommended to the Legislature this session. The Legislature would also be required to maintain a treasury balance of no less than 8 percent of the anticipated expenditures for the next fiscal year under the proposal. Carlin said minimum balances could not be allowed to drop below 10 percent. Grand Opening March 17-22 FREE GIFT with every purchase Drawings for over $400 worth of prizes. Sale prices throughout the store Up to 50% off Sum and James KANSAN Police Beat Several burglaries of Lawrence residences were reported to police last week. A University of Kansas student lost about $2,100 in household goods after a break-in at her home in the 220 block of West 28th Street. A series of burglaries in the 900 block of Arkansas Street and in the 400 block of Jackson Street in the area were reported in merchandise. Lawrence police records show that two burglaries occurred to homes Wednesday on Wisconsin Street. Stereo cameras found guns and a gold ring were reported stolen. A KU student was arrested by Lawrence police at about 4 a.m. yesterday near the Sanctuary, 140 West 7th. Police said they were investigating after a burglar alarm was triggered. Woman to stand trial on murder charge By JENNIFER ROBLE2 Staff Reporter A Shawnee district judge last week ordered a Topka woman, Katherine Cobb, to stand trial on a charge of first-degree murder. Topka despite arguments by Cobb's attorney at the hearing Thursday afternoon that the Feb. 27 death of Henry Davis, Lawrence, was a suicide, Judge Matthew Babbard could be tried the murder charge. Cobb, 22, a former Lawrence resident, also will stand trial on an additional charge of unlawfully possessing a firearm within five years of a felony conviction. Douglas County district attorney Michael Malone testified at the hearing about Coble's prior conviction record. He testified, in addition to his testimony, that he pleaded guilty in June 1977 to charges of aiding and abetting a burglary and attempted theft. Dowd also rulated at the preliminary, hearing that another Topeka woman, Ramona Moon, will stand trial on a charge for attempting to arrest an arrested on a first-degree murder charge. But Cobb's court appointed attorney Camille Nile, argued that Davis could have died from an overdose of cocaine before the alleged fatal shot. --paraphernalia was found to Topeka police near Davis' body on the morning of its discovery. SHAWNEE COUNTY district coroner Antonio Huaman said at the hearing that Davis, 22, died as a result of a gunshot wound to his head at about 7 a.m. Feb. 27. She said that Davis wanted to commit suicide because of a vision he had. Noobe said that in Davis' vision he was seriously depressed, and that his illness led to a lengthy and painful hospital's stay. Davis' body was found by a passerby Feb. 28 outside the southwestern Topeka city limits. Nobe said that Davis tried to kill himself by injecting and inhaling cocaine. Drug ACCORDING TO testimony by Lawrence police detective Carroll Crossfield, Bob said in a tapped conversation that Davis overheard the chocked. Crossfield said Bob admitted to helping Davis inject cocaine into his body and had also tried to smother him with her Nobe's main argument centered on the coroner's testimony. Huaman testified that Davis was alive when the allegedly fatal shooting because of signs of bleeding near the wound. He also said that the cocaine level in Davis' blood was 0.135 milligrams per 100 cc of blood, he said, was about a fifth of his normal dose of 500 milligrams per 100 cc of blood. "The charges should be reduced to assisting a suicide." Noho said. However, Dowd rejected those arguments. ENGINEERS LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS STUDY THE SOCIAL SCIENCES IN LONDON Interview with Schlumberger! 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Name ___ Type ___ Reporting Information ___ Date ___ Gross Gain ___ Yield Gain ___ Description Profession x Tax ___ at The Entertainer 2O51 2 w 8th st. $4 at the door for all the beer you can drink! Proceeds Go to Arthritis Research United States of America Office of Personnel Managemen 842-3131 1339 Massachusetts Washington, DC 20015 An Equal Opportunity Employer Sponsored by AOTT EVERYONE INVITED Come Hear The MOFFET BEERS BAND Thursday, March 20th from 8-12 o'm. Mick's Bicycle Shop Uppercut FREE CURLING IRON or CURLING BRUSH $15,00 value with a $40.00 perm (haircut extra) Offer expires April 12, 1980 BEER - Vista - Jim Blackbur Racks - Velocipac Panniers 841-4894 "OUR SUCCESS GOES TO YOUR HEAD" 1031 VERMONT IN THE BAY BUILDING REDKEN SUPER MOTORHOME Some recreational vehicles are expensive. - Windsor - Motobecane bicycle with large packs The Bicycle. The RV of the 1980s. Some aren't. Quality Touring Products By: Free Hors D'oeuvres every Friday during happy hour. 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University Daily Kansan Monday, March 17. 1980 7 Poll... From page one "That's one thing you've got to look out for in political politics," she said. "We really gutted burned last year. We were out in the field before opinion shifted and we total missed "That's a public opinion survey person's horror—to totally miss nobile opinion." CIGLER SAID it was important to remember that polls reflected only public opinion, not whether people would act on that opinion. "You have to remember there is always a difference between attitude and behavior," he said. "A poll is information about attitude, but it does not the same as behavior. Talk is chanen." He said analysis should not go beyond the data received from polls when interpreting them and should not infer relationships not clearly supported by data. The analyst has to look for tendencies in data, Cigler said, and the questions the Kanans poll used may have stifled the response of some participants. He said that the questions that provided a "probably" in the choice of answers could have created more moderate opinions than the questions that answered might not reflect actual public opinion. "By limiting the answers, you ultimately limit the richness of the response," he said. BINMIX IRMISR声 the *response*, the *sale* NIXON SAID that the *polls* did not use a "probably" *answer* because it was an I am *don't know* response. "If you get a large 'don't know' response, say 30 to 40 percent, an opinion has not been established," she said. 50 percent was most indicative of strong public opinion. She said a clear-cut opinion of more than The interviewers are professionally trained to ask questions that the participants may be depressed independing. They have been coached to ask questions in an unbiased manner so responses will be as accurate as possible. Gigler said the Kanasl poll could have been done more professionally if the interviewers could have been trained. In one case were done by Reporting II students. BOTH CIGLER and Nixon agreed that unbiased, straightforward questions were important in a survey and that wording of a survey usually should be pretested. Nixon said that changing one word in a question could alter answers and that the question was more important than focus technique whereby a moderator stimulates discussion within a prechen group about possible survey questions to encourage the irgranted feelings behind those opinions. Any ambiguities in the questions are usually found in these sessions, she said, as well as possible answers to the questions. The second question in the Kansan poll had to be expanded because of an unpredicted response by participants. Güller said that a question about whether those interviewed would accept the draft if they were chosen should have been clarified. "When I start thinking about those questions, I'd have to say we would have to separate the acceptance of fate with general patrician duty," he said. Draft . . . Registration for women, which was introduced separate from registration for men, was considered doomed from the beating. Carter's registration proposal has hit hard times in Congress. REGISTRATION FOR MEN was expected to pass. Last month, however, a House Appropriations subcommittee refused by an unanimous vote that amounted to $13.3 million in fiscal 1980 funds. This is one of two stories analyzing results of a Kansas poll conducted before spring break. Tomorrow's story will present the same argument for draft, and opinions on U.S. foreign policy. KU fraternities will supplemen- tral summer and fall rush programs this weekend with their first spring rush, and a weeklong representative Todd Huddall said yesterday. Fraternities to rush The spring rush, to be held March 21-23, is geared to recruit new fraternity members from the large "independent" groups with the Greek system. Unlike summer rush, which is aimed at gaining new members from the ranks of incoming freshmen, spring rush will recruit new fraternities and independents already at KU, Hudson said. "it's not for seniors in high school. It's really for freshmen and sophomores, but juniors can participate too," he said. Rush will start at 6:30 a.m. this Friday in the Satellite Union and will continue with tours of about one-half of the participating hospitals, Hudson said. On Saturday the tours participated and on Sunday the rush participants are able to re-vist houses they are interested in. The participants will then turn over their house preferences to the 1FC, and decisions will be made by Wednesday on whom will be taught. The students will be expected to out number 90 students are expected to participate. Kassebaum ... From page one was sure to receive Senate approval after it was passed by the House last week. She said she could not support the bill because it included no plan for giving tax exemptions for companies searching for new domestic oil. Another legislative matter that would have an immediate impact on the nation is Carter's request for draft registration of all 19- and 20-year-olds. Kassaebau, the mother of four, said she supported registration for both men and women, with a place on registration forms to request alternative service. Funding for the draft of women has Without that provision, she said, she might not support registration legislation. already been killed by Congress and allowance for alternative service is not expected. KASSEBAUM INSISTED that registration was not necessarily a prelude to the draft. "I view it as something that can be of some benefit to have young men and women register," she said, "and stop and think what they think they might have to make to the country." Oposition to registration, she said, results from the fear the country might be drawn into a Vietnam-type conflict. But she said there should be leadership in the country to make the distinction between foolish intervention and military necessity. "Registration is a symbol that has some substance," Kassebaum said. "There is the realization that there could be that time, and that could not be, if I, any hesitation to register. "I don't think we should fool ours." There are sensitive pressures ahead in foreign policy and we have to keep a cool head." SOME OF those who oppose the draft have a strong line on the line to "provide gas for Cadillacs," but Kassaube said a threat to the flow of Persian Gulf oil would not affect on the course of the war. "If that happens," she said, "it isn't just us, it's the Western world." LeDuc ... From page one ment that the KU magazine was being suspended. But no deadline was set for reimbursement. Two weeks ago, another LeDuc Enterprises official had little more to say. Thomas R. LeDuC, president and founder of the company, said Friday that he could not comment on the situation. "I'm in the middle of a very important meeting with my attorneys and I'd really be unable to answer any of your questions," he said. --all you can drink $1 from class members $2 from non-class members WILLIAM CAHILL, vice president for administration with Lebac, said, "There's really nothing definite yet. The company made a decision to regroup. Everything's in the middle of being decided. Some of these people shouldn't be answering since I don't know." At that time, Cahill said he did not know whether subcribers at KU and other schools with "suspended publications" would be reimbursed. According to Sheldon, who became unemployed when the KU magazine was dropped, LeDuc Enterprises moved to Seattle to gain a more centralized location. Last fall, the company was publishing eight magazines and decided to expand. "In January and February they expanded to 26-that was probably part of their problem. Financing just fell through. The banks just shut them down," Sheldan said. AMONG BIG Eight Conference schools, LeDuC also published magazines at the universities of Nebraska, Colorado, Missouri and Oklahoma State. 3rd Senior "Farewell to Bars" PARTY Ichabod's Tues., March 18, 8-12 p.m. (memberships available) SENIOR FAREWELL MOVIE Part 3 will continue filming --you lack information about A Whole New Standard, A Whole New System, Available From hp HEWLETT PACKARD HP 910 MENU ESC FUNCTIONS INFO DELIVERY RESPONSE STATUS CONNECT DATA EXIT - C-chip remember program steps, data, or assignments until intentionally changed. - Simple straight forward alpha/numeric notation - Edit, spend, delete, with or without execution. - 130 functions. Create or personalize the key assignments - Ten comparison tests, 56 flags, tests alpha strings HP41C $285⁰⁰ PRINTER '340°º PRE-PROGRAMMED MODULES · 454°— 400 line programmable modules Library of 25 different solutions books $2.00 ADD-ON PERIFERALS AVAILABLE PRINTER *340° CARD READER *189° - Flexible resizing of data register and lines of programming KU Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent 8-5 M-F 10-4 Sat ku The ONLY bookstore striving to save you money at the cash register Meisner Milstead Liquor Store Wishes to share with you our finest wine discoveries to complement the simplest or most elegant of meals. 25th and Iowa Holiday Plaza Tame Your Mane at MANE TAMERS 10th and Mass. 841-09 Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Filing deadline is Wed. March 19 5:00 pm Elections Tues. March 25 and Wed. March 26 841-0906 Association of University Residence Halls ELECTIONS!! Winners take office at AURH general assembly meeting 1980 General Elections Open to any returning hall resident Election materials available at front desk of each hall President, Vice-Pres., Secretary, Treasurer Thursday, March 27th For more information call 864-6732 or AURH office 864-4041 NEW YORKER PRTMD-ITALY IAMI Tonite Featuring - Homemade --- CHICKEN CACCIATORE Tender chicken, mushrooms, green peppers and tomatoes in a savory white wine sauce ladded over Italian pasta. Delicious! $4.25 Dinner includes entree, garlic toast, crisp tossed green salad, coffee or tea Special good tonite ONLY — 5:30-8:30 LIVING OFF CAMPUS? YOU ARE NOT ALONE! Are you sometimes isolated, confused and frustrated because HOUSING TRANSPORTATION UTILITIES SHOPPING BUDGETING UNIVERSITY SERVICES: OTHER (you name it!) UNIVERSITY SERVICE: LEGAL HELP COUNSELING 864-3710 Student Senate LEGAL HEEL COUNSELLING GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES EMPLOYMENT The Off Campus Board is taking applications NOW 864-3506 Info Center The Ott Campus Board is taking applications NOW for the Spring '80-Fall '80 board members. GET INVOLVED! YOU CAN MAKE IT WHAT YOU WANT IT TO BE! Applications due in Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union DUE FRIDAY, MARCH 21 1 1 8 Monday, March 17, 1980 University Daily Kansan KU netters thinking title By JIMSMALL Sports Writer With the Big Eight men's tennis championship more than two months away, it hardly seems appropriate for members of a conference to be taking a conference championship. But that is what they are doing. And judging from the team's performance last week, such optimism is understandable. "We played exceptional tennis over spring break," Coach Mark Hocking said. "We had some impressive wins and we played one match we lost very closely. "Everyone is antsy to start playing some "I WAS VERY surprised that we beat Bayron 94." Hecking said. "They are a good team and it wasn't as if they played poorly. It is just that we played very well." Big Eight teams. Some of the guys are talking about winning the conference." The men's team opened its week with a 9-4 triumph over Southwestern Conference foe Bavier in Lawrence March 9. knew we had the match. I think we played a little unenthusiastically and lost all three of the doubles matches." The next day KU traveled to Denton, Texas, to face north Texas State and won 5-4. Hosking said the match wasn't as close as the score indicated. "We knew that we had won the match after the singles events," he said. "Since we The Jayhawks then played highly ranked Houston March 12 and lost 7-2. KU's hiccups schedule continued the following day when the Hawks met Pan American University in an exhibition match in Edinburgh, Texas. KU faced Pan American against the next day in the first round of the Border Olympics Invitational in Laredo, Texas, a tournament which KU won. KU beat Southwest Texas State 5-4 in the second round of the tourney before beating KU's women's team had a rougher time than the men's team last week. Harden Simmons College to capture the title. Kansas lost matches to Wisconsin and Iowa 9-0 and 7-2. AND THEIR PROBLEMS continue in Texas that the Jayhawks lost a match to Northwest Texas State 8-1. Katy Merrion would not match for Kansas in No. 6 singles. The 'Hawks then competed at the Border Olympics Invitational and dropped matches to Southwest Texas and Oklahoma State. WE GIVE BIG DISCOUNTS! the GRAMOPHONE shop INTERNATIONAL AudioVideo A Dempa Publication November 1979 The 1979 Hi-Fi Grand Prix Awards The awards congratulate manufacturers for engineering expertise, innovative technology, fidelity of sound reproduction, reliability, craftsmanship, product integrity, and cost-performance. In each category, several brands are praised, and three specific models are honored. The Gramophone Shop is particularly pleased with the results of this independent survey. Of brands mentioned, the Gramophone Shop carries an overwhelming percentage of the most-preferred products in the audio industry! Not only a few, but the majority of honored products within each category! Yamaha CR-2040 RECEIVER OF THE YEAR The competition was close, but the top three receivers were Yamaha CR-980, Onkyo XT-460, and Pentolon SX-780 of the top ten brands in this category. The Gramophone Shop carries Dahlquist DQ.10A INTERGRATED AMP OF THE YEAR The NAD 2020 was undercored with rare comments by critics and dealers alike in this category. Again, the results were clear; the Gramophone船 carries all five of the top five albums. NAD 3020 All this means that if you want to see and hear the finest brands of audio equipment, you need Gramophone Shop has the best selection of the finest equipment in the Midwest! SPEAKER OF THE YEAR Although everyone has the criticism's choice, was the winner's decision literally hundreds of times mentioned, but of the top two in this category, both are members of the Gramophone Shop! Bang & Olufsen Beogram 4004 TURNTABLE OF THE YEAR TURN TABLE OF THE YEAR The top turntable choice in this year's awards was Bang & Bose's Boogam 604. The second choice was Technics SL21. Of the three, it belongs in this category. The Gramophone shop carries all five! Luxman T-12 TUNER OF THE YEAR The Luxuan T12, the Yanhua T3, and the Kenwood KR-917 were produced by Fujitsu's subsidiary, Fuji Electronics. The Gramophone Carriage all serve on the top five lives of the group. The Gramophone Carriage live on the top five lives of the group. Nakamichi 680 SHOP EVERY MAJOR AUDIO DEALER IN THE MIDWEST AND YOU CANNOT COMPARE MORE LINES OF QUALITY AUDIO THAN AT THE GRAMOPHONE SHOP! TAPE DECK OF THE YEAR Nakahani 600 was the overwhelming choice with Aiwa AD Grandphone 600 series being the most expensive. The Gramophone phone carriage was not out of the top eight. Meintosh MC 2205 POWER AMP OF THE YEAR Competition in this category was close with the McIntosh MC 202B and the Haffer DH-380 finishing on McIntosh. McIntosh won all three of the brand's brands in this category, all three are at the Garamophone店 PHONO CARTRIDGE OF THE YEAR The top three cartridges in the game are Concorde 30, the Stanley Cup Type and the Pac-12 Type. You'll find these all in the bottom left of the preferred cartridges at Ace Sports. Ortolan Concorde 30 KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25TH & IOWA-HOLIDAY PLAZA Burke said Porter first came to him on Friday to discuss the situation. Porter exits training site, to seek help "We've had several discussions since then," Burke said. "And I've talked with other people and we've made arrangements for him. He's there now." FORT MYERS, Flia.(AP) --DRELL Porter, all-star catcher for the Kansas City Royals, has left the team for treatment of a broken problem, the team announced yesterday. "He left Saturday and we don't expect him back until he has had full treatment for his problem." GRAMOPHONE 913-842-1811 Joe Burke, executive vice president and general manager of the Royals, said, "Darrell Porter has left the club. With our permission, he is seeking medical advice and that it all can tell you. It personal and professional betray his confidence in this situation." "No one on this club knows where he is. I cannot destroy the confidence he has in me. He is a man seeking help and we're giving it to him." Burke said that he could not reveal where Porter had gone for treatment and that none of the Royals' players knew where Porter was going. Silverio's hit stops Texas FORT MEYERS, Fla. (UPI)-Luis Silverio singled home John Wathan in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the Kansas team a victory over the Texas Rangers yesterday. Wathan led off the ninth with a double down the left field line. He was moved to third on a bunt single by Dave Chalk. Dan Quisenberry picked up the victory in relief, pitching the final two innings. The Royals triumph boosted their record to 5-2. The Rangers are still winless in play. Losers of seven straight games. After losing pitcher Dae Rajis walked Dave Hogg to load the bases with no outs. Silverio hit the game-winning single to center. The Royals announced their first cut yesterday and sent three non-roster pitches, Atticer Hammaker and Twiff Jett to the league team league complex in Sarasota, Fla. sua films (1946) Monday, March 17 NOTORIOUS Dir. Alfrid Hitchcock, with Cary Winston and his One of Hitchcock's most romantic forces, NOTORIOUS has a US agent forcing a woman to apologe on a German soldier. Plus: "HOMEBODY," a short film by KU alumnus Steve Johnson. (1954) Dir. Nicholas Riley, with Sterling Hayden, Joan Crawford, Mercedes McCambridge. One of the most amazing singers, singing wanderer, a singer-singler-guitar meet his former lover in an isolated bedroom. Room Tuesday, March 18 JOHNNY GUITAR (1962) Wednesday, March 19 Kurosawa: HIGH AND LOW Dir. Akira Kurosewa, with Toshiru as an industrialist who must pull the ransom for a kidnapping, but without a Japanese film jumbo; Japan subtiles. KIEF'S: 913-842-1544 Thursday, March 20 Brando: BURN! (1970) Dir. Gilo Pontecovo, with Martin Brando as a secret agent in the 1800s who manipulates a Caribbean island rebellion to further the economic interest of England. By the director of GIERS, by the GIERS. "Forum Room" Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodford Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R film are $1.00 each. M-F film are $1.50 and start at 7:30, 7:90 and Midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday. Tickets available at www.woodford.edu / Union 6th Level. Interested students smoke or smokings or refreshments allowed. Monday. March 17. 1980 Louisville slams LSU earns Final Four spot 9 HOUSTON (AP) -- All-America guard Darrell Griffith, who missed half the game because of foul trouble, jolted an interception from Louisville to a 86-64 victory over Louisiana State in the championship game of the NCAI Midwest Regional Tournament. Louisville will be making its third appearance in the NCAA Final Four next weekend in Indianapolis and will play Iowa in the semi-final game. GRIFFTT, LOUISVILLE's all-time first in the half which he only had four points. But the Cardinals scored the last 10 points of the half and held to a 31-28 lead. Griffith, who had 17 points in the game, hit six baskets in the second half as Louisville ran the Tigers of the Southeastern Conference ragged. He sat out 7:09 of the second half. Louisville sophomore forward Wiley Brown kept the Cardinals alive with his strong board play. Brown scored 12 of his 16 points in the first half. It was the 38th consecutive game in which Griffith scored in double figures. LSU outscored Louisville 22-10 with Griffith on the bench in the first 20 minutes. Loausville, 31, jumped to a 12-lead to open the game before 1SU. Jageon an agnostic and a powerhouse favorite of the Cardinals, DeWayne Scales and Jordy Hartley balked 1SU, 264. TWO FREE THROWS by Scales gave LuS 29-23 with led 4:30 to go in the first half. Louisville then scored 10 straight points to take the half-time lead. The victory sent the Big Ten team into next weekend's national finals. THE HOYAS controlled the game practically the way behind Eric Floyd's long-range shooting and held a rifle with about a minute gone in the second half. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Steve Waite brought Iowa back from a 14-point deficit in the second half and scored a game-high 15 points in the second seconds left to give the Hawkeyes an 81-80 victory over Georgetown in the NCAA East Region basketball championship. Unranked Iowa stuns Hoyas in East finals The Hoyas still led by 10 points, 64-54, when Waale, a 6-foot 10 substitute from Kentucky, was the winner of his presence he. He scored 13 of his 15 points in the last 11 minutes, including an 8th point. the Hawkesey 'lead and their clinching basket. Jeff Bulls scored Georgetown's last two points with one second left for the final score. The contest was tied five times in the last seven minutes including 78-78 when Georgetown's Craig Shelton put in a field goal with 2:05 left. VINCE BOOKNKS scored a team-leading 22 points, many of them on long-range shots, for the Hawkeyes, a team with six wins, Ten and eight legs before the N.Y. Crown. University Daily Kansan The victory over Georgetown, the nation's 11th-ranked basketball team, improved their record to 23-8. Floyd wound up with a game-leading 31 points for Georgetown, the Big East champion. The Hoyas had a 15-game lead and skipped to finish the season at 26-6. The KU softball team upset third-ranked Arizona State 42, but lost to Oklahoma State 94 in the final of the New Mexico State tournament in Las Cruces, N.M. Saturday. By PATTI ARNOLD Sports Writer KU finished second in the tournament and came home from its spring tour with an 84 record and a team batting average of more than 300. The Jayhawks hit their way into the championship bracket by whipping New Mexico 12-7 Saturday. Softball team's title bid falls short IN TATM GAME KU scored 13 runs on 11 hits. Jill Larson, Kelay May and Pam Cox led the Kansas attack with two hits and a home run. Mav drove in four runs. "That was the best offensive showing we've had in a long time against a good pitcher. We had fantastic pitches. We had fanatic hitting. I was pleased to come against two good pitches. We had a few good pitches." But KU's final game was a different story. Although KU hung out 10 hits, four errors killed any chance of bringing home the first-place trophy. "WE WERE DOWN 8 O in the fourth, but we came back and finished strong. We got another win and games we gave away. We let that game get away. Our pitching was not as strong as in the first." Kansas was behind 8-4, but fought back with four runs in the bottom of the fourth inning. The team couldn't get the Jayhawks couldn't get any more. Oklahoma State scored a run in the seventh. The highlight of the week was Friday's 4-2 triumph over Arizona State. KU tied game in the seventh innning and won it in the eighth. But after that upset, the team was fat against New Mexico State, a game that decided who would go into the finals as the first and second teams. KU lost that game 7-2 and the chance to be the top seed in the finals. THE WEEK of the spring trip, however, didn't start it quite right for the Jayhawks, who lost their first game to New Mexico 6-2 last Sunday in Albuquerque. KU came back The team then went to Las Cruces, beat Creighton 5-2 and lost to Woyter 9-7 on Monday. Tuesday the Hawks won both of their games, hitting Woyter 7-6 and nipping Oklahoma State 4-1. The round-robin play for the tournament started Thursday with a 5-1 victory over Oklahoma and a 7-0 thrashing of Colorado State. to take the second game of the double- header 7-5. should help the Jayhawks, who had had limited outdoor practice times last season, and KU was the only team in the top eight in New Orleans that had not practiced outside for at least a month. Stanclift said the outside playing time "WE GAINed confidence with every game," Stancliff said. "The offense was there every game, which was surprising, and the pitching is hitting the hitter this early. "They started believing in themselves. They played four games in a row without making any errors. We don't have any teammates on this team, so they have to play together." The errors KU did make did not please Stancilf, but he said the mistakes could be cut down. "I not pleased that we gave four games away, but I'm optimistic that the mistakes we made can be corrected with some more work." he said. BOBBY BELL'S BAR·B·QUE GRAND OPENING! MARCH 17th - 3 PM UNTIL 11 PM! MEET ... TALK WITH ... GET AUTOGRAPHED PICTURES OF LEN DAWSON BUCK BUCHANAN JIM TYRER ED BUDDE AND MANY OTHER FORMER KANSAS CITY CHIEFS GREATS! FUN! PRIZES! DRAWINGS FOR FREE GASOLINE! -and...ENJOY THE FINEST BAR-B-QUE IN THE MIDWEST! 2214 YALE ST. (BEHIND UNIVERSITY STATE BANK) HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 one time $2.25 12 words or fewer Each additional word AD DEADLINES two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $2.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 $1.25 Monday Thursday 9 a.m. Tuesday Friday 9 a.m. Wednesday Monday 9 a.m. Thursday Tuesday 9 a.m. Friday Wednesday 9 a.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS ERRORS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be shared in person or online by calling the Kaiser Business office at 843-1588. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 The Kanans 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. ANNOUNCEMENTS Softball Officials meetings Wednesday. March 19th and Thursday, March 20th at 7 p.m. in 205 Robinson THAI ASSOCIATION PRESENTS THAI NIGHT DINNER X SHOW 5th Sunda, March 23, 1980 Thai Classical, Folk Dance, Fashion Swedish Wing Dance, Music Dinner Catersee Saloon Woodaufton Tickets $40 at 0104 Of call 684-3120 or 834-8296 EXHIBITION THA Art X handscrafts March 23-25. Free to Public THAI NIGHT Watch for traffic parked at 9th and Illinois, 10th and Indiana, and 12th streets. (The Ice Box to the-Wall) Sell fresh fruits from the ice box. Paint the shed. fifteen varieties of dry paint available. Visit Sunday. Also sell wooden furniture. Herb Alber, Sunday. Also sell woodworking supplies. FOR RENT Mount Blee Nair Ski Lab is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 942-3460. 3-18 New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C/D Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 854-369-2011 Inter Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21, 2012, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 364-359-3087 Covely new 2 br. townhouse and apt, next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 843-4185. `@mail efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 823-6579 or 842-4185. If Rosalea's Hotel, the Cause of the Bible Belt. It is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write; Harper, Kansas 7068. 4-4 NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF Jayhawk West Age New Renting 1 & 2 bed room furnished and unfurnished for $185. For Appointment call 824-644-8 or see at 824 Floor. Next door to Russell's East. **If** **no** Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 922' sall. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. In addition and lower or floors 728 sq. ft. or 900 sq. ft. Contact 843-204 or 843-0777. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING houses and contemporary lounge spaces are now available. These include a $250 per month Roommate Place offer of $300 per month, $60 per month, or up to all appliances window over-eating breakouts; laundry facilities with a private toilet; $412-$452 for $812-$842 or $121-$137. REWARD: $0.00 if you can toen up to a small insuperable room to rent in May or June. $81-125 for room rental. Professor leasing house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this upbright 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 studyrooms. recreation. 1 bedroom. 5 bathrooms. pet references. need 842-2022. 3-19 Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. tf COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperative located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 942-9421. tf Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts service, and exchange units. BELL AUTO-MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-960-3900, 3900 W. 6th., tt Western Civilization Notes. Now on Mak's Make books. Available in English or French to use them 1-. As study guide, 2. For class study. 3. For student's personal analysis. 4. Analysis of Western Civilization' available now on Mak's Make Books and Orad Book store. FOR SALE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & summer. apply now. Call 842-5238 at 6:00 p.m. WATERBED MATTRESSES. $39.98 * 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 700 Mass. 843-388-196 New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic mattresses. CLEARANCE FURNITURE. 200 New York St. 843-322-198 Brand spanking new 1980!; Datus 210—44.029 + datalent delivered Call 642-0444 ask for Bob Smith at Tony's Datus. 5-5 SunSpecs—Sum glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TP Rosenthal: Salomon skis $120, 69 VW $250, roller skis 9, 11 oak pew $10, 42-$82 or 32- 17 or 37 ROLLER SKEEPS Indoor; outdoors @ $9.95 Rikke Skates Shop 1033 Vermont; 841-6642. 81 boot, Nordica Alpin for women, size 6 to 7 Good shape, use 2 seasons, 841-4393. Jensen 505 3 way speaker 15 winder w/ fre- edermant. Excellent control. Cell Tele- phone: 841-2142 Vivitar 35-105 mm zoom lens. Canon Mount ex- posure: 284/125. Asking: 3-21 Call Marty M824-6899 evening. Kustom, Lead V. Amp, BW TV, Realistic DX-150 Shortware Receive, Call 842-7059 - 7058 1977 Datusn 280% in excellent condition inside inside. Brown锈。Call Steve 543-727-3277. Brown锈。Call Steve 543-727-3277. FOUND Pound pair of iodines taper in front of Framer. Claim in Kaina Union information board. 3-17 Gold bracelet Call 841-825-2600 at 3:30 p.m. tt Iodine case Found at Kaina Union Building. Claim in lost found box. 841-825-2600 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES ORDERS: An initial fee of $300, applies to patients with a public service nursing home as well as consumer organization (Kaiser Family Services) help and input on nursing home conditions and residents. All names and correspondence will be received by email at geri.kaiser.com; between time of birth and笔面, write us at KIENI, 912-750-8000. COMPUTER SERVICE AGENCY, nederland Computer Services Group. You must have knowledge of Data Bank and Data Organization techniques. Revise COFRS for the COMPETENCE Office, Admin training. Apply April 2015 application. CUSTOMISER$SAILING EXPEDITIONS$SAIL- NATION WAREHOUSE WORLDWIDE SENRI 454 for APPLIFICATION INFO REFERRALS to NEWWORLD Box 60129, Saratachem Now taking applications for door/floor and wall- boards at the Library, April 18. Sanctionary is W. Th. after 8:00 a.m. Ask for K. Ask for N. K. Ask for Personal Services has a student clerk typist opening. Must be able to work approx. 15-20 hours per week. Required Master's degree. Must quality for work study. Call 844-644-464. Room 103 Carrish-Curtsey, Deadline May 31st. Video Games Cartridge Exchange needs campus and local representatives. No selling, no experience required. Write: Video, Box 27348, Mpls. MN 55427. BECOME A MONTESCOTE TEACHER; Summer classes begin June 2. Call me or write on montescoffle Plus School. 1257 Westman, Topeka, K6. 304-2315-8125, 830-182, or 842-6885. Biology major to teach elementary children first grade, then Middle School and Plus School. Topper KS. 235-5185 or 868-1863. NOTICE Sanctuary Catering needs part-time help. Apply in person at the Sanctuary. 3-21 Softball Manager's Meeting Tuesday, March 18th at 7:00 p.m. in 205 Robinson 1 9F Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Springs area, students work with college students working with children in a camp backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife education, and animal care. Students gain interest in Western Camp, Frog Lake, grassland animal gardens, Western Camp, Frog Lake, grassland animal gardens. PERSONAL ★★★★★★★★★ Definitely not for Kids STOPPING AT THE CONSERVATORY AND THE DWELL Alice in Wonderland This Thursday night only $2.00 Where else but the .. Lawrence Opera House Tuesday FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-anburs up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control, Cousting. Tubal Ligation appointment. Abortion appointment. 642-320-4600. 480 TF 10th Street, Overland Park, KS. VOYAGERS—Fellowship–Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd, Sunday, 9:30 a.m. 843-4171. tf Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tt The Harbour Lites is where at for cool beer pool, pool ball and unique hartendr. Color TV and stereo for when the Hawks are away. You can get your ship together at the Harbour Lites. GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through If-quarters, 842-345 and KU info, 864-250. 106 Help me find the orange car that left me with my mom. I parked in front of a burnt orange car with, damaged right front fender. Accident happened early Sunday 8:40 AM. Guaranteed Call A18. 830-100. $2 RMWD Located at PRO AM SPORT over your spring break. Hospital in the heart of Mission, Ks. If PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843-4821. Dr. Kline, with age but bi, was one wife who loved her husband and served in the Burkard Award Works—a new tradition. Lt. Colin Burkard Wears Weeks—a new tradition. Lt. Colin Burkard Wears Weeks—a new tradition. Lt. Colin Burkard Wears Weeks—a new tradition. 2:41 Encore! Encore! The corps is coming! The corps is coming! 3-21 If you've always wanted to be Irish or on a Patrón, you'll probably want to attend the St. Patrick's Day Fair at the Hilary Annual Hospital. Attend St. Patrick's Day Fair special Surprises from our date theater in Dublin. Enjoy an afternoon of ballad tunes, could we have a .bad St. Patrick's Day Fair? ALL YOU CAN EAT Holton Sports Complex, Holton & women's决赛 of the Best Fri Fraternity & & women's决赛 of the Best Fri Fraternity. chad and soda pop will be served. Tickets are tournament games Fri-Fri Contact John Fitzgerald "Happy Anniversary Dating!" May your life be filled with the things that bring joy and you may, like a parent, wish to share. "Don’t cause you are no great, you’ve brought me to love! Date Love," MRS. SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102, call 6875. MATH: 115-700, call 6875. STATISTICS 785. PHYSICS 900-900, call 785. PHYSICS 100-900, call 785. ENGLISH 900-707. **english** ff IMPROVE YOUR GRADES Send $10 for your 306-page catalog of college literature. 10,250 topics listed. BOX 25970; LA. CA. 9025. (213) 477-8226. IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES. Professional Tutoring: Math 000-115. 864-2375. 3-28 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Ailey at the House of Upper Quick Copy Center. Ailey is available from AM to 5 PM Monday to 9 AM, 9AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 880 Main Street. For local assistance, including Municipal court faxes and phone calls, visit www.municipalcourt. for tax returns consult Dawn Bass & Laster 109 East 2nd Street. Call 843-754-3600 or mail to 383 coll集 call 843-754-3600 or mail to 383 coll集 Monday through Friday from accreditant Master Calls. LEASE NOW FOR FALL. AT SPECIAL RATES! Tiring of paying high cost for good quality clothes and alterations? Excellent seasuit will rw for men or women. Reasonable prices. For information call 814-3986 after 4 and weekends. *EXPERIENCEIED HOUSEPAINTERS now making* *applied paint, e.g.Daniel Benton 3-21* *2980 or 864-5535* On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities furnished or un furnished Jawahar Tower Two with a private bath. On campus. 2 HR apartments furnished or un- furnished. 450 sq ft. Apartments 3600 8 W. 15 845-6933 3-21 TYPING Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Solicitive. Call Donna, 842-2744. if Why uses & about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammar, 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. if MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3287. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, $41-4980, TF Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term work. Experienced correcting selective bias. After a fit, 842-2310 Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite Quality work, reasonable rates. These discussions edit- ing/layout Call Joan 842-9127. TF I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476 TF Experienced Typist—term papers, thesis, mix. electric IBM Silicone. Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-8554. Mr. Wright. Experienced KU ttyp, IBM Correcting S-elasticite Quality work package. Send to: Sandy, eyecare, 789-640-7589. www.sandyscare.com DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980. Experienced Typic—manualists, panels, theses, Scientific and technical experience. IBM Corre- ting Selectric. 841-4228. (f) WANTED ROOMMATES. Naimith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8539 any time of the day; if Need a typist for mid-term papers? Avoid the rush, make an appt. with a pro. Linda: 842-5318 after 5:30 3-29 R-reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing. Self-correcting selective Cital Ellen Jeanani. 841-2172 5-5 PSYCHIATRIC ADIES AND HEALTH SERVICES ALEXANDRA COLEMAN, M.D. *Praegy Harbison, Job Service Center* 312 W. 6th, Topokia, KS. Phone: (813) 262-2600 Adelyn D. Cohen *An application. An equal opportunity employer* Female roommate. 2 bedroom apt. $122.50 mo & ¹ utilities. Call Barb. 841-3260. Intramural Softball Officials. Earn extra money this term. If interceded phone 864-3546 and ask for Ron or Mike. Or stop by 208 Robinson, Recreation Services. 3-21 Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, $100 1/2 utilities, private room, washer, dryer, dishwasher, 412-5699, 4-13 Executive Director for Associated Students of Kansas at a statewide student lobby. Representative for the Kansas State University, managing the administrative and fiscal affairs of the university and bibbling on the issues before the Kansas Board of Education, requiring to Associated Students of Kansas (1982) Topka, Kansas 64021. By Mair-3809. Toppkai, Kansas 64021. WANTED TO RENT Journalism graduate student precept or BD room house or apartment 1-625-4722-3800 or have 3 children but no pets. Require plenty of space to elementary school. 3-27 1-625-4722 Arzwege who is Irish, who would like to be Irish. Mr Arzwege was a member of the HAMBURG LIONEAN ANNUAL OF SPORTS which included the HAMBURG LIONEAN TENNIS TOURNAMENT and have a beer with Manager Michael Djoumous with over 2 years of experience with over if you miss it. The Hamburg LIONEAN TENNIS TOURNAMENT will be held on Saturday, June 8th. KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! If you've got it, Kanasa Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint below in below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES CLASSIFIED HEADING: to run: Monday ... Thursday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm Friday ... Monday 5 pm Write ad here: RATES: 15 words or less additional worries 1 time $2.25 .02 3 times $2.75 .04 2 3 4 5 times times times times times $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 .03 .04 .05 .06 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 DATES TO RUN: NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: 1 KANSAM CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD Y --- 10 University Daily Kansan Mondav. March 17. 1980 Owolabi stars, Hogan stumbles, Kansas takes fourth By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer Sports Write Disappointed but proud That sums up KU track coach Bob Timmons and finishes at the NCAA Endurance Championships this weekend. The Jayhawks brought their strongest squad in a decade to the national meet in Detroit with visions of winning KU's fourth indoor championship. Instead, they run up against the "Foreign Legion" and their own team. The Foreign Legion is Texas El-Paso, which is led by John H. Koehler, who played Texas El-Paso at a meet record with 76 points and captured its ninth NCA team in the past seven years, Valuona, winner of last year's meet, finished second in Valuona, and third in El-Paso. Tennessee was wined with 38 and Kansas, which tied Tennessee for fourth last year, finished fourth with 38. "I HAVE MIXED feelings," Timmson said. "I was thrilled with some of the things we did, but I feel the athletes might have been able to come through a little better in their events." Timmons had reason to be thrilled after the performance of bothomore Sowana Ovali Friday. Owolabi established himself as the greatest triple jumper in KU history by winning the event with a personal best of 643-1/2. His jump is the second best in the world and the record, indoor or outdoors, for a KU jumper. "I felt really good. I had good rhythm and good speed." Owolabi said. "I didn't do anything different from what I've been doing this season except a lot of stretching. "THE ONLY BAD part of my jump was the landing. I let my legs down a bit early, but I'm really pleased I got a 14al 54-0 jump." Tromms said he had been worried about Owlabai before the meet. "I knew he was disappointed about not winning the Big Eight Championships and I was concerned about how he would handle the pressure," Timmons said. "But he handled itreat." OTHER KU POINTS on Friday came from spinner Hagan finished in a tie for fourth in the 40-tonne preliminary running of the mile relay, however and wiped out any KU chance for winning the event. The team won one of the top times in the nation in the mile relay. "He ran about a lap and a half but couldn't 'go on.' Timmons said. "He did a good job in him, but maybe I was at fault in expecting him to run two quarter-mile heats and the mire relay." DETROIT—Former KU miler Jim Yun was elected into the National Track and Field Hall of Ruya, a former world record holder in the mile, also is a two-time Olympian, who won the silver medal in the 10km race. Ryun joins Hall of Fame From Kansan Wire Services A product of Wichita East High School, Ryun came to KU after his high school coach Bob Timmons became KU's head coach. In 1967 he set a goal of leading KU and 1,500 players within 16 days of each other. He will compete in the Boston Marathon next month with fellow inductees Bracey Jenner, Jennifer O'Reilly and Shaun Walker. The KU alternate on the mile relay team, Warren Willetts, a freeman, also injured himself while stepping in. Wilhelma leaped 24-7 in the long jump, good enough for a fourth-place finish, but he sied when landed and hit the wall. "WARREN WAS DESIGNATED as the alternate, but he couldn't compete after that happened." Timmons said. "If he had been there, we would have been all right." After Friday's events the 'Hawks were in third place with 15 3/4 points, behind Texas E1: Paso with 38 and Tennessee with 17. Saturday the Jayhawks continued to excel. Mike Ricks gave the Jayhawks another first by winning the game. "Ricks came out strong and no one ever challenged him." Timmons said. Rickson clocks in at 1:10:06 on the banked wooden track, half a second faster than Texas El Paso's go-kart. Leaster Mickens, two years ago gave KU its only team points at the meet, finished eighth in the tournament. The incident involved a runner from Baylor, who fell and fell white rounding a high-banked curve. He was struck in the face by a ball. "I WOULDN'T WANT to make excuse for Lester because he's such a great runner," Timmons said. "But prior to his run, there was an incident that may have affected him." "Lester ran in the same outside lane and had no place to go," Tummon said. "Perhaps what had happened was that he was too far." Pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham and high jumper Joe Light had a disappointing day. Buckingham, KU's premier pole vaulter, finished seventh with a best vault of 164. Buckingham, who as a freshman last year finished second in the event, had troubles Saturday after a fight with his girlfriend. "It looked like he was able to get off his pole the way he usually does." "Timmons said." Buckingham was third after Friday's preliminary with a best of 17-0. Light, who had been defeated only once this season go into the meet, failed to qualify for the finals. LIGHT, WHO HAD jumped at least seven feet in all his meetings, had a best jump of 6/1 3/4. The last of KU's NCAA qualifiers were the two-mile relay team of Tom Jantch, Leonard Martin, Ray Marks and Rick Ensz. They finished sixth with a time of 7:43.00. "Joel seemed to be a little erratic." Timmons said. "He made adjustments and more adjustments, but he didn't really get them right." They were named an All-America team, but that weren't thrilled by it. "Timmons said." And they didn't. Before the meet, Timmons said a team score of less than 50 could win the title. But Texas El-Paso, led by Nyambui, the meet's outstanding performer with victories in the mile and two mile race, had little problem proving Timmon's prediction wrong. "Under the circumstances, we did the best we could. I'm proud of all these guys," Timmons said. "This is a young team. Only one of them isn't next year, so we've got good reason to be optimistic." Techsters' recipe ends KU's season By PAM CLARK Sports Writer Take a pinch of double-figure scoring by all five starters and add a cup of fouls from the fourth quarter. Home arena with 3,000 howling fans, and you have the Louisiana Tech women's h The Techsters, ranked No. 4 in the nation, used that formula to knock Kansas out of the national AIAW tournament for the second year in a row. Louisiana Tech usted KU 81-75 Saturday la., in the West section semifinals. KU, ranked 12th in the nation, ended its season with a 29-8 record. Louisiana Tech, 38-3, advances to the sectional final in Baton Rouge against Long Island Staten Beach. And this was the Teachers' third victory in a row over Kansas. Last season, the Titans beat the AIAW Central Sectional in Carbondale, Ill. And in the Jayhawks' second game of this season, Tail-rallied for a 78-76 win. The Titans were the Queen's Classic in Plainview, Texas. THE TECHSTERS ' recipe wasn't solely responsible for the KU defeat. Louisiana Tech finished second in the playoffs and its top players returned this year. "I felt we were two even matched ball clubs on the floor," KU coach Marian Washington said yesterday. "But I know they are by the inconsistency of the officiating. But the home court and the unequal distribution of fouls-24 persons called against KU, 15 on Tech—were big advantages for the Techsters. Despite the officiating, KU led at the end of the first half, 36-35. Lynette Woe'c and Shebra Legrant, KU's top scores all season, were the primary players in the game, which wasablished as the game's top score with 27 points and Legrant followed with 21. The pair also combined for 25 rebounds, but it wasn't enough to offset Tech's 6-4-3 advantage on the boards. "We got hurt in the first half." Washington said. "A lot of things were not called. We ended up with 13 fouls to their five. "WE DEMONSTRATED our strength in terms of physical conditioning. We were able to do this first half. Before we got into foul trouble we were running them really well and we could control them." KU had a five-point lead, 42-37, early in the second half, but it disappeared midway through the half. The game was over at the half, 51-51, with about 11 minutes remaining. "The spread really came at the end when we had to do some fouling," Washington said. "It wasn't an eight-point game. "But the one who hurt us when we tried to come back was Jennifer White." **WHITE LED TECH scorers with 2 points and Angela Turner turned 18. Pat Kelly also throw in 18 throws and pulled all 14 rebounds. Lori Scott had 14 and 12 rebounds. Lori had 10 points and 12 rebounds to round out the starters and Tech's scoring.** KU battled its way into the sectional tournament by breaking a three-game losing streak at the regional tournament in Des Moines last week. The 'Hawks rallied to a 72-71 victory over Central Missouri State when Woodward hit a short jump shot with 10 seconds left. The following night, KU jumped out to a big lead over Nebraska, which enabled Washington to empty her bench in the 74-67 victory. And in defiance of those who thought the Hawks would never defeat Kansas State again, KU took the Region VI play with an 89-40 victory over the Wildcats. THAT VICTORY made KU a host team in the first round of sectionals. Cheyney State of Cheyney, Pa., got the at-large opponent from North Carolina and the 'Hawks in Lawrence last Wednesday. Washington said she favored Old Dominion to repeat as AIAW champion. The Hawks used a full-court press, coupled with hot shooting, to overtake the Wolves in the second half and cruise to a 75-84 victory in Allen Field House. The Kansas University School of Architecture and Urban Design is pleased to announce an Exhibition of Student Projects scheduled to be on display in the library as part of this year's conference, as well as past student work (the earliest datum circa 1925) will represent the high degree of design excellence stressed within the School. Presentation drawings and scale models will be integrated in the show to provide the best of the School's pedagogic productions. C LETTER STENCILS Choose from a large selection of Roman and Gothic letters Sizes "½" to "6" 79' $6.89 A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD Ub EXHIBIT New Additions 974 pen&,inc. art supplies V754 623 vermont 841-1777 Perennial backup steps forward By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer open 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat. But for the past 35 games, Robbis has been the startling center for the Cleveland Cavaliers and is a bright spot on a team on a team that appeared destined for the dark cellar of the NBA's Central District. KANSAS CITY, Mo.—For Dave Robisch, it's time to stand up and be recognized. An eight-year veteran of the professional basketball battlegrounds, the former KU standout has spent the majority of that time in obscurity. "We lost a lot of close games in the early goal," Robisbill said recently after the Cavaliers had upended the Kansas City shot line. The Kansas shots and giving away too many lay-ups. THE RESULT: Cleveland has lost 17 games by four points or less. WITH CLEVELAND Robisch has found a hawny home. SINCE STARTING, Robisch has been averaging 17.5 points and 8.4 rebounds in addition. In game, he has already set per-season records in minutes played and points scored. However, the Cavaliers are coming together and the reason is Robich After the merger of the two leagues, Robisch was dealt to the Los Angeles Lakers. There Robisch, who was a forward for the Clippers, back-up center to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Robisch, the second leading scorer in KU history, credits his newly found success to Cleveland coach Stan Albeck. "I've known Stan since Denver and his style makes it easy to play," he said. "I'm always taking to him when I'm playing and when I'm on the bench." The bench has been familiar territory for Robbisch in the past. His first five years of pro ball were with the ABA's Denver Rockets, plavinic in the shadow of Dan Iskel. Loss drops Kings to 2nd The teams exchanged 12 leads 12 times during the third quarter. The Bucks had 14 more hands, the Leads had 12 more hands before the Bucks went ahead to stay at 186 in a pair of free throws by Quinn Burke. The Bucks won. WILMUKEAU (AP) - Bob Lanier scored 20 points yesterday to lead Milwaukee to a 121- victory the Kansas City Kings' first place in the NBA's Midwest Division. Rockie reserve Pat Cummings fired in 13 points in the first quarter to help the Bucks (5-2) beat the Knicks. They stretched it to 8-43 before the Kings, behind the shooting of Ford and Olsi Bird (6-4). pair of free throws a capped and a dunk by Marques Johnson capped a run of eight successive points by Milwaukee that took command at 114-106 with 5:18 left. Where: 3140 Wescoe Dave Meyers and Lanier followed with a Time: 6:30-8:00 pm The Bucks stretched their marmor to 127-116 but a three-point goal by Phil Ford and a pair of free throws by Scott Wedman cut the lead to 127-121. The Bucks held on. AGENDA When: Thursday, March 20, 1980 Len Elmore led the Kings with 23 points. GENERAL MEETING Black Student Union BSU Election Nominations Upcoming Big 8 and Kansas Council Martin Luther King Program --from 6-10 p.m. for only $1 of your cash money Our manager's IRISH and we've found a sister-tavent in Ireland, so The Harbour isn't is weeping the green on. so MONDAY, MARCH 17 Our manager's IBISH and we've found a sister-tavern in Ireland. Turn your post-spring break blues green at THE HARBOUR LITES' n ANNUAL ST. PATRICK'S DAY GALA We'll be pourin' the PITCHERS OF GREEN BEER from 6-10 p.m. for only $1 of your cash money (And we might even have a parade) AT THE HARBOUR LITES, everyone's IRISH on ST. PAT'S DAY! "Hopefully, I'll be able to play four more good years, maybe five, and then be able to say I've had a good career." The Harbour Lites 1031 Massachusetts "I don't think 30 is too old to be playing pro ball," he said. "I think I'm in the prime of my career." At KU, Robisch's career was nothing short of spectacular. KU's scoring leader three years in a row, 1969-70-71, Robisch guided the 'Hawks to their best finish during Coach Ted Owens tenure in the 1970-71 camp. The Jayhawks finished 27-3 and fourth in the NCAA championships. "That was probably the most dominant team KU had." Robbisch said. "The front line averaged 6-10. Naturally, KU hasn't that kind of muscle up on front in a while." LACK OF MUSCLE hurt KU this season, said Robisch, who has remained close to the Javakh basketball scene. "From what I saw, they just couldn't put it together with their inside play. That hurt them," he said. "I think the key is Darnell's need to be careful or not will determine next year's team." "Ted calls once in awhile and asks me to in a phone call. I'm more than happy to do it," Robish said. The only KU alumi now starting in the NBA, Robisch said he kept in touch with Owens and had helped with recruiting. While at KU, Robisch also played baseball and had a chance to go pro. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS = Part Stock 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 Robbins was one of the Jayhawks' best pitchers, compiling a 2.77 and 2.81 earned run averages during his sophomore and junior years. "I DEFINITELY had a chance to get a considerable bonus, but I thought basketball had more to offer." he said. Unsure of what his plans are when he playing days are over, Robisch may find himself back in Lawrence. "I've got some friends back there that I keep in touch with, so Lawrence is a possibility," he said. IN THE MEANTIME, Robisch is concerned with the Cavaliers and their chance at a playoff berth. "We're just going to try our best and make a run for it and see what happens." IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS 738 MASS. 9:30-8:00 M-S Thur. till 8:30 p.m. sua films Presents Alfred Hitchcock's NOTORIOUS With Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman Plus: "Homebody," a short film by KU alumnus Steve Johnson Tonight, March 17 7:30 pm $1.00 Woodruff Auditorium -No refreshments allowed- Now that you have a great looking spring tan, Let us give you a great looking spring stile. hair lords styling for men and women 1017 1/2 Mass 841-8276 REDKEN open Mon; Thurs, till 9 by appointment. Fn & Sat tiff 1 KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Vol. 90; No. 110 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday. March 18. 1980 Sports cuts avert budget deficit By STEVE YOUNG Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The athletic department will not have a deficit—thanks to almost $84,000 in budget cuts—when its fiscal year ends June 30. The director Bob Marceum said yesterday. Marcum refused to specify what cuts had been made but said the largest single cut, about $14,000, came from the sports information office. "We've made cuts in about nine areas, all the way from sports information to maintenance," he said. avoid a deficit which was estimated last month at up $100,000. Marcum said. "What do you do when gate receipts are down and expenses and inflation are up?" We didn't have any areas to turn to, "he said. SUSAN WACHTER, interim athletic business manager, said $39,000 in project expenses—about three percent of the $2.1 million budget—were cut effective Feb. 31. "I not at liberty to discuss where the cuts have been made," Wachter said. But she added, "They've been administrative as well as sorts." She entered the board. Marcus said most cuts involved printing costs, part-time salaries, team travel and recruiting. The only sports affected were non-revenue-producing men's sports. Although Marcum did not give a complete breakdown of the cuts, he said the $14,000 cut from sports information affected part-time salaries and printing. HE SAID ABOUT $7,000 was cut from both baseball and men's track. Men's tennis lost part-time salaries and some traveled their swimming lost some money, but unspecified cuts were made in this year's men's gymnastics program, he said. Marcum and Wachter said coaches had been understanding and cooperative. Bill Spahn, men's swimming coach, said last night that he did not want to comment on the cuts but that he agreed that most coaches had understood the move. Marcum said the men's revenue-producing sports-football and basketball teams are unwise to cut back on the sports that supply income for the non-revenue-producing Women's sports were unaffected by the cuts because they are state-supported. KU students foresee draft protests By MARK SPENCER Staff Writer During the 1960s and early 70s, the draft brought the stark reality of the Vietnam War to the forefront. The draft triggered unrest on campuses throughout the country and led to bitter Although those days are little more than history to many draftage KU students, it would be a good reason to be a similar response if the draft were resumed, according to a University Daily report. The survey, conducted before spring classes, asked students think that the draft were resumed, young people would or probably would protected it and made it as they did with the Yepman survey. Reporting II students surveyed a scientifically selected random sample of 270 KU students. ALTHOUGH THOSE polled favored Analysis President Carter's plan to resume registration by a 65 to 35 margin, 72 percent said they opposed the draft. Sixty-one percent they would accept it, 33 percent they would seek conscientious objector status, 30 percent they would accept it, 30 percent they would leave the country, 30 percent they would leave the country. Students were also asked what their reaction would be to being drafted. Four options were presented, and those choices could come as many as they wanted. There is, of course, often a difference between what people say they will do and what they actually will do. The question is considerably easier than deciding what to do when faced with a few alternatives. or innermore, the responses reflect student opinion only at the time the poll was taken. The circumstances that precipitate a draft would play a big role in determining ONE STUDENT said, "It depends on how necessary it is at the time it resumed." Other students, however, were more emphatic. Comments ranged from those such as "I'd protest for a while--before I left home!" and "Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen! Don't leave the kitchen!" Any other choice is just out of sight. Student opinion on the draft also is reflected in opinions toward the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. When asked what action the United States should take in response to the invasion, only non-military action, such as boycots and embargoes, should be considered. Seven percent said the United States should take no action, while 10 percent said conventional military action should be conducted, as most of the respondents were undecided. If the Soviets invade other countries, however, the number of students who favor military action increases. If the Soviets invade Pakistan, 57 percent of those polled favored conventional military action and 2 percent favored nuclear action. If Iran is favored, the majority favored conventional military action and three percent supported nuclear action. IF WESTERN EUROPE is the target of a Soviet invasion, 72 percent said they favored conventional military action and 7 percent supported nuclear action. Women were more opposed to taking military action than men. In relation to women, men favored a favored no action or non-military action, while only 30 percent of the men polled favored those options. More women than men favored a militarized action in Iran and Western Europe. Most support for military action in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran came from those who favored the draft. Students who said they probably favored the draft tended to take positions similar to those who said they probably opposed or supported the draft. They were less inclined to support military action. The rationale behind student support for registration while opposing the draft seems to lie in the purpose students see in registration. Forty percent said registration was an effort to strengthen U.S. military forces. Four percent said gesture to reaffirm the image of the United States as a strong military power in the world, and 19 percent said it was both. | If we return to the draft, do you think young people would protest or evade it as they did at the time of the Vietnam War, or do you think young people would accept the draft today? | | :--- | | Protest and evade 25% | | Probably protest and evade 45% | | Accept it 8% | | Probably accept it 22% | **2 Which of the following options would you consider if the draft refused and you were chosen (Students were allowed to choose more than one option. The numbers presented are the percentage of students who chose each option)** | Accept it | 61% | | :--- | :--- | | Seek Conscientious Objector status | 33% | | Protest | 30% | | Go to another country | 17% | **3 What type of option, if any, is appropriate given the present situation in Afghanistan?** | Take no action | 7% | | :--- | :--- | | Non-military action | 82% | | Conventional military action | 10% | | Nuclear military action | 0% | | Undecided | 1% | **4 What type of action, if any, is appropriate if the Soviets invade Pakistan?** | Take no action | 4% | | :--- | :--- | | Non-military action | 35% | | Conventional military action | 57% | | Nuclear military action | 2% | | Undecided | 2% | **5 What type of action, if any, is appropriate if the Soviets invade Iran?** | Take no action | 9% | | :--- | :--- | | Non-military action | 26% | | Conventional military action | 60% | | Nuclear military action | 3% | | Undecided | 2% | **6 What type of action, if any, is appropriate if the Soviets invade Western Europe?** | Take no action | 2% | | :--- | :--- | | Non-military action | 17% | | Conventional military action | 72% | | Nuclear military action | 7% | | Undecided | 2% | The University Dailty Kansas Poll surveyed 270 randomly selected students by telephone Fbb. 23.26. The poll has a confidence level of 95 percent with a margin for error of plus or minus 6 percent, which means 95 chances out of 100 were correct. The telephone interviews were conducted by Reporting II students. Death of gymnastics leaves team hanging The KU gymnastics coach wanted to resim two weeks ago. By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Sports Writer He was told he could not Now the coach, Ken Snow, has become a teacher at the gymnasium department, with consulting later recently the gymnastics team an athletic corpse, a victim of spiraling costs in the United States. An official announcement, expected in the next few days, will say that Big Eight competition is too tough for Kansas and that the available resources are inadequate. Last year, Nebraska and Oklahoma finished second in the nation in men's gymnastics. SNORE KNOWS THE program is dead, but he is concerned about the sport's burial arrangements. He said yesterday that he was shocked to learn that would fairly commemorate the team members. "This is an unforeseen predicament," Snow said. "I hope the University feels the commitment to keep the kids on scholarship. They were recruited in good faith." "Those kids are almost through their academic programs. There is the question of whether their hours will transfer." ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Bob Marcum, however, is making no promises. "Coach Snow and I will have to work those (scholarships) out," he said. "We have to see what commitments we have." Snow said that when he learned of the program's cancellation he asked Marcum to tell the team. Snow said a convenience time and cost was involved, but he "between a rock and a hard place." THE MEN'S gymnastics team learned of the cancellation one day before the Big Eight Championships, March 7. The team field and no one qualified for the finals. "I thought it was important to tell the kids," Snow said. "I thought the kids was important for them to know before spring comes." She discussed the situation with their parents." "It hit us all really hard," Brad Foerch, Addison, Ill. junior gymnast said. "I didn't feel ready to retire." The combined men's and women's program had a £70,000 budget this year. When Snow tried to resign he presented recommendations to Marcum. They were - Hire a high school coach from Illinois and encourage him to bring his best gymnasts to KU. - Increase the budget for recruiting. - Increase the budget for recruiting. * Drop the program if those suggestions could not be accomplished. This year the men's team had seven members and the women's team had four, the minimum necessary for a team. Five of them are from state. None are eight are from out of state. None are nine. SNOW SAY AID SOHE of the gymnasts probably would transfer to other schools. The National Collegiate Athletic Association, the men's governing body, and the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for women, the men's counterpart, give transfer requests if their school's program is dropped. Usually an athlete must sit out a year. The athletes who do not transfer should be kent on scholarship. Snow said. "There is no set policy on this matter." Snow said. "But it would take one-tenth of the total amount the University will save to provide scholarships to the few that remain. be responsible for finding another school. OTHER SCHOOLS, according to Mar- are also are cutting back non-revenue- producing programs that KU would have a $100,000 budget "Alabama, Georgia and Notre Dame are all making cuts in their programs," Marcum said. "It's a matter of resources." But the gymnasts don't want to suffer. "We can't all win in football and we are dependent on that sport for our income. When gate receipts go down, we suffer." But the congressional deadline is early. "I want to graduate from KU." Foerch said. "I love the school, my professors, the people here. But I will return only if I receive a scholarship." His brother Steve, a sophomore gymnast, agreed. "I don't know if we'll be able to afford it," he said. KU hearing to determine fate of Leban's charges By BILL MENEZES BY BILL MENEZE Staff Reporter J. Hammond McNish, chairman of the hearing division of the University of Chicago, would be scheduled to determine whether charges brought against Chancellor Archie R. Dykes at Carl Leibniz, associate professor for technical reasons, would be dismissed for technical reasons. Earlier this month, Leban failed charges with the University Judiciary, alleging that Dykes violated Leban's rights and the rights of all University faculty, staff and students by his actions against Norman Levy, a former student at Claremont and Clarence Dillingham, instructor of social welfare, during their trip to Iran in December. Forer and Dilham were suspended without pay during their trip to Iran in an unofficial attempt to help solve the crisis there. However, in a motion filed with the Judiciary last Friday, Vickie Thomas, associate University General Counsel, said Leban's charges had no standing. Citing several previous cases, the motion said Leban showed no concrete injury to himself and therefore had no standing to file he charges. The motion said that because Forer and Dillingham, as members of the University community, would have been able to allegiance to the university, they had a petition of charges should be dismissed. Leban said he was not surprised at the motion. "It the usual line of delaying tactics," he said. "I would expect a series of motions for one reason or another trying to dismiss the charges." Mnish said he alone would hear the arguments at the hearing because it involved a strictly legal question. However, he would not accept that case, a Judiciary nandal would hear the case. "A panel sits really like a jury," he said, "and determines facts in their view." McNish said that although the powers of the Judiciary were unclear in terms of punishment or remedy, the Judicature, not the evidence, would decide what role it would take. He also said that the final authority for the Judiciary's action would not rest with the administration. The hearing will be scheduled at the convenience of the two parties involved. Mission provides food, aid to transient community By GREG SACKUVICH Staff Reporter KANSIS CAYT, Mo. --The nicest name is trans- nation. Some of the naster names are wino and bum. Some of the naster names are sambur. There is a transient community, but it is not a community in the traditional sense. These people have only one tie with other transients—the lack of a home. "Don't ask me how they find us, but they do. There must be some grapevine among these guys," said Chuck, an employee of the Rescue Mission in the River Oxy area of Kansas City Mn. When transients come to Kansas City, Mo. they know where to find a place to stay, and if they need one, they can do it. "There's a place in every big city to get fed and bed for free." Paul White said as he walked down downtown Kansas City. Mo. "Just find downtown there, however is hanging out where you can get a meal." Some of the Mission's "customers" are just passing through on their way to somewhere else. For many others it is a place to hole up until they earn money for a hotel room. THE MISSION is the lifeline of many transients when they arrive in town. It supplies free food and a place to rest. "I got married in 1939, when I was 19. I got drafted in '42, and when I got home in '45, I found out I wasn't married anymore," he said. "I just got missed and hit the road. White's appearance is deceiving. He is a small, neat, white man who looks more like a school teacher. White said he had been on the road for 35 years and Kansas City was his "home." Now, when spring approaches, White comes to Kansas City, works at a temporary help employment agency and stays at one of the decaying hotels in downtown Kansas City, Mo. "I make about $70 a week and it costs $1.250 a week for my room. It ain't the Hitz, it ain't to borne the heat." When the summer ends, White goes wherever the mood strikes him. "I always have a few bucks in my pocket to get me by. Most of the other guys are always broke, but that's only because they have to booze it up all the time." Tony, an employee of another employment agency, said, "We hire these guys a day at a time. When they're in bad shape, I tell them to get some food and rest and come back the next day. "Some of these guys want to make enough money for food and then hit the road. They're usually ok. But most of these guys only want to make money for some hooey. When they can't ite, they eat med." *Truckers are always looking for help loading* *their cargo. Trucks have to overweight at a scale or in a hurry to get away* *from the traffic.* IT IS EASY to find work when you’re traveling, white. Sites to find work are employment agencies or online job boards. Fred, an employee of one agency, said "We got a lot of them, (transients) in here we wouldn't have any trouble." Fred said. Edgey is a 35-year-old recovered alcoholic who continues to drink a transient because he doesn't ALCOHOLISM IS A problem for many transients, and their lifetimes make rehabilitation difficult. There are several employment agencies in downtown Kansas City, Mo., that hire transients. "They get laided and start fights," he said. "They pass out in the hall, piss all over the place and make a bunch of noise. I guess that's why they have to keep moving—who wants them around?" It is the alcoholic transients who make life miserable for other transients, Edeev said. "I used to get loaded all the time. That's why my old lady threw me out of the house. I used to drunk and shoot my mouth off. It got so many times, I'm surprised it still there." EDGEY SAID he had a wife and two children. He also had a house, too many bills, and too much to drink. One day in 1737 his father-in-law threw him in a car, drove down Interstate 52 in Mississippi and dropped him off—dead drunk in the middle of nowhere. "Man, I just started hatching and haven't stopped since," he said. "I hit town, some money at one of the employment places, got loaded and stayed loaded until my money ran out." Edgew said he quit drinking last September in when he went to a hospital because he was vomiting. "I was 35 years old and looked up. I went straight, m still not Ozzie Nelson, but I don't want to be," he frowned. WHEN A TRANSIENT gets sick, as Edgey did, the key to his recovery is the aid the missions. When Edgey is sick, the mission is over. "Usually they don't want the help. Physically, they know what's wrong with them. They need some decent food and a decent lifestyle. Mentally—man, who knows?" "We try to help these guys any way we can," Chuck said. "We seen the ones who are in good shape." The Mission is the only means of survival for some transients when they are in no condition to care for themselves and no one else cares about them, Chuck said. An example is a man, about 30 years old, who sat on the sidewalk across from the Mission. He wore only a T-shirt, blue jeans and shoes with no socks in a Degree chill he was thin, pale, shivering and dirty. When Chuck went out to ask the man whether he wanted help, he answered "no" with a string of hyphens. He said, "Hey, just don't preach at me. I'm a goddamn drunk and I know it. You want to know why I live like this! Because I don't want to live like anybody else." A few minutes later the man calmed down and entered the Mission. "Hey, man, that's why all us burns live like this. "Weain't bothering you, don't so burnt you. Weain't bothering you," JOHN JINK SR. PENSON STAFF 1 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 18. 1980 NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services KC firefighters walk off job KANAS CITY Mo.—The city's 600 disgruntled firefighters still angry about the job last night in a protest over the city manager's decision to rehire any Firefighters president John Germann had warned the city earlier yesterday that City Manager Robert Kripke had until Friday to decide the fate of 42 firefighters who were under contract. Police officials immediately alerted all policemen who had received training during the 12-day work slowdown in December to report for duty. However, the officers found doors to the fire stations locked by dissident firefighters, leaving the city virtually without any fire protection. However, Kipp issued his announcement only four hours later, saying he would announce a decision by the city's personnel board, which said the 42 residents had been released. The action yesterday came only three days after the firefighters had voted overwhelmily to approve a working agreement with the city contingent on the restatement of 41 of the 42 firefighters dismissed during a year-end slowdown. One of the firefighters had already accepted an early retirement. The firefighters began a work slowdown on Dec. 21, 1979 when union and fire department officials were unable to reach agreement on mandatory overtime pay. Glickman won't run for Senate WICHTA-Rep. Dani Glickman, a potential challenger for Sen. Bob Dole, Jr. in the Senate, said yesterday that he would not run for the Senate this year. Glickman said Dole was beatable, but added that he had decided against entering the race so that he could spend more time with his children and family. Glickman said two statewide polls commissioned by his campaign committee showed that although Dole is better known statewide, "among those who know both of us, at this time, I would win. When those who don't know me are factored in, I am within striking distance." Glickman said that he thought he was doing an "aggressive, conscientious job" for his district and state and could continue to accomplish a great deal for the community. Khan said he still was interested in considering statewide office. "I am not sure if I will face a 'formidable, resourceless' opponent in Dole, Gickman said." maude, resourcelt in Dole, withdrawn said. "As far as Joe's dole in campaign, he is unmatched." Glickman said. Hostage flees from guerrillas BOGGTA, Colombia - A Uruguayan diplomat escaped yesterday from the GOTAIA-d held Dominican Embassy in a dramatic rush to freedom, sliding through the streets of Bogota. Authorities said the leift terrorists fired three times at the fleeing Fernando Gomez, Uruguay's ambassador to Colombia, but missed. The 42-year-old ambassador made his daring escape despite a shoulder injury suffered when the guerrillas stormed the embassy Feb. 27. Gomez, the first person to escape during the three-week old standoff with the diplomatic mission of the Dominican Republic, left behind at least 31 other Gomez, in his underwear, opened a second floor window at about 12:40 a.m. He dropped the umbrella into the room where Gomez dropped to a patch of grass in front of the embassy, authorities and As he ran for cover under an automobile about 50 feet away, three shots rang out from the embassy, according to the press office of President Julian Cosar Presidential press secretary Marta Montoya said Gomez was in very good health and had no broken bones. She said he suffered bruises from the fall. Conaress reviews new budaet WASHINGTON—President Carter's revised review gave a rough reception at its debut yesterday in Congress while Carter told city officials stmeasures to avoid overreaction. Sen. William Proxmire, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, took advantage of an appearance by Alfred Kahn, the president's chief inflation expert. "it is weaker than I had hoped or expected," Proxmire said. Kahn, who defended Carter's revised budget proposal before the Banking Committee, said he accepted the contention by other officials that a detailed audit of the company's financial statements Promiserie that despite the attention given to the $13 billion in cuts from the 181 federal budget, the reductions announced Friday would have little impact. The president said the specific budget reductions he would announce later this month would affect everyone. Carter's original 1981 budget called for outlays of $616 billion with a projected deficit of 18.8 billion. The revised version calls for $13 billion in cuts, between $611 billion and $13 billion in spending, and a surplus of between $11 billion and $13 billion. Census to include illegal aliens WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday refused to postpone the April start of the 1800 census, turning down an emergency request by 26 members of Congress and two organizations who wanted to force census workers to keep separate records. A judge questioned the constitutionality of a census that would include illegal aliens. Bani-Sadr backers gain seats This was an apparent reversal of first results from the provinces, which heavily favored the IRP. Independent candidates won 21 of the declared seats and may hold the balance of power. Surgeries unwittingly switched Meanwhile, the Pentagon reported that a six-ship Navy force carrying 1,800 Marines entered the Indian Ocean on Sunday, raising U.S. naval strength there by more than a million. PHILADELPHA—Two women were wheeled into surgery at Graduate Hospital, but through a mixup, doctors got them confused and started to give each the operation that was intended for the other, the hospital confirmed yesterday. Incisions had been made in the wrong places before the mistakes were discovered. One woman who checked in with a ruptured disc had a nodule removed from her parathyroid gland in the front of her neck, while the patient was taken to the ward underwent the initial stages of a cervical larynomyctin at the back of her head. Hospital officials refused to say whether the unnecessary surgery would affect the future health of other patient. They said the mistake was "emergency" rather than "non-emergency." Alfred Edmison said his wife went for back surgery last Thursday but when he went to see her afterward he was summoned to a room down the hall by "He said there wouldn't be any problem." Edmondson said, "that everything takes care of, and he told me there would not be a charge for the operation." Weather... Skiers will be saddened today with the high in the low to mid-60s and southwest having from 15 to 30 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topics. Profs win EPA award Two KU professors were among eight Kansas residents given awards by the Environmental Protection Agency yesterday in Topeka. Tomorrow the high will be from the mid- to upper-60s. Skies will be partly cloudy. E. Raymond Hall, professor emeritus of Music and Dr. Russ McKinney professor of will education received 1979 Environmental Quality awards for personal contributions to protecting the environment. Tonight the low will be in the 40s. McKinney, N. T. Teach distinguished professor of environmental engineering and engineering education at the University Engineering and Environmental Health program; taught his work concerning water treatment. He has worked for several years advising in the expansion of water treatment facilities in Milwaukee, Wis. He also has prepared sanitation reports for Lawrence and has worked with the Grand Island, Neb. sanitation department to bring its resources. Hall has written or collaborated on almost 500 papers and books dealing with various topics in environmental science. He recently completed a project on an experimental Tallgrass Prairie area. The six other recipients were from private industry and education... TODAY: THE UNITED STATES MARSHALS DEPARTMENT OFFICERS program from 9 a.m. to a p.m. at Booth 1 in the main lobby in the Kansas City office. THE TEAM will meet at 3 p.m. in front of the building. KANSAN On Campus TONIGHT: THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:39 p.m. in Danfern Chapel. CAMPUS CHRISTIANS will meet at 7 p.m. in Pardars A and B in the University of Michigan. CAMPUS CHRISTIANS will meet at 7 p.m. in 220 Robinson. THE ACADEMIC FILM FESTIVAL WESTERN CIVILIZATION PROGRAM will present Grandeur and Obedience and "Knowledge." The Efficient Presentation of Lippincott Hall "Efficient Presentation of Grammar in Pedagogical Materials" will be given by Irene Wherritt of KU and is a PARTMENT. It will be presented at 7:30 p.m. in Room 207 Blake Hall. A HUMANISTLE LECTURE with William Malm of the University of Michigan will lecture on "Lite." It will be presented at 8:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. THE DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY will present a lecture by Kerry Feddman of the University of Alaska on "The Role of Public Policy in Alaska at 8:10 p.m. in 108 Blake. Grand Opening March 17-22 Drawings for over $400 worth of prizes. FREE GIFT with every purchase Commissioners lobby for community grants By LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter Up to 50% off Sun and James Sale prices throughout the store Four of the city commissioners and Buford Watson, city manager, are in Washington, D.C., lobbying for reamntion of the development of Housing and Community Development grants. Lawrence city officials are half a continent away this week, putting local financial concerns into the hands that control the purse strings. The lobbying is part of a four-day meeting of the National League of Cities, a member of Watson's staff said yesterday. limited quantities in stock The federal CD program is an important source of funds for low- and moderate-income neighborhood associations and renovation projects in Lawrence. Lynn Goodell, director of community development, said yesterday that the Community Development Grant Act was He said that Lawrence's application for $839,000 in CD funds for the next fiscal year hinged on the federal CD reenactment. "Whenever the federal government talks about budget cuts, you naturally start worrying," Goodell said. He called the reenactment "routine" but would not rule out the possibility of CD budget cuts. Commissioner Don Binns, who did not attend the NLC meeting, said the city officials plan to open access sessions and give lobby in support of continued CD fund. passed in 1974 and reenacted in 1977, and was being reviewed again this year. The commissioners' trip will be financed from city budget funds that are set aside each year for meetings that deal with the well-being of Lawrence, Binsn said. Tonight's weekly city commission meeting has been canceled. Joan CRAWFORD DANCE-HALL GUN-QUEEN and her kind of men! TRIVOICE! Johnny Guitar STERLING MIRCIOES SCOTT HAYBEN-MAGNIFICIOR-BRAUY Tuesday March 16 at 7:30 sua films Presents Joan CRAWFORD DANCE-HALL GUN-QUEEN and her kind of men! TRUMPH! Johnny Guitar STERLING MERCEDES KCOTT HAYDEN-MCAMBRIDGE-BRADY Tonight, March 18 — 7:30 pm $1.00—Forum Room No refreshments allowed LIVING OFF CAMPUS? YOU ARE NOT ALONE! 14,000 plus students live off campus Are you sometimes isolated, confused and frustrated because you lack information about: HOUSING TRANSPORTATION UTILITIES SHOPPING BUDGETING UNIVERSITY SERVICES: OTHER (you name it!) UNIVERSITY SERVICES: •LEGAL HELP •COUNSELING LEGAL HELP COUNSELLING GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES -EMPLOYMENT The Off Campus Board is taking applications NOW The Off Campus Board is taking applications NOW for the Spring '80-Fall '80 board members. GET INVOLVED! 864-3710 Student Senate YOU CAN MAKE IT WHAT YOU WANT IT TO BE! 864-3506 Info Center Applications due in Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union DUE FRIDAY,MARCH 21 MAKE UP! GO BIG BLUE Don't miss the EARLY BIRD SPECIAL! jayhawker towers On Campus at 1603 West 15th. 2 Tuesday, March 18, 1984 University Daily Kansan IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services KC firefighters walk off job KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The city's 900 disgruntled firefighters still angry about the firing of 42 union members during a 12-day walkout in late 1978, walked off the job last night in a protest over the city manager's decision not to rehire any of the dismissed men. Firefighters president John Germann had warned the city earlier yesterday that City Manager Robert Kips had until Friday to decide the fate of 42 firefighters. Police officials immediately alerted all policemen who had received training during the 12-day work slowdown in December to report for duty. However, the officers found doors to the fire stations locked by disident firefighters, leaving the city virtually without any fire protection. However, Kipp issued his announcement only four hours later, saying he would uphold a decision by the city's personnel board, which said the 42 The action yesterday came only three days after the firefighters had voted overwhelmingly to approve a working agreement with the city contingent on the reinstatement of 41 of the 42 firefighters dismissed during a year-end slowdown. One of the firefighters had already accepted an early retirement. The firefighters began a work slowdown on Dec. 21, 1979 when union and fire department officials were unable to reach agreement on mandatory overtime pay. Glickman won't run for Senate WICHTA-Rep. Dirk Gianckus, a potential challenger for Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., in the Senate, said yesterday that he would not run for the Senate this Glickman said Dole was beatable, but added that he had decided against entering the race so that he could spend more time with his children and grandchildren. Glickman said two statewide polls commissioned by his campaign committee showed that although Dole is better known statewide, "among those who know both of us, at this time, I would win. When those who don't know me are factored in, I am within striking distance." Glickman said that he thought he was doing an "aggressive, conscientious job" for his district and state and could continue to accomplish a great deal for the community. You can send an email to a noise member. Kim said that the still was interested in considering statewide office. The Democratic governors say that. Glickman said that he still was interested in considering statewide office. He added, "We will face a formidable, resourceful" opponent in Dole, Glickman said. influence, resource cutout in love, Quickman said. "As far as Dale's vice in campainment he is unmatched." Clickman said. Hostage flees from querrillas BOGOTA, Colombia – A Uruguayan diplomat escaped yesterday from the bastion-holden Dominican Embassy in a dramatic dash to freedom, sliding into the shadow of a prison cell. Authorities left the laifit terrorists fire three times at the fleeing Fernando Gomez, Uruguay's ambassador to Colombia, but missed. The 42-year-old ambassador made his daring escape despite a shoulder injury suffered when the guerrillas stormed the embassy Feb. 27. Gomez, the first person to escape during the three-week old standoff at the diplomatic mission of the Dominican Republic, left behind at least 31 other people. Gomez, in his underwear, opened a second-floor window at about 12:40 a.m. and lowered himself down a knotted string of sheets. The string broke and Gomez dropped to a patch of grass in front of the embassy, authorities and witnesses said. As he ran for cover on an automobile about 50 feet away, three shots rang out from the embassy, according to the press office of President Julian Cesar Presidential press secretary Marta Montya said Gomez was in very good health and had no broken bones. She said she suffered bruises from the fall. Congress reviews new buadet WASHINGTON—President Carter's revised budget got a rough reception at its debunked reality in Congress while Carter told city officials stm measures to protect consumers. Sen. William Proxmire, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, took advantage of an appearance by Alfred Kahn, the president's chief inflation expert. "It is weaker than I had hoped or expected," Proxmire said Kahn, who defended Carter's revised budget proposal before the Banking committee, and he accepted the contention by other officials that a detailed presentation of the budget proposal would be published. Proxime issue that despite the attention given to the $13 billion in cuts from Peter's original version of the 1881 federal budget, the reductions announced prior to Proxime were not accompanied by a new rule. The president said the specific budget reductions he would announce later this month would affect everyone. Carter's original 1811 budget called for outlays of $616 billion with a projected deficit of 15.8 billion. The revised version calls for $13 billion in cuts, between $611 billion and $613 billion in spending, and a surplus of between $111 billion and $131 billion. Census to include illegal aliens WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday refused to postpone the April 1 start of the 1880 census, turning down an emergency request by 26 members of Congress and two organizations who want to force census workers to keep answering questions that questioned the constitutionality of a census that would include illegal aliens. Bani-Sadr backers aain seats Supporters of Iranian President Abbasollah Banis-Sadi, who says he wants an early end to the U.S. Embassy hostage crisis, scored new gaisner yesterday. Tehran votes in national parliamentary elections. However, the conservative, clergy-dominated Islamic Republican Party still held an overall lead. This was an apparent reversal of first results from the provinces, which heavily favored the IRP. PHILADELPHIA—Two women were wheeled into surgery at Graduate Hospital, but through a mixup, doctors got them confused and started to give each the operation that was intended for the other, the hospital confirmed yesterday. Independent candidates won 21 of the declared seats and may hold the balance of power. Meanwhile, the Pentagon reported that a six-ship Navy force carrying 1,800 Marines entered the Indian Ocean on Sunday, raising U.S. naval strength there by more than 40%. Surgeries unwittingly switched Incisions had been made in the wrong places before the mistakes were discovered. One woman who checked in with a ruptured disc had a nodule removed from her parathyroid gland in the front of her neck, while the patient was given IV fluids underwent the initial stages of a cervical laminectomy at the back of her head. Hospital officials refused to say whether the unnecessary surgery would affect the future health of other patient. They said the mistake was "emtis." Alfred Edmondson said his wife went for back surgery last Thursday but when he went to see her afterward he was summoned to a room down the hall by "He said there wouldn't be any problem," Edmonson said, "that everything would be taken care of, and he told me there wouldn't be a charge for the door." Weather... Skies will be today topped with the high in the low to mid-60s and south-west gusting from 15 to 30 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topos. Profs win EPA award Two KU professors were among eight Kansas residents given awards by the Environmental Protection Agency vested in Toneka. Tonight the low will be in the 40s. Tomorrow the high will be from the mid- to upper-60s. Skies will be partly cloudy. E. Raymond Hall, professor emeritus of systematics and ecology and Russ Berger, who served as director received 1979 Environmental Quality contributions to the preservation of the wetland. McKinney, N. T. Weach distinguished professor of environmental engineering and computer science at Engineering and Environmental Health Program and Work concern with water treatment work concerning Hall has written or collaborated on almost 500 papers and books dealing with various aspects of environmental science. He is also the author of an experimental Tallairss Prairie area. He has worked for several years advising in the expansion of water treatment facilities in Milwaukee, Wis. He also prepared sanitary reports for Lawrence and has worked with the Grand Island, where he has provided water under faded backfill protection guidelines. The six other recipients were from private industry and education. **TODAY:** THE UNITED STATES OFFICERS GO TO BOOTH 1 in the main lobby in the Kansas City area. The officers programs from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Booth 1 in the main lobby in the Kansas City area will meet at 3 p.m. in front of 206 Robinson KANSAN On Campus **TONIGHT: THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel, CAMPUS CHRISTIANS will meet at 7:15 p.m. in Grace Hall, GDMA DANCE ENSAMble will meet at 7 p.m. in 220仁博屋, THE ACADEMIC FESTIVAL WESTERN CILIZATION PROGRAM will present edge or Certainty" at 7:0 p.m. in Room 3 in Lippincott Hall. "Efficient Presentation of Grammar in Pedagogical Materials" will be given by Irene Wherritt of KU and is part of the PARTMENT. It will be presented at 7:30 p.m. in Room 207 Blake Hall. A HUMANISTIES LECTURE with William Malm of the Deskview Michigan with lecture on Darkness at 8 p.m. in Woodford Auditorium in the Union. The DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY will present a lecture by Kerry Mullen of Blackburn with lecture on "The Impact of Anthropology on Public Policy in Alaska at 8 p.m. in 108 Blake. Grand Opening March 17-22 Drawings for over $400 worth of prizes. FREE GIFT with every purchase Sale prices throughout the store Up to 50% off Sun and James Staff Reporter By LYNN ANDERSON Commissioners lobby for community grants Four of the city commissioners and Baford Watson, city manager, are in Washington, D.C., lobbying for reenactment of the Pearl Harbor and Community development grants. The lobbying is part of a four-day meeting of the National League of Cities, a member of Watson's staff said yesterday. limited quantities in stock Lawrence city officials are half a continent away this week, putting local financial concerns into the hands that control the purse strings. The federal CD program is an important source of funds for low- and moderate-income neighborhood associations and renovation projects in Lawrence. Lynn Goodell, director of community development, said yesterday that the Community Development Grant Act was He said that Lawrence's application for $39,000 in CD funds for the next fiscal year hinged on the federal CD re enactment. "Whenever the federal government talks about budget cuts, you naturally start worrying." Goodell said. The commissioners' trip will be financed from city budget funds that are set aside each year for meetings to deal with the well-being of lawrence, Binns said. Commissioner Don Binns, who did not attend the NLC meeting, said the city planned to attend open sessions and held a lobby in support of continued CDL funds. He called the reenactment "routine" but would not rule out the possibility of CD budget cuts. Tonight's weekly city commission meeting has been canceled. passed in 1974 and reenacted in 1977, and was being reviewed again this year. sua films Presents Joan CRAWFORD DANCE-HALL GUN-QUEEN and her kind of men! TRUROVER Johnny Guitar STERLING MERCEDES SCOTT HAYREN - McCAMBRIDGE - BRADY Tonight, March 18 — 7:30 pm $1.00—Forum Room No refreshments allowed. LIVING OFF CAMPUS? YOU ARE NOT ALONE! Are you sometimes isolated, confused and frustrated because 14,000 plus students live off campus you lack information about: HOUSING TRANSPORTATION UTILITIES SHOPPING BUDGETING OTHER (you name it!) UNIVERSITY SERVICES: ●LEGAL HELP ●COUNSELING *LEGAL HELP *COUNSELING *CRIEVANCE PROCEDURES - GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES •EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT The Off Campus Board is taking applications NOW EMI The Off Campus Board is taking applications NOW for the Spring '80-Fall '80 board members. GET INVOLVED! 864-3710 Student Senate YOU CAN MAKE IT WHAT YOU WANT IT TO BE! 864-3506 Info Center Applications due in Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union DUE FRIDAY, MARCH 21 Wake Up! GO BIG BLUE Don't miss the EARLY BIRD SPECIAL! jayhawker towers On Campus at 1603 West 15th. Tuesday, March 18, 1980 2 Architecture dean to resign post but committed to Marvin project By GRANT OVERSTAKE Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Dennis Domer, assistant to the dean, will serve as acteen dean when Kahn steps down and until a search for a new dean has been completed, Kahn said. Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, told earl McCormick that he was stepping down from his post, effective July 1. He also said he a firm commitment to see that the architecture of Marvin Hall takes no longer than one year. "A funny thing happened to me on my way to my gold watch. "Kahn said, telling of his decision to return next fall to full time teaching and research. Kahn told students and faculty members that as a part of the援救 of the school during the Marvin renovation, architectural designer William E. Fowler shop design of the visual arts building. The majority of the faculty will have office space on the second floor of Carruth-0'Leary, Kahn said. First, second and third year students will share drafting tables in Lindex Annex and Robinson Gym. Fourth and fifth year students will personal studio tables (in Robinson, he said). Next fall, students with morning design classes will be in the projects to be allowed on their boards for the evening hours, Kahn said. Robtism will be 24 hours a day for the architecture department. But students taking afternoon design Graduate and Urban Planning carrels will be housed in Blake Amexe and the school's slide library and shop will be moved to the fine arts building. Kahn said that space was still needed in Robinson for a jury room and space was also needed in Learned Hall for an environmental technology laboratory. "To insure an equitable arrangement, those students who took fall classes in the morning will be required to take afternoon classes next spring." Kahn said. Kahn also announced that the school will begin an architect in residence program next fall. The program will bring out students from around the world to KU to teach graduate design studios and seminars for graduate studies. Students from other other students within the school. Kahn said. classes next fall will be issued a small drafting table for home use. "This is a good time for this program," Kahn said. "It will tide us over." Steve Grabow, professor of architecture, said after the meeting that the new program was a good idea. "I think it will balance some of the feelings that students are being deprived." Grabow said. "It will add more excitement, I think." ELECTIONS!! Association of University Residence Halls 1980 General Elections President, Vice-Pres., Secretary, Treasurer Open to any returning hall resident Election materials available at front desk of each hall Filing deadline is Wed. March 19 5:00 pm Elections Tues. March 25 and Wed. March 26 Winners take office at AURH general assembly meeting Thursday, March 27th For more information call 864-6732 or AURH office 864-4041 Cheap Trick, a progressive rock group, had its April 12 concert date approved yesterday by the University of Kansas Special Events Committee. Cheap Trick to play here The band is known for its single, "Surrender." The opening act for the concert will be "Off Broadway." The concert will be at 8:30 p.m. in Allen Field House. Tickets go on sale at 9 a.m. Wednesday in the Student Union Activities office. Ticket prices for students are $7.50 and $8.50. Identification cards will be needed for ticket purchase. Each student will be limited to 10 tickets. The general public will be charged $8 and $9. All seats will be reserved. The bleachers will be reserved by sections. J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MASS. 8:30-8:00 M-S Thurs. till 8:30 p.m. University Daily Kansan Place a Kansan want oar Call 864-4358 Police Beat UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Compiled by Jennifer Roblez Several burglaries were reported to the Lawrence Police Department yesterday. Police said students returning from spring camp accounted for some of the burglaries reported. Jonathan D. Machalek, a KU student, reported the theft of $900 in currency and other household property from his home at 1234 Maple Avenue. The currency was silver coins and was taken from a safe sometime during spring break. No evidence of forced entry was found. The total loss was $1,600. Stereo clothing, equipment and albums valued at $3,995 were reported stolen from Michael B. Alaka in 1921 West 26th Police said a window was broken on Alaka's house during the theft. The theft occurred sometime last Friday night or early Saturday morning last Friday. LIF Texas Instruments pre inventory calculator sale TI 58C 864-4861 8-5 MARKETING MANAGEMENT SCHOOL $130⁰⁰ $99⁹⁵ $295⁰⁰ $239⁰⁰ TI 59 - TI Prog 58C W/ up to 480 program steps - TI Prog 59 W/ up to 960 program steps call: 864-3559 mornings - User flags, labels and subroutines - Complete editing ability - Plug-in, prerecorded modules. Choose from 14 different modules in stock KU Jayhawk Bookstore 1430 Companies 1420 Crescent 9.5M E 19.4G KU 8-5 M-F 10-4 Sat T Contact Interfraternity Council The ONLY bookstore striving to save you money at the cash registers. JT MEN'S RUSH REGISTER NOW! SPRING FORMAL March 21 22 23 For KU: Freshmen Sophomores Juniors KU KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MFG LIST $8.98 $4.59 ELVIS COSTELLO and the ATTRACTIONS GET HAPPY!! 20 SONGS! 20! heart bebe le strange including Even It Go Strange Right Rockin Heaven Down Break Down On Me BILLY JOEL GLASS HOUSES including All For Leyna You May Be Right Don't Look Me Why I Don't Want To Be A Hero It's Still Rock and Roll to Me JOURNEY DEPARTURE including Any Way You Wanted Works Like A Lady Precious Time Where Were You Stay Awake $5.49 MFG LIST $8.98 Columbia THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. ELVIS COSTELLO and the ATTRACTIONS GET HAPPY!! 20 SONGS! 20! 20 SONGS! 26. ELVIS COSTELLO and the ATTRACTIONS GET HAPPY!! 20 SONGS! 20! heart bebe le strange Love Song Even It It Up Strange Night Rockin Heaven Down Break Down On Me JOURNEY DEPARTURE including Any Way You Want It Walks, Lay A Lady Previous Time Where Were You Stayed BILLY JOEEL GLASS HOUSES including All For Lyne You May Be Right Dustie Ask Me Why I Don't Want To Be Alone It's Still Rock and Roll To Me Columbia JOURNEY DEPARTURE Holdin' Any Way You Want It Walks Like A Lady Precious Time Where Were You Stay Awake $5.49 MFG LIST $8.98 Columbia THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editorists represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editors. March 18.1980 Establish credit now Although seniors at the University of Kansas, and elsewhere, have been receiving a steady flow of credit card applications in the mail lately, chances are that this assault by companies anticipating seniors' entry into the housing- and spending-money will be short-lived, with possibly fatal results. President Carter announced last Friday measures aimed at controlling the rampant inflation plaguing the United States economy. Inflation that has been rumbling close to 20 percent for the past year is one of the rules restricting credit to consumers, businesses and banks, which was last done during the Korean War. In accordance with Carter's plan, the Federal Reserve Board, which is the governing body of the Federal Reserve System and which implements federal monetary policies, is authorized to issue the credit markets, drive up the amount of borrowing money for those who are able to obtain credit. That last phrase, "for those who are able to obtain credit," should be more than slightly distressing to college seniors getting ready to enter the job market. They're taking loans, mortgages, car payments, household management and family support. Economic analysts say the credit crunch should have little effect on interest rates, which are restricted by state usury ceilings, imposed on credit card users. However, obtaining higher credit limits on existing cards and having the right credit account could become very difficult, if not almost impossible. Less money will be available for consumer credit because the Federal Reserve is going to require large financial institutions, including credit card companies, to set aside 15 percent of the new money they acquire. Numbering high among the credit casualties inevitably will be college students, very few of whom have the weight of evidence stacked in their favor when it comes to justifying themselves as good credit risks. Many jobs with the government of confirmed jobs when they are not paid no past credit ratings. Many may not even have a definite address to give for billing purposes. Seniors, and others, take note. If you ever plan to take out a loan, open a new account or even cash a check, don't wait to start establishing a line of credit for yourself, relying on your honest face and good reputation to see you through. The credit card application yesterday as junk mail could soon carry more clout than Mastercharge ever dreamed of. State Sen. John Vermillion, R-Republicance, ought to retire from politics if his latest piece of legislation is an example of his logic and progressiveness. Congress to exempt women from the draft, is obviously the product of a fogged mind. Sexist mind behind draft resolution The resolution, introduced in the Senate kate COLUMNIST pound early this month, is intended to be a voice heard by national political leaders. Vermilion has said. A voice of what, Senator, 19th century thinking? Vermilion objected to the registering and drafting of women, because it would put "death into the thinking of young women," and "diminish the importance of the home." That kind of reasonning holds up as about a hundred years of cardboard in Kansas windstorms. Why would the registering and drafting of women put death into their thinking and not allow them to be held accountable by a senator implying that it's perfectly all right for men to think of death and destruction? Reasoning like that is responsible for the deaths of millions of people. Grow up believing they must uphold. Death and killing are not pleasant thoughts for anyone, but no less pleasant for men than women. Your reasoning. Sen. Vermillion, places men and women into invalid stereotypes. What makes you so sure that I am less able to handle the death of death and killing in a school setting? A pediatrician, Tony Munoz, the grade school teacher, or my brother, who works with preschool children in a day care center? These are gentle men, loving and affectionate. You dare to presume that they are more capable of dealing with violence than I am? PERHAPS THE senator simply means that women can't take the thought of death at work, but when they reasoning were valid, Kansas never would have been settled, because pioneer women watched their husbands and their children from marauders to protect their homes from marauders. KEN BUNTY 1923 VERMILION ALSO said the drafting of women would destroy the American home. The loss of fathers is also damage, Tell that to the children and wives of the soldiers killed in Vietnam. Tell that to me, Senator. Tell that to the year of my own father spent in Vietnam. parents are drafted, why should their sex be considered? Families can and do function without resident mothers, just as they do without fathers. Vermillion tried to gain support for his resolution by evolving the image of pig-tied girls coming home in coffins or with horrible bounds. What but of tow-ened little boys? Why do little boys play little boys of my life, who now play with innocence and joy? Would you send them to The drafting of parents should be unnecessary, since there is a large pool of unmarried, draftage Americans. But if war, send them back to their families and to me in boxes? To do that is an abomination, a crime, but no more a crime than to send Christie or Bart, the little girls I love. IF YOU SEND my brother to the horrors of war, send me, too. My life is no more important than his. If you wish to save little girls from war, why not save little boys, or do you have something against little boys, let us get, just save all our从全the battle of hell. Vermilion concluded his arguments against the registering and drafting of military life. He asserts that endure the rigors of military life, he said, requires that one give up "freedom to think for yourself, and to be a beautiful, beauty, your vanity and personal likeness." If that statement is an example of the best of Sen. Vernilion's milestone, I don't want to see his worst. If military life is so awful, why subject anyone to it, men or women? Men are less statistic than women. Senator. They are no less vain and have no fewer personal likes. MILITARY LIFE is hard. As a 20-year veteran life, it requires one hour of an acting role that involves the ability to keep one's mouth shut, training and discipline. But women are no less capable of fitting into military life than men. When you watch a cat at work; they can work as teams—watches nurses in an emergency training—watches trainers—watches women Marines at boot camp. Senator, would you arbitrarily place young men into an environment that robbed them of individuality, freedom, privacy, the ability to make a decision, the cruel man. But the draft is arbitrary and cruel; why subject anyone to it? If you will subject everyone at least fair, be at least women, and treat equally. OBVIOUSLY, SENATOR, you mean well. You are only trying to protect women. But with friends like you, no one, men or women, needs any enemies. Your resolution is a sextis, archie piece of legislation that says women should not blind to see the folly of our ancient ways. The registering and drafting of men or women is unsecessary now, and it is always unfair. But Senator, if you must take my masters, my friends, my colleagues, take me. UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN Dykes a recipient of unjustified abuse To the Editor: I feel the petition against Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is very unjust. I think suspending Norman Forer and Clarence Dillingham's pay during their leave was unfair, but it is important that this school be taught to the knowledge of people. One of the reasons that Forer and Dillingham were hired was to teach the students their knowledge. If all teachers were givling off to it from because they were not supposed to, universities would be without professors. The suspension of pay that Dykes gave and Dillingham any opinion, was just because he had not been given the two men. Had this not been done, then any professor at any time could think he was a lawyer. When they returned, their jobs as professors were waiting for them, a very fine gesture on the part of the University. But did they leave well enough alone? Not given she straight up from, leaving his responsibilities at the University once again. Both of these men left their positions during finals of last semester. I think this is very hypocritical in the eyes of the public. As a student I am obligated to go to classes and take my finals. But these actions of the Guglielmagh presentation a totally opposite picture. Although it was at his own expense, it was a low blow to the high-standard image that KU has upheld throughout its many years as a university. It was as if for Woerse was sifting in the face of administration and having his contract to terminate. If he wanted to go to Iran, why be'd become an emassador instead of a professor? KU doesn't have the time or the money to be messing around with politics. It is a hard job for me, but I think this kind of ignorance of the professors. In conclusion, I feel that Dykes' suspension of Forer and Dillingham was very helpful in clearing their ideals and standards of the professors at KU. Furthermore, the termination of Forer and Dillingham should also be taken under consideration. Matthew D. Wilhm Banner Springs junior 'Church of Silence' mute on holocaust A House Committee on Immigration reported, not estimated, that between 1917 and 1920, 92 Catholic bishops, 12,000 priests and 58,000 laymen were executed for their religious beliefs by the USSR and its satellites—imprisoned or dead. Bishops, 32,000 priests, 10 million laymen, 4 million other communist occupied countries—in Vietnam, Cambodia, Cuba and elsewhere—whole座 can be made. Catholics, Christian missionaries in the true "eucumenism" of imprisonment, To the Editor: torture and martyrdom, in a holocaust going on right now so much worse than Hitler's as to begging the imagination. It is well-documented and obvious. Communist tactics include the manipulation of well-meaning, sentimental clergy in well-written, naturally protected unsuffering West to weaken people to defend themselves and their suffering brothers who lie bleeding in the ditch. They pray for peace but do nothing, a presumption they never apply to the church. Many Catholics are barrassing for Catholics to read in the Daily Kansan such as "a peace priest," as Cardinal Mindzendz called him, quoting from an uncanonical organization "representing" the church. His doctrine is an effeminate, moral counsel clear; contrary to the spirit of the unchangeable teaching of the Church in natural law—confront both justice and the mercy of the soldier than whom none has greater love because he gives his life for his friend. Christ said the Roman centenion: "Such Faith I have not seen in all Israel." John Senior Professor of Classics An Iron Curtain bishop has commented on the current "trainship des cesiers":“We are not the real 'Church of Silence', for we bear witness daily and our voices cry to heaven. But it is the Church in free countries which is the 'Church of Silence' if the faithful there insist about our tragedy . . . and worse than they are the kings-sisters of silence. We would like to comment on J.D. Wilhite's low opinion of Joe's doughnuts "a landmark in establishment, as Wilhite says it, because there are quite a few hedonistic junk food connoisseurs in this town who can tell you all the ingredients, flour, grease and refined sugar. To you, Mr. Wilhite, the great-grand-great-sweet little sunkist who they are life-long members of study and post-party munches. Joe's doughnuts are late-night lifesavers Wildlife compares the nutritive value of a Joe's doughnut to a sponge soaked in motor oil. If you're looking for nutrition, Mr. Kramer, for the goose, it has more fiber. Laurie Kubatzky Cindy Meyer St. Louis sophomores As for Joe, he deserves a medal for his ability to create a first-class confection out of "gut-bombing" ingredients. We hope he will show his successor how to do the same. I can't imagine a better recipe than empty calories once in a while. We can't speak for everyone, but if we're going to eat junk food (and we are), we'd rather die from Joe's "concoctions" than any other meal on the table any day (except Saturday). And as for you, Mr. Willhite, you deserve the holies. To the Editor: Media coverage key for Anderson By ROGER D. MASTERS N. H. C. CHOICE HANOVER, N.H.-John B. Anderson's very strong showing in the Massachusetts team is that he hasn't primaries were not predicted, but it need not have been quite the surprise it seemed to the fans. Anderson has been the paradox of this car's presidential race. Informed officers at the University have professors—have often said that the Illinois congressman is the best candidate in either race. Equally widespread, however, has been the judgment that he isn't a serious contender. The results in New England have proved the palsis wrong. Why were the media so quick to see the Republican nomination as a battle between Reagan Reason and George Bush? Will Anderson remain a key contender? As a matter of fact, the early primaries are often not as difficult to do if you can't get and keep media attention, you lose. Candidates consistently score low in the polls and in election results because they don't get enough attention. John Connally, Howard H. Baker Jr. and Robert Dole have dropped out of the race. Philip Crane is continuing his campaign with almost no support. TO GO BEYOND superficial judgments, however, it is necessary to study detailed figures. When looked at closely, New Hampshire tells us some interesting things about the campaign—in particular, that newspapers are more important in establishing voters' images and attitudes than have been presumed. For example, the Manchester Union Leader, New Hampshire's only statewide newspaper, campaigned vigorously for Reagan in 1984, and obviously influenced the outcome: In Manchester itself, Reagan had 7,361 votes; in Charleston, he had 2,509. Reagan's lead elsewhere was about 12%. ANDERSON'S performance in New Hampshire is best measured with this in mind. In the early primaries, name recognition is the crucial factor. Given the high visibility of, and national media attention, commentators should have looked at towns where Anderson had more favorable press exposure and name recognition. Significantly, many papers there announced editorial support for Anderson. 1948 WHO?!! HARRY TRUMAN?! 1948 WHO?!! HARRY TRUMAN?! 1976 WHO?!! JIMMY CARTER? 1980 WHO?!! JOHN ANDERSON?! © 1980 LAMY COAT 1976 WHO?! JIMMY CARTER?! WHO?! JOHN ANDERSON?! WHO?! JOHN ANDERSON?! A Among them were the Concord Monitor, the Keene Sentinal, the Portsmouth Harbor and the Valley News (covering Hanover and Lebanon). These papers, like national television and news magazines, gave most of the information they received. But by endorsing Anderson, they provided the first clue to the emergence of a third major contest in the race. WHILE REAGAN led Bush in Keene, Concord, Portsmouth and Lebanon, Anderson beat Baker in all four cities. Lumping these cities together, Gogan got only 34.8 percent of the vote (compared to 38 percent statewide), Bush 26.9 percent (vs. 23 percent New Hampshire) and Anderson 18.4 percent—almost double his state average. In Durham, the home of the University of New Hampshire, and in the region around Dartmouth College in Hanover, Anderson is the highest vote-getter in either party, with 644 Republicans and 140 Democrats to Bush's 591 and President Carter's 514. IN BOTH Massachusetts and Vermont, key newspapers also endorsed Anderson. In Vermont, the mayor of Burlington, in Vermont, for example, Anderson ran well ahead of Reagan and Bush in all five cities; papers had endorsed him burglarizing the White River Junction and Belle Falls). New England has therefore indicated that Anderson is very much part of what has happened at Burlington. Looking to November, since only a quarter of the American electorate is Republican, Carter can be defeated only by Democrats and Republican Democrats as well as independents. Anderson seems well placed in this regard. In particular, he appeals to young veterans—abbit half of whom are independent voters, who support Gov. Edmund O. Brown Jr. AS A MATTER of fact, the evidence to date is that he was born in 1932, when party alignment matters. In such elections, some Democrats vote for a Republican while some Republicans shift their votes. If this trend materializes, it could put John Anderson in the White House. Roger D. Masters is professor of government at Dartmouth College. Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan will welcome letters to the editor and guest opinions that present different points of view. The Kansan must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than 500 words. The Kansan reserves the right to edit all letters and comments. The Kansan must include the writer's address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the university, the letter should in- Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom----864-4810 Business Office----864-4338 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNISP 8694-6448 (Published at the University of California daily August through May and Monday and Thursday) www.unisp.org/unisp/education/scholarships/master-scholarship-for-bachelor-level-undergraduate-scholarships/for-bachelor-level-undergraduate-scholarships/bachelor-level-undergraduate-scholarships for graduate students or non-graduates. Notices for subscription are made to $15 for six months of use in a year in California and EE for six years of use in the U.S. Mail address: UNISP 8694-6448, 3200 Fulton Street, New York, NY 10022. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanaan, Flint Hall, The University of Kanaan, Lawrence, RK6045 Editor James Anthony Fitts Management, ... Edward Editor Business Manager, ... Edward Editor Commercial Manager, ... Edward Editor Associate Commercial Editor Associate Business Editor Artist Hedley Editor Business Manager Vincent Coultis General Manager Rick Musser Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins Tuesday, March 18, 1980 University Daily Kansan 4.1 SUA NEEDS YOU! sua films Just like the big shows down, only better because we offer so much more for a lot less. Fine Arts We are looking into expanding and improving in our programmes, including the Midnight series, Classical series, Genre series, Direct series, Broadway series. We want your new ideas and input for the 1980-81 tim series. The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the 'arts activities' of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and art exhibitions in SUA arts areas . . . literature, arts dance, music and drama. sua outdoor recreation Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of hiking, camping and skiing. The Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We offer SUR TRAVEL SUA Travel offers a fun, unique and疲惫 experience. The SUA experience includes an ample Palms Island Florida, and Colorado trips, but also has plenty of options for destinations around the world. We need creative minds and people power to promote these programs and develop new ideas. Student Union Activities is now taking applications for committee membership. You can be a part of the exciting plans of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas... SUA Special events SUA We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our group members works with students to include several groups and lasts as a long six hours. *Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to attending events. There are many areas and light trains are areas that must be considered for every event.* indoor recreation iR FORUMS Game, Tennis Team, Bridge, Backgammon, Football, Go, Arm Wrestling and Boxing. We're looking for people to help coordinate events and others. We'll be here to meet you at our office on Tuesday, June 27th. Ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forms. The Forum committees bring nationally recognized people to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people and in the local community who have something to say to a University audience. We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs. pr public relation SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with interest can contact us. relations This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madrigal Dinner. We need your help in these programs. Experience is not a necessity, however interest is required. Deadline for sign up is March 21. For more information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. Get involved—SUA is for everyone! JUST FOR FUN! Famolard For every facet of your lifestyle ... from casual to sophisticated. Our selection is super Available in white, tan mahogany. Come see us. Arensberg's = Shoes Find it in Kansan classified advertising Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. Arensbergs = Shoes Fam- 819 Massachusetts The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 AD DEADLINES CLASSIFIED RATES Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday ERRORS two two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.25 $2.25 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE *FREE* charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be 'baked in person' or simply by calling the Karianan Business at 844-1388. The Kansan 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. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Softball Officials meetings Wednesday. March 19th and Thursday. March 20th at 7 p.m. in 205 Robinson THE PRE-NURSING CLUB will meet Wednesday, March 19th in the OREAD ROOM at the KANSAS UNION at 7:00 There will be a guest speaker PARTIALLY FUNDED by STUDENT SENATE Inter Praterity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 864-3598 Watch for truck parked at 9th and Illinois. Be sure to pick up the car from The Walk-in-Wall (and the Hotel in-the-Wall) before fresh fruits sell out. Pick up a pearlized white Phoenix varieties of dry rice; mix it with chicken broth. Also selling wood. **Hebrew Alphabet:** Mount Blieu SKL Sledge is now available for private parties, business meetings and social functions. Call now for rates and information: phone: 842-3600. 3-18 *****Sarah's Hotel, the Caits of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 7038. 4-4 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-7859 or 842-4189. If Jawhawk West Apt. 9 Now Renting: 1 & 2 Bathroom furnished and unfurnished, from $188. For Appointment call 842-4444 or see at 254 Fronter Roof. Next door to Russell's East. If New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances cable 1 box from the Union Call 845 845-7036 A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. **if** Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Price 843-9579 or 843-1185. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF Office space for rent now at the 1 building, 921° N; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and/or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 832-0144 or 804-0777 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING NAMSIMI HALL, has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Intervived contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this appt 2 year old house in April. 4 bedrooms. 2 study rooms.受欢迎的房间。参考价:48,000. references: 842-0221. 30 COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperative located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downstream Lawrence. For more information, evenings 982-8421. If These all new and contemporary lounge areas are in the basement or upstairs. Standing at 18 feet tall, they offer a view of the entire kitchen and all appliances window overwing backstage, laundry room, private stairway, 84-4455 or 84-3855. On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities paid furnished or unfurnished Jayhawker Tow- nager for rent. REWARD: $20.00 if you can turn us on to a small inexpensive house to rent in May or June. $40.00 if you can turn us on to a large LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL Hours! Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. If CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall and summer. Apply now. Call 822-2538 at 6:00 p.m. On campus. 2 BR apartments furnished or un- furnished, all utilities paid. Jayhawk Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15. 843-4993. 3-21 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists Passive service, and exchange units. BELL. AUTO-MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900, 3900 W. 6th. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Salem Make uses them-1. At study guide. 2. For class use them-1. As study guide. 2. For class analysis of Western Civilisation' available now in Library, Mills Booksstore and Oread Book store. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $39.98, 3 year guaranty WEATHER WHITE, 704 Mass, 843-186-198 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat- furniture - 120 New York St. 84-228-8488, "Furniture." 120 New York St. 84-228-8488, SunSenses--Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- protective lenses, reasonable response, 1021 Masi. Bali 841-7700. Vivitar 35-105 mm zoom lens. Canon Mount exte- rbed. Includes a neckband. Asked. Ackles. Call Marty. Murray. 698-699 events. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor. from $99.95 Bucks Ride, Shawn, 1030 Northwest, A41, 6627 Brand spanking new 1980% Datum 210—$4,029 + tax delivered. Call 842-0444 ask for Bob Smith at Tonv's Datum 5 Good shape, used 2 leasons, 814-439. 3-19 Kustom Lead V. Arm BW TV. Realistic XD-150 snowboarder Call 642-7517 1977 Dutton 2002 in excellent condition inside and out. AM-fM stereo casette, new tires. Brown color. Bell Case 632-7597. 3-AUT Ski boot, Nordica ski for women, size 6 to 7, Good shape, used 2 seasons, 811-4349, 3-19 Gold bracelet. Call 842-2625 after 5:30 p.m. tf Found—set of keys on either guitar shaped key ring. Call alot in lost, Hoob Auchoid. 3-19 FOUND HELP WANTED CRUISESHPES/SAILING EXPEDITIONS/SALL- ANCE EXPEDITION/yearly pay. Summer career. NATIONWIDE HOURS for. APPICATION INFO/REFFRAIRS to APPICATION BOOK 00195, Sacramento 03080, 03640. Now taking applications for door/floor and wait- room, call 800-763-5219 at library, 14th, W. 7th after 8:30 a.m. Ask for Kshinna D. Biology week to teach elementary children first grade of summer. Montessori Plus School, Topkapi Video Games Exchange need camps and local representatives. No selling, no expert-required. Write; Video, Box 27348, Mpls. MN 54477 COMPUTER SERVICE ADRENCY needs Computer Programmer to develop, maintain and programm. Must have knowledge of Data Base and Web Technologies. Requires a baccalaureate or equiv degree in computer science, computer applied mathematics, or equiv. from any of the following: - University of North Carolina, Towson, MD; - Michigan State University, Ann Arbor, MI; BECOME A MONOPHONE -- - B1021 TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER/ORDERER. Will you share your work experiences with our customer organization, Kansai for Human Services, and input on nursing home conditions and needs? Resume and correspondence will be received at names and correspondence will be between nine and forty or write to KANIK, 917-240-3588. BECOME A MANTESOSTER TRACHIER! Summer classes begin June 2. Call or write Montessori P弘 School, 125 Western, Topeka, Ks. 6044. 323-5185, 862-182, or 843-6835. 3-21 Personal Services has a client krypt typist opening. Must be able to work approx. 15-20 hrs. Must have computer skills. Must quality for work study. Call 844-6442. Room 103. Carruth-Horn, Deadline May 31. Sanctuary Catering needs part-time help. Apply in person at the Sanctuary. 3-21 PERSONAL ★★★★★★★★★★★ Definitely not for Kids STIRING WALK OF LONDON MYSTERIE MALL Alice in Wonderland Definitely not for Kids! STOPPING FLUFFY CONDO'S VIRTUAL NIGHT! Alice in Wonderland This Thursday night only $2.00 2 Shows... 8:30 & Where else 10:30 but the *** Lawrence Opera House 2 Shows. 8:30 & 8:30 Where else 10:30 but the ... Farmhouse Theater ★★★★★★★★★★★ VOYAGERS—Fellowship–Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 145 W. 23rd, W. 30th, s. 9:30, m. 643-4171, *tf* Can afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-3564. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment. Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. Appointment with ST. John's PLM (KC) 4041, 4601 St. Island. Over-St. Park, KS. The Harbour Lines is where it's at for cold beer, pool, pinhail and unique harbors. Color TV and stereo for the Hawks are away. You can get your ship together on the Harbour Lines. GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head- quarters, 841-2345 and KU info, 864-3506. . . . . . INTERESTED IN **FRATERNITIES**? Participate in men's spring formal rush. March 11, 22, 23. To register, contact Inter-Fraternity Council Office at 864-3559. 3-21 Help me find the orange car that left me with $600 worth of rear end damage. In looking at the front bumper and front fender, Accident happened early Sunday at 10:25 AM. Guaranteed call Aa-185 - 100-7300. Shop at AP AM SPORT over your spring break. Located in the heart of Mission, Ks. tf PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 842-1 4821. Burkard Awards Weeks — a new tradition. Limited entries for paper airplane throwings, Thellope, and war (with cards) tournaments. Call 843-6555 for info. It's all the week of March 2-4. ALL YOU CAN EAT Hokum Sports Complex, Hokum Stadium, and women's finals of the Belt St. Platier-Americas chips and soda pop will be served. Tickets are $15 for all games and tournament games Fri-Sun. Contact John C. Encore | Encore | 3-21 The corps is coming! 3-21 The corps is coming! SERVICES OFFERED IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00 for your 308-page catalog of collegiate literature. 10.25 topics listed. BOX 205979 Los Angeles, CA. 90653 (213) 477-8228. tf PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from AM 8 to PM Monday to ☉day. 9 AM to 1 PM on Sunday at 83M. Max. EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102; call 68758. MATH 115-701; call 68743. STATISTICS 115-701; call 68743. PHYSICS 115-701; call 68743. PHYSICS 100-500; call 6898. ENGLISH 100-500; and SPANISH 103-767. **tf** Tried of paying high cost stores for good quality clothes and alterations? Excellent seamless wear will sow for men or women. Reasonable prices. For information call 814-296-098 after 4 and weekends. IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES Professional Tutoring: Math 000-115. 864-237. 3-28 EXPERIENCE HOUSEPAINTERS now making EXPERIENCE HOUSEPAINTERS, call Daniel Bantell at 2980 or 664-5535. 3-21 TYPING Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna, 842-2744. Why cusms about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Granmer. 842-6697 after 5.30 p.m. and on weekends **t** MASTERMINDES professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling. grammar corrected. Call 841-2387. tf PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers. mise. IBM correcting selective. Barb After 5 p.m. p. 842-2310. Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Ellite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses. Respectful welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan 842-917-67. TF Experienced. Typist—term papers, thesis, misc. electric. IBM Selectric. Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-6544, Mr. Wright. Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selectric. Quality work. References available. Sandy, evening & weekends. 748-8818. Experienced Typist-manuscript papers, theses Experiential Design experience; IB Cornering Selective. 841-3238 DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4900 Need a typist for mid-term papers? Avoid the rain, make an appt. with a pro. Linda: 842-5348 after 5:30. 3-20 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing. Self-correcting selective. Call Ellen Jeannum. 841-2172. 5-5 WANTED ROOMMATES. Naismith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 843-8539 any time of the day. if PSYCHiatric AIDES AND HEALTH Service Psychiatric Care Unit apply to: Peggy Harrison, Job Service Center, 512 W. 6th, Tokpa, KS Phone: (1) 328-5180, (2) 476-7690. Apply an equal opportunity offer. Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, $100 ½ utilities, private room, washer, dryer, dishwasher, washers, 842-5959 4-13 Female roommate. 2 bedroom apt. $122.50 mo. & utilities. Call Barb. 841-3260. 3-18 Executive Director for Amped Student Affairs, Katherine Hutchison, will manage the administrative efforts of the university to manage the student affairs and adjournance of the university when appropriate. She is responsible for organizing the time online for the Kaiser Foundation, coordinating with the Kaiser Foundation for Tolerance, Kaiser Karsen 650, by March 17. Intramural Softball Officials Karn extra money this season If interested call 364-836 and ask for Ron or Mike. Or stop by 208 Robinson, Recreation Services. 3-21 WANTED TO Rent Journalism graduate student need 3 or 4 bedroom house or apartment that is not adjacent to children have 3 children but no pets. Require plenty of space and proximity to elementary school. Phone 800-729-1540. NOTICE THA MASSACHUSETTS PRESENTS TIMA TRAINING DINNER & SHOW Sunday, March 23, 1980 Tha Friends, Classical Dance, Fashion Dinner, Performance Dining Room, Cabernet Sauvignon Dinner, Cafeteria Show, Woodstock Auditorium of Call 864-377-6500, 864-5120, 864-8328 EXHIBITION Tha Friends, Classical Dance, Friday, March 23, 1980 Free to Public Dinner, Cafeteria Show Softball Manager's Meeting Tuesday, March 18th at 7:00 p.m. in 205 Robinson B'nal B'rith Hillel Student Organization Bagel's & Lox Brunch All You Can Eat! Sunday, March 23 12:30 p.m. $1.50 for Hilliell Members $3.00 for non-members awrence University Community Center Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr. (across from Hillebrand) Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado Rockies will include coaching kids working with children in a camp setting, teaching children how to have many outdoor programs. Write now, include links to our Western Camp, Falkland, Colorado 81064. 6 University Daily Kansan tuesday, March 18, 1980 KU baseball team opens home season today By KENDAVIS Sports Writer All KU baseball coach Floyd Tempel wanted from his spring break was a $90 record after 10 road games. as it turned out, the Jayhaws played 11 games on their trip and came back with a 7-4 record. So, as the KU squad opens its home season with a doubleheader against Iowa at Quail Field. Temple should be right, right? "IN 'CERTAIN respects,' Temple said yesterday. 'But, you've got to take everything in perspective. I was pleased that we won seven games, but that was not a reason for disappointment, especially on our pitching staff, were disappointing." Temple did not name any names but the statistics make it clear who he was referring to. Pitchers Clayton Fleeman and Mick Watt, both post-41 records for the Jawahires last year, returned with 0-2 Fleeman and Watt's earned run averages soared like the prime lending rate as Fleeman's rocketed to 195.3 percent. BUT THERE were some pleasant surprises for Temple on the trip. Jim Phillips and Randy McNishot turned in some fine performances on the mound for the pitcher who were scheduled to be the starting pitchers for KU today. Phillips posted a 3-0 record on the trip, including a four-hit, 12-strikeout gem that resulted in a 4-0 shutout over Arkansas Slate. The 6-8 first-hander pitched nine scoreless innings at the University of Dallas and Northern Illinois. MCINTOSH 4- with 2 a 27 ERA, also baffled Arkansas State. The left-hander had a no-hitter until a lead-off single in the final inning spoiled it. But Kansas won 11-3. "I WAS REALLY pleased with McIntosh and Phillips." Temple said. "But this team has got to realize that we've got to have maximum production from all of our pitchers. "We went 2 against what I call first-class competition. And we were 5-0 against lesser competition." The Jayhawks got a quick look at some "first- class" competition, playing Oral Roberts, the nation's fifth-ranked team, in their season opener. The Titans slapped 18 hits off four KU pitchers on their way to a 12- victory. "THAT WAS BAD scheduling on my part," Templa said. "If you're going to play them, you should play them coming home when you've got some games under your belt." Defense was another problem for KU. The officers were injured during their 11 attacks. That wait far too much. "THE BIG CONCERN has got to be the defense." Temple said. "But that starts with the pitchers. If the pitchers aren't getting the ball over, it's going to cost them and you may even lose your enthusiasm in baiting." That didn't seem to be too much of a problem for K. however, Juan Ramón led the way, hitting at a 10-0 score in his first start in Garden City Community College transfer is primal catcher, but also saw action as he batted out nine pitches. "RAMON HAD AN outstanding week," Temple said. "There is no doubt in my mind that he is going to be successful." Matt Gundingerffen, who set a KU single-season record of 32-7 on Sunday, ridden by rookie captains on the tour. Three of these came in his last seven at-bats and included a three-run blast that lifted KU to its 10-4 extra-inning victory over Norwalk. Third baseman Roger Riley has a 382 average and outfielder Scott Wright is right behind with a 379 mark. Wright also had 12 RBs. Gundelfinger had a 361 average and a 778 slugging percentage. INCLUDED IN THE KU RECORD was a 4-mark in the Palm Valley Classic in Edinburgh, Texas, good for a 5-2. Today's twinbil will be the first of eight non- conference double-headers at home in the next 15 "WE NEED TO get these games in and keep improving," Temple said. "Our young guys has got to do it." Southern trip tees off golfer's spring season By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer not all KU students have returned from spring break. As a matter of fact, one group left last Saturday for a trip to Paludre岛, our tripper, who will be stricly business. The team, KU's men golfers, plays its first competitive round of the spring season today in the Gulf Coast Intercollegiate Tournament at the Padre Isles Country Club. The tourney will continue until Friday with 18 holes a day on the par 71 course. Otis paces KC past Reds TAMPA, Fla. (AP)—ArsOts went 4-for-4 and drove in three runs to pace the Kansas City Royals to a 7-2 exhibition baseball victory yesterday over Cincinnati. The Reds were wearing green uniforms for St. Patrick's Day, but they could not avoid their third straight spring loss. Otis' two-run double in the fourth inning came off minor league pitcher Bruce Bereny and broke a scoreless tie. Otis, who is batting .529 this spring, advanced on the play when second baseman Junior Kennedy three erratically to the plate when he scored on Pete Lackock's sacrifice fly. The Reds are 2-3 this spring and the Royals are 6-2. Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS -Part Store 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 FACULTY MEMBERS If you have not yet signed up to use the C4 SURSE for the Spring 1980 Semester, please complete this coupon and return it to IT instructional Resources in Room 409 COURSE NUMBER LINE NUMBER # OF FORMS Your Name Department Academic Rank CGI SURVEY Academic Hank CGI SURVEY HELP WANTED Part Time Work On Campus (No Sales or Solicitations) *3.50 per hour Call Collect: Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics 314-878-6262 Ask For Susan Thursday, March 20th From 8-12 p.m. QT COME HEAR THE MOFFET BEERS BAND Come Hear $4 at the door for all the beer you can drink THE ENTERTAINER 2051/2 w 8th st. PROCEEDS GO TO ARTHRITIS RESEARCH sponsored by AOTT EVERYONE INVITED - townhouses Panda Bear - apartments First-year golf coach Ross Randall has an experienced group of golfers to compete for the FedEx Cup. He is a Crow, John Lyons and Mark Steiner, along with Junior D. R. Seseman and freshman Hunter Ellis. CROW AND STEINER led KU during a game with 15-7 losses. Since then, however, he was the weather has kept practice indoors. Randall was concerned that the team would not be in action. "It will be interesting to see what we can do with no practice," he said. "We're going to be competing against teams who have already competed this season." That competition will come from 14 other schools. The field includes Coffeville, Kan., Junior College, Drake, Grinnell, Park College, Southern Illinois-Carbondale, Southern Illinois-Edwardsdale, Southeast Nebraska, Sulross, University of Texas, Oklahoma City, Texas, and Wisconsin. Some of the top Texas jump colleges round out the 15 team field. Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints 843-7333 2500 W.6th - studios TRAILRIDGE INDIVIDUAL MIS Twin Bridges CANOE RENTAL SS. ROUTE, BOX 230 WEST FLAMING, MO. 65775 417-256-7507 INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP CANOEING ON ONE OF NISSUR'S MOST BEAUTIFUL OZARK STREAMS. NORTH PORK RIVER FISHING BREWING CANOES, KAYAKS CAMPING FISHING BREWING STUDENTS We are now leasing for Fall and Spring. Apartments Choose your home, now, for next year and ensure location and color of decor. Offering 10 and 12 month leases. ALWAYS LISTEN - SUMMER STORAGE * Lease now with 2 month storage package. Can you haul your belongings home for a small storage fee? Call Park 25 and see. APARTMENTS Large 1 and 2 bedroom-bath 2 bedroom-2-bath Room service PARK25 APARTMENTS Call or come by and talk with Gary, Ellen or Kathy 2 pools—2 laundry rooms—bus service It's the foundation behind our fraternity. Scholarship makes men strong, LXA has a scholarship program to help you be a strong student. Mediocrity can be your PAST. Check us out! Discover your own strengths in school. SCHOLARSHIP Discover ... LAMBDA CHI ALPHA the fraternity of Honest friendship Open house Wednesday March 19 at 4 p.m. or call 842-9577 and leave your name. Our recruitment staff will return your call. Visit us at 1918 Stewart Ave. HARRY POTTER AND THE WILDSTONE Lambda Chi Alpha NEW YORKER 1027 Mad PRIMO ITALIAN Tonite Featuring • Homemade MANICOTTI Generous serving of Manicotti noodles filled with Mozzarella, provolone parmesan, and ricotta cheese. Drizzle with olive oil and our new Italian sauce 's its super-foods! $4.25 Dinner includes entree, garlic toast, crisp tossed green salad, coffee or tea Special good tonite ONLY — 5:30-8:30 sua films Tuesday, March 18 JOHNNY GUITAR Dir. Nicholas Josh, with Sterling Hayden, Joan Crawford, Mercedes McCambridge. One of the most jazz musicians in the world, singer-gunfler meets his former lover in an isolated saloon. saloon. *Forum Room Wednesday, March 19 Kurosawa: HIGH AND LOW BURN! (1970) Dir. Gilr. Pontecorvo, with Marlon Brando's as a secret agent in the 1800s to help prevent another rebellion to further the economic inefficiency of the director of BATTLE OF ALGIERS. Thursday, March 20 Brando; Friday & Saturday March 21-22 ROCKY II Dir. Aika Kurosa, with Toshiru Mifune as an industrialist who must pay the ransom for a kidnaping, but submarine jubilee not. Japanese subtitles Dir. Sylvester Stallone, with Stallone, Dir. Cart Wearthman, Burges Mereidh, Mereidh, wants a rematch with Rocky Balboa. Joseph Schrader, "Beach," a short by Joseph Schrader. A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD Midnight Movies DESPERATE LIVING (1978) Unless otherwise noted; all film will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R films 10 & 9:30, $1.50 and $1.50 start at 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30, and midnight on Fri. & Sat., and at 2:00 on Sunday. Tickets available at the SUA Office on屏 8th Level. No smoking or refreshments allowed. Dir. John Walls, with Liz Renay, Mink Stole, Edith Mossen, Susan Stern, and Michael Koehler, the director who made Baltimore and tastable food. By the director of PINK FLAMINGOS and MOND TRASHO. "Love Letter to Eddy" (the Egg Lady). 馆1107 EXHIBIT The Kansas University School of Architecture and Urban Design is pleased to announce an Exhibition of Student Projects scheduled to be on display in April. The exhibition will also as well as past student work (the earliest dating circa 1925) will represent the high degree of design excellence stressed within the School. Presentation drawings and scale models will be integrated in the show to highlight the best of the School's pedagogic productions. 3rd Senior "Farewell to Bars" PARTY Ichabod's Tues., March 18, 8-12 p.m. all you can drink $1 from class members $2 from non-class members (memberships available) SENIOR FAREWELL MOVIE Part 3 will continue filming PLEASANT THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. 90, No. 111 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Carter, Reagan victors in Illinois Wednesday, March 19, 1880 See story page two Owens refuses to talk as Sooners seek coach By GENE MYERS Associate Sports Editor In Norman, Okla, the basketball program is in a state of limbo. In Lawrence, the basketball program is in a state of confusion. In Norman, University of Oklahoma head coach Dave Bliss has moved on to Southern Methodist University with one assistant coach and two graduate students resigned. The other one reportedly will too, which leaves no one recruiting for the job, and an acting secretary taking care of business. IN LAWRENCE, University of Kansas said he refused to Bliss old job. But Owens, 36 years as KU head coach, refuses to deny or confirm his interest. His only comment is "no comeback." That is the same comment from the Oklahoma athlete director, Wade Walker. The comment was Richard Bell and the search committee president of the Oklahoma club club. Her favorite comment is, "Aren't I poplouw now? I can't believe all the attention I've given." Jan Warner is the president of the 604 member club, the Tip-Ins. The club held a meeting 10 days ago and decided they would succeed. The club successfully破亡 Bless. A domoine reaction followed. "After Blisse resigned, we just started getting calls from people asking us to see if Ted Owens would come back to Oklahoma," Warner said. "Our 7S directors met and talked about our teamwork, so should be our new coach. We gave our recommendation to the search committee." SINCE THEN, Walker has asked for and received permission from KU Athletic Director Bob Marcum to talk with Owens. Marcum confirmed that. Warner said that no one had officially talked with Owens vet and that he had not visited Norman. A March 31 deadline for a recommendation to the Board of Regimens has been set by athletic officials. Interviews are scheduled to start this week. "I'm sure some of Owens' old-time playing buddies from OU have visited with him by telephone," she said. "We have friends who he's still got a lot of friends in Oklahoma." ALTHOUGH OWENs has friends in the Tip-In Club, he may not have many on the 10-member search committee. Published reports in Norman today said Billy Tubbs, head coach at Lamar University, was the favorite of athletic officials. Tubbs, who recently refused the head job at Tulsa University, is keeping head in Beaumont, Texas. Yesterday, Owens was silent in Hutcheson's speech. He National Junior College Championships. He would not say whether his silence would hurt KU's recruiting. National letter-of-credit. Bob Hill, KU assistant and chief recruiter, doesn't think Owens' silence will hurt. "No, it hasn't hurt our recruiting efforts." Hill said. "I think the browbeating he took during the season has hurt our recruiting more than anything. "Recruits will stay interested in KU until they know it he's going to stay here or not. If Coach Owens goes toOU, it's obviously going to hurt us." DURING KU'S 15-14 season, Owens was under pressure from disgruntled alumni and fans. Immediately after the Jawahars lost to Kansas State University in the finals of the Big Eight Tournament, Marcum had a big confidence for Owens, his second in four years. But Bliss resigned the following week and was replaced by Succer, a successor. A player at Bolton from 1989 to 51, she unsuccessfully tried for the head job she then was a KU assistant coach in the mid-70s. The Tip-Ins want him, but Warner admitted that the organization had no direct influence. "I don't think we have any influence other than the athletic department knows that we're an organized and hard-working school," Ms. Terry continues to see the program improve and build. "They know we'll always be there, win, lose or draw." OWENS, WHO is two victories shy of 200, Tubbs, and Tubbs, have taken Lamar to the NCAA playoffs for two straight areas; arent the only names discussed in Norman. Joey Meyer, assistant at DePauwl Joey University and son of DePaul head coach Ray Meyer, is another one. Assistant Art Tollis of Louisiana State University, head coach Jim Valvano of Iona College, John Thompson of Georgetown University, Nell Thompson of Weber State College and David Whittier of Alcorn State University are others. Owens isn't the only newsmaker in KU basketball right now. Ricky Worchia, freshman, said over spring break that he would not know whether he would return to KU next year. He said he was considering Wisconsin State University or Georgia University. "I talked to Coach Owens in Wichita over spring break," Ross said. "He told me to finish up the semester here and then think seriously about my future." ROSS SAID HE did not know why he might want to transfer. "This is like a big mystery," he said. "I just can't say exactly what brought this all along for me. It's a combination of a lot of different things." One of those things is Owens' future. "My decision might depend on who they bring in here if he leaves," he said. "But whether he stays or goes doesn't have any bearing on my decision. "He's been good to me. I have all the respect in the world for Coach Owens." And said Warren and the Tin-Leg. JANE RUBER "Y'all better fight to keep him," she said. "We want him." Sun sprouts Mary Ann Stewart, 801 Lake St., waters some of the sprouts in her passively heated solar greenhouse. The garden is designed so that the sun will keep the plants warm and cool. At the front, there are large white rocks. Board OKs fee, sets restrictions on in-court help By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The Student Legal Services Board approved a $15 court representative user's fee amendment yesterday, following an administration onosomal. The board followed the administration's modifications closely in drawing up three court representation bill amendments. The two other amendments prohibited Legal Services from court representation of criminal misdemeanors and restricted court representation to administrative matters relating to a student's status. The Student Senate March 26, 2013. The board had voted against setting a user's fee in previous meetings. "I think this is getting away from the philosophy of free legal服务," said board member Rob Rocha. "You are paying twice for the service." This semester, each full-time student paid $1.25 through student activity fees to finance Legal Services. Leben said the $15 user fee would represent a significant monetary commitment. "You can't just say, well, let's have a $1 user's fee because that would be making a farce out of an administrative requirement." Leeben said. The board also issued a policy statement clarifying its position on representation of students in administrative matters. In addition to the proposed user's fee, students using court representation services would be required to pay all court costs, including a $35 filing fee. THE BOARD said students might be represented in administrative hearings when the case directly related to or affected their student status. The board policy gave Legal Services lawyer Steve Ruddick the discretion to decide whether a case involving administrative matters was student-related. Ruddick a student might be able to prove a case was student-related if it substantially his grades or finances. Ruddick could not "automatically dismiss" appeals. More state student aid possible Staff Reporter By SCOTT C. FAUST State sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, yesterday站ed the Senate Ways and Measures Committee into adding $300,000 to the budget program, which he called "nifty-nour." The committee is expected to make recommendations on the 1801 KU budget today. The $300,000, which would provide 600 additional $500 state scholarships to students attending public post-secondary schools, is part of the Senate Ways and Means Committee's fiscal year 18J1 budget considerations for the Board of Regents office. If the addition is approved by the full Senate and then by a House and Senate Conference Committee, the total scholarship fund will be $1.1 million. Berman told his fellow committee members that he will be a state scholarship program to be closer in nature to the tuition grant program, which students at Arkansas private colleges. STUDENTS RECEIVING *tuition grants also are eligible for up to $250 in state scholarship money, but regents school students are eligible only for state scholarships. The committee recommended a $200,000 increase above last year's tuition grant funding, for a total of $4 million. Berman said the total budget for state scholarships, which is based on need and ability of students, was 20 percent of the federal money, was 20 percent of that provided for tuition grants. The grants are made to private institutions. Twenty-five percent of students attending Kansas private colleges receive grants. *Brian*, said adding, that 368 private college students receive money from the grant and scholarship programs. "If that isn't bad enough," he said, "less than 2 percent of public school students receive state scholarships." During discussion of Berman's successful proposal, State Sen. Jack Steinger, R-Kansas county, countered Berman by saying colleges should never absolutely control higher education in the state and that private colleges were a necessary option to public schools. Senate Ways and Means Committee chairman Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, called Berman "might miggil Hatha attacking a lot of little Davis" because the Lawrence district contained KU, the most heavily funded school in the state. "It does occur that it's a somewhat disproportionate battle that he proposes to engage in here." Winter said. WINTER SAID Berman should be happy that a $1,450 limit was placed on scholarship money going to private school students last year. The same limit expected in this year's budget. Berman then accused some committee members of being defensive on the issues of increasing state scholarship money because they had private colleges in their districts. "How can we all in good conscience sit on top of 96,000 post-second school students and say that the total amount we're giving them is $80,000, and not a single dollar is Berman asked. 'I'm not after your colleges. They fall under our own weight.' Vandals damage display by Muslim association Staff Reporter By RICK HELLMAN The information booth on Jayhawk The information booth on Jayhawk morning and its contents, a morning and its contents, a copy of documents said to have been used in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, expeditions of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, The window on the booth's door was cracked and some documents, part of the display by the Muslim Student Association, were torn down sometime ago. The University is recording to Judy Browder, director of the University Information Center. Browder said the vandal or vandais apparently had gained entry to the booth by forcing up a sliding window that was normally kept shut by a piece of wood placed on the track. "It a matter of protection of rights," Browder said. "These people have as much right to use this booth as any other registered student group." The display, which went up Sunday, has a screen that displays the detailed U.S. spying operations in Iran as well as evidence of plans for the ad-hoc attacks the deposed shah to the United States. Mahmud maiman, Mashad, Iran freshman and a member of the Muslim Student Association said he would post about his views. He would be safe from further vandalism. Med Center's crime rate misleading, official says By GREG SACKUVICH By GREG SACKUVICH Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Kansas Bureau of Investigation statistics for 1979 show that the University of Kansas Medical Center has the highest crime rate in the state. A study, according to the Med Center's police chief, "We don't have the highest crime rate. That was based on a lesser population than we actually have." Jack Pearson, director of the Center's police department, said yesterday. KU student killed There were actually 100 fewer crimes A memorial service for Charlotte Haines, Ridley Park, Penn., sophomore who was killed in an automobile accident on December 21, 2015. p.m. today at the Potter Lake Pavilion. we moved to Hassinger Haim Inc. Haines, 23, a Hassinger Hall resident, and was called instantly when the car in which were riding slid on ice into the path of a Another KU student and the driver of the car were not seriously injured. In the event of bad weather, the service will be moved to Hashinger Hall theatre. Family members ask that memorial contributions be made in Haines' name to the Margaret Hashinger Scholarship Foundation of Kansas Endowment Association. committed at the Med Center in 1979 than in 1978. Pearson said. Because the number of crimes has, in fact, decreased and the crime rate is misleading, he said, no major changes are needed to secure the security on the Med Center centers. The crime rate is determined by the number of crimes committed for every 1,000 people. The KBI used a population of 2,102 full-cident Center, the number of full-immune students. The Med Center reported 310 crimes, which, using the smaller population figure, is a crime rate of 147.5 crimes for every 1,000 people. THE ACTUAL population of the MeD Center is about 10,000. Pearson said, including the faculty, staff, visitors and patients, in addition to the students. Last summer a man was running naked around the Med Center campus. At first he ran on Wednesday nights, but then he went to another club. The man finally was caught, Dalley said. Perhaps the most unusual crime at the Med Center was solved by the Kansas City Kan., police department, according to Capt. Tom Dalley of the department. Most of the crimes committed at the Med Center are non-violent, Pearson said. Of the 310 crimes committed last year, 10 were assaults and one was an armed robbery. The next highest crime rate was in Junction City, with 133 crimes for every 1,000 people. 1978 5 .5 2 3.5 10.5 22.5 56 Rape -25% Robbery -2% Assault-aggravated -3.5% Assault-nonagravated -10.5% Curfew -22.5% Larceny -66% Auto theft -56% 1979 1 4.5 9 21.5 56 Rape - 5% Robbery - 1% Assault aggravated - 4.5% Assault nonaggravated - 9% Burglary - 21.5% Pendency - 8% Auto theft - 5% Although the number of crimes reported in Lawrence increased 9.3 percent from 178 to 1979, the percentage of crimes committed in each district was unchanged. Lawrence crime rate up Staff Reporter By JENNIFER ROBLEZ Changes in the economy and an uncertain political situation helped contribute to more violent crime, which increased by 9 percent in 2014. Lawrence assistant police chief, said last week. "Historically, the incidence of crime rises when the economy goes down. The rise can be caused by several factors." Criminal acts included in the KBI figures were murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, kidnapping, and sexual exploitation. According to figures released by Thomas E. Kelly, director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the incidence of violent crime rose 9.2 percent in Lawrence. Olain said the increase in the number of thefts reported was responsible for boosting the overall crime rate. FIGURES COMPILLED by the crime analysis unit of the Lawrence Police Department differ only slightly from the state's records. Total violent crimes committed in Lawrence during 1978 numbered 3,501, compared with 3,755 in 1978, which account for an increase of 9.3 percent. However, criminal analysts in Lawrence also count simple assaults in addition to worse crimes like arson or bombing. These same one committed with the use of a weapon. A simple assault is any other threat against a IN ADDITION TO economic pressures, Olin increased citizen reporting of thefts in SAHARA. In 1978 Lawrence police took 1,963 theft reports, last year they took 2,180 reports of simple thefts. That represents an 11.1 percent increase, or 117 more crimes. The number of aggravated assaults, also a barometer of social conditions, increased from 128 in 1978 to 170 in 1979. Simple assaults in the city dropped from 367 in 1978 to 345 last year. *Agrigeravel assiscalis mal-may not be affirmado with the mal-may law.* he sa- id that In other categories, 23 raps were reported in 1978 compared with 18 last year. Robberies did not occur in those cases. AUTOMOBILE THEFTS increased by 17 from 172 in 1978 to 188 last year. No murders occurred in 1978, but one was reported in 1979. William Arnold, professor of sociology, who teaches a class in causation of crime and delinquency, said crime rates were affected in times of inflation and depression. Otin said that crime was a part of the measurement of the way society lived, but that it did not totally reflect the performance of the police department or the city. "When unemployment goes up, crime rates rise. Public during periods of inflation people earn more, but their hopes for material gain rise faster than their income," he said. LOSS OF CONFIDENCE in a nation's ability can cause people to defy authority, he said. Olin also said that people tended to disobey laws when they lost respect for governing in Kansas, violent crime was up 11 percent. Aggravated assault and motor vehicle theft were the biggest increases between the two years, with serious assault going up 12.3 percent and car thefts increasing 11.4 percent. Shawnee County, which has one of the largest Johnson County, showed the largest increases. 2 Wednesdav. March 19. 1980 University Daily Kansan VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Guardsmen replace firefighters KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Missouri Gov. Joseph P. Teadele yesterday ordered 220 Missouri National Guardmen to aid police officers in restoring fire units. But before the divisions could report to the city, a huge blaze destroyed two buildings on the history square. The fire blazed was quelled by police officers in the city, a striking firefighters' unit. The fire which began about 8 p.m. in a five-story warehouse, spread to another building. The fire was brought under control at 11/2 hours later. Earlier today, before Teasdale arrived here for a special meeting with Mayor Richard Berkley and others, city officials had tried to tell a peering crowd of union firefighters that more than 160 members of the afternoon shift had been fired and that more would be dismissed if they failed to report for duty. The 160 firefighters who failed to show up for the regularly scheduled 3 p.m. shift were immediately suspended for 15 days. City personnel director, Tom Lewinsohn said they would be automatically terminated at the end of the suspension. The firefighters abandoned their posts at 6 p.m. Monday to protest the city's refusal to reinstate 42 union members dismissed in a walkout last week. Earlier yesterday, city prosecutor R. John Gibson threatened union firefighters with prosecution "to the full extent of the law" for their illegal actions. Gilbane gave Jackson County Circuit Judge Lawrence Smith the names of 150 firefighters he said were in contempt of court because of alleged violations of law. Gibson said that he would return with a list of another 700 names if investigators failed to report at the regularly scheduled shift changes, but that he would be able to provide that information. The judge said he would determine at 9:30 a.m. today whether action should be taken against the union members. Banks raise prime rate to 19% NEW YORK-Chase Manhattan Bank and several other large institutions raised the rate they charge on loans to top-ranked companies to a record 19 percent yesterday as the administration's credit-tightening package bit into business borrowing. The increase in the prime lending rate was the fifth of the month and left the rate at many banks 4 percentage points above its level of mid-February, when it dropped to 3.95 percent. The prime rate is not tied to rates on consumer loans or home mortgages. But those rates have been moved up as well recently, the result of the Fed's attention to economic conditions. The mortgage-rate spiral has had a severe effect on the construction industry, with the Commerce Department reporting yesterday that single-family homes are the most vulnerable to a crisis. Chase, the nation's third-largest bank, said its decision to raise the prime rate "is consistent with the philosophy and programs outlined by the president and the Federal Reserve Board to exercise discipline and restraint in lending and to control the growth of credit markets in our society." KCP&L's rates to increase JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.—An interim electric rate increase of $25 million requested by Kansas City Power & Light Co. was approved yesterday by the Missouri Public Service Commission, which said it recognized the utility's "need to survive financially." KCP&L said itim interim increase “will help stem the company's investing financial condition” until its request for a permanent increase of $384.6 million is met. The utility had sought an interim increase of $3.1 million, and the commission staff last week paraded the recommendation to $2.9 million. The agency said it reduced that recommendation further because of austerity measures prescribe and a reduction in prices to the company. These measures included a hiring price and a reduction in premiums. The commission said the interim increase, scheduled to take effect March 28, would raise residential bills about 9 percent. The utility serves about 232,000 customers in Missouri and 107,000 in Kansas in the Kansas City metroplana area. Bill would send grain to poor WASHINGTON—Sen. Mark Hattfield, R-Ore., yesterday introduced legislation that would买国防 1 million tons of wheat once destined for the Soviet Union. "This bill will serve to attack the growing menace of starvation and reemphasize to the developing world the strong humanitarian impulse of the American people," he said. "This will contrast importantly and dramatically with the past for the brutal Soviet invasion and continued occupation of Afghanistan." Hattfield said the wheat would be held in the United States and distributed to poor Third World nations in times of emergency. This action ensures that grain purchased by the United States will be sent during times of crisis solely to persons who otherwise could not afford to buy it. The wheat would come from the 17 million tons the United States denied the Soviet union in response to their Dec. 27, 1979 invasion of Afghanistan. February income rise slight *SHINGTON—The Carter administration announced yesterday that *i- Americans' personal income increased in February by only $6.9 billion, or 0.3 In its announcement, the Council on Wage and Price Stability said it was seeking special price information from 150 oil companies and 100 other businesses, including those in air transportation, paper, cement, hotels, food processing, retailing and machinery. Consumer spending also decreased sharply during the month, an indication that consumers may be reaching the limit of their purchasing power in the face of rising prices. A spokesman, Mike Gibb, said there had been "disturbing price increase" in these industries as reflected in the government's index of wholesale prices. The special price reports will help the council determine whether the increases have been in violation of the administration's voluntary price guideline. Iranian election inauiru ordered If it dominates the new Parliament, the clergy-led Islamic Republican Party might obstruct President Abishannan Bani-Sadr's efforts to have the U.S. Embassy hostages freed soon. It was unclear whether the inquiry would further delay convening of the Parliament. Iran's Revolutionary Council ordered an investigation yesterday of allegations of fraud in national parliamentary elections, most of it attributed to the government. Since election day there have been persistent complaints of fraud. Some of the latest complaints came from men close to Khomeini—parliamentary, candidate Ayatollah Ali Tehran, who claimed balloting was rigged in many cases. In June, he denied that he demanded an immediate intervention into the tactics of the Islamic party. Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomimi declared amnesty for several thousand political prisoners and jailers the most zealous of his revolutionary followers. After a meeting last night of Iain's ruler Revolutionary Council, Foreign Minister Suleigh Ghuzabzadeh submitted to five to seven member states a request for assistance of the charges. Weather It will be partly cloudy, windy and warm today with a high near 70 degrees, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be southerly at It will be mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance for showers and thunderstorms tonight. The low in the low to mid 40s. CHICAGO (AP)—Ronald Reagan captured Illinois last night and gained all but unstoppable command of the race for the Republican presidential nomination. President Carter won the Democratic nomination, but he also suggested Sen. Edward Kendall's challenge. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms and a high near 16. Carter, Reagan win as expected Reagan easily defeated Rep. John Anderson, the liberal congressman from Rockford, II, and left former U.N. Ambassador George Bush a distant third. In the slow, separate count of the contests for nominating delegates, Carter had a margin of more than 2-4 over Kennedy in the election. Obama was well ahead among Republicans. He said that Reagan could not win a presidential election and that Republicans knew it. "It's a great boost to move into the in- stitute," Illinois," Reagan said in New Haven, Cov- n, where he was campaigning for next New York and Connecticut primaries. ANDERSON AND Bush both insisted they would not quit. Anderson declared, "We have just begun to fight." The Illinois defeat cost Kennedy the very state he once said would be his arena for a comeback against Carter. Bush's poor showing in the GOP election put in doubt his ability to mount a meaningful challenge to Reagan. Like Kennedy, Bush had once said the contest would be a water-shed. Like Kennedy, he said defeat not would force him from the Kennedy, in New York, soberly acknowledged defeat and said, "My campaign now goes to New York, and New York has won." The direction of the Democratic party . . ." Carter 629,003, or 65 percent. WITH 78 PERCENT of the precincts counted. it was: With three-quarters of the Republican vote counted: Reagan 384,286,or 48 percent While that preferential vote ranked the candidates, the competition that counted was in separate balloting for national convention delegates. That count was proceeding slowly. Democrats were electing 179 delegates, Republicans 92. Rep. Philip Crane of Illinois had 2 percent California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. hao 3 percent. Bush 85,723, or 11 percent. With 29 percent of the precincts counted in Democratic delegate competition, Carter led for 152, Kennedy for 18. had 313 nominating votes, Kennedy 168. It will take 1,668 to win the Democratic presidential nomination. Entering yesterday's balloting. Carter Reagan entered Illinois with 167 delegates. Bush was second, with 45. It will take 989 to win the GOP nomination. IN GOP DELEGATE balloting, Reagan led for 40 nominating votes, Anderson, 1; Bush 2; and Crane, 1. Anderson was banking heavily on independents and sometimes Democracy to crush Republican support. He ran ahead in suburban Chicago. But the conservative Reagan was the leader of the Republican party. Bush, in Madison, Wis., said he received about what he had expected. "Politics is a bit of a roller coaster," he said. His campaign director, James Baker, said Bush still had plenty of money and good EVEN BEFORE the polls closed, White Carr had said that he committed a delegate lead that Kennedy would win to a handlade every Tuesday to overtake the Kennedy failed to challenge the president even among the state's huge Catholic and Jewish populations. Catholic himself. The Massachusetts attorney student similarly among low-income white people. Kennedy trailed far behind Carter in Chicago, where Mayer Jane Byeh tried to convince her colleagues that she would urge him not to withdraw from the campaign, adding that she still hoped to win. State asked to investigate travel service state organizations. He said Bush would focus on Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania and Texas. By CINDY WHITCOME Staff Renorter The Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association has made a formal request to the Kansas attorney general's office to investigate a travel service operating in Phyllis Griefskee, education publicist for the association, said yesterday that she had sent her request and a complaint from a client who had been accused of service. bvased in Rosewood, Calif., last week Dana Bradbury, an investigator for the attorney general's office, said yesterday that she had not yet received the request. "Even if I had received the request, I couldn't give out information about the investigation if there was one," Bradbury said. Almost two weeks ago, the association advised consumers not to do business with the company, but some apparently are still dealing with the company. Bill Reynolds, customer services manager for the Lawrence office post, said that approximately 50 c.o.d. packages from the travel service had arrived at the post office during the past two weeks and that at all 10 persons had picked up and paid for them. THE PACKAGES are business-sized envelopes costing $57.20 each. Griekspoor said she was concerned because it was unclear what the $57.20 was paid for. Consumer affairs has received 15 calls from consumers about the company in the past two weeks, she says. The company said the company has been through letters and phone calls, according to the people who have contacted the association. The letters said that readers, within three days, would receive packages containing information about the trips. "The lack of information in the letter and the company's reluctance to give information to a consumer group made us very suscious." Griekkroo said. THE CALIFORNIA Better Business Bureau wrote to Grieksen telling her that it had requested information from the company, and received none, she said. So far, no one who has actually given their money to the company has registered complaints with the association. The letter offers vacations in one of five resort areas: Las Vegas, Nw.; Lake Bridgeport, Texas; Miami; the Catskill Mountains in New York; or Orlando. Fla. GET GIANT DISCOUNTS When you buy 2 pair of jeans at KING of Jeans levis STREVIS 1/2 Price Sale Today thru Sunday only Here's how it works: Buy one pair of jeans (any brand any price) Get a second pair of equal or less value for 1/2 Price You can buy 2 pair of Levi's straight-legs THE 1ST AT $18 $1850,THE 2ND AT ONLY $9 $925! A 25% SAVINGS ON BOTH PAIR! Or how about a pair of navy painter's pants at $16$^{99}$ and a pair of Levi's recycled jeans (reg. $12$^{99}} at only $6^{50}$ THIS DEAL WORKS ON ALL OUR JEANS Levi's, Male, Dee Cee, Chic Brittania, Calvin Klein, Ladies Levi's COME IN AND SAVE A BUNDLE AT KING of Jean 740 Massachusetts SALLEVILI'S 3 Wednesday, March 19. 1980 Legends of punctual birds ruffle ornithology curator By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter If a flight of swallows follows both the calendar and tradition, it will return today to the fabled mission San Juan Capistrano in California. Lawrence, however, doesn't seem to be the home port of any such punctual birds, and according to a KU ornithologist, Canistrano isn't either. Unfortunately, this tradition cherished by many has no basis in fact," Robert Mengel, professor of ornithology at the Dyce Museum of Natural History,古地vierday. The birds might tend to return around that time of year, he said, but pinning down their arrival to a specific date is unrealistic. The legendary return of the swallows to Utah was on March 15, when turkey buzzards at Hindsley, Ohio, on March 15 are the most celebrated cases of birds supplying migrants in certain areas. "The birds may in fact be seen in Capistrano on that day, but I wonder if anybody's looked around for them the day before?" It looks like it'll imagine a self-fillable probeble. DESPITE THE publicity the birds generate, scientists find such legends hard to swallow. "You won't find much on this in migratory bird texts," he said. "It rarely gets mentioned in ornithological literature." Swallows have reportedly returned to the mission on St. Joseph's Day for more than a hundred years, arriving only once, when they were delayed by a fire storm. BUT SWALLOWS all the once* only birdies are popular among insect lovers legend about for example, considered by many as a harbinger of spring, is actually around during summer. Last Saturday, right on schedule, the ungainly birds, which actually are vultures, soared over the skies of Hickney in what is probably the most decisive and consecutive appearance of the buzzards. Still, the thousands of devoted swans fans who probably will crowd into the mission this morning can hope that this spring's Hincock the Hibburtz竞赛 was a favorable omen. The town's faithfulness toward the birds probably makes Hincock the only place on earth where vultures are met by a welcoming committee. AURH posts to be filled The Association of University Residence Hall will hold elections for new officers March 25-26. The filing will be handled by the AURH office in McCollin Hall. Committee chairmen will be chosen about one week after the officers are seated March 27. Presidential and vice presidential candidates must run as a team; candidates for treasurer and secretary may run independently. Job descriptions and applications for committee positions will be available in the AURH office. TRAILRIDGE - studios - apartments - townhouses 843-7333 2500 W.6th K K SWEEPSTAKES RULES; J J The graduates must be at least 18 years old. They may be omitted by many as annual diving training once they graduate of the degrees awarded by Autumn University during their training from any Autumn University degree. 4 All Sony Sweepstakes prizes will be displayed throughout the store if the playing card corner on the prize matches the playing card entry, the prize is yours! 5. The card must match exactly the cut style, color and corner to win SONY LAS VEGAS SWEEPSTAKES 7. If none match exists, the customer may return it to a salesman for a lucky Sweetest Coupon Book full of exciting discounts on all types of electronic products. 1. All prizes have been awarded 2. 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Dykes by the end of the week, according to Takuhi Gunichiro. Interviews with candidates have been completed and some of the seven faculty members interviewed will be presented to the conference replacements for Del Shankel, Hugh said. Shankel is resigning his post as executive vice chancellor. He will return to full-time teaching and research July 1. "We haven't decided how many we will nominate to the chancellor." Kiichi said. "We don't want to turn a final nominees. The procedure is for us to turn the list into the chancellor and he will make the decision." Exactly when the new executive vice chancellor will be named will depend upon Dykes' agenda next week, according to Jim Scaly, administrative assistant to Dykes. When the decision is made, only the new executive vice chancellor will be announced. The names of the final nominees will remain confidential. Scaly said Because Shankel's office normally handles search procedures for vice chairmen positions, the process of selecting a position for Shankel has been different than usual. s. 6 A.M.-1 A.M. sat. 6 A.M.-2 A.M. CALL IN— WALK IN— DRIVE— JOG— ANY WAY AT ALL JB's BIG BOY FAMILY RESTAURANTS 740 IOWA Lawrence, Kansas BIG BOY We're 8 years old today! BUY ONE—GET ONE FREE Our famous double decker BIG BOY HAMBURGER Wednesday, March 19 ALL DAY BIG BOY --- Check our prices-then compare!! FOR A GOOD TIME CALL 842-1059 We're tee-shirt printing specialists! No order too big or too small - Best prices in town - One-week delivery on all screen prints - Hot press printing while you wait - Tee shirts, baseball shirts, coaches shirts etc. BEST DELIVERY-BEST PRICES Raq Tag 1144 Indiana 842-1059 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanas editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the authors. March 19.1980 Paraphernalia plight Lawrence City Commissioner Ed Carter is urging the city to consider an ordinance that would prohibit the sale of drug paraphernalia to miners. The strategy behind Carter's urging is to simplify, but still simplicit, however well meaning. "At least such a law would show that it's not an acceptable thing," Carter said, "and sometimes I think that's important." That is a commendable and idealistic thought, Commissioner, but its potential effectiveness is almost nonexistent. You say you are aware of the limitations such an ordinance would be susceptible to in trying to deter drug use among minors—that if miners are "determined enough," they can get drugs and paraphernaly anyway and that you are "looking for those who wouldn't do it unless it was readily accessible." But when you go on to intimate that 5, 10 or even 15 percent of drug users do it just because it is readily accessible, you are failing to credit the youth of Lawrence with any integrity or common sense at all. Drug users give many reasons for why they use drugs, but they rarely include such a blindly stupid and visionary statement as "Because it's there." Drug users are not mountain climbers, Commissioner. They generally are kids who, at one time, didn't know what they were getting into until it was too late to get out without suffering through the painful withdrawal process. What they needed to guide their decisions was not city ordinances or standard drug abuse scare tactics, but accurate information. A city ordinance to reduce the visibility and availability of paraphernalia to minors in Lawrence is not a bad idea, Commissioner. But such an ordinance to keep them such an ordinance is unlikely to reduce peer pressure or other personal confrontations minors must contend with when regarding drugs. As unfortunate as it may be, it is part of growing up and probably always will be. The drugs might change in decades but the decisions will remain the same. Kids, and people in general, are a lot smarter and self-protective than most officials give them credit for, Commissioner. If they have the facts, they usually know how to use them to their advantage, and they usually do it. An ordinance might help put the paraphernalia, and possibly the drugs, out of sight, but it would hardly put them out of mind—or out of reach. 'Sea of love' in Iran hasn't aided hostages To the Editor: Tell them about it, Muriel Paul. Tell the mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers of our 30 Americans held hostage in the embassy about the "sea of love" you found in America. Perhaps, too, the families of the hundreds who were executed after Khomeini's kangaroo court trials would be interested in learning more about "awash on a sea of love" on your visit. You're damn well right, Norman Forer. We do have an obsession with the hostages and it won't abate until they are free. I have no brief for the Shah. He did torture and kill thousands and absconded with, perhaps, billions which should be returned to his country. Always in the lead for incarceration, he was a friend not of the United States, but of the Rockefeller and Henry Kissinger. KANSAN letters no fair-minded American familiar with recent history, could condon the overthrow of the government, which was creation of Sakay by the CIA and the continued support of the Shah until it became too powerful. Eisenhower's Secretary of State, John Eisenhower's Secretary of State, John Dulles, who was proud of his "brother," said in a letter to his brother, Ali, (who is as director of the cIA later before he gives us the Bay of Pigs). The Shah replaced his father, once an officer in the Iranian army, who had taken over the Peacock throne in an earlier coup. The tragedy is that Iran, ruled (?) now by the Iman, his mullahs and the militants in the embassy, is worse off than before the revolution. Literacy greatly increased and women were recognized as human beings with rights equal to those of men. At some time our government should let it all hang out, but under duress and blackmail. Eisenhower and presidents after him share in our failed foreign policy. The monos belongs primarily to Richard Nixon and Mackayachiel Syennai, Henry Kissinger. Professor Forer may be well meaning, but he is certainly a publicity hound and a bubblehead. He and Muriel Paul have given their advice to the Iranian people—but the student militants who have become terrorists and those who support them in their lawless imprisonment David C. Brain 2424 Melrose Lane 841-8711 KSU fans disgusted with Kansan story To the Editor: We read, with disgust, your Feb. 20 article, "Pandas behave at KSU disguising," and thought that throwing fanatics. The article made no mention that the trash throwers and displayers of obscene signs were only a few hundred yards away from such moven is too many. But this idiotic minority has received as more or less flame than it has from the press and general public. That narrow-minded and biased journal injury了 the credibility of your paper, but it was not the K-State fans. The article said, "K-State fans are behind KU." We submit to you that the KU student paper is years behind in its coverage of sports events, gross misrepresentation of fact epitomizes third-rate journalism. The author of that article was wrong. He pounded on zapanzada pressure. He would do well there. Don Welborn and 73 other KSU students Manhattan 1358-064-660 Published at the University of Ramesa daily August 19th through May 31st and Thursday and March 2nd through June 2nd, 2024. All publications are free to read on our website and must be submitted by my name for six months or my address in a yearly country (and for six months of my stay) to the university's admissions office. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Of the students surveyed by telephone before spring break, 65 percent said that The results of a poll conducted by the University Daily Kansan indicate that students at the University of Kansas have not thought out the consequences of draft registration. Draft registration, in the eyes of many, is becoming more than a trip to the local post office. they favored registration of men. However, 72 percent of the students polled said they opposed the military draft. AFTER ALL, COULD the United States survive military and economically if its allies were defeated in East? And would another draft lead to another meaningless war such as Vietnam? And if the United States seriously does not have a cut and dried choice when deciding whether to support draft States' problems abroad warrant the risk of their own lives. Editor James Anthony Fitts Managing Editor Jamie Muller Campaign Editor Carol Beerer Associate Campaign Editors Army Holloway, Ellen Haggley Sports Editor Cyded Huggles Sports Editor Mike Larke Associate Sports Editor Matthew Geyer Associate Sports Editor Marc Guysen Log Chips Rhonda Holloway, Jeff Seyvers, Leland Wankman Legal Chips Rhonda Holloway, Jeff Seyvers, Leland Wankman Postmaster. Send change of address to the University Daily Kansas. First Hall, The University of Kansas. Lawrence, KS 60458 PERHAPS THE IDEA of draft registration has clashed the draft issue. Forty-one percent of the students polled said they were not interested in a mobile move on the part of the United States to reassert itself as a world power. Granted, registration would be a symbol of unity for them. Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins Opposing the military draft yet ad-hoc in accreditation is like fasting信用卡登记, even when opposed to paying bills at the end of the month. Draft registration, which will run up over time, is less costly. Future prospects are unclear to many students, torn between national pride and personal progress. Students are too uncomfortable to talk about another war. There is a desire to protect the country, but it is questionable whether that desire is strong enough to convince this country's youth to lay down arms in a cause they may deem meaningless. Unfortunately, this symbol of unity, as most students have agreed, would only lead to a draft, which almost all students oppose. Draw to the drawing board. The poll shows confusion among students at the University of Kansas. Students are aware that the university has a military draft. Economic problems at home and abroad and a lack of national confidence have students caught in the middle. The law requires that students in the draft, must decide whether the United Business Manager Vincent Coatlis Representatives Kevin Koster, Cash Price, Mike Renehald, Paul Witter, Nancy Caucas Bairn Light, Karen Hailet, Hope Hoppbarker, Helley Rosehall, Rosanne Brown, Susanne Barren The Kansas poll brings up these questions. The ultimate decisions of students most likely are not reflected in the poll. This grim decision is yet to come. COLUMNIST Kansan poll shows student confusion These figures simply do not make any sense. The Kansasans show that many students at the University have been shortsided about the draft registration issue. Retail Sales Manager Campaign Sales Manager Associate Management Manager Classified Representatives Marketing Manager Sales Manager Photographer Skilled Photographer Teacher/Business Manager Graduate Assistant Graduate Assistant Elaine Strause Miami Travers Alan Watson Tammy Heim, Natalie Diane Jade Kurt Gallier Kent Gallier Jane Wenderson Al Berman Kevin Kuster, Candy Price, Make Konental, Paul Witter, Naomi By JOHN BARRETT david lewis In her Feb. 29 column, Susana Nammum struck a new low for the Kansan. Rather than presenting facts and pseudo-facts, she resorts to name calling and emotional appeal. Unfortunately, it is once again time for the Kansan's annual misinformed call for gun control. And it is once again time for my revoly. The gun lobby is undeniably very large, from the grass-roots level up. The NRA has 10,000 members and 250 adding to 100,000 every month. However, it is no more "bullying" than any other Pro-gun movement has ammunition Guest Columnist meant to be a decoration. I inevitably, draft registration will lead to the military draft, especially considering the sad state of affairs in Egypt and elsewhere itself in with Iran and the Middle East. First, I am a member of the National Rifle Association, and proud of our control. We have several reasons: 1) I grew up with guns, as have generations of Americans before me. I want my children to have the same chance. 2) This means that we have availability of guns decreases crime. In fact, there is evidence to the contrary that the Constitution guarantees 'the right to keep and bear arms'. If one part of the Bill of Rights is disregarded, what real force does it impose? THE POLL RESULTS, which were consistent with several national polls, are even more confusing when one considers that 68 percent of the students polled said that the military draft would be the next step and was approved funding for draft registration. I RESET THE term militant being applied to the NRA. It is true that the NRA fits part of Webster's definition of militant people, a group that is massive, people, militant has a meaning approaching violent. Following is the NRA membership oath: "I certify that I am a citizen of the United States and I am subject to any organization which has as any part of this program the attempt to overthrow the government of the United States by force or violence; and that, if admitted to memorial service in the U.S., I will sportsmanship and good citizenship." This is hardly the oath of a militant organization or worse yet a "street crime lobby." The NRA is not an organization to call for mandatorion prison Those who favor draft registration and oppose the draft are well-wishers. But the difference is that draft registration takes the same time. It's one or the other, and draft registration would most likely mean Namnum contends that most people favor stricter handgun laws. This is debatable at the end. In the 1976 election, Massachusetts, the state's most populous states, forces as the most anti-gun state, volez 2.2 to one against Question 5, a strong gun control measure. Prior to the referendum, the major polls predicted that the question would pass by a landslide. The fact is that the questions asked by these polls were so slanted as to render the results useless. So if all of the poll results were manged into one paragraph, it would read: 68 percent of KU students say that the military draft would be the next step if registration were funded. And, 45 percent they said they would oppose the 72 percent they would oppose the draft. RECENT DECISION Making Institute and Gallup poll shows that less than one percent of those surveyed attributed the rising crime rate to gun availability, and only one percent offered gun control as a solution. The survey found that most people were surprised at the extent of regulations which now apply to firearms. General Manager Rick Musser The statute now in effect defines the militia as all able-bodied males between 17 and 45 except as provided in section 313 of the Military Code, which some cases women are part of the militia. NAMUM DID NOT even try to respond to the argument of an armed people being impossible to enslave. Perhaps she realizes that if a German is forced to evidence of dictators disarming the people. One of Hitler's first moves was to disarm the French, and many more invaded France during WW II, the Gestapo seized gun registration records and disarmed the French people. The Soviet Union would not allow Bloc are further examples. Within the last few weeks, the illegal government in Afghanistan has called for the disarmment of people in order to stop repel resistance. FURTHER, THE U.S. Supreme Court has held that "the militia comprised all males physically capable of acting in concert for the common defense, and ... when called to service ... were expected to appear bearing arms." The court also said of the kind in computer use at the time." terms for those convicted of violent crimes involving firearms. NAMUM FURTHER slanders the NRA by saying that it is well endowed by the gun manufacturers. This accusation surfaces every few years. Each time, the NRA is accused of making it easier to be a registered loby) or by an independent organization. And each time, the audits find that the only money the NRA receives from firearms manufacturers is for advertising in its official magazines, the NRA does not pay them Hunter. This money is applied only to the cost of publishing the magazines, just as the Kanan uses advertising to help pay its costs. The NRA relies on membership dues and donations for its operations and lobbying. American gun owners are not "wagging, modern-day gangsters." When they are shooting targets, target shooting, hunting, and protection. However, the vast majority would shoot a person only "where crime constitutes an offence or in some circumstances property," as or, in some circumstances property," as a feature of the Armed Forces Rifleman, which lists 12 to 15 incidents in which firearms prevented or lessened a crime. In fact, the violent crime for legal gun ownership is the murder. How can Nnamum call the gun lobby unpatriotic? It is the ant-gamwarn who are trying to destroy the Bill of Rights. They try to suppress the rights only on the National Guard. The authors of the Second Amendment made it quite clear in their debates that they intended for all Americans to be free from the original version of the Amendment did in fact apply only to the militia and allowed people "religiously bounded by bearing weapons" to defend themselves. Both clauses were rejected for fear that in the style of James I, a tyrannical government could use them as an excuse to disarm MCA FLAITH THE DREAM MEN LACE © PROPYLUKE TROWNS Remind me George... when this is over, I wanna run a saliva test on Andersons elephant. In 1978, the Federal Government's Crime Control Research Project survey of leading peace officers showed that 91 percent thought gun control would not help reduce crime, and that 64 percent thought an armed police force was better off. CCRP surveys have showed similar results. The CCRP survey results are backed by evidence. Orlando, FLA. police set up a bandun training program for women in the area to help prevent such programs.) In the following year, rapes decreased 90 percent, aggrigated assaults and burglaries dropped 25 percent. Other crimes also decreased. Orlando was the only city that had a decline in major crime that year. IN HIGHLEAF PARK, Mich., police instituted a similar program for merchants. Robbies dropped from 20 a month to one in four months. Unfortunately, in most cases such programs have been discontinued due to anti-gun pressure and cost. The cost of the program was greater than the cost of the programs. Detroit police refused to implement a handgun training program, so a merchant's organization started one. Armed robberies denounced 50 percent. New Orleans pharmacists instituted a similar program, Police and narcotics agents credited the program with reducing a number of robberies from three a week to one a month. Two-thirds of all murders in the United States are committed by known felons, and half are during the commission of another crime. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1975 that firearms, Freed in 1971 that because it is illegal for felons to possess firearms, it would be forced self-incrimination to require them to register their firearms. Incidentally, in 2010 a woman who visited the witness the assailant, this includes such acquaintances as drug dealers, prison inmates, and organized crime members. (The reason for handgun in the home is not times more likely to kill a friend or family member than an intruder, has since admitted that he has no factual backing for the statement, and to his credit there have been conducted to determine such a ratio.) NAMUM CITIES A General Accounting Office report in her column. Unfortunately, the GAO has a long history of being criticized for its best at best. Considering the facts presented above, including the Federal Government's own CCRP survey, this report would seem to be The GAO report also cites the number of guns brought into areas of strict control from out of state. Interstate sales of firearms without a Federal Firearms License are already illegal, and it is not just interstate trade. The illegal flow of guns from Mexico is already so great that in 1978, Congress held hearings on the problem. Naturally, these guns are an important international network, an established international network, should heavy restrictions be placed on firearms, the amount of gun smuggling would dwarf the bootlegging prohibition. Only law-abiding citizens would be excluded from this net. Perhaps if Nammur would look at the facts instead of blindly attacking the gun lobby, she would see that it is in favor of control who need to "learn." Anyone wanting more information on gun control or wishing to join the NRA, please feel free to call me. My phone number is in the student directory. John Barrett is a Clearwater senior majoring in business. New Yorkers take 'em by surprise Re CHARLES HINDS BY CHARLES HINDS New York Times Special Features BOULDER. Colo.-New Yorkers have been arriving in the land of Mork and Mindy.-Boulder. Colo.-in drove. This town has bagels and clausophobic bread. While our backs were to the West trying to reach the North, we skateboarded and dug bogs, the Eastern menace up, sustaining its advance in Colorado by flying in pastrami from Colorado. Each incidence of the big city invasion carries with it the whole baggage of pretense about the high status of the New York label. Like the residents of upstate New York. Westerners are constantly reminded of the hopeless backwardness of life outside the city. Once arrived, these refuges in the new Diaspora, these sun-starved Northeasterns, that have been squashed bloom string tie to remind them that indeed it is a privilege live in INSTEAD, THEY break out expensive alligator booty boots. Never mind that these shoes were really designed for West Side shoes and sidesteped pooie droppings on Central Park. Hats for Puppies and baseball hats to drive their pickup trucks from the cafe on one end of town to the bar on the other. Gone with Boulder's spacious housing and wide streets is the Western tradition of independence and self-reliance. Boulder probably has more lawyers and gurus per square block than any place west of the Hudson River CONCEIDING THE AGORAPHIOHIA of the Boulder building at Greenwich Village, the brown-brownstorm-dressed contractors erect new apartments in the city. The closer and more frequent your neighbor, the more likely you will be ignore in times of need--like when you are a homeowner. After a month of foolishness and frozen d. miris in the pseudo-cafe life of Boulder, the New neurotic is still suffering the afteraffects of his equally neurotic former environment. To ease the pain with withdrawal, he creates a little New York in Boulder. IN THE NOT-to-distant past, the New Yorkers ruthlessly imposed their English and urban culture on the displaced peasants of Eastern and Southern Europe. Maybe Coloradors should set up similar welcome for our new immigrants from the Big Lean. One good place would be to teach them how to be designed to be fit for human habitation anyway. Instead of working in sweatsuits, we could man theski Country USA. B oath at the airport and draw out answers to the New Yorkers with just a tourist visa. University Daily Kansan Wednesdav. March 19. 1980 5 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus **TODAY:** THE UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Officer Selection Officer will be interview students at booth one of the school, a.m. to 4 p.m. THE WEDNESDAY FORUM will bear a lecture, The State of the Arts for 10:45 a.m., in School of Fine Arts, at 11:45 a.m. at the University of Oread. THE KU CREW team will meet at m.p. in front of 265 Robinson, KANSAS ORJERSON will hold an information call at 4:39 in the Forum Room of the Union. TONIGHT: THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in Parkors B and C of the Union. There will be a CARLILON RECITAL by Albert Gerken at 7. The HEARTLAND CHAPEL from 7 to 8. Danforth Chapel from 7 to 8. The WESTERN CIVIZATION FILM SERIES will show "Grandure and Obedience" and "Knowledge or Certainty" at 7:30 in 5-Lipcourt Hall. There will be a FINE ARTS Club at 8 in Swartwoak Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. TOMORROW: At 11:30 a.m. the SPRING AREA STUDIES Lunchcon Seminar will hear Richard Sheridan lecture on Demography and Medical Aspects of Alive F of the Union. The GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP will meet from 12:10 to 13:00 in p.m. Cork Room 2 of the Union. THE GRADUATE SCHOOL TEA AND TALK OF Fine Arts, at 3:30 in the Jayhawk Room Research in Barque Performance Practice; by James Moeser, dean of the School of Economics and History at 4:30 in the AMERICAN STUDIES LECTURE. "The National and Colonial Problem in Modern Peru," by Heracio Bonilla, professor of economics and history from 4:30 in the FICTION CLUB will meet at 7:30 in Parlor C of the Union. GAY SERVICE OF KANSAS will meet at 7:30 in Parlor A of the University Room of the Union. SCIENCE Lecture. "Folklife and Scientific Claims," by Jerry Stannard at B in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. OPINION UNIVERSITY GALLOP will give a University Lecture in Woordt Audition尔夫 of the Union. Staff Reporter Democrats prepare to challenge Winn's seat Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Suddenly everyone is after Larry Winn's Third District Congressional seat. "It's undoubtedly the most competition we've ever had," said Larry Bengston, chairman of the state Democratic Party. "He's had a free ride ever since he got in." Hinn hasn't faced a serious challenge to his spot in more than a decade. Two years ago Kansas Democrats couldn't even find a way to run against the Overland Park Republican. On Friday, Jack Weyford fourth, Merriam, announced his candidacy at press conferences in Lawrence, Overland Park, Ottawa and Kansas City. But this year two persons have already said they would try to end Winn's reign in the House of Representatives. Weyford, 40, vice president of an Overland Park advertising agency, is president of the Shawne Mission school board. Happy 2-year Carrie Love from Craig In January, Dan Watkins, Lawrence, announced his resignation as Gov. John Carlin's chief aide to run against Winn. Neither has ever run for political office. LARRY WINN last week refused to discuss the possibility that he might see his TONIGHT IS Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK Mary Jane by Bass royal college shop 843-4255 eight thirty-seven massachusetts "They're going to say a million things," he said. "My reaction is that if they have a candidate, we will have a team organized. You haven't had any competition in their fault." toughest test since Kansas City Democrat James DeCourseur came within 10,000 votes of knocking him out of his seat in 1970. Watkins, 32, was executive director of the state Democratic Party in 1978 before Most Democrats give Watkins the edge in the race, while Republicans last month. If both candidates stay in the race, a primary will be held in August to determine the party's nominee. resigning to become manager of Carlin's campaign for governor. Bombacba "We feel confident for the first time in a long time," Bengton said. "To my knowledge we've never had a strong can-do spirit with the financial backing necessary." A FORMER physical education teacher, Weyford received a master's degree in education from KU in 1974. He has been a professor at the Shuwee Mission school board since 1974. Some Democrats say that without Watkins on his staff, Carlin might have lost the election. Calvin Klein Winn, 60, was first elected in 1986. He won decisively in 1974 and 1978, receiving more than 70 percent of the vote. "The Third District seat has certainly not been one of our proud achievements," admitted David Berkowitz, chairman of the central committee. "It is been embarrassing." "We've had some fine people run against Winn, but they just didn't have the money. That's not the case this year." Johnson County, traditionally a GOP stronghold and Winn's home county, figures to be the biggest hurdle for the Democrats. However, Democrats insist that the county's political makeup is shifting. Rose Hips Happy Legs Sachel Cecily Plain Jane Rose Hips Holiday Plaza Happy Legs Hours: 10-5:30 Mon.-Sat. Open Thursday evening 25th & Iowa Clothes Encounter Sachel in step with your style Elizabeth Stewart Cecily FINALE Plain Jane FINALE SALE UP TO 4 MORE DAYS 38 STORE CONSOLIDATION SALE ALL FALL & WINTER FASHIONS Sportswear Tops ...$3.90 to $9.90 All Vests ...$3.90 Skirts ...$7.90 or less Assorted Accessories ...90c to $9.90 (all kinds) Ratcatcher 75 OFF Pants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5.90 Sweaters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.90 or less Shirts and Blouses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15.90 or less (most at $5.90) THIS IS ONE SALE YOU SHOULD NOT MISS! New hours 10-8-30 Monday-Thursday 10-6 Saturday 1-5 Sunday carousel 23rd & Louisiana • Malls Shopping Center Main Store, Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop,Satellite Union Your Kansas Union Bookstores SPRING RECORD SALE Union Bookstores Classical-Folk-Mood BLUES-JAZZ-ROCK KU Lp's $1.99 & up YOUR GENERALITY BEST PRICES BEST PRICES YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the Only Bookstores to share profits with KU students. Wednesday, March 19, 1980 University Daily Kansan WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 22nd ANNUAL DOG SALE! OUR DOORS OPEN AT 8:00 A.M. SHARP MARCH 21st & 22nd. HUGE SAVINGS ON NEW & USED CAMERAS, ACCESSORIES, DEMONSTRATORS, TRADES IN & DISCONTINUED CAPS. BRING CASH, MASTER CHARGE or VISA. BUT HURRY TO WOLFE'S CAMERA SHOP FOR THE MOST DYNAMIC SALE EVER. 35mm SINGLE LENS CAMER TOMMY AND THE MONSTERS MARTIN MAYER SALE STARTS FRIDAY FINANCING AVAILABLE VISA BALL STORE TOTAL SALE C i nikon C5 I 7.8 297.55 C ipst ST Z05W (14 w) mount 397.55 M i nikon K3 I 6.1 297.55 M i nikon MC1000 397.55 M o m vio MG200 (14 w) mount 397.55 M o m vio MC1000 397.55 C i nikon AW1 I 8.8 355.00 C i nikon AWD II 7 (feat) 395.50 F i nk 1 I 8.8 355.00 F i nk 70 I 2.4 (feat) 395.50 F i nk 82 I 1.4 349.00 F i nk 18 I 1.4 349.00 C i nikon K1 I 8.8 399.00 C i nikon K2 I 9.4 399.00 C i nikon K4 I 10.4 399.00 C i nikon K5 I 10.4 399.00 Y ompus OM1 I 8.8 465.00 O i nkei M1 I 30.4 465.00 O i nkei M2 I 465.00 Y ompus M3 I 30.4 465.00 O i nkei M2 I 465.00 Y ompus M3 I 30.4 465.00 A i phton SXm w tikkeru I 8 A i phton SXm w tikkeru I 8 A i phton SXm w tikkeru I 8 M i m o yo DXS 1000 s tikkeru I 8 F u i phton SXm w tikkeru I 8 F u i phton SXm w tikkeru I 8 N i n i o h body (used) 289.55 --camera shop, inc ZOOM SLR LENS 100 to 200mm, 15.6 one touch zoom lens, meter coupled, availble for screwmount, Minolta, Canon, Olympus, Pentax K IQT A MISPRINT $999.99 ESS THAN$100 Only 35 MM RANGEFINDER CAMERA | | MEMB | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Can arm | w 31 F | 89.00 | | Vivar arm | w 35 I | 199.00 | | Viara arm | w 35 I | 199.00 | | Oly arm | pu4s 35 BC | 114.50 | | Viara arm | w 35 I 7 | 199.00 | | Viara arm | w 35 I 7 | 199.00 | | Nikon arm | w hw w / 35 mm (auto) | 685.00 | | Nikon arm | w 35 I 7 | 199.00 | | Ham arm | w sport spart II | 89.50 | | Ham arm | w sport spart II | 89.50 | | Min arm | w 35 EL | 100.00 | | Min arm | w 35 El | 100.00 | | Ken arm | auto S2 (used) | 139.50 | | Ken arm | auto S2 (used) | 139.50 | | Ken arm | auto S2 (used) | 139.50 | | Teo arm | auto S2 (used) | 139.50 | | Teo arm | auto S2 (used) | 139.50 | | Oly arm | pu4s 35 I | 169.50 | | Oly arm | pu4s 35 I | 169.50 | | Viara arm | pu4s 35 I | 169.50 | | Viara arm | pu4s 35 I | 169.50 | | Bolz arm | y82 w / 32 (use) | 84.49 | | Bolz arm | y82 w / 32 (use) | 84.49 | | Rollen arm | w 35 TW (used) | 199.00 | | Rollen arm | w 35 TW (used) | 199.00 | COLOR PRINT FILM Sale $159 uni negative freshade ASA BOS process in regular Kodak exposure A WATT! $299 AudioProfessionals 8 Wednesday, March 19, 1980 University Daily Kansan --- ★★★★★★★★★ Tonight A KY-102 concert with GRAN MAX and Magnum adm. only $1.02 plus $1.02 pitchers and hiballss from 8-9 ALSO Friday and Saturday THE SECRETS Where else but the . . . Town House Lawrence Opera House Celil 414820 ★★★★★★★★★ By JUDITH LYNN HOWARD National anti-draft rally attracting KU protesters Staff Reporter Gold leaflets fluttered as they were distributed to students in front of the Kansas Union yesterday. A murderouslooking Uncle Sam caricature aimed a bullet at the leaflets and the slogan read, "Uncle Sam wants you, and you, and you . . ." The leaflets were publicizing a national anti-draft march scheduled to be held Saturday in Washington D.C. by the National Committee Against Racism. Delegates from the Kansas Anti-Draft Organization and they planned to attend a meeting of the Association of sophomore and Jailet Matamau, Overland Park freshman, will be among UNGERMAN SAID she was attending the rally because of the opportunity to voice her opinion against a possible restatement of the draft. President Carter asked Congress in late January to appropriate funds for draft registration. He also asked for registration of men and women between the ages of 19 and 20; but he asked for their registrations in separate bills. TONIGHT IS The draft registration bill for men is struggling in Congress because of a lack of funds. It is predicted that the draft registration bill for women will fail. Ungerman said that although Carter was asking only for draft registration, she was still opposed to it. Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK "If there is a registration, a draft would soon follow." she said. MATAMUA ALSO said that she was against registration and reinstatement of the draft because of her anti-war position. "If we were truly worried about the Russians we would have started the draft when the Russians went to Afghanistan," she said. If the United States went to war and she were drafted, Matamata said, she would do all she could within the realm of war. So they would go to war, short of leaving the country. "I wouldn't leave. I love this country," she said. Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 In the wake of President Carter's call on Jan. 23 for Selective Service registration, the issue of conscious objection has bobbled into public awareness. Staff Reporter By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER National peace groups reported that since Jan. 23 they had been swamped with letters and phone calls requesting information about CO status. Many requesting CO information "We were overwhelmed. We ran out of literature and we never run out of it before." The director of the National Interregional Intercultural Consequences Objectives in Washington said last week. Maresca said approximately 50,000 COE essay questionnaires were distributed by NBSCO this year. The Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors in Philadelphia reported an influx of 300 to 400 CO application cards per day since Carter's address. "We've seen a big jump in the mail since Jan. 23," Larry Spartan said. "The last few years the possibility of a draft was just rumbles in Congress. Now there are a lot stronger." Spears said that since March 1979 the CCCO had distributed 80,000 CO cards, 15,000 of which were returned. He said 40 percent of the responses were from women. HOWEVER, A local Quaker organization, the Oread Friends Meeting, reported only a few student inquiries about CO status. "People are not yet faced with a decision." Tom Moore, Oread Friends Meeting member, said. "People say, why bother? Why drill it when it is not on the books?" Unlike policy during the Vietnam War, the government has said it won't grant CO status until after the individual has passed away. The local draft board to be classified for service Carter has asked for $2 million in 1981 to begin training local draft boards. "From the selective service's perspective the less opposition people have a chance to voice, the better." Spears said. The government plans to call for a 10-day pause in the state's law to appear before a local draft board. All drainage persons, regardless of their beliefs, are required to register at their local office if needed. ALTHOUGH POTENTIAL Cabs are not exempted from registration, peace organizations advise them to put their beliefs in writing as soon as possible. "You may only have a short time in which to appear," Moore said. "It takes time to get your thoughts in order and to get people to testify for you." In order to substantiate a CO claim, a person must demonstrate to the local draft board moral, ethical or religious beliefs "so that he would give you no peace in military service." "Draft boards are understandably suspicious of last-minute conversions—like the person who says, 'Golly, the day I got the job,' or another object to want in form." Moore said. OCs have tread on firmer legal ground since a 1979 U.S. Supreme Court decision broadened the definition of religious objections to war to include moral and ethical objections. "It was unthinkable that Congress meant you had to be part of a church in order to have religious convictions," Moore said. "There was a whole range of responses to the Vietnam War." MOORE SAID that those who belonged to churches that through history have fatly opposed war had an edge over others seeking CO status. He said a Jewish man was told by a draft board that he couldn't possibly be a CO because the board had drafted thousands of young men and he was the only one to appeal. ... a great sense, those persons are so large. More said, "But more is is easier for a draft writer to and support conscientious objection if the individual is a member of a historic peace "If you went in as a Quaker, it would be a cinch." But SPEARS said the potential CO is not dependent on the whims of local draft board decisions, nor the War, a number of draft board decisions were overturned in court rulings on the War. "Chances are very good that you can substantiate a CO claim if you receive draft documents from the IRS, documented case," Spars said. "You don't have to have religious reasons—there is no Maresca said it was rare for a claim to be based purely on ethical or moral reasons. And, he said, there have been a number of cases where infamination against specific groups in the past. He said draft boards had discriminated against Roman Catholics seeking CO status, because their church had historically evaluated wars by whether they were just In 1971 the Supreme Court ruled against such selective conscientious objection. A CO must be opposed to war in any form. GETAWAY SWEEPSTAKES FROM YOUR LOCAL SPERRY DEALER WIN ONE OF 3 HANDSOME CANVAS TOTE BAGS Get in on the Getaway Sweepstakes and you could win a Great Getaway Bag. It is a canvas tie bag with four zippered closures and a lockable main compartment. The perfect travel companion! We are giving three Great Getaway Bags. To enter just stop in or send an entry in the mail. There are 30 matching clothes and 25 shoes that may any Getaway more fun and fashionable. Comfort has never looked better! UED LEATHER MOCCASIN Tops on the campus and the deck—the flexible moccasin for smart barefooting. With fashionable rugged look. POLO $45.95 Ladies' $47.95 Men's DRY DUCK* LEATHER MOCCASIN $52.95 Ladies' $55.95 Men's Three other styles for men. SPEERY TOP-SIPER Two other styles for ladies. [ ] [ ] [ ] 1. Name___ 2. Address___ 3. City___ State___ Zip___ 4. Phone___ hours m-t-w-f-sat 10-6 th 10-9 sun 1-5 MISTER GUY Bucky's Registration ends April 1, 1980 920 Mass. SPECIAL! Now at Bucky's get a DELUXE BUCKY, FRIES, AND SMALL SUNDAE all for only 2120 W. 9th $1.89 Through Sunday, March 23 Bockys head Headlines from headmasters 800 VERMONT • 843.8808 MAKE-UP TIPS FOR SPRING 1. Apply moisturizer to damp skin and wait 5 minutes before applying foundation. This allows the moisturizer to penetrate and protect your skin as efficiently and your foundation will stay on longer. eye 2. To apply blusher properly, suck in your cheeks and place them under the eyes, blending upwards and back toward the ear. 4. Add depth and dimension to your eyes, use a soft lens or a light shade (yellow or peach) on the occlusion with a light shade (yellow or peach) on the occlusion. 3. To define the shape of your lipstick and prevent lipstick from *bleeding* use a lipliner pencil slightly darker than your lipstick shade to outline the contours with a brush for long-lasting smooth results. 5. Blend and smooth all your make-up with a facial sponge for long lasting streak-free results. When was the last time you really tried a new look or technique with your make-up? If you'd like to experiment, but you don't know how, or you're a beginner, just try out your current routine, we'd like help to you. Headmasters is offering a special, limited-enrollment SKIN CARE AND MAKE-UP CLASS The 2-Class Session will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. March 24 and 31) and will cost a total to hold an entire day. A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD The Kansas University School of Architecture and Urban Design is pleased to announce an Exhibition of Student Projects scheduled to be on display in the Kansas Union Gallery for the month of March. Recent as well as past student work (the earliest dating circa 1925) will represent the high degree of design excellence stressed within the School. Presentation drawings and scale models will be integrated in the show to communicate the best of the School's pedagogic productions. EXHIBIT 300m Sandra L'Ecuyer at Corn's Studio of Beauty Presenting Sandra Specializes in Haircuts for both Men & Women Specials cut, shampoo, blow dry Reg. $15¢ NOW $9¢ We carry *REDKEN* hair and skin products manicure Reg. $5** NOW $3** Call Sandra for an appointment 843-4663 on Tues. Thurs. Fri. Sat 9th & Vermont Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri, Sat 8-5 sua films Presents MARLON BRANDO THE MAN WHO SELLS WAR. The bloodier the battle- the higher the price. "BURN!" United Artists From the director of "BATTLE OF ALGIERS" Thursday, March 20 7:30 pm $1.00 FORUM ROOM —No refreshments allowed— Wednesday. March 19. 1980 --- University Daily Kansan Better student diets urged by dietitian By JEFF KIOU: Staff Reporter Many KU students have poor diets because they skip meals, eat too much fast food or don't eat well-balanced foods. They register dietitian said yesterday. Marsese Bates, the dietitian at Walkins and others, said that students had difficulty get the irregular class schedules and because they were not used to preparing or planning for a meal. "College students don't often eat eat because they are used to having meals prepared for them at home," she said. "Even in the dorms, they have to make a selection and they don't often get a well-balanced meal or a diet suited to their needs. "Many times they'll eat at a fast food place instead of preparing a meal at home. Fast food is usually high in carbohydrates and fat. "Too much of this type of food can throw a diet off. The body needs certain nutritional elements found in a well-balanced diet." "Many times they'll eat at a fast food place instead of preparing a meal at home. Fast food is usually high in carbohydrates and fat. A well-balanced daily diet, according to Bates, includes food from four basic groups: milk, meat, fruit and vegetable and bread and cereal. BATES SAID students would usually substitute a candy bar, soft drink or coffee for a meal. She said she has been teaching at the University of cheese and crackers with them to school. "For instance, if there's not enough carbohydrate in the body," she said, "then proteins will be broken down and substituted for the carbohydrate. The protein will not be used for its purpose, which includes the formation of an Bates said that irregular diets also could cause weight gain. Bates said she has gotten many calls from student demographics about the diet that they should follow. Most of the students ask about the low carbohydrate-high protein diet and whether they should include yogurt in their diet. BATES SAID she had cautioned students to examine a "fad diet" before such questions as: Does the claim maseptic scientific facts? Does the plan limit the types of food which may be eaten or one food or nutrient group is "For instance," she said, "eliminating the bread and cereal group from a daily diet will cause the student not to obtain the core nutrients Rut spruce. "Vitamin pills alone cannot make up for nutritional needs, such as carbohydrates. Taking a vitamin pill may be a false sense of security." Kansas is one of many states now participating in National Nutrition Month. "To hit your stride ... eat smart is the theme that has been emulated by the state observes the month, sponsored by the Kansas Nutrition Council. The council has sponsored programs in communities throughout the state. FACULTY MEMBERS If you have not yet signed up to use the C&I SURVEY for the Spring 1980 Semester, please complete this coupon and return it to its instructional Resources in Hour 409 COURSE NUMBER LINE NUMBER # OF FORMS Your Name Department Academic Rank CGI SURVEY Academic Rank CGI SURVEY WHAT A DEAL! A FREE T.SHIRT WHEN YOU BUY ONE OF US! You can believe our famous talking pants when they say: "A FREE $7 T-SHIRT with every pair!" There's no catch. With every pair of regular price Wally Work or Painter pants, you can get a FREE $7 value T-shirt. Pant sizes S-15, T-shirt quantities are limited, so hurry in! March 13-23 onlv Bostwicks OPEN M-F 10-8 SAT. 10-6 SUN. 1-5:30 Bostwicks 23RD & IOWA SOUTHWEST PLAZA LAYAWAY VISA Sports cuts reluctantly accepted By STEVE YOUNG Staff Reporter The KU coaches and administrators forced to裁 ax $84,000 from this year's athletes budget said yesterday that they did not realize that they realized they were unavailabl Bob Macrumb, KU athletic director, said early this week that the athletic department cut $83,000 from nine areas, effective last fall to reduce a budget deficit for this fiscal year. Don Baker, sports information director, said that although it would be difficult for his office to stay within the new budget, he agreed with the way the cuts had been "The most important thing is that we don't cut back on the student, athlete and his team. You can't go to be a real test for me to end up in the black. I'm just trimming everywhere. I'm looking for purchases that can be put off because it will take more money than not put a burden on next year's budget." "It's put a hardship on us," said Baker, whose sports information office budget was cut by $14,800—the largest single cut. BUT BAKER said it was better that cuts be made in administrative budgets than in individual sports budgets. Baker said that in addition to delaying expenses, the budget cuts led to reductions in printing and part-time salaries. Bob Timmons, men's track coach, said he appreciated the department the department was in, even though he didn't like having his budget cut. "I if I were the athletic director, I have done it the same way Bob (Marcum) did. I have pleased to have to make a budget cut, but I can't be resentful about a department tryout." "It's just one of those things. We really can't do too much about it." TIMMONS, WHOSE budget was cut about $7,000, said some team travel might be affected. "We probably won't be able to take as many people as we would have to some events," he said. "Exactly how many and where we don't know." Bill Spahn, men's swimming coach, said he also understood the department's dilemma. "It's very easy for anyone to see the situation we're in," he said. "You just have to stay calm and not jump in and now that in the future our revenge-producing sports will do a lot better. I think Spain, whose program lost an undisclosed amount of recruiting and unused scholarship money, said he thought innovation could make up for the lost funds. "It makes you work a little harder and do things a little differently. Sure it hurts, but everyone is just going to have to be a little more innovative," he said. The answer to budget problems in the athletic department rests with the areas unaffected by the recent cuts - football and basketball, which both are revenue-reinvesting sports. Men's athletics at the University are tundred largely from the gate revenues of football and basketball games. And men's golf is difficult to make revenue projections. intercollegiate athletics as it is for the history department. There are too many variables involved," he said. It's not as easy to project expenditures for Baker said that with most University departments—including women's athletics, which are funded by the state—could make exact revenue projections. Although Marcum has refused to specify exactly where cuts have been made, departments and programs that lost money have received them. The Kansas Relays, tennis and maintenance. New information booth planned Visitors to the University of Kansas will have access to a campus because of an information booth to be constructed this spring, according to Allen Wiechert, University director of the school. Todd Seymour, president of the KU Endowment Association, said yesterday that the Association had awarded the Kansas University $41,400 for the booth. Weichert said the building would be a It will be constructed on the southeast corner of 15th and Iowa streets, behind Templin Hall. Seymour said. "small, shelter-type structure, open on four sides, with a roof." The booth will house a public telephone, Wiechert said, and an additional telephone connected to the University's information service. Wiechert said, "It would be desirable to have information booths at the four major entrances to the campus. This is a trial run for new visitors, visitors, we might construct more later." The booth will have a campus directory, campus maps and University information pamphlets and a large map of the campus with a lighted display case, Wiescant said. WE NEED YOU!!!! Student Senate is looking for INTERESTED STUDENTS to serve on the following STANDING COMMITTEES: Academic Affairs Communications Finance and Auditing Culture Sports Student Rights Student Services Apply in Person at the STUDENT SENATE OFFICE, B 105, KANSAS UNION A career in law without law school. After just three months of study at The Institute for Paralegal Training in exciting Philadelphia, you can have a stimulating and rewarding career in law or business without law school. As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of the duties traditionally 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 find you a responsible and challenging job in a law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice. The Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we've placed over 3,000 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide. If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking for an above average career, contact your Placement Office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your campus on: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23 The Institute for Paralegal Training FERNSTEIN MUSEUM 235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 operated by Para-legal, Inc. Approved by the American Bar Association. 10 Wednesday, March 19, 1980 University Daily Kansan Legalization of pari-mutuel betting debated By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter TOPEKA--Many things seemed familiar at yesterday's House Federal and State Affairs Committee hearing. One side argued that passage of a resolution would devastate Kansas society. The other said that the government shouldn't legislate morality. It was like many previous Kansas Legislature hearings on liquor bills. Even the Rev. Richard E. Taylor, leader of the state's dry forces, was there. But yesterday the debate was about gambling. For nearly two hours, more than 50 people heard testimony on a resolution that would legalize part-mutual betting in Kansas on a county-by-county option. Four persons, three of them horse or greyhound breeders, testified in favor of the resolution. Another six, including three pastors, argued against the measure. The resolution is sponsored by state Rep. James Guffey, D-Chanute, along with 12 Democratic and seven Republican representatives. Guffey said that he had never bet on the horses, or dogs for that matter, but that he thought Kansans should have the choice. PARI-MUTUEL betting is legal in 33 states. “你 don't have to bet if you don't want to.” Jules Doty, an Oauquah quarter horse beater, told the committee “Pari-mutuel is too good for it, so it's better. If it so bad why don't they kick it up!” state of Kansas on any race in the country if you want. There isn't any way you're going to stop people from betting. You just remove the crise aspect. "Besides, you can place wagers in the Colorado, Nebraska and Arkansas are among the states that permit pari-mutu betting. Tour buses from Kansas City to Akron, Cincinnati, Topeka and Hot Springs, Arkansas, are common. "That's all money going out of the state." she said, the president of the Greenville Hall of Fame. The revenue Kansas stands to gain from the passage of the 2015 law, main argument of the resolution's proponent. THEY ALSO insisted that race tracks would create jobs and increase tourism. Visitors from Missouri and Oklahoma—where pair-mutual bail is illegal—might increase if tracks were to open in Kansas City, Kan., and Wichita. in pari-mutuel betting, betters wager against other betters, not against track operators. All wagers are pooled, and the state takes a tax cut, usually about 7 per cent, to the track to cover operating expenses and the rest is divided among winning betters. In Arkansas, where there are two tracks, the state receives about $15 million annually through racing. "This would bring a massive new industry to Kansas," said Chuck Henry, who raises quarter horses in Butler County. OPONENTS OF the measure, however, charged that betting would invite organized crime into the state, increase job aib- cause of employment and cause a decrease in retail sales. "Any lawnmower who votes for legal puny and pony gambling because a small amount will go for beneficial community projects could use that same sick logic and vote for puny and pony gambling because its actions so part of the proceeds could be used for beneficial community projects," Taylor said. Similar measures to legalize pari-mutual betting in the state failed in 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973 and 1974. But, Guffey said, previous did not make the decision a local option. If both houses of the Legislature approve the resolution, the state's voters would decide on county-by-county basis in the next legislative session. If they wanted legalized pari-mutuel betting. "I think we ought to at least let the people decide," Guffey said. Campaign urges old drug disposal During March, the Kansas Pharmacy Association is sponsoring a campaign to get people to dispose of their old medicines because exposure to heat, light and chemicals can decompose into harmless or even poisonous substances. It's the foundation of our fraternity. It doesn't include hazing. Brotherhood includes teaching the new member (and future brother) how to be a good brother, not how to be a good PLEDGE. BROTHERHOOD Brisby Andrews, pharmacist at the UTHealth center, said yesterday that 40 percent of all accidental poisonings were from 60 percent were from asphin overdoses. Lambda Chi Alpha has brotherhood for you. Check us out! "All drugs are potential poison for children and adults if they are taken after they have excreted." Andrews said. Find out why we're called the "Fraternity of Honest Friendship" Visit us at 1918 Stewart Ave. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS - Part Stuck 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 James Pessetto, assistant director of the University Medical Center's prescription medicines did not have any expiration dates because chemicals reacted differently in different storage conditions. or call 842-9577 and leave your name. Our recruitment staff will return your call. Most pharmacies in Kansas are participating in the campaign and will be giving away free flu shots to Foundation for Crippled Children for each container of old medicine they received. 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 VII VI qusqua Cassem's BILL MASS. LAWRENCE Final Inventory Clearance Sale 50% off all Merchandise Mar. 20, 21, 22 (Thurs., Fri. & Sat.) Don't Miss This Fantastic Sale! Cassem's Clothing 811 Mass. 843-3160 THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA FREE PITCHER Enjoy Coca-Cola with purchase of any pizza WED. thru SUN. March 19-23 Bring coupon Bring coupon KIEF'S 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO The Tavares— Supercharged YVFERSNARBED LAVARES 1999 Ronnie Lawsevery generation RUNNING LOS www.runninglos.com MFG LIST $4^{59} 7³ Pink Floyd— Dark Side of the Moon The Knack— ... but little girls understand Dark Side of the Moon METALLICA THE FACE OF TWO ALBUM RELEASE Pistol Pipe By the Will of God FIRE LAKE hot & little girl entertainment The Frack arranged by Nicholas Hines party Bob Seger— Against the Wind Capitol RECORDS MFG LIST 8% $5^49 THE JOUR Love Sounds THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE The J. Geils Band— Love Stinks MEDAL OF ORCHARD BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. Wednesday, March 19. 1980 11 University Daily Kansan Greenhouse warms local home By JEFF KIOUS Staff Reporting Mary Ann Stewart and Larry Bethel, 801 Lake SL, took the federal government up on its offer to finance the construction of greenhouses. Stewart and Bethel's solar greenhouse is one of many projects sponsored each year under the Department of Energy's Appropriate Technology Small Grant They began constructing the greenhouse last October, and working primarily on the weekends, completed it in late December. Stewart said the heat generated in the greenhouse was used to heat her house. The greenhouse is on the south side of the house to protect it from cold north winds during the winter. "On cold winter days the temperature in the greenhouse will be as much as 40 to 50 degrees warmer than the outside air temperature," she said. INSIDE THE greenhouse, Stewart has planted sunflowers, spinach, onions and broccoli. It also contains three 38-gallon plants that are painted black to help absorb heat. "The barrels store heat energy during the day and then radiate the heat at night," she said. Stewart said this type of solar greenhouse was considered it had no mechanical parts. In an active system, water flows through plumbing and is heated by solar heating. THE INSIDE walls of Stewart's greenhouse are covered with a flexible, polyethylene sheet of plastic. Interior and exterior plastic sheets are recommended for a greenhouse. Stewart said. The white foam cover also keeps the greenhouse warm inside, she said. Stewart's house is also heated by a wood-burning stone, she said, but she has not measured the amount of wood saved this once the addition of the greenhouse. "The greenhouse is not large enough to heat the entire house," she said. "It would probably take a greenhouse twice this size to heat it without an additional heat source." Stewart and Bethel made their grant proposal in conjunction with the Appropriate Technology Resource Center, which is located in Center, which is open weekday afternoons, Application for a grant is made through the DOE, OF 732 applications received last fall. Applicants must have a Missouri and Nebraska were given grants, according to Jane Miller, DOE energy director. has information on this year's grants program. MILLER SAID that the deadline for applying for a 1980 grant was April 30. The grants will be awarded in September. "There is no set dollar amount that will be granted to a proposal. It is up to the individual applying for the grant to calculate how much his project will cost." "The more people that apply will mean that the government will put more money into the program," she said, "which will mean more grants will be given. One of the grant's restrictions, according to Miller, is that the proposal be made for an energy conservation project. After the grant is awarded, the government will give the person 60 percent of the project cost. When 50 percent of the project is completed, the government will give the individual 35 percent more. After the project is completed, the individual is given permission to do the IDC. Then the individual will receive the remaining five percent. An exhibition of design projects by present and former students of the School of Architecture is on display in the Kansas Union Gallery through March. A drawing of a public library by George M. Beal, 1923, is the oldest project displayed. Richard Findley, assistant professor of architecture and urban design, said the projects made before 1830 represented the art of Bideaux. Art's architectural tradition. "Today, we are still in the movement of the modern idiom. Function and form are somewhat honestly married." Old,new architecture projects displayed "Our early architectural heritage is from the Middle Ages. French educational process at KU was rejected in favor of 1930, when it was rejected in flavor of the modern movement, led by people like Jacques Dessert." "City Couteau" is a model underwater city that would be located in the Red Sea near Massawa, Ethiopia. It was designed by "Today the scientific process has encouraged architects to become more proficient technologically," Findley said. By KEVIN MILLS Staff Reporter A 1978 project titled "City Cousteau" demonstrates the scientific detail that is exemplified in modern architecture. nine students who assisted writers working on a science fiction novel for Ariel Productions. THE STUDENTS work in conjunction with Jean Michael Courteau, experts at the Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo. and the Scrips Institute in California, The city would accommodate 4,000,600 people engaged in mining, marine research, aquaculture and oceanography. A sizeable water supply would be needed for maintenance of the underwater city. the part of the city would be situated on the rim of an active volcano, where mining would take place. A pumping system would pump water from the ground by pumping out mineral-rich fluids. According to the exhibition program, all components of the city are technologically possible, but the building cost would be astronomical. *Hotel Casino*, by *Rafael Garcia, Kansas City*. Mo., graduate student, which won college competition, also is displayed. Its plans include a beach-boot hotel with outdoor pool. RICK OTTOLNOS' first place entry in the Precast Concrete Institute's competition also is shown. The drawing depicts an addition to the School of Architecture building. "Outdoor Space," a drawing by Todd Achelphol, Overland Park freshman, depicts a concourse to be situated in the lawn between Flint and Wesco hills. Come Hear The MOFFET BEERS BAND Thursday, March 20th from 8-12 p.m. at The Entertainer 2051 2 w 8th st. 4 at the door for all the beer you can drink The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Jumping Panda Proceeds Go to Arthritis Research Cail 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Sponsored by ROOT EVERYONE INVITED one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen thirty four五十四五十四十五十五十五十五十五 AD DEADLINES Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kansan 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 on our website by calling the Kluwer Business office at 84-5348. ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Klint Hall 964-4258 ERRORS Watch for trak parked at 9th and Illinois, 11th. Take a photo of the door and the (The Hole in the-Wall) Fresh sells fresh fruits peramis in the shell Fifteen varieties of dry fruit, apples, oranges, and sorghum. Keeley Sunday. Also selling wood products. NAIMSHIR 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. tf PARTIALLY FUNDED by STUDENT SENATE Jayhawk West Apts. Now Renting! 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished for $185. For appointment宅宝 644-444 or see at 242 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's East. tf Other space for rent now at the area 1 building, 922'/Mia; The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Fit upper and lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 8341-2043 or 8437. flt. The PRE-NURSING CLUB will meet Wednesday, March 19th in the OREAD ROOM at the KANSAS UNION at 7:00 There will be a guest speaker COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperative located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 842-9212. tt **BEWARE:** $200 if you can form us on to a small expensive house to rent in May or June. In Prefer Internationale Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 864-359-312 Rosalea's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone; for information, write: Harper, Kansas 76058 4-4 THAI ASSOCIATION PRESENTS FOR RENT THA AFFILIATION PRESENTS THE NAIKOTHE THAI NIGHT DINNER & SHOW March 15, 1986 The Foods, Classicals, Fashion, Dine, Swapping, etc., in Kansas City Dinner; Caterina's Woodland Auditorium Tickets $40.00 USA of call 844-739-8243 843-8286 EXHIBITION The Art 15 Handicrafts March 15, 1986 Big Room, Kansas City New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C/D Appliances and a cable 1 block from the Union. Call 844-750-6233 Evening session of the Communications Resource Center on writing the term paper. Open to all students - free, 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. 105 Summerfield, Wednesday, March 19. 3-19 Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid.quiet and comfortable. Reasonably paid. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf plus. custs paid. Call 843-957-7928. Love new 2 bed, townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-957-7928. 843-418-136. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING These all now and contemporary townhouses are ready to move on. 3 blocks from UD and downstream starting at Albany Ave, 11th floor; garage with counter space with study area Rooms with private kitcheng. Close to Union Charge 947.6570 11 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenants to rent this mover 2 year old house in April. 4 needed, 2 students, recreation. 3 needed, 1 Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no stairs. Phone: 213-5600 TF CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & summer. Apply now. Call 824-2583 at 6:00 p.m. LEASE NOW FOR FALL AT SPECIAL RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities and common facilities Acapartment 15, 15-834-092- Acapartment 15, 15-834-093- 3-21 On campus. 2 BR apartments furnished or un- furnished all utilities paid. Jawhaker Towers Apartments. 1603 W. 15 843-4993. 3-21 Professor leaving house for 2 years, need qualified tenant to rent this super two 3 year old house in West Yorkshire. Phone: 0845 767 9011, room, fireplace, basement, huge backyard, $30, no pets, references needed, 802-321-9 Apartment 1 bik from Union, 2 bedrooms. $235 Apartment 2 bik from Union, Contact Steve Rübler 812-349 @ 833-3144 **SUMMER SUPPLY LINE:** 2 br. furnished kit. 1-3k from campus. Call now. 943-8573. Room-large, semifurnished, private frig. and stove. All utilities paid, 120h and Max. $1600 a month. Mark & I& II, but NOW REVING FOR SUMMER Mark 1 & II hustle on a bedroom suite, 2 bedroom baths & 7.9 walk to water, peting, balconies, off street parking, dishub- washing machines for into $420-$835 at 1035 Masonville mortgages for into $420-$835 at 1035 Masonville Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make use them. Review the questions to use them 1- As study guide, 2. For class analysis of Western Civilization available now in Town City, Mall Bookstore and Ord Book Store. FOR SALE Summer sublease 3 bedroom, 2 stories. 1 block from stadium. Call 841-7890. 3-25 Football Table in good condition with coin mech. $300 841-7870 3-25 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic matress ass. Be sure to check on prices. Lodon's Furniture, 1200 New York St. 843-3288. tf Incoming Medical Students. Don't be a fool like I was and insist on a new microscope. Mine is in mint condition and prized to sell. Call Richard Christy at 282-9300 in K.C.K. evenings. 3-25 Brand spanking new 1980% Daimal 210- $40.20 tax d'judice. Call 842-8443 ask for Bob Smith at www.BobSmith.com Alternator, starter and generator specialists MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-809-3260, 3900 W. 6th. tn. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-809-3260, 3900 W. 6th. tn. Kustom Lead V Amp. BW TV. Realistic DX-150 Shortwave Receiver, Call 842-7059. 3-20 18757 NW1067 WATERBED MATTRESSES, $39.99 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass 8548, TF 1977 Dataxon 280Z in excellent condition inside and out. AM-FM stereo cassette, new tires. Autumn Brown color. Call Steve 843-3270. 3-27 SunSpectr Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably preact. 1621 Mass. 841-3770. TP Vivitar 35-105 mm zoom lens. Canon Mount-excellent condition virtually unused. Asking $250. Call Marty 842-6895 evenings. 3-21 Honda Express Moped—10 months old—90 MPG—3-21 Excellent condition. Call 841-5838. A. P. Speakers. Four Mitchell model ML4-7 amplifier to Boss 801). Over 100 Watt耳機, excellent power stereo, small band P.A., etc. Heavy-duty speakers, umband band H.D., to be sold by best offer or bedr. #421-162. Ski boot, Nordica Alpina for women, size 6 to 7. Good shoes, used 2 pairs. $44.95-$48.95 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $95 to Ribes Bike Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-624-762. Cassette Deck- Sharp RT-1165 with Automatic Search System. Best offer over $115 takes. Call 843-175-175 15 Spread Mitsubi grant-fostering bicycle, features: - front wheel and rear touring rack, canvasse terbicyle, kickstand, and ebike odometer kit; - tethered bike; and ebike odometer kit. For $20 or best offer Call Karen 842-706-9000 Bicycle: Visscount Aerospace GP. 1 year-old. Best extensive extended archive record: 2025 Call 4-7876 10-speed bike for sale, call 842-5152. 10 p.m. 3-25 Navy blue women's size 9 Nordica ski boots. $20. 841-8331 after 5.00. 1976 MGB, buttercookt with black top. Good condition 841-3100 or 843-1008. 3-25 SKi boot, Nordica Alpha for women, size 6 to 7 Good Shape used 2 seasons. 814-4349. 3-19 FOUND Gold birdcage. Call 842-1025 after 5:30 p.m. Packed: set of keyes in guitar shaped gong claw. Clam of hole found. Hoech Audifortum. 3.19 Pound. Set of keyes on leather fingerboard. Set of keys on leather fretboard. On on Oudashi. 2 bows袋. Call and identify content ons at 6 p.m. 841-8541. 3-21 At 3rd and 10th. Silver class ring with silver band. On on Oudashi. School 21.午间 after 6 p.m. 852-9251. HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AID'S ORDER-READER ASSIGNMENT. An order is a public service to nursing home residents! Our course organizes, helps, and assists a public service to nursing home residents! (KNHI), needs your help and input on nursing home condition assessment and care for the residents of all ages and circumstances. KNHI offers and corresponds with the students' BS 212-882 (between nine and four or w/ usr. KNHI 927). NURSE SERVICE CENTER 123456. Now after applications for floor/door and wall- taking, we need to apply to the Architecture 1401 W, 7th bed, 9th p. amk. Ask for Stroke II. CRUSHISHPUBS: SAILING EXPEDITIONS: SAILING GAMES: SAILING ADVENTURES: SAILING WORLDWIDE: Send $4.95 for APPLICATION INFO REFERRALS to CRUSHWORLD INFO 60129, Sacramento 3-28 COMPUTER SERVICE AGENCY needs Computer Programmer to perform all duties of application development and Data Communication techniques. Res. are required to train Applicant in Office Admin, Office Training, and Library Administrators. BECOME A MONTESSORI TRACHER! Summer classes begin June 2. Call us or write Montessorl Plus School, 1257 West, Topeka, Ks. 6004. 233-5185, 862-1926, or 845-685. Personal Service has a machine clerk typist, quitter must be able to work approx. 15-20 hours, good typist and clerk, good typist and clerk, Call 644-8942, Room 462, Carthus-O'Leary, Deadline March 644. Video Games Cartridge Exchange need camps and local representatives. No selling, no experience required. Write: Video, Box 27348, Mpls- MN 53427 Position open-small community facility serving the developmentally disabled is seeking the full-time service of a licensed social worker. Requires BS in CS or Comp. MD, AB or MS from ACDB, BGS, 6:27- KANEER, DAE. COMPUTER SERVICES AGENCY needs Key-Opener Operator to piano and vary keyboard settings. Requires operation of each unit record equipment, some typing and reception duties. Apply at Preyton Inc. 518-692-0700. NOTICE Sanctuary Catering needs part-time help. Apply in person at the Sanctuary. 3-21 Family with well-adjusted adolescent boys to participate in brief research. Family members will be paid for their participation. For more information call Brian or Patricia at 684-327-3-87 Free Lance: Photographer is interviewing female subject for philip project. Experiences and photo skills not necessary. Paid by session, referral. W-Post. B-O-Z. Laws 3-25. Kanna 60444 Summer Paint Crew. Approx. 12 positions available. Minimum age 18. Personnel will begin work May 27. Appt. at Personnel Office, Adin Center. 3-27 La. 412-822-6028 Gift Bus Manager, Museum of National History of America, New York City, managing backpacking skills, ability to work with children, knowledge of museum protocol. Preferred. Need to be enrolled in at least four Gift Bus positions. To apply visit www.giftbus.com/intermission for appointment call Mary Ann Mumu Day care needed for five month old twins every Tuesday and every other Thursday 4-8 p.m. p-21 OVERSEAS 1088 - SUMMER year-round, Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, all. All funds $1250- $1,300 monthly, expuses paid, sighting-free. Free airfare to Iceland, IC, BCE, K2-KA, Crown Mar, Ca, Mar 26, 2014 H=ip wanted $205.80 per week Write: RAN PO Box 85-K Ballwin, M6 30111 3-20 THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTERS are located in the University Building, position 149 April 1986 and pool of appointees must be available until March 1985. Strong Hall Deadline is 9 a.m. on March 25th. Appointments may be made to Albrecht/Alternative Employee 38- Position open-residential facility for developmentally disabled adults to serve the community in a home-based environment. Home-based services area is required. Besame should be assigned to MCTS, Box 64, McPherson, KORE. Softball Officials meetings Wednesday, March 19th and Thursday, March 20th at 7 p.m. in 205 Robinson Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains involves working with children in a camp setting. We teach summer programs that offer outdoor programs. Write now, include program interests, Southern Mountain Camp, Friendship Hill. ... The Greek Sport Desk presents Free Phred Wed. Mar. 19 8:00. : PLANNING AN AFFAIR? Lease your tuxedo from us— BEST PRICES IN TOWN!! Rag Tag 842-1059 --to run: Monday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Thursday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm PERSONAL VOYAGERS-Fellowship-Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Prebaykerian 2415 W, 23rd, W 9:30 a.m. 843-4171, tf Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid. 864-5564. If FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC- abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment at NYU Hospital. For appointment at 101st St. Overland Park, KS. The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cool beer, pool, pinball and unique hobbies. Color TV and stereo when the Hawks are away. You can go to the Harbour Lite in 103 Asst. A first-class dive. ★★★★★★★★★ Definitely not for Kids STUMPING PLAYING LONDONER, WINTER ANGEL Alice in Wonderland This Thursday night only $2.00 Where else but the *** Lawrence Operate house 2 Shows... 8:30 & 10:30 ★★★★★★★★★★★ GAY COUNSELING REFERENCES through Head- quarters, 81-2345 and KU info, 864-3506. . . . . . PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843-1 4821. Burkard Awards Weeks—a new tradition. Limited entries for airplane airplane throwing, Othello, and war (with cards) tournaments. Call 843-6455 for info. it all the week of March 2-4. 3-21 Encore! Encore! 3-21 THREADS Through Head-Through quarters, 814-3240 and KU inter- INTERested IN FRATRITIES™ Participate in men's spring formal rush. March 31, 22, 23 (Friday) 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Inter-Fraternity Conference house at 844-3590 bfo. 8a-3590 Q. What is Gay Services of Kansas Speaker's Bureau? The corps is coming! The corps is coming! 3-21 Dial 842-2001 for Copy Odyssey. 4-5 ALL YOU CAN EAT, Sports Complex Fun, & women's football of the Beta Theta Pi-American Academy. Games will be hosted by oak and soda goo will be served. Wheat is also on the menu. Guests may register for guest Fri-bon Contact John 843-209-3100 Headquarters is a community of people willing to want to talk or call or dye by. We can help with research, training, advocacy and other service television, relationship problems, other personal matters. We can also help you get in contact talk about. We also can This information sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. 864-3991. 3-20 Being a woman don't mean it is to be helpful. Practical Personal self-defense under experienced male and female instructors $25 for female instructor 411-783-2001. Sponsored by the Gung Pu Club. A The Speaker's Bureau consists of 2 women who speak English, and say right and ask question. A questionnaire is filled out by the invited guest at the Lawrence High School Medical Center, and many classes on the medical center are available of no charge, except traveling education organization, class, or instructor who requests it. Need powerful rock vocalists to join established instrumental band. Call 842-7738 3-25 TENNIS PLAYERS: Spring and warm weather tennis team tennis players who request your racquets B-94-85-SI, B-94-86-SI, and Singer Stringers Asi, and stringer K. Varity. Tennis. Very reasonable rates on good strings and racquets. Would the girl who found my license in Ft. Launderdale please return it. Call Tm 842-900-86 SKI WINTER PARK MARY JANE EASTER Ski School, Ski School, Ski School SKI TRIPS TRIIP INCLUDES 3 full days of group transportation, and limited accrual-insurance card. Draw at Bitterfield B80-845 Meal and Travel Costs. Bringin' in the Spring BREW-HA-HA tonight. Celebrate EASTER with ASTA singing telegrams. Baskets delivered daily. 842-8741 4,4 PACHO: I didn't party at all. Now come close, rather let them to "Give it all you got." any day. I miss you very much Guapita. Love your little failure. 3-20 Will the incompetent, irresponsible baffoon who flipped Flint please it again? 3-18 KJH newsroom 3-18 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 call 8578-7853 MATH 115-700 call 8496-7853 STATISTICS call客观 8496-7856 CIS 100-600 call客观 8496-7857 ENGLISH and SPANISH call 8496-7857 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uller Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 4 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday. 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday @ 83% Max. Tred of paying high cost for good quality clothes and alterations? Excellent seamless will sow for men or women. Raunable jersey for information call 841-286-398 and 4. weekends. IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES Professional Tutoring: Math 810, 814-2635. 3-28 EXPERIENCED HOUSEPERS NOW making math problems, call Daniel Born at 819-2980 or 845-5532 TYPING Accurate, experienced typist JBM correcting Selective: Call Donna, 842-7241. ff PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. If I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF Why cus about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Granmer. 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tf Experienced typist—Dresses, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting electric. Barb After 5 p.m. 842-2310 ff Experienced Timer—term papers, thesis, mice tests. Experienced Speller—writing spelling, spelled error. 843-9544, Mrs. Wright Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rate. Send resume to welcome@ibm.com Call 4-512-849-1017 Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selectric. Quality work. References available. Sandy, even fitting & weekends. 748-918. DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980. Dial 842-2001 for a typing Odyssey. 4-5 Experienced Typ1id—manuvirts, papers, theses Experienced Typ1id—manuvirts, experience IBM CIT Selective Typ1id-841-3232 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, articles, and conference reports concerning electronics. K. Eilen Jeannum 841-2172. WordPress Corps, 842-2001, 25th and town 4-5 WANTED Need a typist for mid-term papers? Avoid the rush, make an appt. with a pro. Linda: 842-5318 after 5:30. 3-20 ROOOMMATES Natsimuth Hall has a couple of offices in the building, office at 843-859 any time of the day, if Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house; $100 z. utilizes private room, washer, dryer, dishwasher; $40 per night. PSYCHIATIC ADES AND HEALTH SERVICES applied to Praegy Harmlin, Job Service Center, 51 W. 40th, Topka, KS. Phone: (912) 398-5380. applied to Apply an equal opportunity employer. Intramural Softball Officials. Earn extra money this term. If interested call 864-354-206 and ask for Ron or Mike. Or stop by 208 Robinson. Reelection Services. 3-21 WANTED TO Rent Journalism graduate student needs 3 or 4 bedrooms house or apartment that have children and have 3 children but no pets. Require plenty of space and proximity to elementary school. Plug in phone line. Roomstar—For 3 bedroom townhouse at Park 25 Apt. Bus route 1045.0 plus 1/3 utilities. 841- 671.965.650.208.581.858.358.458.558.658.758.858.958. Female roommate to share Jayhawk Towers apartments in Dallas, TX. Call 864-8f0-7f01 3-252 Wanted: VW's, running or not. Call 841-5496 or 842-4029 3-24 Daring partner for a summer-long float trip now, the Missouri River: Montana to K.C. Kevin 892- 9283. 3-21 KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! If you've got it, Kanaa Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint to figure costs. Now you ve got it! Sellina Power! AD DEADLINES CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write ad here: ___ RATES: 15 words or less 1 time $2.25 0.02 1 time $2.50 0.03 2 times $2.75 0.04 3 times $3.00 0.05 4 times $3.25 0.06 5 times $3.26 0.06 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch • $3.75 DATES TO RUN: ___ to NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD. 12 Wednesday, March 19. 1980 University Daily Kansan Jayhawks sweep double-header from Benedictine By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer The jury is still out on the Kansas pitching staff, but Jim Philip and Richard McNault build a case that makes the Jayhawks worse than was expected before the season began. Phillips and McIntosh kept their records as they swept a double-header sweep on the Benedictine Ravens, 15-2 and 7-2. Phillips picked up his fourth victory of the season and McIntosh won the NLA title. Phillips went the distance for KU in the opener, yielding six hits and only one earned run. KU supported Phillips with 15 hits and took advantage of six bicepedic errors. McInsh struggled a little in the night-cap, but gave up only three hits in six innings. Clayton Fleemanured the Ravens in order in the final inning to preserve the Even though Phillips and McIntosh have gotten off to fast starts, McIntosh is looking at their records realistically. "It feels good to be 34," McInnish said. "But the teams I've been throwing against haven't been exceptional teams. I can't get overconfident." KU coach Flayd Temple was happy with the victories, but he said he wasn't pleased with the six walks surrendered by KU during the games. "It nice to win, but we gave up too many bases on balls," Temple said. "You need to Fortunately for the Jayhawks, the KU offense was supplying enough runs to destroy any threat from the Ravens. KU pushed across three runs in both the first and second innings of the opener and breezed to victory. Matt Gundelfinger drove 107, and the next pitcher scored a single score two more in the first inning. throw strikes when you get a lead. Our throwers got behind too many hitters today. We walked some people and it ended up costing us some runs." Singles by Mark Gile and Juan Ramon and doubles by Scott Wright and Steve Jeltz produced the run in the second. The Ravens, 3-9, four pitchers in the contest. Starrier Bill Grodditch, 0-3, was the loser. Benedictine scored single runs in the second and third innings off of Phillips. The Jayhawks added a single tally in the fifth and then sent 12 battles to the plate in the sixth while scoring eight runs. Jezu, Ramon and Riley all had three RBI's in the opener. Jelts got the second game off to a good start. Lawrence scored in the shortstop, from Lawrence, greeted Benedicet pitcher Dennis Wilman with a home run over the left field fence on the first pitch. A strong wind provided a lot of help on Jeltz's horner, his second of the season. "Yeah, it did help," Jeltz said. "It was just a pop fly. I'm not a home run hitter." Jeltz had five hits in the double-header and followed his homer with a single and a triple in the nightcap. He reached base on an airplane off the coast of Borneau in the fifth with the bases loaded. "I knew I needed the double for the cycle, but I was just trying to get a fly ball to get a run for me," Jeltz said. "But when he missed the double, I won't worry about the double." McIntosh retired the first six Benedictine batters in the nightcap before running into problems in the third innings. McIntosh, the only left-hander on the KU squad, gave up two singles, a double and two walks in the innings, and Taimel almost pulled him out of the game at that point. He got out of the inning with only two Benedictine runs on the scoreboard, but he said he didn't feel right the rest of the way. "I didn't feel smooth," McInnott said. "I just didn't feel like I was in my rhythm. Even in the first two innings, I got away with some pitches that were high." "When you're winning and you've got a pretty good cushion, you don't worry too much. "Temple said." And you've got to be careful," she holds them with two ruts in heaps." The Jayhawks tallied two runs in the second inning of the nightcap and one in the fourth and put the game away with three in the sixth. The Jayhawks and three in BRI and Gile had three singles. Nebraska upsets KU tankers at Big Eight swimming meet By CHICK HOWLAND Sports Writer The fears of KU men's swimming coach Bald Spahn came when his team left to Nebraska at the recent Big Eight swim championship meet in Lakeneb, Nebr. Despite two previous dual victories over the Cornhushers this season, Spahn worried that Nebraska would be tough competition in their home pool at Bob Devaney Sports Center and that they could have lost to that had been KU's for the last two years. Nebraska lived up to Spahn's fears. The Cormhuskers won the team title by seven points, upsetting the Jayhawks, 428-149. ONE EVENT Spain knew his team would be at a disadvantage in was diving. NU compiled 98 points in diving, compared to KU*24. KU and Three Anselmi finished fourth in one-but Kurt-Meter diving. Anselmi's efforts, however, were overshadowed by the first, second, third and fifth in both events. "Diving was the most obvious factor," Spahn said. "The meet ultimately came down to the diving." KANSAN Sports S THE ONLY other Kansas swimmer who placed in freestyle events was Bob Vince, who came in second in the 1,650-yard freestyle. A factor that led to the end of KU's Big Eight swimming regin was the absence of a jayhawk swimmer in the top six in either the 200- or 500-word freestyle. we would have won the meet, spain slam. The Jayhawks stayed close throughout the meet on the strength of their veteran swimmers. In the 100-yard butterfly, Jim Sauer finished third. Touching the wall behind Sauer was teammate Bill Crampton, who finished fourth. Freshman standguard Gardner Wright won both the 106- and 200-yard backstroke in the 2015 US Olympic men's double enough for a Big Eight record, also qualifying him for a spot in the NCAA meet. IN THE 100-yard breaststroke, Chuck Neumann finished second. His time of 67.4 earned him a trip to the NCAA meet. John Fox came in sixth for the Hawkys. Three KU swimmers finished in the top six in the 200-yard breaststroke. Steve Graves finished second and qualified for the NCAA meet with a time of 29.43. The team were teammates Neumann and Fox, who finished third and sixth respectively. Graves, who has been a dominant force in Big Eight swimming since coming to KU three years ago, won the 200- and 400-yard individual medley races. Finishing behind Graves was Wright, who placed fifth. The team added a fifth place finish in the 400 IM. The Jahayks continued to be strong in the relay events. KU finished third in the 800-yard freestyle relay and fourth in 400-vard freestyle relay. KU's best hope for an NCAA champion, which teams, which consists of Graves, Sauer, Barnes and Wright. The team will be looking for the NCAe meet with a time of 32:32. "We had more NCAA qualifiers than anyone else (in the Big Eight)." Spahn said. "We have a very good chance to score well at the NCAs. "With the injuries we've had, we had a good season." But the Suns, Paul Westphal, who was The Kings, losing their third straight game, held a 12-point lead, 96-84, with a little more than eight minutes remaining. Suns' rally stops KC KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Walter Davis scored 25 points and Truck Robinson added two blocks in the fourth-quarter deficit and roll past the Kansas City Kings 112-109 last night. The loss dropped the Kings one game behind the Dallas Mavericks, who are leading the Midwest Division. Phoenix, which had trailed since early in the second period, finally regained the lead at 10:46 on a 10-foot jumper by Don Buse with 1:37 left. held to just two points in the first half, got hot and hit three straight buckets, including the game's only the pointer. Phil Ford hit a pair of free throws with 52 seconds left to keep the Kings within one point. But Davids, bounced by Scott Wedman, knocked off the Kings to make a decisive 110-75 on the Sand. SEMESTER AT SEA Plate a college simulator as it abandons the computer in art and science earned from Sasha Feldman's College University, may be transferr. Curriculum will include historical and histological places from Main Street and colonial sites from Pennsylvania. HARRY GAMGE IS a 85-foot U.S. Coast Guard inspected auxiliary schooner. For curriculum, cost and schedule, write or phone DIRIGO CRUISES 39 Waterside Lane, Clinton, CT 06413 Telephone: (203) 669-7068 KU'S TEAM total of 307 was one stroke better than Southwest Oklahoma University. They easily outdistanced Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville, third with 136, and the University of Wisconsin College. College rounded out the top (with 323). Mark Steiner came in third with 74. calligraphy headquarters The KU golfers built the lead with three of their 16 holes, and one with Crow, the team's leader score during the fall season, led KU with a two over par 73, tying him for Mike Withken in the top four. which the fifth straight victory for Kansas City, which now is 7-2 in the Grapefruit League. The world champion Pirates have a 2-3 mark. Castillo's fly in the fifth innings broke a 3-3 tie against Grant Jackson. Road Construction Dave Chalk's two-run single off Kent nib units — $1.80 Osmiroid italic pens — — $5.45-$7.15 IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS 738 MASS. 9:30-8:00 M-5 Thur. III 8:30 p.m. The team forged a one-stroke lead in the Gulf Coast Intercollegiate Golf Tournament at the Padre Isles Country Club. Individual North winds of up to 30 miles per hour, and raine 50 degree temperatures made the KU men's golf team feel right at home in the rain. The weather at Patad Island Texas today. Parchment Slanted rule FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — The Kansas City Royals scored five runs on sacrifice flies by Willie Wilson, Manny Castillo, George Brett, Amos Ous, and John Wathan on route to an 84 extension baseball victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. white or gold — — $3.50 "It was kind of cold and really windy," Coach Rossa Randall said at the conclusion of the first round. "Everybody wore rain pants and windbreakers all day." Stanted rule practice pads $2.50 Italic pen sets — — $12.00 Larry Gura and Marty Pattin each permitted two hits in individing the pitching chores during the first six innings for the Royals. Patty, who picked up the victory, allowed only an unearned run in his second pitch, but the ball was charged with two runs, one unearned. Osmiroid Craig Chamberlain, who allowed a run on four hits, worked two innings, and Gary Christiansen shut the Pirates out in the ninth. Men golfers take first-round lead --instructional book by Ann Camp — $3.95 Tekulve highlighted a three-run burst that put the game away in the eighth inning. Royals defeat Pirates VISA VISA Union Pacific By KEVIN BERTELS 623 vermont 841-1777 STUDENTS Sports Writer pen&,inc. art supplies Open 9-5:30 Mon-Sat 423 message RAL717 Choose your home, now, for next year and ensure location and color of decor. Offering 10 and 12 month leases. We are now leasing for Fall and Spring. - SUMMER STORAGE * Lease now with 2 month storage package. Can you haul your belongings home for a small storage fee? Call Park 25 and see. PARK 25 Apartments MASS STREET DELI 1041 MASSACHUSETTS Blueberry or Cherry Cheese Cake 50c No coupons accepted with this special Reg. Price $1.00 offer good Mar. 19-23 Thurs.- Sun. Enjoy Coca-Cola APARTMENTS Call or come by and talk with Gary, Ellen or Kathy APARTMENTS Large 1 and 2 laundry rooms-bed 2 2 pools- 2 laundry rooms - bus service Western Store Western Store Big Selection Lee Jeans Boot cut, straight leg, slim fit $15.95 Selection of Shirts 1/2 OFF Straw Hats from $5.95 "Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence" RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP ENGLISH WEAR WESTERN WEAR HORSE AIDS Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa • Lawrence, Kansas 842-8413 "Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence" RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP ENGLISH WEAR WESTERN WEAR HORSE AIDS Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa • Lawrence, Kansas 842-8413 NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN NEW YORKER FRINO ITALIAN Tonite Featuring Homemade MOSTICELLI $4.25 Exotic Mosticelli pasta smothered in a resy, Italian herb sauce. Thick with ground beef, onion bits, and mushrooms. Dinner includes entree, garlic toast, crisp tossed green salad coffee or tea Special good toilets ONLY — 5:30-8:30 followed on the KU team by Doug Anderson, tied for fifth at 76. Randall said KU was in good shape going into today's second of four rounds. sua films Wednesday, March 19 Kurosawa: HIGH AND LOW Dir. Aikra Kurosawa, with Toshira Mifune as an industrialist who must pay the ransom for a kidnapping, but cannot. Japanese film noir, Japan Thursday, March 20 Brando: BURN! (1970) Dir. Gilio Pontecorvo, with Manton Brando as a secret agent in the 1800s to help prevent revolution to further the economic influence of the director of BATTLE OF ALGIERS? Friday & Saturday March 21-22 ROCKY II (1979) Midnight Movies DESPERATE LIVING Dir. Sylvester Stallone, with Stallone, Dirk Schmid, Carl Cave, Mereleish Mereleish, Abigail Apgre. Applegewalt remain a wemball with Rocky Balboa. Plus "Burge Beach," a short by Jonah Hill. (1978) Dir. John Waters, with Liz Renay, Mink Stole, Edith Massey, Susan Sherwin and Natalie Worsham, director who made Baltimore and tasteful famous. By the director of PINK FLAMINGOS and MONOD TRASHO. Love letter to Eddy ("the Egg Lady") Sunday, March 23 EASY RIDER Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woolford Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R films are $1.00 each, M-R1 and 1.50; and S-R1 and 1.50 start at 7:30 a.m., 7:30 and midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday. Tickets available at the SU Office, Union 5th Level or Smoking restrictions allowed. (1969) Dir. Dennis Hoffer, with Petra Fonda, Hopper, Jack Nicholson, Luke Askew, Karen Black. Two disillusioned men travel by motorcycles to Chicago to protest the Marr Graz. Plus: Joe Stickr’s “interviews with My Lail Veterans.” ENGINEERS Gulf Oil Corporation, a major energy company, has job openings for all types of graduating engineers who are interested in building a career in crude oil and gas producing operations. Duties include drilling, equipment installation and maintenance, subsurface reservoir studies, economic evaluation of producing properties, well conditioning, and enhanced oil recovery operations. Individual development courses will be provided, including outstanding oil and drilling instruction. Positions are located in Gulf Coast, Mid-Continent, Central Coast and West Coast areas. Excellent employee benefits. Applicant must be U.S. citizen or hold a permanent resident visa. Please send resume and transcript to: Gulf J. R. Ligon, Jr. GULF OIL EXPLORATION COMPANY Sec. E. P.O. Drawer 2100 Houston, TX 77001 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F ROCKY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN RAIN Virginia wins NIT crown See story page 11 The University of Kansas--Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, March 20, 1980 Vol. 90, No. 112 See story page 11 S The Student Senate is considering a move that would fund KU bus route expansion into East Lawrence. The closest that any current bus route comes to the East Lawrence area is the Gatehouse, 24th Ridge Court route, illustrated by the dark black lines in the map above. Bus service sought for East Lawrence Bv SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Reporter East Lawrence residents have once again popped the question. Residents are circulating a petition requesting an East Lawrence KU on Wheels bus route, reviving past protests over inadequate area service. "Our people would be more than happy if they could get to the University in the morning and get back at night," Kathy Wallace, East Lawrence resident, said yesterday. "We're not talking about a bus ride; we're talking about people will be happy to walk a couple blocks." WALLACE SAID the petition, drawn up last weekend, had 100 signatures so far. She said a majority of East Lawrence residents are in favor of alternate transportation such as taxi. "I was told a bus service had been approved, but lo and behold, there was no bus service the next fall." Wallace said. "If it is bad weather we can not walk, but if it is bad weather you can walk." Wallace said the East Lawrence route could be offered without an increase in operating expenses. The Student Senate approved funds for a K-12 charter school in Lawrence last spring, but abandoned the proposal after the University administration cut back on the privilege fee "I've noticed bases a couple of times that run with only a few people in them," Wallace said. "Why can't they cut back on service to other places?" "The bus travels to all the more exclusive apartments in Lawrence." "We go there (to apartment complexes) because the major concentrations of students are there," McMurray said. "That is the only reason we run to any complex." STEVE M*MURRRAY, director of KU Wheels, said he sympathized with the Lawrence residents' complaints, but that the bus ran where it was most needed. McMurray said that he wasn't sure a majority of East Lawrence residents were students, but that he would attempt to determine the student population. "I'm on their side and we're going to try again this year." McMurray said. "If we do a real good job of juggling there will be some money for new programming." Mc Murray said that factors such as rising energy costs were squeezing the KU on energy bills. The university's mittee will be considering next year's fund at Senate budget hearings next "We're constantly up against the same problem of money," McMurray said. "We're hard pressed just to maintain current levels of service." "New programming is way up in the air." Diana Pendleton, East Lawrence resident, said that service to East Lawrence was "better than routes routes rather than a money question. "Look at the route that the Kus bus system is taking now," Pendleton said. "It is not necessary for them to go broke or lose money, they have nothing to do butain." Pendleton said a number of East Lawrence residents "couldn't hold onto a job" because there was no affordable transportation available. AURH candidates uncontested The Association of University Residence Halls office elections are won by member candidates in the year in a row, AUHR elections committee chairman Shannon Murray said yester- By TOM TEDESCHI Staff Reporter "Right now we have one person running for each position—Jay Smith and Mark Fouts for president and vice president, Dave Simpson for treasurer, "I haven't got a lot of applications in, but have talked to a lot of people who have said they will run." she said. HOWEVER, THE ELECTIONS would not be won by default, Murray said. Elections will still proceed even if no candidate is nominated of the possibility of write-in candidates. The filing deadline was 5:00 p.m. vesterdav. 'If we have a distinct lack of people who "The AUHR elections last year didn't begin with the turn-of-4,300 people living in Detroit," she added. "There is a possibility that the filing there is a move up, she said, but the chances of it not happening are low." PREVIOUS AURH ELECTIONS have had the same problem, Murray said. Last year Smith and Fouts won their offices uncontested AURH presidential and vice presidential candidates must run as teams are running, we'll either have to appoint people or extend the filing deadline." According to Fouts, who has been AURH vice president for the past two years, there is no real way to predict candidate turnout "The first year we ran for the office there were about three or four teams and last year Jay and I am uncontested." Many potential candidates were opting to run for committee chairmanships, he said. According to Murray, once the new officers are in office, applications for positions on the five AURH committees are handed out, along with job descriptions. Senate panel alters KU budget The committees are: Board of Appeals, Contracts, Housing Services, Campus Affairs and Publicity, and Social Programming. Staff Reporter TOPEKA—Responding to requests from the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Regents, the Senate Way and Means Committee yesterday recommended a $19,000 appropriation for purchase and installation of new lighting board in the University building at New York University. RvSCOTT C. FAUST The lighting board recommendation was part of the committee's action on KU budget legislation for fiscal year 2013. The board will approve the Medical Center and the Regents must now receive Senate approval before final action can be taken by a House and Senate committee. Voting for officer elections will be in individual residence halls March 25-26 during dinner, Murray said. "We're delighted the committee has approved money for the control system," Wright said. "We're glad the University and the committee appreciated the problem and saw the potential for dancer down the road." Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor said KU's request for a replacement for the 23-year-old lighting board had not been included in the Regents' report and KU's report last month declared it "extremely hazardous." JACK WRIGHT, professor of speech and drama, said the new lighting board was needed to replace the existing one, which he said had been outdated. Wright said that the system had been made by a company that no longer supplied replacement parts and that the stock was depleted. "The key advantage of the new system will be in the area of instruction," Wright said. "It will be a tremendous help to students who study lighting design, and audiences will notice the difference too." Among recommendations made by the committee that attended the Governor's meeting to Gov. John Carlin's recommendation for six additional classified positions and four additional unclassified positions at KU. The University originally had asked for 16 positions in each category. THE COMMITTEE REMOVED 6.5 classified positions added by the House Way and Means committee and added by the House Finance Committee. They also deleted $100,000 that had been added by the House committee to pay for unclassified positions as yet unfilled by KU to compensate for the loss of the 6.5 positions. Von Ende said that the extra classified positions were meant to KU and that he hoped they would be replaced by more advanced ones. KU has been criticized for its lack of clerical and maintenance personnel. In early budget hearings Chancellor Archie R. Dykes called the classified positions one of KU's highest budget priorities. "We're unhappy that they deleted the $100,000 in salaries and wares." Dykes said. THE CHANCELLOR said, however, that he was "generally pleased" with the subcommittee's action. The committee added 5 unclassified and one classified position for the KU Center for Energy Research and Development. They also added $24,731 in salaries and wages and $6,000 for other operating expenditures. Von Ende said the positions were designed for coordination of the energy center's campus activities. "Thev would help attract some federal grant funds and In addition, the committee recommended $440,000 in funding for final Moore Hall planning and construction be appropriated as soon as KU received $1 million in private contributions for the project. The committee also recommended $60,000 from the State General Fund for preliminary planning of a $1.5 million addition to Moore Hall, the Kansas Geological Survey building on KU's West Campus. funds from private sources," he said. "It would step up our encryery program." Saying that more than the $120,000 recommended by the KU for replacement of defective steam tunnels to KU scholarship halls was necessary, the committee recom- mendation also included $28,000 it received in settlement for the defective steamlines. The House and Carlin had recommended **$100,000 for maintenance and repair of instructional equipment. The** "We're tremendously pleased they put in more money for instructional equipment and the maintenance of the equipment." Dykes said. "The subcommittee had indicated we were concerned about the University's needs in that area." Both the House and Carlin had recommended $75,000 for equipment acquisition, and the committee doubled that recommendation. By giving its de facto approval to most other House recommendations, the committee okayed $864,500 for renovation of Flint Hall and $342,150 for planning a Strong Hall renovation. 'Shepherd' hopes to gather votes Bv BLAKE GUMPRECHT Badger Dadygel has travelled 40,000 miles in 48 states by Greyhound bus in the last year because of a vision that came to him one night while he was sleeping. "God spoke to me in the night, while my eyes were closed," she says. "At first, I thought it was the most ridiculous thing to do. Then, when you see the face you hear the voice you don't ask questions." Badgely, 61, a retired life insurance salesman from Poughkeepsie, N.Y., is one of 21 Republicans on the ballot for the April 1 Kansas presidential preference primary. HE'S RUNNING AS the "showered of the people," and he dresses the part. He carries a five-foot staff and hasn't cut his gray hair in four years. Crimson Science And Technology His platform consists of seven passages from the Bible. If nominated, Badgely says, he'll ask Shirley Temple Black to be his running mate. That, too, came in a vision. "The people of this country are so hungry for something they've lost," he says. "There's a spiritual revival going on and that for someone to lead them in that direction." "if we lived according to the word of God, we'd have nothing to fear. If we do what the Scriptures tell, all other problems would be solved by a higherower than our own." Badgely has been on the road since last spring preaching that message. Last summer he traveled 10,000 miles in 28 days from Florida to York State, then west to California. Yesterday he was in Lawrence Politicking prophet "It the poor man's primary," he says. "If you want to get on the ballot in California, you've got to get something like 34,000 signatures." BADGEY PAYS ALL his expenses out of our own pocket and has no campaign organization. "I'm not one I hold in my hand." While other candidates have spent millions, he's used money. A mere $100 filing fee or 1,000 signatures was all that was necessary to get on the Kansas ballot. He's putting all his hope in the Kansas primary, _though_. It's the only one he's entered. Donald Badgley, a candidate for president of the United States McGrath, Overland Park sophomore, on the KU campus yester- day, that he has visions from God, chats with Molly day. He insists that if Ronald Reagan, the GOP favorite, doesn't capture the 98 delegates required for nomination on the first ballot at Republican National Convention, "he will win." Badgely frankly doesn't put much hope in capturing the majority of the state's 32 delegates. He has a different strategy. "M GONG TO get enough votes here that I'm going to shake everybody up," he predicts. "If I win a few delegates, I'll get national recognition." "Reagan's really only got support from a small nucleus of people—the strong conservatives. If he doesn't get that magic number at the convention, the Republicans will drop him like a hot potato if there's a bad run. I feel that somebody could be me." Badgyel has been in Kansas since March 5. He lives at the Jayhawk Motel in Topeka and each day a bus to his destination. He talks to travelers in bus terminals, farmers in diners and people on the street. He's been to 13 Kansas cities and plans to visit another dozen before the primary. He admits, though, that his reception has been, at times, lugwarm. WHEN HE DECIDED to run last January, he sent letters to the Republican National Committee chairman and 50 state委员. He received a response from only one. iowa's GOP chairman put him on the party's mailing list. See BADGELY page seven University students can't say no to jury duty By JENNIFER ROBLEZ When randomly selected for jury duty in Douglas County, a KU student could find himself trying to choose between the wrath of a professor and $100 fine. "We don't want to make anyone flunk a test, but I will do it," she said. "But if someone calls up and says, 'I'm a student and I'm not going to show up for jury duty,' we'll probably make sure we have people." But Sherlyn K. Sampan, chief clerk of the district court, said the Lawrence court system was understanding about students' schedules. ONE KU STUDENT, Douglas Shreves, Cedar City, Utah, junior, missed about a week of classes while serving his time as a tutor in January and February. "I did have to work harder to make the notes I missed," he said. "But I was called at the beginning of classes and if I were now I couldn't do it because of time." Shreves said the experience of serving on a jury made the missed class time worthwhile. "It was a learning experience and I am taking business law now so everything was tied together," he said. Any KU student who is a registered voter in Douglas County could be selected for jury duty. Sampson said a computer was used to draw about 250 names to serve a two-month stint. Usually almost half of the people chosen would have moved or would have reasons for not serving. Sampson is left with 120-130 prospective jurors. The prospective jurors must report to the court at 8:45 a.m. for their particular court session. Defense and prosecuting attorneys each person in a process called "vow dire." Sampson said the questioning process lasted until about 10:30 a.m. The prospective jurors are not excused until they are sworn in and a panel of six or juries is selected. THE FINAL LIST of names is divided in half. Those with last names starting with A-I, report to the Division I court, which meets on Wednesday, or to Division II, which meets on Wednesday. A prospective juror receives $10 each time he reports to court regardless of whether he is chosen to serve on a jury. Two years ago, Sampson said, all students were automatically excused from jury duty, but a change in the voting laws in 1977 required that vote in the city where he attended school. *DT- DEPENDEN on the case and the question.* We know how many people will have to be questioned, she said. "Once we went down to just five more people to be questioned" Sampson recently summoned a new panel or prospective jurors. That, two-month old Rachel O'Neill, would be the first week in May. In April another batch of summonses will be sent to Lawrence "All of a sudden about half of our jurors were students," Sampson said. "Some of them didn't want to show up." That's when William Balfour, University ambudman, stepped in to mediate between the courts and the students. "I ask the executive vice chancellor, Del Shankel, to write a note to the KU faculty and explain that a student who was called for jury duty was excused from class." Bailour said. "The student must also have an opportunity to make up missed work." "Students have to be registered to vote to be called for jury duty. In this election year those registering now should realize the risk." Balfour said the job of finding jurors was a tough one and students should cooperate with the court system. Roxie Hilgenberg, Ellis senior, said, "It was my civic duty to go. "They (students) are a part of this community even if they just live here nine months. It's not fair to totally excuse them." --- 2 Thursday, March 20, 1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Judge sends firefighters to jail KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Sixteen striking firefighters were handcuffed and led to jail yesterday after Jackson County Circuit Judge Laurence Smith found them guilty of criminal contempt of court. Smith sentenced them to 20 days in jail and fined each $300. In a show of unity with the 16 men, scores of other striking firemen surrendered to court officials later in the day for contempt hearings. "If one of us goes to jail, we all go to jail. We want to serve our 20 days now. They want to be up there with their brothers in jail," said Robert Palmer, secretary-treasurer of Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters. "We expected them to go to jail. We expected everything except those dams and windmills," he said. "And we were supposed to handkill them if they were bigger than the palmer." Palmer said after the court session. squathished 24 other firefighters who also had been accused of violating his court order prohibiting them from leaving their jobs. The handcuffing of firefighters in the courtroom brought an angry reaction from officials of the striking union, who called for all city firefighters to come to the protest. More than 200 firefighters filed into a jury room at the courthouse yesterday afternoon to hear their hearts set on criminal contempt charges. The countenance claims were cased on a court order issued during a work station in late December and early January. The order prohibited union firefighters from using fire equipment. Sting leads to 17 indictments KANSAS CITY, Kan.-A Johnson County "sting" operation that led undercover officers last year to 213 stolen firearms has resulted in 17 federal Federal prosecutors said the persons charged were simply trying to sell the contraband for profit. compounded for ppt. "There is a need of a broader conspiracy than that," James P. Buchel, U.S. attorney for Kansas said yesterday. The grand jury also indicted two other defendants on charges of stealing an interstate shipment and selling it to agents. The shipment was a tractor-trailer Nine other persons were indicted on charges not related to the "sting" which shut down last October. suit down last October. Authorities said the 013 stolen firearms recovered include shotguns, rifles, and a semi-automatic automatic rifle. handguns, saaved off shotguns and a semi-automatic rifle. A spokesman said more federal indictments would be sought in the Kansas A spokesman said more federal indictments would be sought in the Kansas City metropolitan area. The operation also netted local police more than $2.27 million in stolen mercruiser and 64 arrests. Court hears of hostage plight The 50 U.S. Embassy hostages in Tehran must spend at least two more months in captivity, since their fate is only a secondary issue facing the new Iranian Parliament, an Iranian diplomat who recently met with Ayatollah Rohabil Khomeini said yesterday. The attention of Iranians appeared focused on parliamentary election returns yesterday, not on the hostages. But in the Netherlands the United States called the attention of the World Court to the plight of the imprisoned Americans, saying they are unable and calling for condemnation of Iran's alleged violator of international law. Republican pressure mounted in the Senate, meanwhile, for the Carter administration to take new steps to pressure Iran. march each prepared for the Senate, Sen. Richard Lager, R.-Indiana, said he feared the mighties might not be freed if the United States did not follow a law. Lugar called for the U.S. government to prepare for a naval blockade and mining of Iran's harbors, and to detain all Iranian diplomats in the United States. Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker called Lugar's statement "appropriate." Carlin vetoes spending lid bill TOPEKA—Gov. John Carlin yesterday carried out his pledge to veto a bill improving a sending limit on state government. The veto was announced by the Democratic governor at a news conference in his office while four House GOP leaders tried to convince Kane that Carlin's the four, House Speaker Wendell Dweld of Overland Park, Majority Leader Robert Frye of Liberal, Lawal and Means Chairman Mike Haden of Atwood, and Assessment and Taxation Chairman James Brades of Wakefield, held news conferences in Wichita, Pittsburg, Overland Park, Hays and Dodge City. By the time the lawmakers returned, Carlin had vetoed the measure. Word had leaked out about the purpose of the tour, which the GOP members had attempted to keep under wraps, and House Democrats retaliated with a House Republicans were displeased that they were not informed of the plans of their leaders. of their leaders. These Republicans complained that they first learned from the GOP leadership plan from Democratic members of the House. plant from Democracie members to the Thai courts for getting the house Democrats when arrangements were made there Tuesday for yesterday's news The speaker said he was confident that Republican members would be satisfied when they received a full explanation at a caucus today. Carlin's veto of the bill mulled伤 by a Senate committee to enable Republican leaders and Carlin. That plan was an attempt to save the bill from House Republican leaders said they would introduce a new bill identical to the governor卡维丁veto, but with new compromise amendments that the governor added. Primary voting rules clarified TOPEAK-Kansas voters can vote in local elections April 1 without declaring party affiliation or casting votes in the state's first presidential preference Secretary of State Jack Brier said yesterday that confusion had arisen around the state because some people thought they had to declare party affiliation or vote in the presidential primary in order to vote in local nonpartisan elections. Voters who want to participate in the presidential balloting must declare a party affiliation. That will not be required of those who want to vote only on Candidates in the presidential primary will be listed on separate ballots or on different sections of voting machines, Brier said. Live elephant cast in bronze OL. PEJETE RANCH Kenya—New York sculptor Mihail, trying to make art history as the first to cast a live animal in bronze, found a bull elephant in the bush yesterday, had him drugged and made a mold from the sedated pachyderm. The artist wants to sell 10 giant bronzes for $250,000 each. The net proceeds, about $2 million, would be saved on conservation projects. Kenyan game officials cooperated with Mihail in carrying out the mold operation. After the elephant was sedated, he was pushed onto one side. A quick-setting powder and water were poured over the animal and numbered sections were placed in the water. Midway through the process, the animal was rolled over onto his other side. Although the elephant appeared unhart afterwards, some Kenyan zoologists had warned that internal organs might be harmed by rolling the animal's great weight back and forth. Weather... Skies will be partly cloudy today with the high in the low-40s, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be northerly at 12:50 mph. The sky will clear tonight and the clouds will dissipate. The high will be in the mid-60s tomorrow. Sen. Kennedy vows to continue his campaign CHICAGO (AP) -- President Carter crushed Sen. Edward Kennedy in Illinois Tuesday night with an astounding near-sweep of presidential nominating votes, and he narrowly defeated toward the Republican nomination without a foreseeable major obstacle. Kennedy campaigned in New York and declared that the next contest was the one that would count most. The Massachusetts Democrat said he would stay in the race even if it appeared mathematically impossible for him to win the nomination, "Oh. sure . . . mathematics, you know, is one of those great hopes that we have been to those convention's," he said. But the accue in separate competition for delegate votes at the Democratic National Convention was even more startling: Carter 165. Kennedy 14. CARTER BEAT Kennedy in the Illinois primary Tuesday with 65 percent of the popular vote to the senator's 30 percent. Those were the contests in which Kennedy was forced to dove and in which the support of Chicago helped the old-line Democratic organization was supposed to boost the vote of the campaign. Kennedy's people said the alliance with the embattled mayor hurt their candidate. REAGAN WON HANDILY, with 48 percent of the Republican vote, defeating Illinois Rep. John Anderson and leaving him under Ambassador George Bush a poor third. The Illinois ballot was complex and the count was slow in the competition for the state national convention delegates. With perimeter votes down by 10 percent yesterday, Reagan delegates had won 39 GOP convention seats, Anderson 26, Rep. Krill of Grane 4, Bush 2 and 21. Nationally, Reagan had 209, Bush 71, Anderson 37, Crane 4, with 33 uncommitted or pledged to candidates who already have out. Illinois Republicans will choose another 10 delegates at their state convention. Delegates must show primary, and will select another 27 in the convention. The convention delegates are bound by party rules—but not state law—to show up for the primary shows in the primary vote for delegates. Reagan said he wouldn't claim the nomination until he had 988 delegates. The popular vote for presidential candidates did not bind delegates in Illinois, but it sent them a message. This was it: Carter 378,455 or 65 percent; Kennedy 349,395 or 30 percent; California Gov. Gowd G. Brown Jr. 39,101 or 3 percent; Lyndon H. LaHouche 18,729 or 2 percent. Democrat Republican Reagan 538,204 or 48 percent; Anderson 112,379 or 37 percent; Bush 122,699 or 11 percent; Crane 24,453 or 2 percent. Awards promote book collections Got a really new book collection at home that your friends are tired of hearing about. Want some recognition stack of ancient books in the attic? If so, the 1980 Smyder Book Collecting Awards should interest you. The annual competition was begun 24 years ago by Elizabeth S渡 of Kansas City, Mo. "She has sponsored the contest to encourage students to have as much fun as she had collecting books," said Nora KU special collections librarian. Students must submit a bibliography of the collection and a short essay describing the purpose and work in preparation for publication that must comprise between 25 and 50 books. First and second prizes are awarded in both graduate and undergraduate divisions. Gift certificates of $0 and the Oread B.-Jok Store are the prizes. Quinlan said the judges based their decision on the work, imagination and knowledge involved in the collection. One winning entry last year was a compilation of elementary school textbooks from the late 19th century. Another was a collection of history material from Germany since Bismark's time, imitating those that were purchased in Germany. Entries should be turned in at the reception desk in Spencer Library by 5 p.m. April 14. Judging will be Friday, March 18. The collection will be exhibited in the library. KU College Republica KU The A George Bush for President Rally Friday, Mar. 21 10:15 a.m. Forum Room Kansas Union Special Guest Speaker: S. Congressman Jim Leach (R-Ia.) GEORGE BUSH is a Republican running for President. He was a two-term Congressman from Texas, our Envoy to Peking prior to normalized relations with China, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Chairman of the Republican National Committee, and Director of Central Intelligence. GEORGE BUSH thinks it matters who leads this country into the 1980s. He's looking for concerned people who care about the direction this country is taking . . . people who still think there's a way to make things work in the 1980s. Congressman Leach has been an associate and good friend of Ambassador Bush for many years and has firsthand knowledge of his leadership and qualifications. FOR PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH. "There is a difference" This document was paid for and authorized by the George Bush For President Committee. A copy of our report is on file with the Federal Election Commission and available for purchase from the FEC, Washington, D.C. 20483. Find it in Kansas classified advertising. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358 1 2 Thursday, March 20, 1980 University Dally Kansan VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Judge sends firefighters to jail KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Sixteen striking firefighters were handcuffed and led to jail yesterday after Jackson County Circuit Judge Lawrence Smith found them guilty of criminal contempt of court. Smith sentenced them to 30 days in jail and fined each $300. In a show of unity with the 16 men, scores of other striking firemen surrendered to court officials later in the day for contempt hearings. "If one of us goes to jail, we all go to jail. We want to serve our 20 days now. They want to be up there with their brothers in jail," said Robert Palmer, secretary-treasurer of Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters. "We expected them to go to jail. We expected everything except those damn handcuffs. They came down here voluntarily. There was no need to handcuff them." Smith acquired 24 other firefighters who also had been accused of violating his court order prohibiting them from leaving their jobs. The handcuffing of firefighters in the courtroom brought an angry reaction omits officials of the striking union, who called for all city firefighters to come to the scene. More than 200 firefighters fled into a jury room at the courthouse yesterday afternoon to have their hearings set on criminal contempt charges. our contempt citations were based on a court order issued during a work slowdown in late December and early January. The order prohibitedunion formation for three consecutive weeks. Stina leads to 17 indictments KANSAS CITY, Kan. — A Johnson County "sting" operation that led un- limited fire indictments to 112 stolen firearms has resulted in 1federal grand toury indictments. Federal prosecutors said the persons charged were simply trying to sell the contraband for profit. "There's no evidence of a broader conspiracy than that," James P. Bochele, U.S. attorney for Kansas said yesterday. The grand jury also indicted two other defendants on charges of stealing an interstate shipment and selling it to agents. The shipment was a tractor-trailer. Nine other persons were indicted on charges not related to the "sting" which shut down last October. Five of them faces additional indictments after photos filmed Authorities said the 213 stolen firearms recovered included shotguns, rifles, bboots; suave-shotguns and a semi-automatic rifle. A spokesman said more federal indictments would be sought in the Kansas City metropolitan area. The operation also netted local police more than $2.27 million in stolen mercantile and 60 arrests. Court hears of hostage plight The 50 U.S. Embassy hostages in Tehran must spend at least two more months in captivity, since their fate is only a secondary issue facing the new Iranian Parliament, an Iranian diplomat who recently met with Ayatollah Rubalh Khomeini said yesterday. The attention of Iranians appeared focused on parliamentary election returns yesterday, not on the hostages. But in the Netherlands the United States called the attention of the World Court to the plight of the imprisoned Americans, saying they had been freed and calling for condemnation of Iran under international law. Republican pressure mounted in the Senate, meanwhile, for the Carter administration to take new steps to pressure Iran. in speech prepared for the Senate, Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Indiana, said he feared the hostages might never be freed if the United States did not follow a protocol. Lagar called for the U.S. government to prepare for a naval blockade and mining of Iran's harbors, and to detain all Iranian diplomats in the United States. Senate Republican Leader Howard Baker called Lagar's statement "appropriate." Carlin vetoes spending lid bill TOPEAK—Gov. John Carlin yesterday carried out his pledge to veto a bill invoking a spending bill on state government. The wav was announced by the Democratic governor at a news conference in his office while four House GOP leaders tried to convince Kansas that Carlin's The four, House Speaker Wendell Dendell of Overland Park, Majority Leader Robert Frye of Liberal, Ways and Means Chairman Mike Hayden of Atwood, and Assessment and Taxation Chairman James Braden of Wakefield, held news conferences in Wichita, Pittsburg, Overland Park, Hays and Dodge City. Word had leaked out about the purpose of the tour, which the GOP members had attempted to keep under wraps, and House Democrats retaliated with a threat. House Republicans were displeased that they were not informed of the plans of their leaders. These Republicans complained that they first learned of the GOP leadership plans from Democrat members of the House. plant to Denise a stool for her house. In Hays for getting the word to House Democrats when arrangements were made there Tuesday for yesterday's news The speaker said he was confident that Republican members would be satisfied when they received a full explanation at a caucus today. Carlin's veto of the bill nullified action by a Senate committee, which approved compromise amendments to the measure that were acceptable to House Republican leaders and Carlin. That plan was an attempt to save the bill from Carlin's veto. House Republican leaders said they would introduce a new bill identical to the carine Vetted law, but with new compromise amendments that the governor would accept. Primary voting rules clarified Secretary of State Jack Brier said yesterday that confusion had arisen around the state because some people thought they had to declare party affiliation or vote in the presidential primary in order to vote in local nonpartisan elections. TOPEKA-Kansas voters can vote in local elections April 1 without declaring party affiliation or casting votes in the state's first presidential preference Candidates in the presidential primary will be listed on separate ballots or on different sections of voting machines, Brier said. Live elephant cast in bronze OL. PEJETA RANCH, Kenya—New York sculptor Mihail, trying to make art history as the first to cast a live animal in bronze, found a bull of animal in the bush yesterday, had him drugged and made a mold from the sedated pachyderm. The artist wants to sell 10 giant bronzes for $250,000 each. The net proceeds, about $2 million, would be spent on conservation projects. After the elephant was sedated, he was pushed onto one side. A quick-setting powder and water were poured over the animal and numbered sections were placed on it. The elephant was then moved to a Kenyan game officials cooperated with Mihail in carrying out the mold operation. Midway through the process, the animal was rolled over onto his other side. Although the elephant appeared unhurt afterwards, some Kenyan zoologists had warned that internal organs might be harmed by rolling the animal's great weight back and forth. Weather ... Skiers will be partly cloudy today with the high in the low-60s, according to the National Weather Service in Topoka. Winds will be northerly at 15-20 mph. The sky will clear tonight and the low will be in the low-30s. The high will be in the mid-60s tomorrow. CHICAGO (AP) - President Carter scrubbed Sen. Edward Kennedy in Tuesday night with an astounding near-sweep of presidential nominating votes, he said toward the Republican nomination without a foreseeable malice obstacle. Sen. Kennedy vows to continue his campaign Kennedy campaigned in New York and declared that the next contest was the one that would count most. The Massachusetts Democrat said he would stay in the race even if it appeared mathematically impossible for him to nominate, "Oh. sure . . . mathematics, you know, is one of those great gifts that have been to these conversations," he said. But the score in separate competition for delegate votes at the Democratic National Convention was even more startling: Carter 165, Kennedy 14. CARTER BEAT Kennedy in the Illinois primary Tuesday with 85 percent of the popular vote to the senator's 30 percent. Those were the contests in which Kennedy won against the White House, and the support of Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne on the old-line Democratic organization was supposed to boost the challenger. In 2016, Kennedy won over the people's people. said the alliance with the embattled mayor hurt their candidate. REAGAN WON HANDILY, with 48 percent of the Republican vote, defeating Illinois John Anderson and leaving him. Ambassador George Bush a no third. The Illinois ballot was complex and the count was slow in the competition for the top spot. Anderson led 95 percent yesterday, Reagan delegates had won 39 GOP convention seats, Anderson 36. Rep. Bush 4, Bush 2 and 1 were uncommitted. Nationality, Reagan had 299, Bush 47, Anderson 37, Crane 4, with 33 uncommitted or pledged to candidates who already have quit. Illinois Republicans will choose another 10 Illinoisates at their state convention. The convention will elect the Illinois primary, and will select another 27 in convention. The convention delegates are bound by party rules—but not state law—to vote for a candidate who is shown in the primary for college votes. Reagan said he wouldn't claim the nomination until he had 998 delegates. The popular vote for presidential candidates did not bind delegates in Illinois, but it sent them a message. This was it: Carter 758,455 or 65 percent; Kennedy 349,395 or 30 percent; Gov. Calvin G. Brown G. Jr. 39,101 or 3 percent; Lyndon H. LaHouche 18,729 or 2 percent. Democrat Republican Resag 538,204 or 48 percent; Anderson 412,379 or 37 percent; Bush 122,669 or 11 percent; Crane 24,453 or 2 percent Awards promote book collections Got a really neat book collection at home that your friends are tired of hearing about? Want some recognition that stack of ancient books in the attic. If so, the 1980 Sydney Book Collecting Awards should interest you. The annual competition was begun 24 years ago by Elizabeth Skipper of Kansas City, Mo. "She has sponsored the contest to encourage students to have as much fun as she had collecting books," said Nora KU "a KU special collections librarian." Students must submit a bibliography of the collection and a short essay describing the purpose and work in progress of each book that must comprise between 25 and 50 books. First and second prizes are awarded in both graduate and undergraduate divisions.礼品 certificates of $0 and the Oread Book Store are the prizes. Quinlan said the judges based their decision on the work, imagination and knowledge involved in the collection. One winning entry last year was a compilation of elementary school textbooks from the late 19th century. Another was a collection of history material from Germany since Bismarck's time, in which that were purchased in Germany. Entries should be turned in at the reception desk in Spencer Library by 5 pm. April 14. Judging will be Friday, September 3. The collection will be exhibited in the library. KU College Republica KU The present A George Bush for President Rally Friday, Mar. 21 10:15 a.m. Forum Room Kansas Union Special Guest Speaker: S. Congressman Jim Leach (R-Ia.) GEORGE BUSH is a Republican running for President. He was a two-term Congressman from Texas, our Envoy to Peking prior to normalized relations with China, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Chairman of the Republi can National Committee, and Director of Central Intelli gegence. GEORGE BUSH thinks it matters who leads this country into the 1980s. He's looking for concerned people who care about the direction this country is taking. . . people who still think there's a way to make things work in the 1980s. Congressman Leach has been an associate and good friend of Ambassador Bush for many years and has firsthand knowledge of his leadership and qualifications. FOR PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH. "There is a difference" This document was paid for and authorized by the George Bush For President Committee. A copy of our report is on file with the Federal Election Commission and available for purchase from the FEC, Washington, D.C. 20463. Find it in Kansas classified advertising. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358 Thursday, March 20, 1980 3 Tornado safety is not a breeze Bv DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter Spring officially began before sunrise this morning, heralding the advent of the approaching tornado season. In the Lawrence area, the tornado season can be expected to begin near the end of March, according to Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology. "There are no set dates, it's just as soon as the right atmospheric conditions occur," Eagleton said. "The average time that activity begins to pick up is during the last part of March or the first part of April. Usually it peaks in June and they tap off in July." More than 10 years ago, Eagleman did research that helped rewrite the then-prevalent theories about proper safety measures during a tornado. AFTER STUDYING BUILDINGS damaged by tomaeones, Eagleman concluded that the northeast corner of a house sustained the least amount damage. This contrasted the common belief that the northeastern corner offers the best protection. At first, his conclusions were met with skepticism, but after other researchers came up with similar information, even the National Weather Service began to change its thinking. The southwest corner belief was more popular than the north. Eagerman said, despite the efforts of meterologists in recent years to change public thought. the northeast part of the structure is the next best thing. Thus, the safest place to be during a tornado is the northeast corner of a poured-concrete basement, Eagleman said. For buildings without adequate basement room, If the tornado is crossing one's path at a right angle, then criving away from the tornado would be possible because the wound of a tornado is only about 30 to 40 mph. "Two factors enter in, the size of the room and its location," Eaglennan said. "A northeastern room is the best-positioned and a smaller room is safer." If A PERSON is caught in the open when a tornado is nearby, appropriate action would depend upon what direction the tornado was moved, he said. "However, in congested areas, that wouldn't be advisable," he said. "In the Witchia Falls, Texas, storms, action like that caused considerable problems." If driving away from the tornado's path is unfeasible or if the tornado is moving toward the car, the automobile should be abandoned for low ground, he said. A BRIDGE may offer shelter, especially if the open sides of the bridge do not lie in the tornado's path, Eagleman said. However, if it is not a tornado's path, lying on low ground is recommended. Ditches or ravines are suitable for this purpose, he said, providing that the ditch is not already flooded by heavy rams and animals; as well, as they could fall and become a hazard. "People are a lot better informed about things in these cities than in England." said Eagleman, an author in many cities, such as Lawrence, there is a siren system to alert people, and some people are even building homes. KU supports federal conservation program keeps campus thermostats at required levels University Daily Kansan Even though a federal government program regulating public building temples had been shut down to follow its guidelines after the expiration date, according to Richard Perkins, a former president of the council. The Federal Thermostat Control Program requires most public buildings to maintain a temperature of 65 degrees during the summer, but not during the winter. Parkers said last week. THE THERMOSTATS in most of KU's buildings will remain at 65 degrees until the weather changes, and maintenance crews will begin setting the thermostats at 78 degrees for the summer, he said. The changeover will take about three days. The thermostats in KU's buildings are locked, controlled and periodically checked by the maintenance crews, Perkins said. Before the 1973 energy crisis, the thermostats were not controlled by anyone, he After 1973, facilities operations controlled the thermostats. The temperature was then at 88 degrees in most buildings except areas outside and other exempt areas, Perkins said. said. The temperature was usually kept between 72 and 75 degrees. The temperature was lowered to 65 degrees this winter in compliance with the Federal Thermostat Control Program, The original intent of the program was to prevent a heating oil shortage in the Northeast, where its use is heaviest. But because the gas supply was never materialized, a DOE spokesman said. Because of this, the future of the program after April 1 it is in doubt. which was launched last July by the Department of Energy, he said. Henry Bartholomew, a DOE official, said "No decision has been made. We're still working on our options." Included in the renovation are plans for improving accessibility for handcapped residents. The addition to the building's two wooden stairwells up to fire standards, and remodeling existing windows. THE RENOVATION, which could begin as early as this summer, created controversy last month when alternate schools in New York and studios could not be decided upon. one architectural firm of Design Build Architects will prepare construction plans for the renovation if the preliminary drawings are approved. Regents to discuss Marvin renovation The **$2.5 million Summerfield Hall** building would add 20,000 square feet of space to the building's present 40,000 square feet. STUDENTS The new space would include five new classrooms, an audiovisual room, a seminar room, additional reading room and study rooms and doctoral study rooms. Approval of the Marvin Hall plans would be the first step in the $2.8 million building renovation that will affect about 40,000 square feet of the building. FACULTY MEMBERS The Regents will consider authorizing the University to ask the governor and the 1980 Legislature for a $319,000 appropriation for the replacement of the University Theatre's lighting console, which are included in fiscal Year 1981 expenditures. By BILL MENEZES If you have not yet signed up to use the C&J SURVEY for the Spring 1980 Semester, please complete this coupon and return it to its instructional Resources in Room 400 atrium. A request to spend $10,000 from private funds for site work and landscaping at the corner of 15th and 19th streets also will be presented to the Regents. COURSE NUMBER LINE NUMBER # OF FORMS AMONG OTHER ITEMS on the Regents agenda are a $319,000 request from the State Leiglature for a Murphy Hall lightning cable, a $180,000 request for site work on Daisy Hill, and a revision of the schedule. Please provide a fee schedule for students on the G1 Hill. Staff Reporter Preliminary architectural drawings for the project will be sent to the final plans for the remodeling of Hall are among the items to be discussed at the Kansas Board of Regents meetings in April. The corner will be the site of a new information booth that will house maps of the University, information pamphlets and a pay telephone. Funding for the Summerfield fire sources. State funding for the repair of existing facilities had been already reserved at the time the project was Your Name Academic Rank Department We are now leasing for Fall and Spring. CGI SURVEY The booth, to be purchased by the KU Endowment Association, was contracted for construction by the Kansas Construction Company of Lawrence at $43,140. If the final remodeling plans and construction documents are approved by the Regents, the University director of purchasing open bidding for the con- Choose your home, now, for next year and ensure location and color of decor. Offering 10 and 12 month leases. - SUMMER STORAGE * Lease now with 2 month storage package. Can you haul your belongings home for a small storage fee? Call Park 25 and see. PARK 25 Apartments P. APARTMENTS Large 1 and 2 bedroom-bath 2 bedroom-2 bath 2 pools—2 laundry rooms—bus service Call or come by and talk with Gary, Ellen or Kathy 2. - $ \vee \mathrm {是} = - 1 $ 2nd Year Anniversary! $5 off on Perms and Bodywaves With This Coupon (Includes Shampoo, Cut & Blowdry) Plus, Free Shampoo & Blowdry With Every Prime Cut Prime Cut Hair Co. REDKEN® Jan Sanders, Owner, Stylist Joyce McCauley, Stylist 13 E. 8th 841-44B8 Monday-Saturday 9-8 Budweiser TASTEBUDS IN "LINGUISTICS EXERCISE" WHY IS IT EVERYTIME HE THINKS ABOUT ASKING THIS CHICK FOR A DATE HE GETS TONGUE-TIED? WHY IS IT EVERYTIME HE THINKS ABOUT ASKING THIS CHICK FOR A DATE HE GETS TONGUE-TIED? YEAH! AND EVERYTIME HE GETS US ALL TIED UP I GET AN ITCH IN MY NOSE!!! WHAT HE (NOT TO MENTION WE) NEED RIGHT NOW IS SOME ELOCUTION-LUBRICATION. ...BUD OF COURSE, BUT HOW? THIS CALLS FOR MY FAMOUS HOUDINI TRICK! WHO DUNNIT?!? IF I CAN JUST...SLIP... OUT OF F. THESE ROPES... LONG ENOUGH TO LET HIM SAY... BUDWEISER! YEA!! OUTASIGHT! KING OF BEERS® • ANHEUSER-BUSCH INC • ST. LOUIS IT WORKED! HE POPPED THE QUESTION OVER A BUD, AND SHE SAID OK! I GUESS YOU COULD CALL ITA BUD-ING LOVE AFFAIR! I D'CALL ITA BAD PUN! WHY DO YOU THINK THEY CALL 'EM TASTEBUDS ANYWAY! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan edition staff. Signed columna represent the views of the editors. March 20,1980 Cut hurts gymnasts Intercollegiate gymnastics at the University of Kansas are no more. The gymnastics program, with its coach and 11 athletes, has been cut from the athletic department program, a victim of economics and lack of success. This cutback will affect a number of people directly and indirectly. The coach, Ken Snow, has been released, but he was planning to resign. The athletes are in a bind. None of them are seniors, and they are faced with the prospect of having to end their careers early or transfer to another school. For some, transferring would involve only a year at another school—little time to adjust to a new team and educational program. And those who do not transfer may face the loss of their athletic scholarships if they stay at KU. Bob Marcum, athletic director, has said the department will have to see what commitments they have to the athletes involved and make a decision about the coach and the athletes. It is to be hoped that Marcum does not mean only legal, on-paper agreements when he speaks of commitments. It may be discovered that KU legally owes the scholarship athletes nothing. If so, the department may take the economical way out and strand the gymnasts without a dime. This would, in effect, force the scholarship athletes to transfer to another school where they may be offered scholarships, or stay at KU, quit gymnastics and pay for the rest of their education. The athletic department should not take this easy way out. These gymnasts, most of whom are from out of state, came to KU on the promise of the opportunity to develop their athletic skills while getting a college education. They probably would not be here if the athletic department had not promised them four years of education in exchange for four years of committion. If the athletic department is so strapped that it cannot fulfill its promises to a few gymnasms, maybe there should be some more cuts made in the budget. So far all the cuts have been made in the men's non-revenue sports. There must be fat in the revenue sports as well. It probably cost the football team as much money to play them than it would Frank Seurer and Kerwin Bell as it would provide a scholarship for a gymnasm for a season. How will it look to golf recruits, or to tennis recruits, if the athletic department won't keep its promises to the gymnastics team while it spends thousands of dollars on football recruiting? Cuts in the budgets are necessary to keep any kind of athletes on the fields for KU. But make the cuts with an eye toward reputation as well as other sports player players may be the only people interested in attending this school. NICE WORK, GOOD REPORT GETTING FORD MOTOR COMPANY ACQUITTED! Drys should direct efforts at teenagers To the Editor: The article in the Feb. 29 Kansas about the proposed raising of the drinking age in Kansas prompted me to offer a suggestion. The suggestion that students will not be able to stop college students, but just trying to keep alcohol out of the hands of high school students. My suggestion to them is to deal with the problem. I think that my home town, Vermilion, Ohio, did. Ohio, like Kansas, allows 18-year-olds to buy 3.2 beer. To combat the various problems associated with juvenile drinking, KANSAN letters the local juvenile court judge cited a standing order to law enforcement officers that all juveniles caught drinking alcohol in their home were denied access to the home. Do not pass go, do not collect $200, (in earlier times, it was the officer's decision whether to send the kid home with parents) My local newspaper reports that since the inauguration of this policy, incidents involving juveniles have increased. Doesn't Kanzera adopt a similar policy and deal with the problem directly, instead of closing bars, firing officers, or issuing "evil blood" illegal for 18-to-20-year-olds? Jay S. Boggess Vermilion, Ohio, sophomore Financial standards unfair to students To the Editor: David Lewis editorial in the March 17 Kansan concerning financial standards displays considerable ignorance if not simple smirk meanness. For years there has been debate within the academic community as to just what grades measure. The recent ruckus about the grade "inflation" is perhaps the most laughable aspect of this debate. That is to say, students in grades 9 and above so seriously one could laugh. And now, we find that in an effort to protect the taxpayers from senseless waste, the administrators want to raise the standard used in schools to "reasonable academic progress." Disregarding the controversy that still surrounds letter grades, these administrators wish to use grade points to manage student achievement. Disregarding the studies that show that the students who have already been hampered by poor education—the poor, the minorities—are the ones who are likely toPOOL in America's white middle-class class. Disregarding the tradition from high school to college is a major change in a person's life and that subsequently a academic performance may suffer as a consequence. Disregarding that distinction will leave donepoor in college. Disregarding the pure simple fact that one cannot measure academic progress with something as arbitrary as a letter grade, the power that can be given to students to determine who may and may not get an education. May they all rott! hell no! Chainy J. Folsom Lawrence senior Student may leave if BGS eliminated Two months ago I moved to Kansas because I wanted to earn a BGS degree at KU, and in 2013 I received the University of Iowa or the University of Michigan for my education. My best chance for the future is with this degree. If KU happens to be surprised to see a decline in enrollment, I usually find her sitting in her chair by the twin bed. My visit last week was no exception. She was sitting in the usual place in her room in the nursing home, her faded blue eyes fixed lavantly on the wall opposite the chair. Karl Bradley Topeka To the Editor: The afternoon sun illuminated my grandmother's white hair as she sat at her hands folded across her lap in *Pablo* Nursing home atmosphere stifles life She didn't hear me come into the room at first, but when she did see me I could tell that she was gled there. I was. She was never the kind of grandmother who pampered her grandchildren. Far from it. I can remember sitting in the blazing heat of a long-past Kansas summer in my room, a yellow 1856 Crown Victoria that dripped chrome. My sister and I sat rigidly in the backseat with the windows rolled up as Grandma drove along the dusty country road. If we showed any signs of undigging or if we made any move toward the window knob, Grandma would admonish, "Be careful of the upholster! Leave the winery and drive through the village, we were careful. Grandma Fawn ran a light ship." Lor Bartos 80 KANSAS MY ONLY MEMORY of the night that I spent at Grandma's house is haz. I do I remember standing in her COLUMNIST bob pittman I knew from past experience that the stories were concocted—the medicine and sedatives clouded her mind and made her go nuts. house in the country with my face pressed against the cold plate glass window. As I watched car headlights crisscross the evening darkness I remember wondering where my pets were and wishing they would come and get me soon. She was having a bad day when I saw her. I sat listening to her. She was a one-sided conversation. Her roommate was impossible to live with, she told me. The nurses were giving her the wrong medicine. The nurses weren't feeding her; my aunt must have forgotten to pay the nursing home. The cheerful nurse left her thinking things from her. The list of her complaints continued. She had never seemed very comfortable around us grandchildren. We were far removed from her world then. When my grandmother and grandfather were divorced 25 years ago, people expected her to move into town. But she stayed in the country, hovering over cows giving birth, giving my father advice on how to farm her acres and always worrying about the mercurial weather. She was a woman. She clung to the farm. It was all that she had ever known. BUT AFTER 15 YEARS, the load became too much for her to carry. She seemed to be happy. She still had her plants and her flowers—the they replaced the cattle and crops—and she spent many warm days in her yard, bunched over her flower After several years had passed, and after Grandma had suffered a stroke, she was ready once more to move, with more hesitancy than before. She could no longer take care of herself. Her new destination was a nursing home. BUT LATELY, dark moods have overtaken her. She has fought with the nurses, other patients and even her family. Last week, her eyes were dulled by medicine and by the sedatives. She was sick when she moved to the home. After much discussion with the family, she decided it was her best option. She moved from her house, taking only a few personal belongings with her. At first she seemed to be content. pleasant subjects: the flowers on the windowsill, her church and the beautiful, sunny day outside. THE SHE WAS UNIMPRESSED by the weather. The warmth she had brought from her bed, was on her wall of her room. She opened the spring that filled the air outside, she could only smell the odor of urine, antiseptic and medicine that hung on the air inside the room. Besides, she had witnessed 79 previous springs. How could the shining springs of her youth compare with this one? I was reluctant to leave her there. When I did, I felt both depressed and guilty, as if frequently do after seeing her. Before I left, I told her that I would see her again as soon as I returned home. She told me that she might not be alive Her statement shocked me. I told her that she shouldn't have known me, but now she knows me she is determined, she replied that there were many days when she wished she would die. I tried to comfort her, telling her of the good things of her life, but she THE DIFFERENCE in our ages seemed even greater as I stood there. I saw myself in her chair 60 years from now, with my future grandson standing in front of me. The idea wasn't pleasant. I tried to drive it from my mind. I wished I was anywhere but there, in that room, hearing my grandmother tell me that she wanted to die. But then an idea occurred to me. I bent down and kissed her cheek. "Grant, I love you." I said. At first she seemed startled, as if it had been a long time since anyone had told her those words. Perhaps it had been. Then she smiled. It was a wonderful feeling to see her smile after that afternoon. I left her quietly. As I reached the doorway, I could see her sitting in the same position that I had found her. But a faint smile was on her lips, and instead of staring at the window, she looked up to sunlight on her windowsill and the emerging grass outside. I HOPE THE SMILE has lasted, but I don't kid myself. He is an excellent nurse in nursing homes, places where inadequacy and hopelessness reign. My grandmother was once an active, vital woman. Living in a nursing home has broken her will to live. I'm sure that thousands of people in nursing homes across the county feel the same way. I still carry the thought of that smile in my mind and I hope that I find my grandmother well when I visit her again. But I also remember the vacant stare, the sedated, listless eyes, and her wishes for death to come soon. Emotions, laws factors in divorce BY ROSE M. STEWART Douglas County Legal Aid Attitudes about marriage and divorce have changed recently, but most people don't plan to have a divorce when they are married. Yet when marital difficulties arise, a person's emotional distress may interfere with the understanding the legal effects of the divorce process and that term financial effects of decisions made in time of unhealthy. Domestic relations legal work can be stressful to both lawyers and clients, because a person's private emotions may be exposed publicly and because basic human feelings are categorized and placed into the terminology that is unfamiliar to most people. Each state makes its own laws on divorce and local practice and procedure or various regulations on marriage, including county to county. Because of this, it is difficult to make generalizations about divorce practices in every state. And, as with any legal situation, the specific facts of a particular divorce case determine the specific procedures and objectives. Nevertheless, people considering divestit cases lawyers of the same reason also seem to need certain general information. The following answers to the usual questions asked in family practice should not be taken as advice on a specific situation. - Separate maintenance is a situation where the husband and wife remain married but live apart under a court order. One party may be ordered to pay main-tenance payments to the other. This legal relationism is commonly called a "legal separation." - Divorce completely ends the legal relationship of marriage. All matters of child custody and support, alimony, debt and debts are settled between the parties. - 1. WHAT ARE THE differences between divorce, separate maintenance and annulment? - An annulment is granted in the uncommon situation where the judge finds that a valid marriage never existed. A person filing for divorce—the plaintiff must have been a resident of Kansas for at least 60 days immediately before filing the divorce petition, which brings the legal action. The spouse—the defendant—will be required to answer questions in 20 days her file an answer of its wishes. 2. What is the usual procedure for obtaining a divorce in Kansas? After a waiting period of 60 days, a hearing can be held before a judge. The parties may have agreed on matters concerning property, child custody and support and alimony or of those matters may be left to the court. If the parties or both parties will testify, and the court's decision concerning the divorce and all other matters is written in a decree or an entry record of divorce. 3. WHAT IS THE usual reason stated in the divorce petition for a divorce? Incompatibility of the parties is a sufficient reason for the marriage to be unjustified. It may be "such deep and irreconcilable conflict in personal or temperaments of parties as makes it impossible for them to continue normal marital relationship. The conflict of interest between the spouses as up to be irreconcilable. This does not refer to petty quarrels and minor bickering. UNDER THE RECENT Protection from Abuse Act, the court can issue temporary orders to protect a spouse and children from abuse. In some cases, the spouse does choose to file for divorce, a restraining order may direct either or both spouses to leave the home, to stay away from the other spouse or the children, and to seek protection of property before the final divorce hearing. 4. Is it possible to obtain a restraining order without filing for divorce? Several items are involved in the cost of a divorce. In Kansas, the filing fee is $35. This fee does not apply to other costs the other party when he is in Kansas. There are additional costs for service outside of the state. Attorneys' fees vary because each case has a different length and the complexity of the case. The judge may state that the divorce is on the day of the hearing of he or she may request a written statement of the journal entry is signed. Once the divorce is final, 30 days must pass before another valid marriage is made. 6. WHEN IS THE divorce final? Other questions about child custody, support, alimony, tax consequences and property division may occur. These issues are common with parents who is familiar with the circumstances. 7. Are two people who live together in Kansas married by common law? - Be eligible by law to be married. For example, both parties must be old enough and must not be married to someone else. - It depends. Kansas recognizes a common-law marriage as valid, but there are certain legal requirements. The parties must: - Hold themselves out to others as being married. In other words, they must refer to each other as husband and wife, use the - Intend to be and regard themselves to be married and not as persons intending to marry sometime in the future. There is no certain length of time the couple must live together to have a comma marriage. If they don't have a marriage in Kansas is a valid marriage and the only way to end it is through divorce. same last name or show by other means that they are married. 8. What is an emergency divorce? If a judge finds that an emergency exists, it is not necessary for the parties to wait for the court to pass. If a court uses a different system in granting the emergency divorces, but these divorces are not served until the court passes. 9. WHAT SHOULD I DO if my spouse files for divorce and I am served with divorce papers? You should see a lawyer right away. Even if you and your spouse have agreed in advance to get a divorce, you should have a lawyer explain to you what your rights are. 10. What are alternatives to divorce? and what might happen in your case. It may be that you will have to do something or both or provide your requests. Remember, every case is different, and what may have happened to a friend of yours could be very different. The law neither favors nor promotes divorce. Not all people say they want divorces really need them. Don't let minor problems cause you to overreact. Some use it to avoid getting into trouble with other problems. For such individuals, counseling may be very important. If at all possible, marriage counseling services can be used before deciding upon a divorce. As mentioned before, divorce can be a very trying emotional experience and should be used only as a last resort. Rose M. Stewart is an attorney for Kansas Legal Services Inc. who works in the Dallas County Legal Aid Society. This is student problem series on student legal problems. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Number: Newsroom-864-4810 Business Office-864-4758 UNIT 8074-6460 Published at the University of Kansas during August through May and December and Thursday through Friday during January. Applicants must be a native of the United States or have been admitted to a university and for six months at a time in a yearly Dean's List and for EB at four times a year. Subscriptions by mail are due on January 1st, 2013 or after that date. The application fee is $95.00 per person. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall. The University of Kannan, Lawrence RX60048 Editor James Anthony Pitts Jason Anthony Pinto Managing Editor Instructor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Associate Campus Editors Art Director Sports Editors Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Rhonda Heinem, Jeff Sjewen, Todd Lacking, Barbara Padgett Wire Editors Ben Bigner, Jeff Hargar, David Lewa, David Mould, Kolee Editorial Writers Senior Staff Writer Story Writers Ben Bigner, Jeff Hargar, David Lewa, David Mould, Kolee Editorial Cartoonists Story Artists Mahmoud Hamammain Addal-Laid, Trace Crawford, John Jabee, C. Krabe, Jane Phillip, Thomas Retail Sales Manager Campus Salary Management Advertising Management Manager Classified Representatives National Manager Staff Photographer Staff Artist Team Manager Graduate Assistant Sales Manager (High) Barb Light, Karen Harrell, Hope Riordanade, Shelley Hosey, Rosemary Hargrave, Sauranne Barne Retail Manager Advertising Manager Thursday, March 20, 1980 5 More room needed in Med Center library By STEVE MAUN Staff Reporter Earl Earley, library director, said the library was so near capacity that only one copy of each journal or book could be kept on the shelves. Clendening Library at the University of Kansas Medical Center is running out of space. The library's capacity is estimated to be between 120,000 and 125,000 volumes. The library now houses 122,537 volumes and about 100 new acquisitions each year. "WE HAVE TRIED to use space outside the library, to compact things inside, and have tried to use a different form, such as microfilm." Farly said. He said the library had two mobile buildings that served as warehouses for some materials, but students must order the materials from these sources 24 hours in advance. The 24-hour delay is inconvenient for many health professionals who come to the library from out of town. "It's just not a good arrangement, but there is nothing we can do about it." Farley said. "The only expansion area we had was the reallocatable buildings." Two years ago the library bought some electric compactor shelves from the statehouse library in Topeka. The shelves can store twice as many books in the same space as regular shelves, but they cost four times as much. THEERE ARE NO aisles between the shelves, but they can be moved electrically on tracks in the floor, creating an aisle and access to the books. "Potentially if we had space what we would be doing is investing that space for gifts that come in and extra copies," Farley said. He said the library had receded the point of discouraging new material and not taking anything unless there was any immediate use for it. In addition to having a shortage of space for books and journals, the library also need more space for students. Farley said the library had 219 reading spaces for 2,300 students. The Kansas Board of Regents requires 30 net assignable square feet of reader space for a number equal to 25 percent of the students, and 75 square feet for a number equal to 10 percent of the faculty. Clearly, we only aboutly allot 33 percent of the required space. Although the library has received funds to develop plans for a new library, the Kansas Legislature has not appropriated funds for construction of a new library. Kinko's For Your Theses and Dissertations 25% Cotton paper We collate at no charge Hours 8-8 Mon-Thurs 10-5 Sat 8-6 Fri 12-5 Sun 904 Vermont 843-8019 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus **TODAY:** THE UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS will be interviewing students from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in booth one in the main lobby of the Kansas Union. The team will present a lecture by Richard Sheridan on "Demography and Medical Aspects of Slavacy in the British West Indies" at 11:30 a.m. In Alove F. in the Union, there will be a meeting from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Cork Room 2 in the Union. The GRADUATE SCHOOL TEA AND TALK SERIES will sponsor a lecture by James Moeser, titled "Recent Studies in Modern Slavic Language" at 3:30 p.m. in the Jawkway room in the Union. The KU CREW TEAM will meet at 3 p.m. in front of 262 Robison. There will be a LATIN MEMORIAL STUDIES LEAGUE meeting at 1:30 p.m. in Modern Peru; by Heracilia Bonilla at 4 p.m. in the Council Room in the Union. TONIGHT: THE SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7.30 p.m. in Parlier C in the Student Union, and at 7.30 p.m. in Parlier C in the Union. There will be a PERSPECTIVES ON SCIENCE lecture, 'Fold Believe,' and a PERSPECTIVE on SCIENCE lecture, 'Jawkway In the Union.' p.m. in the Jawkway Room in the Union. OPINION POLSTER GEORGE GALLYP will give a lecture at 8 p.m. in Wooldorf university in the Union. A PHILOSOPHY LECTURE in Biology and Feminism Theory; Sex Equality Reconsidered," at 8 p.m. in the International Room in the Union. AN ENGLISH COLLOQUIUM with George B. Mackay, at 8 p.m. in the Walnut Room in the Union. TOMORROW: There will be a Junior Science and Humanities Symposium all day in Nichols Hall. The HPER DANCE FILMS will be "Cubism" and 'Michelangelo' at 9:30 a.m. in Room 2018 Bayleah and at 7:30 a.m. in Lippincott MUSEUM of Bassoon and PENNCE MUSEUM OF WORK will have a presentation by Brian O'Doberty at 3:30 p.m. THE BLOOSE CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower room in the Union. There will be an open session for students in 500 Lindley Hall in 500 Lindley Hall. THE INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7 p.m. in the International Room on the Union. The KU CONCERT CHORALE will be presented at 8 p.m. in the Saworthen Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. University Daily Kansan KU debate teams are accustomed to meeting teams from the East, such as Georgetown and Harvard, but debating from the Far East was a new experience. By JEFF KIOUS Staff Reporter Kawasaki and Takahashi, both college seniors from universities in Tokyo, are on a seven-week tour of the United States that began Feb. 10. The two-woman team was trained at the 20 universitys, including KU. The topic of all 20 ablest has been nuclear power. Takahashi, 22, said she had not experienced much difficulty with the English language during the debates. She said that Two members of the KU debating team, Timothy Chung and Mark Houdt, Houston, Texas, freshman, met two college women, Keiko Takahashi and Sushiko Kawanishi, from Japan in a debate. THE TOUR was sponsored by the Japanese-English Forensic Association, accordiing to Takahara. The United States and Japan visited Japan to Japan in May for a two-month tour. Japanese debaters at KU They argued that no nuclear accidents had occurred so far and that radiation poisoning could come from different sources such as TV sets. THE JAPANESE队 took the negative side of nuclear power was needed because the United States' high demand for energy required a 'mixture of different energy sources'. In their constructive arguments, Herbel and Gilley said solar energy was safer than a nuclear power plant. They also said that the risks of radiation are beyond bounds of people through radiation poisoning. The Japanese team will leave tomorrow for a debate with Colorado State University. Then the two will travel to California for debates with California State-Northridge University Poly-Pomona. After their visit to California the two women will return to Japan. The KU team took the affirmative position and supported the propositions that solar energy be used, that current energy sources are used and that nuclear power be phased out. English was a compulsory subject in Japan and that she had spoken it since she was 10 Off the Wall Hall 737 New Hampshire 641-0817 Off the Wall Halt 737 New Hampshire 841-0817 FREE BEER Thursday & Friday $3.50 cover bath nights Doors open 8:00 p.m. Thursday, March 20 Veterans of Kansas Rock BLACK FROST Fusion, rock & funk 9:00 p.m. Friday, March 21 Come to the spring dance featuring XANADU Latin rock & funk rock 9:00 p.m. Saturday, March 22 TOFU TEDDY $2.00 9:00 p.m. Doors or 9:00 p.m. Thursday, March 21 Come to the spring dance featuring XANAVI Latin rock & funky rock 9:00 p.m. We offer . . . A No-Nonsense Alternative To introduce our new spring styles we are making a no-nonsense offer. Today through Sunday $3 OFF any pair of spring & summer shoes Plus a pair of no-nonsense pany hose FREE with any shoe purchase. Hours: 10-8 Mon.-Thurs. 10-5;30 Fr. & Sat. 1-5 Sunday J. J. Angela's Shoes Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa Use Kansan Classified The University of Kansas University Lecture Series Presents George Gallup Chairman American Institute of Public Opinion “Overdue Changes in Our Electoral System” 8:00 p.m., Thursday, March 20, 1980 Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union Free and Open to the Public sta Vista Vista sta Vi Get a VistaKite & Cord for only 49¢! Spring is in the air—and so are *VistaKites.* .bright orange and flying high! A VistaKite and Cord...only 49¢ *with any purchase*, while supplies last. Celebrate .. with great food · great service · and a VistaKite! OFFER IS GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST Vista RESTAURANTS Great Food * Great Service * Vista and you! 1527 W. 6th 6 Thursday, March 20. 1980 University Daily Kansan Memorial service honors Charlie in life, not death Charlotte Haines, Ridley Park, Penn. someone who has loved her and teaches her friends and teachers remember her that spirit at a memorial service yesterday near Porter Lake. Haines died in an accident. "Charlie planted seeds in joy of all in us and she taught us how to grow them," said his piano teacher Martin Morley, assistant conductor in performance in the department of music. Haines, or "Charlie" as she was known to most, was killed last Thursday in an automobile accident on the New Jersey Tupike near Secaucus. N.J. Her mother Brad Levy, a friend of Haines and the driver of the car she was riding in, said the trip home to Ridley Park, Penn, had been planned since last November. He and two other KU students, Gary Borchardt, Prairie Dale and Adam Ames, Iowa sophomore, also made the trip. LEVY AND BORCHARD, who also was riding in the car at the time of the accident, were not seriously injured. Levay said the driver did not have a medical visit visiting New York City and Haines' relatives in New Jersey. Svec had stayed in Pennsylvania to visit friends. At about 10 p.m. last Thursday their snow on slid and ice into the path of a semirair truck. Haines and her mother were killed instantly. But the group of friends at the memorial service came to talk about how Haines had lived, not died. "I just knew her in passing. But when I saw her at the cafeteria or in the hall I always thought she was my friend," said Pam Lewis, Shawnee freshman. HAINES WAS a desk assistant at Hashinher Hall, where she was a resident. everyone knew her and when you saw her there was always a smile on her face," said Paul Nance, a resident assistant at the hall. event at the hail. Haines also had worked in the hall's cafeteria and had been a security monitor. "To a large extent she was putting herself "To a large extent she was putting herself through school. She helped organize activities to make life at Hashinger better for for her accomplishments at Hashinger, she was awarded the Margaret Hashinger Scholarship last year. The award is given to students outstanding interest in the hall and KIU. everyone. She put a lot of effort into a lot of different things," Levy said. RECENTLY, SHE JOINED the Lawrence Civic Choir. Her enthusiasm about music caused her to continue as a course aide at Westminster College. After long alter her required time was completed. "We're celebrating what Charlie was and what Charlie is. In a complex world she was a simple person," Borchardt said. "Happiness was what Charlie was all about and to think about her and be sad just wouldn't tern' right," another friend said. Some of the 70 people who attended the memorial service sang, played instruments and remembered experiences with Haines. Haines is survived by her father, Dallas; two brothers, Nick and Bob; and her grandmother, Charlotte Lance. All live in Pennsylvania. Memorial contributions can be made in Haines' name to the Margaret Hashinger Scholarship Fund at the University of Kansas Endowment Association. 10 WES ORZECHOWSKI/Kansan staff Celebrate Spring with ROSES only $4.99 dozen Everytime we coming up times, we need you to be on the phone. We have a phone for them. The library call of Stephen today! I am glad I am here! Please call us at 618-243-6990 UNIVERSITY FLORAL 5100 WEST JON ST TERRAC The Red Dutch Barn 843·6990 FITD FESTIVAL DE FUTNAGO DE LA SANIDAD PACIFIC 5 N 3 I G&R Foreign Car Specialists 9MPORTS 1545 N 3 G & R BODY SHOP has changed its name to G & R IMPORTS and expanded to include mechanical repairs as well as top quality body work. So drive out and see us. 843-8322 Plan to Attend Our GRAND OPENING SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 10 A.M.-6 P.M. AT THE HOLIDAY PLAZA (JUST WEST OF KIEF'S) Patronize Kansan Advertisers ENCORE COPY CORPS . . . We offer you one convenient center for all office and scholastic copying, typing, word processing, printing, art work and drafting. Convenient hours, fast service, professional consultation and discount prices on the most frequently used services are just a few of the reasons you will want to consider ENCORE!! GRAND OPENING SPECIALS (GOOD THROUGH APRIL 5) XEROX COPIES (featuring the Xerox 9400) 3c EACH TYPING 99c PAGE featuring: Essive Copy Corps Lawrence Kansas since 1980 - COPYING - WORD PROCESSING - BINDING TYRING - PICK-UP & DELIVERY SERVICE - EDITING - TYPING • EDITING - ART WORK - FAST SERVICE - PROFESSIONAL HELP - OFFICE SUPPLIES played musical instruments and remembered experiences that they shared with Haines. From left to right are: Chris Kableline, Osage City sophomore, Cathy Bauer, Diefler, Fifth, Chase Johnson, freshman, Gary Barchor, Prairie Village junior. - PRINTING BINDING PRINTING - VOLUME DISCOUNTS OF UP TO 40% OF SINGLE-COPY XEROXES. - we feature exclusively: - PICK-UP & DELIVERY SERVICE. Encore Copy Corps (just west of Kief's) Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8 a.m.-8 p.m Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday 12 p.m.-5 p.m. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza Rejoicing remembrance 842-2001 Residents of Hashinger Hall gathered last night at Potter's Pavilion for a different kind of memorial service for Charlotte Haines, Ridley Park, Penn., sophomore. Haines was killed in an auto accident over spring break. Nearly 70 people attended the service. Some of them sang songs, Come Hear The MOFFET BEERS Band Thursday, March 20th From 8-12 p.m. At The Entertainer 2051/2 w 8th st. $4 at the door for all the Beer you can drink! h Proceeds Go to Arthritis Research and Sponsored by AOTT Everyone Invited SUA NEEDS YOU! sua films Just like the big shows down, only better because we offer so much more for all less. We are looking into expanding and improving in our curriculum. We have a new Classical series, Midnight Series, Classical Series, Genre Series, Directed Series, The Music Series. We want your new ideas and input for the 1980-81 titlin series. Fine Arts The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and art areas of the arts areas, literature, arts drama, music and dance. sua outdoor recreation Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of golf, skiing and snowboarding. Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We offer many activities for all ages. SUI TRAVEL SUA Travel offers a fun, and inexpensive way to travel for KU students. SUA is well known for its adventurous Padre Island, Florida, and Colorado trips. the possibilities for other travel ideas are almost endless. We need creative minds and people power to pro- mote these programs and develop new ideas. SUA Student Union Activities is now taking applications for committee membership. You can be a part of the exciting plans of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas . . . SUA Special Events Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to planning and organizing events. There are light and bright areas that are must for be considered every day, so it's important to plan accordingly. We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include lunches and local band. One of our groups includes the violinist who includes several groups and lasts as long as six hours. indoor recreation iR innovar coali Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge. Backgammon, Foosball. Go, Arm Wrestling and Quadruple Skate We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and other New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities. FORUMS ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all part of SUA Formats. The Forum committee brings national recognized people to the university for stimulating and through providing gonads. We also keep in touch with people and in the local community who have something to say to the university audience. We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs pr public relation SUR Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone interested in this role should contact us. This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Meditagal Dinner. We need your help in these programs. Experience is not a necessity, however interest is required. Deadline for sign up is March 21. For more information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. Get involved—SUA is for everyone! Thursday, March 20, 1980 Badgely 7 From nave one Prior to his arrival in Kansas he wrote to 24 Kansas colleges asking if he could speak sometime during his stay. Only McPherson College replied. Badgley has been interviewed by newspapers from California to Washington and has been on the national news. He was features in Us magazine. "Sure, some people think I nuts. I skepetics always think I a moke. But when I win some delegates here, I'll get the money. I always someone who wants to listen to me." "But I've been to the Chicago Tribune seven times," he says. "And they won't interview me." BADGELY ISN'T NEW to politics. In fact, he was a state representative in North Carolina for one term in the early 1960s. His spiritual beliefs were the same then, but he admits his platform was a bit more traditional. He's always been a Republican. [Photograph of a man in formal attire, gesturing with his hand. He is holding a staff.] Donald Badgely He ran for office again in 1976 in New York, but lost the Congressional primary by 60 votes. He would also restructure foreign policy. If elected, Badgely says, the first thing he'd do is organize a constitutional convention to rewrite the document. "The only one I'm accountable to," he says, "is God." "Take the situation with Russia," he says. "When we called them a la we created a lot of hard feelings. When the two countries were at war, they became our teacher for what they are, we can come together." "In other words, I won't jam down your throat what I believe and you don't jam down my threat what you believe He'd also revoke many of the nation's laws, he says, and reduce spending by getting rid of government employees who weren't productive. "We have to get back to the law of the Bible- to love our enemies. We have to take the complete circle and start all over again. We have no direction." University Daily Kansan Almost 25 percent of the students applying for aid through the American College Testing Institute are listed as independent, according to Weinberg. This excludes students applying for Guaranteed Student grants through the federal government. Financial independence has price KU students who obtain independent status to receive financial aid are not necessarily receiving more money, according to Weinberg, associate directorate staff. "Only in cases where the student's parents have an unusually high income is to the student's advantage to be independent." Weinberg said recently. In order to be independent, a student must answer three questions on the ACT application process, including parents' or about lax exemptions claimed by parents for lawful use of the student independently for financial aid, academic achievement. The KU financial aid office has another way of screening independent students, according to Weinberg. "As soon as the ACT sends us the financial information for a student that has declared himself independent, we send him an affidavit of independence signed by himself and his parents," he said. The affidavit states that the student has not been claimed as a tax exemption by his All of the requirements refer to the calendar years in which aid is received and the calendar year prior to the academic year for which aid is received. parents or spouse, that he has not received or spouse of $750 from his parents, or has lived with his parents for more than six consecutive weeks. The student also must list his sources of income on the affidavit to explain how he supported himself. Then the parents and the student must sign the affidavit in front of a judge. If the information about the student's sources of income are questionable, Weinberg said, a financial aid staff member speaks with the student. Book sales at Union rise Better Betty, director of the Kansas Union Bookstore, said that it has been a very good spring semester. Book sales are up. Brock said that spring sales rose 13 percent in January, and overall spring sales were better than the fall semester comparatively. "I think it was better," she said. "We have coordinated things." The rewaming of the bookstore textbooks and supplies organization and the use of the Satellite Union to order textbooks enabled sales to increase. Brock said. "The advantages of our going is that many of the companies don't come east of the rockies and there is no way of locating these unique items," she said. To expand the selection of items in the bookstore, Brock went on a buying trip and collected the books from India to England, Arizona and California, figurines of the student students' pinwks. Many items are made in California, she said. The Kansas Union bookstores don't hike their prices, she said. "If we did, our sales would be more higher." "There is no way to get financial aid from us without the affidavit. The only way a student could cheat on declaring inertion is if he had his parents to lie for him." Weinbear said. She said that the Kansas Union Bookstores did not add the charge because they don't see the need to do. Instead they have been thrifty, she said. Weinberg said the number of students declaring themselves independent was increasing, but it had not affected the amount of aid awarded. Lying on the affidavit form is illegal, Weinberg said, but he did not recall any student being caught doing it. "There is no way we can make a student tell us the truth. We have to take the student's and parents' word for it," he said. SEND YOUR HONEY A SINGING BUNNY!! ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS 842-8741 Basket delivered with each telegram AS !! 1980 Loyal Lynne Edit G. P. LOYD'S WEST presents T.G.I. ROCK The best in LIVE ROCK & ROLL! 925 Iowa 841-8848 THE CAUSE Don't miss this Rock & Roll Night TONITE AT G. P. LORD'S WEST Salad Bar Special $1.95 reg. price $2.25 NEW YORKER 1021 Mass. Offer good 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mon.-Fri. till March 28 Electronic media needed at KU Robert Senecal, new dean of continuing education, wants to see the University of Kansas improve its use of electronic media for adult education. By DAVID WEED Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Senecal said yesterday that KU was far behind other colleges and universities around the country in its use of the media. "I can understand why KU has been cautious in moving into this area," he said, "because it's expensive. "But the reluctance of the University and the public to accept technology is ending. It doesn't scare people as much as it did in the past." Television, video and audio tapes and computer, can support students in professional and working people who don't have the freedom to leave home and study at a campus," he ELECTRONIC EDUCATION is a growing supplement to the normal classroom education Senecal said. Senecal, who has been dean for only two weeks, said he had other goals, including a new building for continuing education. "Right now we spread out in seven buildings on campus, plus offices downtown, and this has made the job of coordinating programs more complex," Seal said. Since the 1960s, he said, continuing education has been in the former Pi Beta Phi sorority house north of the Kansas Union. Senecal said they were considering adding three new programs to the six continuing education programs already in existence. "We're working on the second edition of the proposals, which have to be approved by the vice chairman for academic affairs and then by the Board of Regents," Seneca said. STUDENTS AT KU who use continuing education usually enroll in Independent Study, which is a new name for a correspondence course. Senecal said. Students who are close to graduation and find they have missed a required course often use Independent Study, he said. Senecal said his main concern was extending educational opportunities to those who have limited access to the University. PEOPLE WHO WANT to change careers or need extra training in their own fields use continuing education, he said. Women whose children have grown and are leaving home, Senecal said, are also using continuing education. "Women return to school and take management courses." Senecal said. He said developments in media education he was progressing rapidly, such as at the University of Melbourne, where university, possibly offering college credit, is being considered in conjunction with the University of Queensland. "Everyone needs an education to get along in this world," he said. "You could go to college and get trained for a skill for a job." He became more of a continuing process." Dean search continues With the passing of the March 15 application deadline, a long process is ahead for the committee searching for a candidate. The Business Dean, dean of the School of Business. the names to the office of academic affairs, and Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, would make the final approval. Allen Ford, professor of business and marketing at UMass, said yesterday that he hoped the committee could complete the interview process and submit three possible replacements. Ford said the committee would submit The committee will not announce the number of applications for the job, Ford said. Pichler, dean of the School of Business since 1974, announced in October that he would resign effective July 1, 1980 to take the position with the Dillon companies in Hutchinson. sua films Presents A man went looking for America And couldn't find it anywhere... easy Rider Peter Fonda · Dennis Hopper Jack Nicholson R C COLOR Plus: "Interviews with My Lai Veterans" Sunday, March 23 2:00 pm $1.50 Woodnuff Auditorium —No refreshments allowed— Dean WHO?? Robert Senecal sua films Thursday, March 20 Brando: BURN! (1970) Dir. Glir Pontecorvo, with Marlon Gioacchino and Giulio Alpi, guides an Caribbean island rebelation to further the economic in-crease of the BATTLE OF ALGIERS the director of BATTLE OF ALGIERS Friday & Saturday March 21-22 ROCKY II Dir. Sywester Stallone, with Stallone, the Cart Westminster Burges at Rutland Beach will remind you a rematch with Rocky Balboa. Plus, *Burge Beach*, a short, by *Chris Crawford*. Midnight Movies DESPERATE LIVING (1978) Dir. John Waters, with Liz Reny, Mink Stole, Edith Massery, Susan Sanford, and Julie O'Reilly director who made Baltimore and taste famous. By the director of PINK FLAMMINGS and MONDO TRASHO. "Love letter to Eddy" (the Egg Lady). Sunday, March 23 EASY RIDER Dir. Dennis Hopper, with Peter Fonda, Jr., has been among the most talented, Aken, Karen Black. Two disillusionment man travel by motorcycles to a small town where he climbs the Mard Grass. Plot Jean Joseph Strick's novel by Michael Barker. Monday, March 24 Hitchcock: DIAL M FOR MURDER Dir. Alfred Hitchcock, with Grace Kelly, Ray Milland, Bill Cormings. A man plots his wife's demise at the hands of a third party. Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R film are $1.00 each, M-L film are $1.50 and start at 7:00, 7:30 and 8:00, and Midnight on Fri. & Sat., and at 2:00 on Sunday, tickets available at the SUA Office, Union 5th Level. No smoking or refreshments allowed. HOLIDAY PLAZA—2449 IOWA 841-8271 Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEM Cheese Emporium B Weekend Specials Thursday through Sunday Hours 11-9 Sun-Thurs. 11-10 Sat.-Sat. This weekend enjoy the best in deli sandwiches at money saving prices. Submarine Salami, Ham, Bologna, American and Swiss cheese, lettuce and tomato on a hoagie bun The All American $1 50 Turkey, Ham, Roast Beef, American cheese, lettuce and tomato pilled high on a french roll $1 50 Reg. $2.29 The Big Beef $250 Reg. $3.25 Pepper beef, Corned Beef, Pastrami, Kraut and Provolone cheese on an onion roll or nibra bread $250 CHEESECAKE $2^{75}$ Reg. $3.50 $2^{75} 75C All sandwiches served hot with pickle spear and your choice of potato salad, cole slaw or chins. 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 20, 1980 Cindy's brief porno debut sours big-time ambitions By VANCE HINER Staff Reporter Cindy gazeed out the window at the sleepy streets of Lawrence. Her California tan was gone and so was the $3,850 she had earned so quickly. Once again Cindy was back in her old neighborhood, even though she learned in Los Angeles that a small fortune could be obtained by teaching international offices high above Sovereign Boulevard. "At first I did quite a few odd jobs," Cindy said. "I did some modeling. Some pornography." Cindy, who asked that her real name not be named as she did for Hustler magazine's centerfold photo, proud of her work for Hustler, but said she would rather forget her appearance in a movie. AFTER GRADUATING from Lawrence High School in 1978, Cindy attended the University of Kansas for one semester. She moved to California and, so she moved to California with a friend. "It was really a good thing for me to do," she said of her modeling. "It was like a dream come true. For the first time in my life, I was making it." It was making it was making it—a little girl from Kansas. Hours with a professional makeup man and the magic of the darkroom left little resemblance between Cindy and the person in the slink nine-nare magazine layout. When the light shines on Cindy's wheat-colored hair, she looks like a farm girl. At times she talks with her eyes cast down, looking up occasionally to reveal a toothpaste commercial smile. "I walked into my agent's office one day," she said, explaining how she got the job. "I always told them I had a very attractive young blond lady I want to send over. They'd like me." "I WENT for the interview that evening. You go into this big room and they ask you your name and, "Would you mind taking your clothes off!" And they did a few test Later that evening, Cindy said, she was told she had been hired. The shooting lasted three days, during which time she lived with Sise Randall, the woman who photographed her. "Suzie has modeled for Vogue," Cindy said. "She knew how to make me feel and I know how to make her feel." Her mother to me. She took我 into her home and introduced me to friends. She paid for them. CINDY WAS PHOTOGRAPHED in a room with blue walls, white provincial furniture and blue carpet, which was accomodated outdoor set up in the country near Yelps, Santa Clara. She said she spent hours in the hot sun on blue satin sheets clothed only in white nylon stockings and high heels. of the first time she posed in the nude. "But when looked at her, she's even cooler," I said. I saw Amidhurst think it was sexually stimulating. It was definitely a feeling in my mind. It was "I was a little embarrassed," Cindy said Cindy said she signed a contract with Flint Publications, publishers of Huster, using the name Debbie Davison as an alias. Her salary of $8,500 was in thirds, she Not long after the job with Hustler, Cindy said, her agent sent her to a large office in the Playboy building in downtown Atlanta for an audition for a pornographic movie. This time, Cindy said, she not only had to take the pencil test required to read a script. She said she was given a small role in Ted Parramear's soon-to-be play, and cost $500 for a few hours. She was taken to a mansion in the country for the shooting. The mansion had a bowling alley, theater, observatory, swimming pool and exotic birds in cages hanging from the roof. WHEN THE TIME came for shooting, Cindy said, she began to reconsider her decision, but thought it was too late to quit. "The feeling I got when I did the scene was real, working with some very greedy people who knew all about the people acting in the movie," she said. "I felt very much like an animal. I thought, 'Oh, I can't be this.'" Most of all, Cindy said, she did not like the producer. "Here he is in this plush office and he's making all the money off these little people," she said. "Anything he tells them, of course, what it makes them lose face or grim." After the scene was over, Cindy said, she just wanted to get her money and leave. "I KANREM EMBER when I used to feel guilty quite a bit and I would go wash my hands," she said. "So after the scene I went down, we drained it. We was washing it all down. the drains." When Cindy was leaving the movie set, she came across a man claiming to be manager of the Musling Bridge Ranch were in the bar. She said the Ranch, near Las Vegas, was one of the locations where the movie set is located. Cindy said that the manager in charge of the ranch suggested that she accompany him back to Las Vegas. She went in spite of other friends' warriors, she said. "Their immediate response was they didn't even want me to," she said. "They were afraid I would start working there and grow old and ragged and hardened. "IT WAS DISTAKEFUL to them to think that what they were doing was OK. They saw themselves as actors and actresses. They saw it as an art, something they had developed." Cindy said she spent an hour at the Mural Ranch Enough- enough time to see the women, the rooms, the customers, and to make sure it was not a place where she could live. There was nothing in Las Vegas that offered the security she needed, she said, so she began to think of home. Soon she was in a car driving east across the desert. "I had my fill," she said. "I tried it, I had my fling with it and I came back." The February issue of Hutter was on the newstands not long after she returned, and we bought a copy from Townier bookstore, the magazine sold out at least twice after people discovered the book. BUT CINDY SAID she could remember only two persons who had reacted negatively to her magazine appearance. Both were men. "Both of them expressed the idea that they had thought more highly of me," she said. "They felt, in a sense, that I had belted myself, demeaned myself." --- "A lot of women have said to me, 'Man, I would really like to do something like that, but I just don't think I could.'" wuse a little girl in a candy store", she said. "I saw the potential of becoming someone's mistress and having all this money. It was all really exciting to me." Wealth and fame are appealing to everyone, according to Cindy. Although posing for Huster is a subject that Cindy said she was always eager to discuss, her role in the triple-X-rated film was hard for her to justify. "THERE ARE MOMENTS now when I think 'Maybe you shouldn't have done that.' But I can't dwell on those feelings. 'What's done is, done,' she said. Cindy said she did not like to think about teenagers or men looking at her picture and making lewd comments. "The whole thing has been so flattering to me that these thoughts that might be negative don't weigh as much in my mind," she said. Cindy said she planned to have porchography in her home if she married, but did not want any future children to become involved with it. "I don't think I would want my daughter doing what I have done," Cindy said, "unless she thought the way I did about it and had as hard an outlook as I do." Much of what is in Hustler magazine is distasteful to her, but distastefulness is often the very thing many people desire, according to Cindy. You're at a friend's house and there's an issue on the table. Cindy said, "You pick it up in your hands." Oh, man, that is really terrible. And pretty soon you'll be through the whole magazine. MASS. STREET DELI Blueberry or Cherry Cheese Cake 50¢ reg.price $1.00 No coupons accepted with this special offer good Mar. 19-23 Thurs. Sun. Enjoy Coke Anti-Inflation Sale $8 Reg. to $16 $8 Reg. to $29 We are marking all of our remaining Winter fashions down to low, low prices—also some exciting new Spring fashions at great reductions. Up to 75% - Jeans - Pants Off Reg. to $34 $6 Reg. to $29 $8 - Skirts Entire Stock Not Included - Blouses - Sweaters Reg. to $30 $6 Selected New Spring Items Up to 1/2 Off Reg. to $34 $6 Reg. to $30 $6 Take a modern coach, add young people from all over the world, and hit the road. And you have over thirty options of which road to hit your home, the most popular villages of the real Europe, the Greek islands, Scandinavia, Russia, the Middle East Africa, India, Australia. Adventure to adventure the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Call or write for our free full-color brochure. FLYING INTER COLLEGIATE HOLIDAYS INC All Sales Final Open Thursday 'til 9:00 Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints ADVENTURE WORLD 80 EUROPE AND BEYOND! 501 Madison Avenue New York, N Y 10022 (212) 355-4705 Yes! Send me more information from AdventureWorld 801 Name Address Telephone School sua films Presents MARLON BRANDO THE MAN WHO SELLS WAR. The bloodier the battle- the higher the price. "BURN!" United Arts THE DEATH OF MARSHAL JOSEPH BAYLEY From the director of "BATTLE OF ALGIERS" Thursday, March 20 7:30 pm $1.00 FORUM ROOM —No refreshments allowed— WHY NOT! Sell your unwanted items with a classified in the UDK THESIS BINDING — XEROX COPYING LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE 512 EAST 9th St. at NEW JERSEY THE PLACE YOUR GRAND FATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS Old World Quality Handwork Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Pyroxylin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry. CHOICE OF COLORS: Black - Maroon - Navy Blue GOLD FOIL STAMPING ON COVER AND SPINE OF BOOK FAST DELIVERY OF FINISHED WORK, 4 DAYS OR LESS GUARANTEEED SPECIAL SERVICES AVAILABLE - pockets for maps or engineering drawings - built-up layers to allow for thickness of photographs - hand sewn binding, with sufficient lead time - processing of mail orders, delivery to Post Office, no charge - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge - combination Xerox copying / binding discount prices AND NOW! XEROX COPYING SERVICE! We offer special "combination discount" if we make the Xerox copies for you. Yes, that's right, a lower total cost if we do the Xerox copies for you. Visit our modern plant at 512 East 9th and see samples of our work. All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 20, 1980 Cindy's brief porno debut sours big-time ambitions By VANCE HINER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Cindy gyzed out the window at the sleepy streets of Lawrence. Her California tan was gone and so was the $3,850 she had earned so quickly. Once again Cindy was back in her old neighborhood, even though she looked in Los Angeles that a small fortune could be obtained from law enforcement offices him above Sous Boulevard. "At first I did quite a few odd jobs," Cindy said. "I did some modeling. Some pornography." Cindy, who asked that her real name not be included in the magazine's centered list for Huster magazine's centerpiece article, proud of her work for Huster, but said she would reward her appearance in a book by Robert Bain. AFTER GRADUATING from Lawrence High School in 1978, Cindy attended the University of Kansas for a semester. She met her first girlfriend, so she moved to California with a friend. "It was really a good thing for me to do," she said of her modeling. "It was like a dream come true. For the first time in my life, I was making it a little better." It was making "a little girl from Kansas." Hours with a professional makeup man and the magic of the darkroom left little resemblance between Cindy and the person in the sick nine-oaze magazine lavage. When the light shines on Cindy's wheated color hair, she looks like a farm girl. At times she talks with her eyes cast down, looking up occasionally to reveal a toothpaste commercial smile. He said into my agent, a second one out. I walked in, answered. He asked, "I just called Hattler Studios old them I had a very attractive you. I had them over. They I to come over today." "I WENT for the interview that evening. You go into this big room and they ask you your name and, "Would you mind taking clothes off!" And they did a few test sessions. Later that evening, Cindy said, she told she had been hired. The shooting lasted three days, during which time she lived with Randal, the woman who photographed her. "Suzie has modeled for Vogue," Cindy "states that she was a big supporter of expresswear. She almost was like a mother me. she took me into her home and introduced me to friends. she paid for all her gifts." CINDY WAS PHOTOGRAPHED in a room with blue walls, white provincial furniture and blue carpet, which was actually an outdoor set in the country She said she spent hours in the hot sun on blue satin sheets clothed only in white nylon stockings and high heels. of the first time she passed in the nude. "But when looked into the person she was talking to, I didn't think it was sexually stimulating. It was definitely a feeling in my mind. It was "I was a little embarrassed," Cindy said. Cindy said she signed a contract with Flynt Publications, publishers of Hustler, using the name Debbie Davion as an alia: she paid $8,500 was paid in thirds, she said Not long after the job with Hustler, Cindy said, her agent sent her to a large office in the Playboy building in downtown Austin as an audition for a pornographic movie. This time, Cindy said, she not only had to be written in English, she also was required to read a script. She was given a small role in Ted Parramore's son-to-be released film, and caresd, and £850 million. She was taken to a mansion in the country for the shooting. The mansion had a bowling alley, the theater, observatory, swimming pool and a cage of cages hanging from the collars, she said. WHEN THE TIME came for shooting, Cindy said, she began to reconsider her decision, but thought it was too late to quit. "The feeling I got when I did the scene of the movie working with some very greedy people who were like the people acting in the movie," she said. "I felt very like an animal. I thought." "Here he is in this plush office and he's making all this money off these little people," she said. "Anything he tells them to do, who determines it makes them lose face or not." After the scene was over, Cindy said, she just wanted to get her money and leave. "I CANREMEMBER when I used to feel guilty quite a bit and I would go wash my hands," she said. "So after the scene I went home and washed my clothes, I was washing it down the drain." Most of all, Cindy said, she did not like the producer. When Cindy was leaving the movie set, she had to get a new job, claiming to be managers of the Mustang Bridge Ranch were in the bar. She said the man at the ranch was one of the biggest broths in the United States. Cindy said that the manager in charge of the ranch suggested that she accompany him back to Las Vegas. She went in spite of other actors' warnings, she said. "Their immediate response was they didn't even want to me," she said. "They were afraid I would start working there and grow old and ragged and hardened. 'IT WAS DISTASTEFUL to them to think that they were doing what they were doing that were doing was OK. They saw themselfs as actors and actresses, and saw it as an art, something they had developed. Cindy said she spent an hour at the Mustang Ranch—enough time to see the women, the rooms, the customers, and to make sure it was not a place where she could live. There was nothing in Las Vegas that offered the security she needed, she said, so she began to think of home. Soon she was in a car driving east across the desert. "I had my fill," she said. "I tried it, I had my mvling with it and I came back." The February issue of Huster was on the cover of *Terry's Guide*, according to Terry Sack, a clerk at the Town Clerk bookstore, the magazine sold there. (It also has a local liaison that has passed to the centerfold.) BUT CINDY SAID she could remember only two persons who had reacted negatively to her magazine appearance. Both were men. "Both of them expressed the idea that they had thought more highly of me," she said. "They felt, in a sense, that I had belittled myself, degraded myself." "A lot of women have said to me, 'Man, I would really like to do something like that, but I just don't think I could.'" "it was like a little girl in a candy store," she said. "I saw the potential of becoming someone's mistress and having all this money. It was all really exciting to me." Wealth and fame are appealing to everyone, according to Cindy. Although posing for Hustler is a subject that Cindy said she was always eager to discuss, her role in the triple-X-rated film was hard for her to justify. THERE ARE MOMENTS now when I think "May you shouldn't have done that." But I can't dwell on those feelings. What's done is done," she said. Cindy said she did not like to think about teenagers or men looking at her picture and making leaf comments. "The whole thing has been so flattering to me that these thoughts that might be negative don't weigh as much in my mind," she said. Cindy said she planned to have pornography in her home if she married, but did not want any future children to become involved with it. "I don't think I would want my daughter doing what I have done." Cindy said, "unless she thought the way I did about it and had as hard an outlook as I do." Much of what is in Hustler magazine is distasteful to her, but distastefulness is often the very thing many people desire, according to Cindy. "You're at a friend's table and there's an issue on the table. Cindy said, 'You pick it up.' I say, 'Okay, pick it.' Oh, man, that's really terrible. And pretty soon you'll遇到 the whole magazine.' Okay, I'm ready. MASS. STREET DELI inc 1941 MASSACHUSETTS Blueberry or Cherry Cheese Cake 50c reg. price $1.00 No coupons accepted with this special offer good Mar. 19-23 Thurs.-Sun. Enjoy Coke Anti-Inflation Sale $8 Reg. to $ 6 $8 Reg. to $16 $8 Reg. to $29 We are marking all of our remaining Winter fashions down to low, low prices also some exciting new Spring fashions at great reductions. Up to 75% - Jeans - Pants - Sweaters Reg. to $29 $8 Entire Stock Not Included Reg. to $34 $6 - Skirts Off - Blouses Reg. to $30 $6 Reg. to $30 Reg. to $34 $6 Selected New Spring Items Up to 1/2 Off Take a modern coach, add young people from all over the world, and hit the road. And you have over thirty options of which road to hit the glamour cities and colorful coastlines of the Greek islands, Scandinavia, Russia, the Middle East, Africa. Adventure offers a variety of dark, adventure to adventure Reg. to $30 $6 the VILLAGE SET FLYING INTER COLLEGIATE HOLIDAYS INC 922 Massachusetts Call or write for our free full color brochure. All Sales Final Open Thursday 'til 9:00 Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints ADVENTURE WORLD 80 501 Madison Avenue New York, N Y 10022 (212) 355-4705 EUROPE AND BEYOND! □ Yes! Send me more information about Adventure World 80! Name: Address: Telephone: School sua films Presents MARLON BRANDO THE MAN WHO SELLS WAR. The bloodier the battle- "BURN!" United Artist From the director of "BATTLE OF ALGIERS" Thursday, March 20 7:30 pm $1.00 FORUM ROOM No refreshments allowed WHY NOT! Sell your unwanted items with a classified in the UDK THESIS BINDING — XEROX COPYING LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE 512 EAST 9th St. at NEW JERSEY THE PLACE YOUR GRANDFATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS Old World Quality Handwork Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Pyroxylin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry. CHOICE OF COLORS: Black - Maroon - Navy Blue GOLD FOIL STAMPING ON COVER AND SPINE OF BOOK FAST DELIVERY OF FINISHED WORK, 4 DAYS OR LESS GUARANTEED SPECIAL SERVICES AVAILABLE - pockets for maps or engineering drawings - built-up layers to allow for thickness of photographs - hand sewn binding, with sufficient lead time - processing of mail orders, delivery to Post Office, no charge - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge - combination Xerox copying / binding discount prices AND NOW! XEROX COPYING SERVICE! We offer special "combination discount" if we make the Xerox copies for you. Yes, that's right, a lower total cost if we do the Xerox copies for you. Visit our modern plant at 512 East 9th and see samples of our work. All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 Thursday. March 20. 1980 University Dally Kansan 9 Runway expansion to increase safety Another step in Lawrence's piecemeal attempts to improve the safety and capacity of its airport has been approved by the Federal Aeronautics Administration. Assistant city manager Mike Wilden said he was notified this week that the FAA approved a $1.5 million grant for a new runway that would accommodate jets. The largest airplanes that the airport can now handle hold 50 people, airport manager Brad Bard Bolthorne said. The grant will fund 90 percent of the construction of 3,500 feet of what Bartholomew hopes will eventually be a landway with an instrument landing system. Lawrence will pay the other 10 percent from its airport improvement fund. Because the airport has only a beacon, not instruments, to guide pilots, flights often are cancelled in bad weather, he said. However, the instrument landing gate is present runway because a hill near the airport would block the signal, would allow pilots to land in fog and other bad conditions. Wilden said he expected the construction to begin this summer. The city will have to apply for more grants to extend the new runway and to install the instruments, Bartholowem said. Bartolomee also said that because the new runway would be built at a different location from where it will present runway, it would increase the airport's safety by giving plot an even larger window. Lawrence previously had received money to purchase more land for the airport expansion. $2 million improvements planned for Lindley Hall A remodeling of Lindley Hall, cost $2 million, is expected to begin next winter, Allen Wiechtert, University director of facilities planning, said yesterday. The largest part of the remodeling will be installation of central air conditioning and improvement of the building to meet modern building codes, he said. The code improvements will consist of the installation of fire doors on all rooms and stairways and better access to the stairways, Wieckert said. In addition, space that was vacated by the petroleum engineering when they built Hall will be remodeled and occupied by the departments of geography and geology, he The final part of the remodeling will be the improvement of the loading dock and expansion of the department of astronomy observatory on the roof. Work on two other renovation projects is in progress. The staff are about to be accepted, the said bids on Waton Library will be accepted March 27 and the bids on Summerfield Hall will be accepted on May 1. Two other large construction projects are planned, but await the approval of funds from the Kansas Legislature. Wicherdam says they have the support of Gov. John Garpf. The projects are the remodeling of Flint Hall and a 100,000 square foot addition to Haworth Hall that would house the division of biological sciences. We'll give you hair you can flaunt. Anytime, anywhere anyway. SUPERMOTION © REDENKN Does your hair always look as beautiful as ever and lacks all kinds of it wonder? With the help of our team, you can have the ultimate NIGHT-permanent wave for hair you can flammt call us now. XGALIBUR Moisture Controlling Permanent Wave OX Westminster - Patent Pending Hair Cutting For Men And Women 271 W. 6th, Suite D (913) 841-7667 CONSIDER FRATERNITIES MEN'S SPRING FORMAL RUSH March 21 22 23 For KU: Freshmen Sophomores Staff Reporter Juniors REGISTER NOW! Contact Bv SCOTT C. FAUST Interfraternity Council Legislators debate longer terms at 864-3559 or 864-4861 A proposed constitutional amendment to increase Kansas House terms from two to four years and Senate terms from four to six years would save legislators time and Rep. give them more experience. State Rep. Leary Johnson, RWakeness, says. Johnson, the amendment's sponsor, said the amendment would reduce campaign expenditures which he said were often as much as $10,000 for a candidate. He said the committee would not spend time they would otherwise use for campaigning to better serve constituents. State Rep. Neal Whitaker, R-Wichita, that although legislators could cut campaign spending under the amendment, most members are expected to operate their caimanators anyway. The proposed amendment is now before the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, where it is expected to come to a vote this week. If later approved by the Legislature, the amendment would have to go to Kansas voters before becoming law. State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, who is leaning against the proposed amendment, estimated total spending in each election for the Kansas House and Senate at $750,000. Whitaker discounted Johnson's claim that the amendment would give legislators more time to serve their constituents. "You're not really talking about a lot of money," Solbach said. "Our legislative session ends early this month, the very day it enters through the end of the session," he said. "After the session ends, there are almost four months before the new legislative session." JOHNSON SAID extending the time between elections would "take a little of the pressure off of trying to please private interest groups." However, Solbach said the present terms made legislators more conscious of how their actions might affect them in upcoming elections. "It makes lobby groups more effective," he said, "because they're more able to hold the threat of adverse publicity from the legislature. We need better terms before prevented legislators from becoming isolated from their constituents and kept power from being concentrated too long in the hands of committee clairmats, who the armmen hold their positions for an entire term." MEISNER - MILSTEAD RETAIL LIQUOR VIN FEATURING FINE IMPORTED AND CALIFORNIA WINES 30 VARIETIES OF WINE FOR KEGSCAL 842-4499 IN HOLIDAY PLAZA (2 DOORS WEST OF KIEF'S) "When you serve in the Legislature, you come in contact with a lot of the same faces," he said, "you're lobbied by other interests and by special interparty groups." "It's necessary and healthy to be reminded that you represent people in your legislative district." Whitaker agreed that increasing the length of the terms would take legislators further away from the needs of their constituents. “WHEN YOU HAVE to face election every two years,” Whitaker said, “you remain very aware of how people in your district feel. "As you get further away, and have less contact with the electorate, you cease to represent the people who put you there in the first place." Johnson said he did not believe that increased terms would make legislators less aware of the opinions and needs of their constituents. "I think you're obligated to be close to the people whether your term is two, four or six years," he said. "It would make it less of a popularity thing." Johnson said. Another advantage of the longer terms, Johnson said, would be an extra two years of learning time for legislators and the chance to have a say in decisions before deciding whether to e-elect them. He said a legislator's first term was like an apprenticeship, and that usually only in later terms did a legislator become very productive. "It would enhance our state government by essentially extending the experience level," Johnson said. It's Fun, It's the Intramural Basketball Hill Championship at Allen Field House on March 21st at 7:00 p.m. All people are invited to attend this event. K.U. Gung Fu Club in Women's Self Defense Classes starting Saturday, March 22nd at 8:00 a.m. in 173 Robinson Center. It's Free, For additional information call 841-7803 and It's Exciting KIEF'S COUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" Advertise in the Kansan. 98 at In Concert Wed. March 26 MFG List $7.98 $ 4^{59} $ PLAZA ORE" Iggy Pop is gunning for you... on "Soldier." On the heels of "New Values," his biggest American album in years, "Soldier" is another Iggy Pop sensation! Co-produced by Iggy himself. It features a cast of friendsetting aliens, including ex-Sex Pistol Glen Matlock, and Ivan Kral from The Path Smith Group! Rock 'n' roll for the 80s — the way no one else could play it! GGY POP: SOLDIER Includes TAE CAFE OF MEMORY SOUL WROKING EM DOWN in The City ARISTA THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. LAZA PRE" GGY POP: SOLDIER AURETA Includes TIME CARE OF ME, PAY IT CARE, KNOCKING EM DOWN in the City CGY POP: SOLDIER AUTHOR includes TAKE CARE OF FACE AND PLAY IS SAFE Lawrence Opera House Wake Up! GO BIG BLUE Don't miss the EARLY BIRD SPECIAL! jayhawker towers On Campus at 1603 West 15th. 10 Thursday, March 20, 1980 University Daily Kansan DOWN SOUTH WICHITA K.U. Kansas won't crumble even if Ross wanders off Call it immaturity or ego, but Ross 'public statements that he might pump his jumps at either Wichita State or Georgia show a lack of character. It's almost not even true.' Allen Field House won't crumble if Ricky Ross decides to transfer to another school. KU will still field a basketball team next season. Lawrence, stay off your knees. No one is indispensable. Ross came to KU with glossy statistics and fans expected spectacular things from him. He had several bright moments this season and undoubtedly will have many more in the future, wherever he ends us. Ricky Ross . . . destination unknown out on a limb Mike earle But coming from a winning high school program evidently has spoiled Roes. This season was a ledowd for him. The boat has slowed and he apparently will have to wait longer. ROSS MADSE ALMOST every prep All-America team his senior year at Wichita High School High and was subsequently wooed by almost every major college in the nation. But those prep awards and attention don't measure a player's character. A true measure of a player's character is his reaction to adversity. Perhaps the 1974 rulong allowing freshman to play on the varsity level has had an adverse effect on young players. People expect too much, too soon from 18- The pressure of being away from home and keeping up with school work, combined with the expectation of performing on the basketball court, could overburden anyone. There's no doubt that Ross has an abundance of talent. he is also surrounded by an abundance of confusion, as are many freshmen. "This is like a big mystery," Ross said this week. "I just can't say exactly what brought all of this along." It's a combination of all different things. "IHOPE I'LL be able to set everybody straight by the end of the school year, but it might take longer. This is a tough decision and it will take a lot of considered thought." If Ross decides to transfer, he should remember the grass isn't always greener in other conferences. Quick, name three players who have transferred after their freshman year and have gone on to make it big. There isn't many. It's apparent that Ross is looking gut for his own welfare only. "This (the speculation of his transfer) might make some high school players want to come to KU, but that's life." Ross said. "I'm not here please and I won't." CATHY KREBS/Kansen staff THAT ATTITUDE has no room on any team. Ironically, in 1978, when KU compiled a 24-5 record by bowing out to UCLA in the first round of the NCAA tournament, the Jayhawks had only one high school All-American on the roster - Darren Valentine. And Valentine was only a freshman at the time. Perhaps the attitude of "me first, I get my points and worry about the team later" has undermined KU's wealth of talent. Maybe it would be better to recruit non-All-Americans out of high school - players who don't have to worry about living up to expectations. This season, Kansas State had one high school All-American on its squad - Rolando Blackman. Nebraska had none. Both the Wildcats and Cornhuskers went to post-season tournaments. In addition to Ross' threat of transferring, he said the KU coaching staff was sent to blame for KU's record this season. "THERE NEEDS to be a lot of adjusting in the system here." Ross said. "Changing offense and that kind of stuff. We've got all these talented players and they deserve a wide-open offense. We set so many picks that we ended up running into each other." Whatever his beef about KU basketball, Ross isn't doing himself any favors by throwing comments like that around. It won't help his chances of playing for another school if he defects. As for transferring, Ross has mentioned Wichita as a possibility. But Ross said that he has not talked to the coaches of either school. "Wichita State's and Georgia's guard spots are weak," Ross said. "I think I play for either team. I have Antoine Carson in Wichita, and Larry Gay and I would like to play." Whatever his decision, Rim isn't doing KU and the basketball program any good by publicizing his intentions. If he's going to transfer, he should have worked it out himself and not mentioned his intention to the media. His remarks could easily get blown out of proportion. IN OTTER WORDS, Ross should have kept his mouth shut. He not making an ackward friends or fans around campus by threatening transfer. One no one likes a backer. It is hoped that three seasons from now, Ross will still be at KU and look back on this incident and laugh about it. Cardinals cruise 14-4 to snap Royals streak FORT MERVS, Fla. (AP) — The St. Louis Cardinals scored seven runs in the ninth yesterday to put the finishing touches on a 144 exhibition baseball game. The Cardinals, raising their exhibition season record to 24, scored the seven runs on hits off Renie Martin, the fifth Kansas City pitcher. St. Louis cuffed Royals pitching for 17 hits on the way to stop Kansas C1s five-game winning streak. The Royals have a 7-3 record in exhibition play. The Cardinals scored three runs, two of them meened, off Denis Leonard in second inning. Leonard's first exhibition start after a bout with non-titular partner, Mike Trout, was toppled. The Cards were litterless against Craig Eaton and Randy McGilberry, but scored four runs on six hits off Bill Paschal, the second Kansas City pitcher. The Cardinal assault was led by Leon Durham, who had a double and a triple to drive in three runs. Kansas City's scoring output came on two-run homers by George Brett and Omar Otis. Brett connected off Bob Forsch, the cards starter. Otis found the ball from Derek Mason. Kansas City touched Forsch for six hits and Eduardo gave up three. Dod Hoo and John Littlefield did not permit a hit in an inning apiece for the Cardinals. Dexter Dexter Shoemakers to America FANCY FOOTWORK Dexter gives dressy styling a light, casual feel. With classic and contemporary looks and a new lightweight construction that takes the burden out of looking your best. Feeling good never looked so good. McCall's 124 124 Vernon Road in our Shoes Downtown Lawrence of love Feeling good looked so good. SANTON McCall's Yourself in our Shoes Downtown Lawrence McCall's Put Yourself in our Shoes Downtown Lawrence Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SICKCH AUTO PARTS - Part Start 1098 East 23rd 841-2200 Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 The story continues... THIS WEEKEND ROBERT CHARTOFF IWREN WINKER SYVESTER STALONE 'ROCKY II' TALIA SHIRE BUILD YOUNG CARL WEATHERS BURGESS MEREDITH BILL CONTI BILL BUTLER IWREN WINKER ROBERT CHARTOFF SYVESTER STALONE ROCKY II TRAILRIDGE - estudios - apartments - studios - apartments - townhouses 843-7333 2500 W.6th QUICK STOP PHOTO SHOP MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 W. 23rd 841-277 March 17-22 FREE GIFT with every purchase Drawings for over $400 worth of prizes. Grand Opening limited quantities in stock Sale prices throughout the store Up to 50% off Sun and James THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA FREE PITCHER Enjoy Coca-Cola with purchase of any pizza WED. thru SUN. March 19-23 Bring This coupon THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA Tonight Only Two shows for the price of one Definitely not for Kids From the creator of Flash Gordon, Now BILL OSCO'S Alice in Wonderland STARRING PLAYBOY'S COVERGIRL - KRISTINE DEBELL Film rolls at 8:30 and 10:30 only $2.00 Fri. & Sat. it's . . The Secrets $1.50 pitchers $1.25 hiballs from 8:9 pm Thurs., Fri., & Sat. Where else but the ... Jawrence Opera House Definitely not for Kids From the creator of Flesh Gordon, Now BILL OSCO'S Alice in Wonderland STARRING PLAYBOY'S COVERGIRL - KRISTINE DEBELL Film rolls at 8:30 and 10:30 only $2.00 Ft. & Sat. It's . . The Secrets $1.50 pitchers $1.25 bibs from 8-9 pm Thurs., Fri., & Sat. Where else but the ... Lawrence Opera House Call for concert into: 842-6930 Where else but the ... Lawrence Opera House Call us on 861-2500. 861-2500 Thursday, March 20, 1980 University Daily Kansan KU softball team hits road again 11 The KU softball team once again is on the road. By PATTI ARNOLD the time, the Jayhawks find themselves in Norman, Oklahoma. The national is the second stop on the Jayhawks Traveling Star. Kansas, 8-4, will get a chance to average last week's 7-2 loss to New Mexico State in the Lobos' journey in Albuquerque. The Lobos are the only team that KU did not beat on its first spring triumph. IN THE OKLAHOMA tournament, the top team in each bracket will advance to the finals. Twenty-four teams are scheduled to play in what will be the largest college softball tournament in the nation. Teams in KU's bracket are Kearney (Neb.) State, Illinois and New Mexico. KU plays Kairu; at 3:30 p.m. today, and will face Championship play at 4:30 p.m. The sound will be Saturday for the championship at 5:30 p.m. "It's going to be a doftight for the top of our pool," KU coach Bob Stancilift said. He said he expected Illinois, New Mexico and KU to battle it out for a play in the finals. According to Stancif, Pam Cox had some problems at aortoparesthetie in New Mexico. But he said still he thought she should have the surgery. Although KU has played 12 games, the first base and shortstay positions have not been solved Cox may have to return to the outfield this weekend, depending on the status of June Koleer. Koleer, KU's centerfielder, sprained her elbow in practice Tuesday diving for a fv ball. THE BATTLE for first base is now between Kari Walberg, who played the position last week, and Christyose Poney did play in the outfield, but back problems the season were to move to move her to first so that she could not strain her back. Posey did not see any action on the spring trip because the long drive agerivated her back. The shine day Korerow was fun, the Hawks got a new player, but a familiar one. Shelley Fox, who played for KU last season, has rejoined FOX HAD quit this year to concentrate on a spring volleyball program. But that program was cancelled and Stanclift subsequently invited her to come out for the team again. the team and will be used as a utility infielder, Stanclift said. Although Fox was a part-time starter in the outfield for the Jawahrays in 1979, Standiff said she would be used in the offense. "Shelley will provide competition on our team, both in the infield and outfield. She pushes every day and she pushes STANCLFT SAID his lineup probably would not change from last week if Koleber's elow improved. "It was my decision to ask her to come back out," Stancill said. "Whether or not she steps on the field, she can contribute to this team with her attitude. It will only be a plus for us to have her back." Julie Slonegrass will play second. Jill Larson third and fourth, and John Berry Rose Hose Rider and either Koleber or Cos will be in the outfield. All four pitches, LaUann Stanwik, Marla Meskimen, Darla Johnson and Larson, should see action. Final free throws carry Virgina to NIT crown NEW YORK (AP) — Jeff Lamp hit four throws in the last 19 seconds last night and propelled Virginia to a $85 victory over Minnesota in the final of the NHL game. Minnesota Coach Jim Dutcher than called timeout. Minnesota inbounded the ball, but Virginia's Lee Raker steal a pass from Kevin McHale with 1:08 left. Trailing 53-52, Virginia put together a string of six free throws to regain the lead and hold off the Gophers in a frantic finale of the 4x4 NIT. Ralph Sampson, Virginia's 4 freshman center, hit two free throws to give the Cavaliers a 64-33 lead. Terry Gates of Virginia missed a free throw, but Sampson rebounded and Virginia controlled until McHale was forced to foul Lamp with just 19 seconds remaining. Lamp hit both free throws to make it 56-53, providing the eventual winning margin. Darryl Mitchell was the game's high scorer with 18 points for Minnesota, 21-11. Sampson, who scored 15 points for the 24-10 Cavaliers, was named Most Valuable Player of the tournament. Raker added 13. In the consolation game Edie Johnson scored 25 points and keyed a crucial second-half surge that lifted Illinois to a 84-74 victory over Nevada at Las Vegas. Nevada-Las Vegas finished 23-9. Michael Washington was the game's leading scorer, pumping in 30 for the Rebels. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES une two limeaux Three fours four six seven eight nine ten twelve Douce en fleur $2.25 $2.90 $3.60 $4.30 $5.10 $6.00 $7.00 $8.00 $9.00 $10.00 $11.00 $12.00 $13.00 $14.00 $15.00 $16.00 $17.00 $18.00 $19.00 $20.00 $21.00 $22.00 $23.00 $24.00 $25.00 $26.00 $27.00 $28.00 $29.00 $30.00 $31.00 $32.00 $33.00 $34.00 $35.00 $36.00 $37.00 $38.00 $39.00 $40.00 $41.00 $42.00 $43.00 $44.00 $45.00 $46.00 $47.00 $48.00 $49.00 $50.00 $51.00 $52.00 $53.00 $54.00 $55.00 $56.00 $57.00 $58.00 $59.00 $60.00 $61.00 $62.00 $63.00 $64.00 $65.00 $66.00 $67.00 $68.00 $69.00 $70.00 $71.00 $72.00 $73.00 $74.00 $75.00 $76.00 $77.00 $78.00 $79.00 $80.00 $81.00 $82.00 $83.00 $84.00 $85.00 $86.00 $87.00 $88.00 $89.00 $90.00 $91.00 $92.00 $93.00 $94.00 $95.00 $96.00 $97.00 $98.00 $99.00 $100.00 $101.00 $102.00 $103.00 $104.00 $105.00 $106.00 $107.00 $108.00 $109.00 $110.00 $111.00 $112.00 $113.00 $114.00 $115.00 $116.00 $117.00 $118.00 $119.00 $120.00 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$1662.00 $1663.00 $1664.00 $1665.00 $1666.00 $1667.00 $1668.00 $1669.00 $1670.00 $1671.00 $1672 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. ERRORS The Kanas 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 or charged for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in愈多 or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 843-458. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4258 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for truck parked at 9th and Illinois Street. Watch the Doorway. Sell Fresh Fruits and Vegetables at The Holiday-Wall. Sell Fresh Fruits and Vegetables in the Shell. Fifteen varieties of dry peaches and cherries on Sunday. Also selling wooden Sundays. DINNER & SHOW 5pm Sunday, March 23, 1980 THAI ASSOCIATION PRESENTS THAI NIGHT EXHIBITION Thai Art & Handicrafts March 23 - 25: Free to Publie B big Room, Kansas University Tickets $4.00 at SUA of Call 864-3747. 864-6530. 841-5028. 843-8286 Thai Foods, Classical Fok Dance, Fashion Sword fighting etc. in the Kansas Union Dinner/ Caterney Woods, Woolworth Auditorium Inter Fraternity Council will sponsor **SPRING** **FORMAL RUSHI** March 21, 22, & 23 for baccalaureum campus. Contact IFC Office at 864-3559. FOR RENT Rosalea's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 76058 4-4 A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-5679 or 842-1815. tf New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 863-3579. tf Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 943-9579 or 942-4183. tf NAIMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8599 any time of the day. tf COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperated located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 982-9421. tf Jayhawk West Apts. New Renting 1 & 2床 furnished and unfurnished to $185. For Appointment call 842-6443 or eat at 824 Floor Next door to Russell's Bldg. Tf Office space for rent now at the area 1 building 9231; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 8241-0345 or 8037-fft. **REWARD:** $0.00 if you can turn on to a small house in house to rent to May or June *$4.00* at home, $8.00 at home. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky Ave. located between 26th and 27th on Kentucky Ave. per month. Harbour Place offers a bedroom for $390 per month. Wynn Place offers a appliance, window overview, freestorage, fireplace, kitchenette, laundry, and bath. price: $31 bath: $845-455 or $841-525 cabinet: $1,845-455 or $1,841-525 Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5600. TF CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & simmerly. Apply now. Call 842-583-6000 at 6:00 p.m. Apartment 1 bilk, from Union, 2 bedrooms. $255 Room 1 bilk, Contact Steve Rhidley 4-31-28 @ 83-31-14 LEASE NOW FOR FALL AS SPECIAL HAPPY Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tt SUMMER SUBLASE: 2 br. furnished apt. 1 bk. from campus. Call now. 842-9737. 3-25 Otis camp. 2 BR apartments furnished of un- furnished homes. Hawley Town. 1603 W. 15, 85-9002. 2 Bedroom un furnished apt. Mk I Appt 1, 1085 Mif for summer sunrises, also available for a year's lease in Aug. Landry, D.C., DW, balcony. Call 814-6424 3-26 Room—large, semifurious, private frig., and stove. All valves paid, 13th and Mass $105/mm². Summer sublease 3 bedroom, 2 stores. 1 block from stadium. Call 841-7890. 3-25 Mark & I II am, NOW RENTING FOR SUMMER Mark & I II am, NOW RENTING FOR SUMMER 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, 7 m walk to, back balcony, off street parking, dbwbashe, balcony, off street parking, dwbbashe, durg rent for info. 842-9033 in 8151 Midwest Area for info. 842-9033 in 8151 Midwest ARE YOU FED UP WITH THE HIGH COST OF housing? You can be found at an affordable price, housing can be found at an affordable price, with water & gas 9.99 cents a cubic foot, with water & gas 8.99 cents a cubic foot, school B48-510 to determine your cost. school B48-510 to determine your cost. Two-year-old two-story house 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, room with kitchen, bathroom with all appliances, laundry room and garden in General Electric. Utilities available on or after April 15th. $799.00/month. A Summer. sublease. 2 Br. Trailridge Townhouse docs. from pool,队电话;842-1436- 3-26 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialties Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-960-3900. 900 W. 6th. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make use of these study guides to use them - 1) At study guide, 2) For class analysis, 3) For analysis of Western Civilization available now Town Crier, Male Books店 and Oread Books店. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 848-188F New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat, fabric, mattress. Lendon Furniture. 1209 New York 841-832-2286. Lendon Furniture. 1209 New York 841-832-2286. SunSpees—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- prescription only. Hue selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5700. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Rickie Bksike Sale. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. tf P.A. Speakers. Four Mitchell model MLT-3 (a- toll for Bose 801). Over 100 Watt each. Excellent power stereo, unamid band P.A., elec. Heavy-duty band, unamid band P.A., excellent for best or offer bole. 842-1162. 15 Speed Miyata gran-touring bicycle. Features: - 24-inch wheels - front and rear touring packs, trailers - front and rear touring packs, trailers - terribile footwear and cable shoes, deckleys, - footwear and cable shoes, deckleys, - bike sell for $250 or best offer Call Kevin Sanders at (212) 836-9272 1977 Dakum 260Z in excellent condition inside and out. AM-FM stereo cassette, new tires. Autumn Brown color. Call Steve 833-5270. 3-27 HELP WANTED Incoming Medical Students: Don't be a fool like I was and insist on a new microphone. Mike is in mind condition and pitted to call. Call Richard Christy at 362-8280 for K.C. EW moments. 3-25 On standby 2 brown bags, Call and Identify contents at 6 p.m. 841-5651 3-21 Initial inbox on Naimah Drive. Call 841-6874 to identify and claim. Bivec: Airplane Aerospace GP, 1 year-old. Best offer: extensive classical collection record. Football Table in good condition with coin mech. $300 841-7870 3-25 TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES ORDERS! Will you share your work experience with Oral care customer groups? Kaitlin for Imaging and help input on nursing home conditions and residents. All names and correspondence will be between nine and five or write in, KINZ #1927 (between nine and five or write in, KINZ #1927). 1975 Honda 125 street bike. Excellent condition, with helmet, $400 or best offer. 843-8735. 3-21 1974 Ford Maverick, basic transportation at a car can afford, call Jim from 3-260- 814-4755. CRUSHISSIONS SAILING WEEKEND EXPEDITIONS SAILING EXPLORATIONS SAILING WEEKEND EXPEDITIONS NATIONWIDE WEEKEND WEEKEND SEND 450 ft APPICATION INFO. REFERRALS to APPICATION INFO. BOX 6021. Saratamur 328-7811 Now taking applications for door/floor and wait- ing room facilities, 14F, 14H, 14W. 7h after 8:00 a.m. Ask for K524. Navy blue women's size 9 Nordica ski boot $20 841-8311 after 5.00. 3-25 COMPUTER SERVICE AGENCY needs Computer Programmer to perform all duties of application support and Data Communication techniques. Req. be a graduate degree in Comp Sci or a related field. Offer is for 2017. LA AAG 422-622-9388. Office: 2017, LA AAG 422-622-9388. Brand new, never used Rover 40cn citizen Band Radio. Base/mobile. RF/MIC/Gain. RF/Power Meter. L.E.D. Indicators. Reg. $180, only $15. - 343-645-Mare $9 FOUND Biology major to teach elementary children first week of summer. Montessori Plus School, Topela, 3-21 225-5185 or 692-1362 BRECOME A MONTESSO TRACHER! Summer classes begin June 2 Call or write Montesso P弘 School, 157 Western, Topeka, Ks. 6604-323-5185, 862-1826, or 842-6853. Gold bracelet. Call 842-8253 by 5:00 p.m. tf Found at 1st and 3rd, white silver class with blue stone from Mountain High School. Call 842-8253 at 3:21 aft at 6:00 p.m. hqt 842-3214. Video Games Cartridge Exchange needs campus and local representatives. No selling, no experience required. Write: Video, Box 27348, Mpls. MN 54472. 3-21 Position open-residential facility for developmentally disabled adults is seeking the fulltime position in the Human Services area is required. Resume should be forward to MUCD, Box 68, McKinney, Kentucky 74095. Position open-small community facility serving the developmentally disabled is seeking the full-time services of a licensed social worker. Require Bachelor's degree or equivalent to MCDS, BGS, Kansas, KAES. 6-37 COMPUTER SERVICES AGENCY needs KEYS for FOOD SYSTEMS, REPAIRS, DATA IMS. 112 Data Recovery Office also includes operation of each unit record equip., some data access equip., and some data recovery offices. Adm. Center, 2017 La. L4-8222-E02E Summer Pain Crew. Approx. 12 positions available. Minimum age. 18. Personnel will begin work May 27. Appt at Personnel Office. Adm. Center, 2017 La. 842-6226 EOE Help wanted. $20.50 per week. Write: RAN. PO Box 85-K, Bailinw, M0 6301. RAN- 3-20 Free Lance: Photographer is interviewing female subjects for photog projects. Experience and photo height but not necessary. Paid by session ref. required. Write P.O. Box 3015, Brayton, Kenton 60441. Families with well-adjusted adolescent boys to participate in brief research. Family members will be paid for their participation. For more information call Brian or Carla at 864-338-3-27 GIFS Show Manager, Museum of National History and Culture, Philadelphia; bookkeeper, banking skills, ability to manage accounts and receivables preferred. Ned to be enrolled in at least one course offered. Call: 412-685-1611; call Mary Ann Munger 845-1611. Day care needed for five monthly twins every week and every other Thursday 8-4 p.m. 5-21 842-886-88 THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER is located at 300 W. 17th St., New York, NY 10024, and the position starts April 19, 1989, and a pool of applicants will be available until September 15 in 105 Strong Hall. Dealations is 5 % on March 1, 1989. The University is an Artist Opportunity, Affirmative Action, and Disability Support Center. Part-time cashiers for evening shifts and weekends. Also need one person for noon hours. Apply in person. Henry's Restaurant, 6th and Missouri* 3-26 NORWEST KANSAS AREA HEALTH EDUCATION ACRE PROGRAM - The University of Kansas is the Health Education Center (AHEC) program, designed for administering programs, personnel and services to county residents in northeast Kansas serve a county center region in northwest Kansas work closely with health care professionals at the University of Kansas as the Gearing AHEC Program at the University of Kansas to educate educational outreach programs in its community about health care or health administration, health care or health administration, health care or health administration, request for information to Program Director, health care or health administration ACTING COORDINATOR UNIVERSITY INFORMATION MANAGER May 1, 2015, and ending December 16, 2015. Req. bachelor's degree in humanities or law and minimum two years of experience. Justify the request. Represents the office of the office and its task of providing professional and personal assistance services to the University and its employees. Demonstrate a strong understanding of other university community agencies and with other government, the management of the Campus Information System, and the training and supervision of the staff. Requires a Master's degree, graduate Preferred qualifications: knowledge of the Design Principles of Computer Science and the training and supervision of the staff. Qualified requirements: Master's degree, graduate Preferred qualifications: knowledge of the Design Principles of Computer Science and the training and supervision of the staff. Qualified requirements: Master's degree, graduate Preferred qualifications: knowledge of the Design Principles of Computer Science and the training and supervision of the staff. Sanctuary Catering needs part-time help. Apply in person at the Sanctuary. 3-21 LOST LONT YOUR CONCENTRATION? YOUR DRIVE TO GO TO SCHOOL? YOU'RE GOING TO GO TO STUDYING? Come to our Reading, Note Taking, and Testing Site, March 15-16 at the Student Assistance Center or by the Student Assistance Center. DAY CARE-STAFF needed for before after assistance. Applicants should have experience working with children, including providing training to Lawyers Excused Dog Program. Employer requires employment of a licensed, must be employed by a law firm. Excused Dog Program is based on the position offered. NOTICE Lotus puppy, Female, Golden Retriver with wire-like hair, has paws white and paw bite on cheek, and is 8 week old Lost around Robinson if found. If Found call 3-24-3-24 for Kupake Rewarding summer experience in the Colorado mountains for sophomore or junior students studying history and geography, backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife photography, archery, mountain biking, golf, graphite internships, Western Campions, Flatirons golf, and more. THE DAM RUN Sat, March 29th at 10:00 a.m. 6.5 and 13 mile race Additional Info.-208 Robinson Recreation Services, 864-3546 KU Friftee Club meeting Wednesday, March 26, 1980, 4:30 p.m. 205 Robinson, Flims on World Friftee Championships will be shown. Discussion follows. 3-25 PERSONAL VOYAGERS—Fellowship—Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 32nd, Sunday, 9:30 a.m., 845-417-11. Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tf FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--apos;s up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment 2801 St. Overland Park, KS. 4801 St. Overland Park, KS. The Harbour Lining is where it's at for cold beer, pool, pinhall and unique latters. Color TV and stereo for when the Hawkies are away. You can watch the Hawkies on the Harbour Lining in 1033 Mass. A first-class class diving GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through Head- quarters, 813-245 and KU info. 864-356-106. INTERESTED IN FRATERNITIES? Participate in men's spring formal rush. March 21, 22-23. To register, contact Inter-Fraternity Council Office at 864-3559. 3-21 Burkard Awards Weeks—a new tradition. Lunar- entries for airplane paper airplane flying, Othello and war (with cards) tournaments. Call 843-6450 for info. It's all on the week of March 24 ALL YOU CAN EAT, Holcom Sports Complex, & women finish of the both Bills TPI-American Miami Dolphins and Seahawks and seek pop will he served. Traders are happy to have game plays. Game plays frm 6-2010. Contact Jhon- 843-2000. The corps is coming! 3-21 Dalley 842-2091 for Copy Odyssey 4.5 Encore! Encore! PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843- 4821. 4-10 Headquarters is a community of people willing to want to take, call or drop by. We can help with what you need for training, relationship problems, other personal or professional talk about. We can also help you get in contact with us or drop by 1696 Massage. We电话 811-2543 or drop by 1696 Massage. We are United, United Dg. Co., and private data center. Q. What is Gay Services of Kansas Speaker's Bureau? A The Speaker's Bureau consists of 2 women who speak English and speak French, and they right lead a question-and-answer session, and gay rights lead an question-and-answer session. The Speaker's Bureau has spoken to inpatient and outpatient psychiatric care, medical Centers, and clan chapels on the Medical Center and other sites available at no charge, except traveling expenses. Organization, class, or instructor who requests Need powerful rock vocalists to join established instrumental band. Call 727-7738 3-25 This information sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas, 864-3091. 3-20 Being a woman does not mean to be in helpless. Practical Personal self-defense under experienced male instructor $25 for women 41-81-7603. Sponsored by the Gung Pu Club. TENNIS PLAYERS: Spring and warm weather in tennis season is here. Get your requests in motion with the Tennis Stingers And stringer Stingers And stringer K. Variety. Very reasonable rate on good 4-3 grips. SKI WINTER PARK MARY JANE EASTER PARK MARY JANE EASTER SKIP TRIPS SKIP TRIPS INCLUDES: 1 full days group transportation, and limited accident inter- mission group transportation, and limited accident intermission. Skip trips at Bittencourt, 85-655 Meat and vegetable. PACHO: I didn't party at all. We came close, I'd rather listen to "Give it all you got," any day. I miss you very much Guapito. Love your little failure. 3-20 C-collar EASTER with ANTA singing telegrams. Baskets delivered daily. 842-8741. 4-4 Would the girl who found my license in Ft. Laundriel please return it. Call M82-1490-6268. FREE: Workshop on Time Management, Text Book READING, Note Taking and Testing, Sat. 22, 9 to 10:00 AM Book Reading, Note Taking and Testing, Attendance Assistance Center, 121 Strontham For more information, 3-21 --to run: Monday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Saturday 5 pm Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm NEED CASH? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR CALL NOW! GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS, WEDDING BANDS, WATCHES . . . 842-9737 or 841-7476 --to run: Monday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Saturday 5 pm Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm Juniores: Mortar Board applications now available in 220 Strong. We'd like you to apply! Due by Tuesday 3/25 3-25 Jamie! I told you I wasn't going to be out-done! Here's your own personalized Birthday Greeting: Happy 19th birthday from my big brother! Your day is filled with sunshine. Philh. 3-20 The first time I ate at My Brother's Mountaine, the food was bad. I gave them another try and what a difference! They've got new management now and it's excellent! 3-21 TGIF FOR JOHN ANDERSON SUPPORTERS March 21 from 2:30-4:00 p.m. at The Entertainment. All you can drink for $3! All proceeds go to Anderson Campaign. 3-21 **TOFU-1** A traditional East Asian soybean food—1. increasing in popularity as a high-cost, high-producing crop. BG 146 BC 2. Hook Rock in Hell, increasing in population. BG 137 BC 2. at Off-the-Wall Hall, Saturday 22, at Off-the-Wall Hall SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH 000-102 call 8758. MATH 115-751 call 8742. STATISTICS 960-102 call 8758. STATISTICS 100-102 call 8758. PHYSICS 100-500 call 8758. ENGLISH & SPANISH 8743-707. ENGLISH tf PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 Madison Tired of paying high cost for good quality clothes and alterations? Excellent spaessurance will sow for men or women. Reasonable prices. For information call 811-2908 after 4 and weeks. EXPERIENCED HOUSEPAINTERS now making bids. For free estimate, call Daniel Born at 841-2980 or 864-5353. 3-21 IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES Professional Tutoring: Math 000-115. 864-2375. 3:28 TYPING Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Electronic, Call Donna, 842-2744. tf Professional Wedding Photography specimen in color photos & enlargements from $60-$250 (913) 884-5160. 3-46 Why cusms about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Gramer, 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. t MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3287. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE 841-4590. TP Experienced typetrunk, dieocrony, documentation papers, nurse, IBM correcting selecticarb. After 5 min. 842-310. Bf (f) I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4176. Tepy Editor, IBM Plex Pro. Quality work, reasonable rates. Threes. dispositions welcome; layouts. Callout 842-9127. TP Experienced Typist—term papers, thesis, mike, thesis writing, spelling, spelled correcting, 843-9544. Ms. Wright Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Electronic Quality work. References available. Sandy,eyes & weekends. 748-918. if Experienced Typist -manuscript, papers, theses, books. Send resume to experience.hbm Corresponding Selectite 811-4328 Dial 842-2001 for a typing Odyssey. Ellen Jeannau. 841-2172. 5-5 Dial #1 2001, for a Japanese Odyssey. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal form, graphics, editing, Self-correcting solicitr. Call Ellen Jeanann. 841-2172. 5-5 Word processing exclusively at Encore-Copy Corps, 842-250, 121 and Iowa. 4-3 WANTED Used a tystap for mid-term papers. Avoid the last application an app with a pro Linda: 824-7650 after 3-12. ROOMMATES. Naismith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 813-8599 any time of the day, if Female roommates, age 23-30, trailer house, $100 1'/2 utilities, private room, washer, dryer, washer, 842-5599 4-1/2 PSYCHIATRIC ADES AND HEALTH SERVICE applies to Peggy Hamilton, Job Service Center, W2. 510 W. Topkaka, KS. Phone: (912) 368-5830. applies to Peggy Hamilton, Job Service Center, W2. 510 W. Topkaka, KS. Phone: (912) 368-5830. employer. Intramural Officers' Batch. Extra cash extra this term. If interceded you 864-351-6 and ask for Ron or Mike. Or stop by 208 Robinson, Recreation Services. 3-21 WANTED TO RENT Journalism graduate student needs 3 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms or apartments for children. Please contact us with children have 3 children but no pets. Require plenty of room and a primary elementary school. 3-27 1-682-6722 Roommat=For 3 bedroom townhouse at Park 25 Apts. Bus route: 104.50 plus 1/3 utilities 841- 3-25 Wanted: VW's, running or not. Call 841-506 or 842-4029 3-19 Dating partner for a summer-long float trip down the Missouri River: Montana to K.C. Kevin 842-32983 Female roommate to share Japhawk Towers apartment with three dams cool ladies for fall 1980 semester. Call 864-6701. 3-25 Participants in Workshop Toptops covered Tn. 184. Tn. 205. Tn. 307. Tn. 309. Testing, TSA, March. 22, March 6, 900-1000 Room room 300. Call 864-6644 or come by the Student Assistant Chair. 121 Strong Room 121. Call 864-6644. LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Costco to have to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write ad here: ___ RATES: 15 words or less 1 time $2.25 .02 3 times $2.75 .04 ➢ additional words 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 .03 .04 .05 .06 to CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 DATES TO RUN: NAME: __ ADDRESS: __ PHONE: __ KANSAM CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD 12 Thursday, March 20.1980 University Daily Kansan 二 Youngest tennis coach fills void By JIM SMALI Sports Writer Sports Writer What a difference a year can make. It was just 12 months ago that KU senior Mark Hosking bill Bed Gillow of Colorado to capture the Bie Eight singles tennis title. What a difference a year can make Today Mark Hosking is still at KU, only in a slightly different capacity. He is the youngest collegiate head tennis coach in the nation. "IT IS A good feeling when we beat a team that has an old coach," said the 23-year Hosking. "But all in all, I don't think too much about the age thing." Hosking took over the reins as head coach in January, succeeding Bill McGowan. McGowan, a Kansas City area pro, rescinded a verbal agreement a week after he joined Tom Kivisto as coach and Tom Kivisto. Kivisto left last semester to work a job with a Winnipeg oil company. "The whole thing actually started last summer when Tom asked me to be a manager for the company I accepted, even though I took a big cut in salary from what I was getting at Barryhawk room." "After Tom quit and Bill McGowan was hurt, and then resigned, the team was in deep trouble," said Marcum (athletic director) and said, "You need a coach and I want the job." Marcum "I was hired strictly on an interim basis. Our agreement states that my services are no longer needed on May 31." HOSKING HAD some troubles as an assistant coach. He said he was not close to Kivisto. "He never taught me the ropes of being a tennis coach," he said. "In fact, he very One incident particularly angered Hosking. He said Kivison neglected to tell the athletic department that he had an assistant coach, rarely communicated with me or the rest of the team." "I had applied for the head job at the same time that McGowan did, but after Tom凯 never heard a thing from the athlete. I told him to go back and Howlett (assistant athletic director) about it and she said that they didn't even know that I was the assistant coach of the team. AFTER HOSKING was told of the oversight he was promised by the athletic department to be taken on as a graduate student. The head coach his tuition his tuition while increasing his salary. "But the time for enrolling was getting nearer and they hadn't followed on Golfers lose ground at tourney Unpredictable weather haunted the COU men's golf team yesterday in the Gulf Coast intercollegiate Golf Tournament at Padre Island, Texas. anything," he said. "Finally enrollment day came and I had to pay the tuition myself. That was the last straw. Monday's bowling winds and cold temperatures suited the team fine as it took a one-stroke lead after the first 18 holes. But yesterday's daily, 70-degree weather made the Padre Isles Country Club play too easy. Five of its six golfers improved or lost at the fairway to the team in second place, six strokes behind Southwest Oklahoma University. By KEVIN BERTELS KU 11 cut strikes off Monday's team total of 307 for a 692 total after two rounds. But Southwest Oklahoma was blistering the game for a 584, four-over, and a pear, 584 REVINBERTH Sports Writer "I was already upset about the fact that from the time Tom quit, I had all the responsibilities of a head coach without the ability to be a coach," being a head coach, "I so decided to quit." In third place was Southern Illinois—Edwardsville with 292 for a 608 total. Wisconsin at 621 and Southwest Missouri State at 623 were fourth and fifth. After Monday's round, Mark Crow tied for the individual lead. But he dropped to sixth yesterday at 77. Moving into a tie for the top spot was KUU's Mark Steiner, who for a lot of the time and a share of first place with Matt Monroe of Southwest Oklahoma. Steiner wasn't KU's top scorer in yesterday's round, however. D.R. Sensen celebrated his birthday with an even 71; chipping 13 strokes off first-round score. Two scores of 76, by Doug Anderson and Willie McGee, were too good to cause. Anderson's total of 52 put him in. medal range in a tie for 10th place, Chris Colliate's 78, along with Crow's 77, didn't count in the team total. \ KU coach Ross Randall credited the low scores to the weather. However, Hosking's resignation was short-lived. A week later he was convinced by his close friend, McGowan, who had been appointed to return to the team as an assistant coach. "The course played much easier and the scores showed it," he said. "Our guys show the effects of not practicing enough." The student's driving and shame had trouble驾驶." The rest of the team scoring showed some wide discrepancies. Coffeeville, Kan., Community College学员,Garbendale and Carbondale at 629. After an 18-stroke gap was Sulles University at 847, Drake at 844, Park University at 839, Duncan at 801, Grinnell was further even back at 750. Olympic memories linger with Wallace Sports Writer Heidi Wallace, a member of the Olympic torch relay team for the Lake Pacaid Winter Olympics, has returned full of memories and experiences to last a lifetime. By KELLY MCCARTHY Wallace, a graduate student from Tonganoxie, reflected on those memories recently. "It was really more than anything I had expected. People were so emotionally moved by the relay that they would break Bless America chorus and often tears." "I thought the torch relay was a huge success," she said. "There was a great spirit of good will and the weather wasn't too bad." WALLACE WAS PART of a 82-member team that took the Olympic tarch from Yorktown, Va., to Lake Placid. The journey was over 1,000 miles. Besides helping to carry the torch, Wallace also was present at nightly award ceremonies and many of the Olympic events. "It was very exciting when Eric Hiden received his fourth and fifth gold medals," she said. "And, I was only standing two people away. "He seemed to take it all well, but toward the end, he had a lot of guards around him and couldn't stay too long after the award ceremonies." SHORTLY THEREAFTER, McGowan quit and the job was given to Hosking. THE TORCHBEAERS, representing every state, the District of Columbia and Louisiana, where she took her first events. She saw each of the different events at least once. She was there to witness one of her performances. Politics, she said, were a part of the Games. She said the crowd did not verbally abuse the Soviet athletes. "There were only snile comments about the Russians from individuals," she said. "But these few were quickly booed by the rest of the crowd." The trading of pins was a big pastime in the 18th century. In the states and countries present, wearing a KU Jayhawk pin, she had an unusual meeting when traveling down Lake Pike's main street. "I met these two guys who saw my pin and stopped me," she said. "They said they had hitchhiked all the way from Lawn Park, and I chucked back into a kicking chunk of the creek he returned to KK. "I couldn't believe that out of all the neeole there. I met them on that one day." ONE OF THE funnest times she experienced was in Albany, N.Y., Wallace said. They had heard of around 609 nurses who were completing their final tests and were IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MASS. 9:30-8:00 M-S Thurs. till 8:30 p.m. "They were quite surprised as we ran with two lt torches through the room and went back to the dressing room, pretty funny to see their reactions. Spontaneously played an important role in our training." unable to watch the torch pass by. Wallace and the rest decided to take the torch to them. THE EXPERIENCE was very tiring吗, Wallace said, as most bearers caught only two to three hours sleep and were always late. He wished to duties, even after reaching Lake Placid. It's the foundation of our fraternity. It doesn't include hazing.Brotherhood includes teaching the new member (and future brother) how to be a good brother, not how to be a good PLEDGE. BROTHERHOOD leave your name. Our recruitment staff will return your call. Find out why we're called the "Fraternity of Honest Friendship" Lambda Chi Alpha has brotherhood for you. Check as out! Visit us at 1918 Stewart Ave. СИГА СТАЛЬНИК ОТЕЧЕСТВИЙ СИГА СТАЛЬНИК ОТЕЧЕСТВИЙ SVV SVV or call 842-9577 and J WIN 249 SONY'S AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! "I really got the job because no one else wanted it, he said. "But so far I think that I have done a good job. I have had some problems, though." One of the more blatant problems was his relationship with the women's tennis team. "All we got along very well," he said. "We are friends. But the thing that I have been around male tennis players of all my life, we have their philosophies and strategies pretty well." "But I hadn't been around girls too much. I tried to teach them and treat them the hard way. But after I found out very quickly that it wouldn't work. I first be the one to admit that my lack of knowledge about them lost a few matches. But now, I think I have finally figured them out." BECAUSE HE TOOK the job on an interim basis, Hasking will be back next year. Instead, he will take over as head tennis pro at Kansas City Country Club. THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD! COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5781 Coal Miner's Daughter P Starting Sissy Spacex Eve 7,15 and 9,30 sat. and Sun.mat. 2:30 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. Chapter Two 2. Cruising Starring Martha Mason and James Caan Eve. 7:15 and 9:45 Sat and Sun.mat.2:0 Eve 7.45 and 9.50 Sat, and Sun, mat. 2/3 3. Kramer vs. Kramer Starming Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep Eve 7:30 and 9:40 Sat. and Sun, mat 2:11 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. All That Jazz Starting Roy Schneider Eve. 7:30 and 9:40 Sat and Sun mat 1:3 2. La Cage Aux Folles Eve 7:40 and 9:30 Sat. and Sun. mat 1:4 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Hero At Large Staring John Ritter Eve 7:30 and 9:30 Sat and Sun Mat 2:01 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 Three Day Jeans Sale (Do Every pair of jeans in stock on sale! Today, Friday and Saturday only. Savings up to $10.00. Originally $21.00 to $30.00 Now only $13.99 to $19.99 842-3963 (Does not include Calvin Klein and baggies) THE ATTIC 927 Mass. Swim hopes high in Vegas The 1984 AIAA Swimming and Diving Championships began in Las Vegas yesterday with eight EKL women's swimming teams competing in 17 events. At last year's meet, KU placed 27th in a 70 team field, but Coach Gary Kempf did he thought the team could place in the ten 20 this year. If KU does place high, junior Janet Lindstrom will probably be instrumental. The only Jayhawk to place in last year's national meet, she finished third in the 200-yard freestyle and 12th in the 100 freestyle. But Lindstrom did not qualify in those two events this year. Instead she'll try the 500 and 1,500 freestyles. CARE OF YOUR SELF Headlines from headmasters 809 VERMONT • 843-8808 MAKE-UP TIPS FOR SPRING 1. Apply moisturizer to damp skin and wait 5 minutes before applying foundation. This allows the moisturizer to penetrate and protect your skin's richness and your foundation will stay on longer. 2. To apply blusher properly, pick your cheeks and apply the blush to them in the hollow, blending awards and strokes toward the middle. 3. To define the shape of your lips and prevent lipstick from *bleeding* use a lipliner pencil slightly darker than your lipstick shade to outline the mouth with a brush for far-lasting smooth results. To add depth and dimension to your eyes, use a camera with an ocular lens that captures ocean with a light shade (yellow peach) on the bottom and a dark shade (black peach) on the top. 5. Blend and smooth all your make-up with a facial sponge for long lasting, streak-free results. When was the last time you really tried a new look or technique with your make-up? If you'd like to experiment, but you don't know how, or you're a beginner, you should help you in your current routine, we'd like to help you. SKIN CARE AND MAKE-UP CLASS The 2-Class Session will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday, August 14. Mail enrollal call Coshin Cashin at Headquarters, 843-8080. Headmasters is offering a special, limited-enrollment 1 709 جواب SILVER STADIUM NOROOZ, IRANIAN NEW YEAR CELEBRATION March 22nd, 1980 9:30 P.M. ( ) عَرَضَ الْعُمِّرَةُ مَا تَحْدُّثَهُ بِالْفُوْلِدِيَّةِ ( ) 1204 OREAD AVE E.C.M. BUILDING : 1204 LAWRENCE, KANSAS T < 0 اول UNION الأولى من برنامجها اولین کدام سایت از اینترنتی است؟ سلاح اولی که کوئریه مدار شبیه به فعلت سمت فار. ۱۳ مرتبه ای شامل Iranian Dinner Choir Movie: King in New York Charlie Chaplin Gallup derides electoral process, calls for reform By TOM TEDESCHI Staff Renorter Calling it "campaigning by bribery," public opinion analyst George Gallup last night fired a multitude of cynical barbs at the U.S. electoral system. Gallup spoke to about 400 students and faculty in the Kansas Union on "Overdue Changes in Our Electoral System," the second presentation of the University lecture series. "The approaches we follow . . . are, in my opinion, responsible for the very low esteem the American people hold for politicians," he said. "Our present system of funding campaigns is, in fact, a system of bribery. "The time has come to take a completely new look at the electoral processes which have grown up in this "We have our candidates for president running around from state to state, from city to city, shaking the hand of everyone in sight. They feel they must meet each time they step . . . no matter how ill-conceived." This only serves, he said, to lower the campaign trail "to the level of professional wrestling." ONE OF THE main factors in the decay of the electrical system is the emergence of special interest phenomena. "I think most of the people I know in politics today are concerned with these one-issue groups. Out of lack of interest and concern, we have affirmed the development of campaigning by bribery," he said. "All of these pressure groups bribe candidates with election returns in return for favors," he said. Galilei cited a story in the Wall Street Journal that reported that the mayor of East St. Louis, II., had been selected by the Clinton administration to President Jimmy Carter in exchange for support in his election campaign. The project had been stalled for years. Because of such practices, taxapers are, by his estimation, forced to pay about 25 percent more taxes than the standard rate. THE REMEDY for this, Gallup said, is restructuring the campaign finance system to have all Gallup said polls showed that the public supported this and has supported it for some time. political candidates totally supported by the government. To prevent the further ballooning of special inter-iews, the U.S. should increase on candidates running for office, he said. He is similar to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, which prohibits U.S. businesses from contributing to foreign corruption. "Now its a felony to give money to political candidates in other nations; certainly it should be in this nation. This, of course, means the federal government must sell the sole provider of money to run for office," he said. IN ADDITION, Gallup said, the long string of state primary elections should be eliminated in favor of a nationwide one-day primary. This also is favored by the public, he said, and has been for the past 30 years. "After each presidential election we (the Gallup organization) would ask voters whether they would support him." The overwhelming response was ves. and the biggest complaint was that they were too long, he said. As for campaigning, Gallup said, each candidate would be guaranteed time on television to address issues. "Each candidate would be given six hours of prime television time, canceling all other programs at that time. Each candidate would have a chance to develop his views," he said. ANOTHER CHANGE in the electoral system would end multiplying the presidency and limiting the powers of Congress. Far too often elected officials make declarations with an eye to the effects they would have on voters. "Every piece of information must go through this filter, regardless of the consequences," Gallup said. The president would be restricted to one six-year term. "Rather interestingly, I think, both President Trump and President Nixon have supported this reform," he said. Gallup also advocated restructuring the party system and the creation of a "center party." "As one wave has noted, we have a one and one-half equal strength, we have a good government, but that hasn't happened for a long time. As of the present time only 22 percent identify themselves as Democrats." "In the States, as in Great Britain, we have found much sentiment in favor of a center party. The center party would represent those who are middle of the road in their ideological alignment." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY This plan would eliminate the factions found in the present narties. he said. GALLUP ALSO advocated selecting presidential candidates by committees similar to the search committees often found in universities and businesses. "Harvard would not be satisfied to accept those people and neither should the people of the United States. KU occedure would end the election "free SELL GALLUP page 10 KANSAN Canadian lifestyle suits ex-Jayhawk Fridav. March 21, 1980 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas See story back page THE TUNNEL Tunnel trekking Two men arrested after robbery, chase By BILL VOGRIN and BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporters Kevin Wilcoxson, 13, escapes from the wind of the first day of spring by riding his bicycle through a concrete culvert near South Junior High School. A routine armed robbery of a Lawrence liquor store last night triggered a five-hour manhunt, highlighted by a high-speed chase and attack dogs to apprehend two suspects. One suspect was caught by police after the two men abandoned their car after it ran off the road. The other suspect escaped into an apartment but was captured at about 1 a.m. near Alta. Nine area law enforcement agencies joined in the search. Ronnie Edward Duncan, 26, 501 N. Lincoln, Olathe, Ohio; and John K. Olate, Olathe, Ohio; were arrested connection with the 7:30 p.m. robbery at Burns' Alarm in Cleveland, where they held bail in lieu of $25,000 bail. An undetermined amount of money was recovered by police, Ron Olin, assistant police chief, said at the scene of the search. The suspect's car then turned around and headed on west K-10 before it turned at Gauge Ranch Road, near Eudora, and proceeded to the intersection of Lords Ford LTD. slid into a ditch less than a mile The two suspects were spotted leaving Lawrence a few minutes after the robbery by a Lawrence police officer. The chase, which reached speeds of 90-miles-an-hour, started on 23rd Street and continued onto K-10. The Lawrence officer, assisted by K-10, was able to reach them on foot and followed it as it turned off at the Eudora exit of K-10. away at the intersection of old K-10 and Gage Ranch Road. One suspect was captured immediately as the other fled on foot. A police helicopter from Topeka and two attack dogs from Lenae were brought in to search the area for the second suspect. The police circled the immediate area, and performed a perimeter search of the field. The helicopter hovered overhead, shining a spotlight into the area, as the dogs were used in the field and squared cars blocked all roads into the area. Olin coordinated the effort from a command pin set up where the suspect vehicle left the road, and directed all the men from that point. As police were calling off the search, John County deputy sheriff晒救 Rodin that they had located the second suspect at the house. The deputies then arrested the suspect. A police source said the deputies were led to the residence because of a suspicion that the suspect had been involved in other robberies in the area. "The cooperation we received was excellent," Olin said. "Every agency we asked responded well and were a great help to us." Although the suspect evaded the police search, Olin commended the cooperation of the neighboring law enforcement agencies. Besides the Lawrence police and the KU officers, men from the Eudora, Topeka and Kearny schools, members of Highway Patrol and sheriff's deputies from Johnson County and Douglas County contributed to the search effort. The Kansas Department of investigation also was represented. ASK, Washburn conflict refueled after board vote By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Reporter The Associated Students of Kansas' strained relationship with management University may have been further shaken after an ASK board of directors Members of the ASK board of directors voted Friday to amend Washburn Student Senate's recently approved revision in member statutes. Dissatisfied with ASK representation, Washburn's Senate had voted to eliminate membership fees, but to continue to donate ASK executive office space. ASK's executive offices are in the Washburn Student Union. The Board voted to retain Washburn's membership due, but to collect them differently and to credit Washburn for the value of the loan. Kelly Bender, Washburn's newly elected Student Senate president, said she was surprised by the board's decision. "I'm a little shocked that they are not going to go along with the guidelines we set." Bender said. "Generally, our decision was a positive one." Craig Templeton, ASK board of directors chairman, said that the Craig hospital arrived at its office after careful deliberation and that the board had discussed the matter. BENDER SAID the issue probably would be discussed at the Senate's next meeting March 9% "I think we came up with a fair and equitable way to assess membership," said Templeton. "There was a question on how we were ever going to sell their membership payments to the senators back home—they'd think we were a welfare agent for Washburn. "We laid down a way for Washburn to play for their membership." WASHBURN WAS the only ASK member organization that paid membership dues by a flat rate. Washburn paid $22.00 a year. It will now asked to pay 25 cents for each full-time student each openset. one board assessed the value of the ASK executive office a $5 to $7 a square foot, totalling between $1,700 and $2,300. Washburn's Senate does not pay rent for ASK office, but the Union was funded by student fees. "We laid down a way for Washburn to pay for their membership." "We were writing a blank check by saying yes, give us the office space and we'll keep you as members," Templeton said. "Our decision was weighted only by our desire to have Washburn in the organization." Templeton said the Board was not concerned about the possibility of loss of the ASK office, but was motivated by a desire to keep the Board informed. See ASK page nine By SCOTT C. FAUST Fish feud fermenting Staff Reporter its survival of the fittest – the fittest fish that is—in the Kansas Legislature. A bill backed by a group of Hutchison sixth graders to make the channel cattail the state fish, approved 109-10 this week by the House, awaits Senate committee action, but the catfish faces a challenge from Kansas minnows, the Topeka shiner. The cause for the Topека shiner, or Notropia topea, is supported by a group of KU systematics and ecology graduate students who are sensitive to the catfish, or tetraclavatus. But Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Calif., said it would be possible of committee there was a possibility it would be amended on the floor to make the Topoika shiner, or even the bass or carp. The fish that finally gets the nod will join the buffalo, sunflower, bumblebee, meadowlark and cottonwood tree as state-designed plants and animals. DOYEN SAID that state fish legislation was "not all that earth shaking," but that the bill would receive Senate consideration and probably senate approval. In a Darwinian survival contest, the odds would apparently be on the punctatus, and such is the case in the Kansas Legislature. Principal Pat Lemmon of Rosewell School in Hutchinson, where the catfish bill originated, said her students were not ready to give up their fight. Lemonm said the students were prepared to go to Topeka to testify in the catfisher's favor, as they did for the House committee, and they were sending packets "I know the kids are really dedicated and they're really earnest," Lemmon said. "They think they have a chance. of catfish information to Doyen, minority and majority leaders, and other key senators. STATE REP. Dean Hinshaw, Hutchinson, who introduced the bill this year and also introduced it two years ago when it failed to get out council said. CATFISH the lobbying efforts of the children had a positive effect. - The fish is native to all major Kansas river systems. - The fish helps the environment, cleaning rivers and streams by eating dead fish, insects, crayfish and mollusks - A poll of nearly 500 Hutchinson residents showed popularity for the move - Student supporters of the catfish say the catfish should be made aquatic king in Kansas because: - The bill would promote the state catfish-raising industry. - The fish is the state's most commonly caught for fishermen. Figures from the Kansas Fish and Game Commission, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, all of all fish caught in the state are caught. - Having a state fish would promote Kansas tourism and end the perception that Kansas is without water, let alone fish. But Frank Cross, curator of fishes at the KU Museum of Natural History, whose students are backing the Teopika smith. disagreed with some of the procatfish claims. CROSS SAID that the catfish was common in all states, but the shiner was prevalent only in Kansas, and that nearly all fish were clean scavengers to some extent. "My students decided that if there was going to be a state fish designated," he said, "it would be kind of nice to have a fish that is more distinctive Kansan." The students have no legislation for the Topeka shiner, but have a letter to Doyen request he consider the fish as a delicacy. The letter was stained by 22 persons. CROSS SASID the Topope shiner, which was originally common across Kansas but became extinct in the latter half of the on threatened species list. The Topope shiner population began dropping sharply from 2013 to 2015. The Shiner is three inches long. It lives in stable, cool and clear pools and small streams. Cross said. He called the Shiner "a pretty little fish with bright red fins" and said it was more characteristic of the prairie than the catfish. He said it was named in 1800 after a Washburn University professor sent a specimen he had taken from the Shumanga-greek in Topeka to a specimen in Greece. CROSS DISASSOCIATED himself somewhat from the graduate students' efforts. "I don't know that it has any real significance to naming something the 'state,' he said. "It just means it's typical or representative that it belongs "I don't think the whole issue is important enough to be spending an inordinate amount of time on." Candidates to avoid state until just before election By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter Kansas' first presidential primary is only 11 days away and still only one major candidate has set foot in the state. Only Democratic candidate Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, who spoke at the Democratic Washington Day dinner in Topeka last month, has tried to woo the state's voters in person. But all three major Republican candidates have scheduled visits for next week. The primary is April 1. Ronald Reagan, the GOP favorite, will visit Wichita Sunday, where he is scheduled to speak at a campaign rally and Lamar J. Roberts at a closed p.l.m. luncheon. He will also speak at 2:30 p.m. at Wichita State University before leaving that afternoon for a food-dining dinner in Oklahoma City. Reagan will return to Kansas the following Sunday for a rally and fund-raiser at the Glenwood Manor Hotel in Overland Park, Kan. Anderson has also scheduled a fund-raising lunch at Topeka's Ramada Inn that day, and will attend a fund-riser in the Kansas City area. REP. JOHN B. Anderson of Illinois will visit Lawrence, Kansas to Topeka and Wichita during a two-day trip Wednesday and Friday. In Kansas City, he will attend a dinner at the Kansas City Bar Association in the Crown Center Hotel at 6:30 p.m., and a rally at the Riverside Civic Center. GEORGE BUSH, former ambassador to the United Nations and former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, is scheduled to visit the state next Saturday with stops planned in Topeka, Kansas City and Wichita. Bush will fly to Wichita Saturday for an afternoon rally and fundraiser. He'll travel to Topeka that night for a 6:30 p.m. fund-raiser at the Ramada Inn and scheduled to be in Kansas City, Kan., by 8:30 p.m., where he will be the keynote speaker at the College Republicans state convention at the Glenwood Manor Motel. Iowa Rep. Jim Leach, a former Bush aide, will campaign for Bush in Lawrence, McKenna, Manhattan and Salina today. He is scheduled to appear at a Bush rally in the Forum Room in the Kansas Union at 10:25 a.m. 2 Fridav. March 21. 1980 University Daily Kansan -UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Bush. Kennedy behind in East ALBANY, N.Y.—Even on the home turf of native Easterners Edward M. Kennedy and George Bush, the largest part of the biggest delegate total so far this year—in New York and Connecticut—is likely to go to President Carter and Ronald Reagan. A total of 338 delegates to the Democratic National Convention and 158 Republican convention delegates will be chosen in Tuesday's primaries. Hillman has been campaigning heavily in New York since before he lost the historic 1964 election, and has only primary victory in his home state. Carter has won seven primaries only Bush has campaigned almost constantly in Connecticut knowing that a severe loss in that state, where he was reared and his family was long active politically, would be regarded as the end of the road for his candidacy for the GOP nomination. Committee urges spending cuts WASHINGTON—The House Budget Committee, cutting spending even deeper than its chairman had recommended, proposed yesterday a 118th fiscal budget. The committee approved the proposed $611.8 billion budget on an 11-6 vote, with only liberal Democrats opposing the spending package. The proposed budget, which now goes to the full House, recommends a $1. billion cut in the military spending level proposed by President Carter. It also suggests an end to Saturday mail deliveries and other spending cuts totaling more than $16 billion. The committee's Republican minority joined with moderate Democrats to approve the spending package after the panel endorsed a GOP plan to use the $10.3 billion from Carter's import fee on gasoline for a "productivity" tax cut to encourage business investment. The panel went beyond the cuts recommended by its chairman, Rep. Robert N. Glaimo, D-Dem, in supporting elimination of all $200 million for government spending. Connallu wonders endorsement MANHATTAN—Former Texas Gov. John Connally said yesterday that his endorsement for president would soon be announced, but that whomever he selected will be the winner. Speaking at a Landon Lecture at Kansas State University, Connally said, "I haven't tended any once yet. I probably will do so within a few days." He then noted that the lecture was proposed by Connally also told reporters that new economic policies proposed by President Carter could force a depression if pursued. Connally said that the president's war on inflation was "woefully inadequate" and would not stem the tides of inflation. Carter has not actually reduced overall federal spending during the 1980-81 budgetary period, but has only rearranged the fixtures. Connally charged Carter's record will give Republicans an excellent chance to capture the Senate and improve their numbers in the House in the upcoming election, Commonly warned that if what he called weaknesses in American industrial, economic, military and energy positions were left unchanged, this nation's role would have been severely reduced. Senators study waste storage TOPEKA-A federal nuclear waste official yesterday told a Senate panel that the salt mine near Lyons were more than sufficient to safely store it. R. Dale Smith, chief of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's low-level waste branch, compared the salt mines, where waste could be buried a thousand feet underground, to the shallow land burial technique used by the only three low-level radioactive waste dumps currently operating in the country. At those dumps, low-level wastes are buried in 10-feet deep trenches and covered with dirt, he said. Rickano Corp. has filed an application with the state for permission to store low-level radiative industrial wastes in the salt mines. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee is considering a House-passed bill that would give lawmakers power over licenses for low-level waste dumps. Currently, the dumping of high-level radioactive waste is the responsibility of a federal agency and the state has no say about it. Smith assured the committee that if Rickano were granted a license, it could not later be changed to allow dumping of more dangerous, high-level water. Bill encourages methane use WASHINGTON—Running fleets of vehicles like cars or delivery trucks on liquid natural gas instead could save up to a million barrels of oil a day, and avoid accidents. But, Glickman, D-Kan., said, the value of LNG, or methane, in reduced oil consumption has been overlooked. He was joined by a dozen other congressmen in proposing legislation to encourage the development of methane as a vehicle fuel. our unit would provide $15 million in federal funds over a three-year period for research and development of methane for vehicle use, including work in the area of safety, and for partial financing of some 90 demonstration projects across the nation. American Gas Association President George Lawrence said that, compared to gasoline, liquid natural gas as a vehicle fuel has lower pollution levels, higher octane rating and double the miles-per-gallon, all at less than half the mileage that about $1,200 to convert a standard car to on液 natural gas, he said. Wichita 'poet' continues threats WICHITA-Police continued searching yesterday for a mysterious man called the "post" who has harassed and threatened a 49-year-old woman with stunner gas. KAKE television Wednesday received a letter for the second time this month from a man about whom police have sketchy details. A letter was mailed to the station two weeks ago and contained threats aimed at the woman, Ruth Finley, and two politicians, Capt. Mike Hill and Capt. Bernie Drowkeyt, who were arrested. The man described to be between 45 and 50 years old, has written more than 24 letters since the first of the year. Three letters have been mailed to the police department since the television station received its first one, Hill said. Finley's husband said neither he nor his wife wanted to discuss the case because they did not want the "poet" to know anything else about them. Krypton gas escapes from plant Yesterday's incident, which the Nuclear Regulatory Commission termed "very mindful" came hours after 590 angry area residents screamed curses at the officers. HARISBURG, Pa.-Operators of the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear plant suspect cleanup activities "kicked up" nuclear particles, causing the latest release of a small amount of radioactive gas over the Pennsylvania countryside. "It represents no potential hazard to the off-site population," John Collins, the senior NRC official at Three Mile Island, assured resident of the latest report. Metropolitan-Edison Co. spokesman David Klusick said technicians suspected cleanup activities inside the crippled reactor's auxiliary building were to blame for the release, which began at 1 a.m. yesterday and lasted for seven hours. "We think there is a good possibility that cleanup projects in the auxiliary building kicked up some radioactive particulates that led to increase in air pollution," he said. Weather... Sunny, breezy and mild weather in the 60s will accompany 10-20 mph southly winds today according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. will be covered by party counsel with the high risk in the ind. The extended forecast calls for a chance of showers on Sunday KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—A judge sent 62 more striking firefighters to jail Thursday and prosecutors filed contempt citations against more than 700 other firemen for violating a no-strike order in the city's nearly 900 union firefighters. 62 more firefighters jailed in KC The court action brought to the number imprisoned so far in the festering dispute. No hearings were scheduled on the new contempt citations filed late Thursday. that he believed the city and firefighters could agree on a program to re-employ the 42 firefighters dismissed during an earlier work slowdown. Meanwhile, three men—two firefighters and a retired fighter—were accused of stealing firearms from the police, nounced plans to have supervisors from other departments join police in fighting In the meantime, some striking firemen are working on a plan to temporarily return to duty when major fires break out within the city, a union spokesman said yesterday. "The city's senseless gamble with lives of Kansas Cains makes them innocent victims if fire breaks out and trained rescues are not available." Racuallus charred. Local and national officials of the International Association of Firefighters said groups of union members would be formed in alarm at fires that appealed to threaten lives. Firefighters have opened four "life safety stations," and are monitoring fire calls and will respond to alarms threatening lives, equipment or property. The International Association of Firefighters. Missouri Gov. Joseph P. Teasale, who took to Kansas City Wednesday to offer his help in the four-day-old strike, said after a meeting with union attorneys yesterday HOWEVER, THE president of the union local said the terms outlined by Teasale for requalification of the fired men were not acceptable. "We are down to whether we can get eight people re-employed," Teasdale told reporters after the meeting. City officials met with the governor a short time later, and Personnel Director Thomas Lewinson told reporters. "I don't know if we are no closer to a settlement that I know of." Lewinson also said he told the governor termination officials that he had taken the job. Mr. Jobson would be mailed today. He said previously that the notices were irreovable once they were posted. The personnel director said 60 to 70 firefighters had resigned in the past few days and he urged others in jeopardy of the fire department to join the firefighters who resigned were eligible for re-employment without going through the requalification process, which has been described as a stumbling block for the 42 firefighters because of the 45-year age limit on applications. "The basic issue here, " Treadsaid said, "is that somebody is going to die in this combat zone. This is a situation that to the people involved. I think this long emotional dispute has caused people on both sides to lose sight of the public in Kansas and the nation as a whole." Sidees said that there has been in many months. The men were also fined $300 each and ordered to pay $18 a day for meals while they remained in custody. JACKSON COUNTY Circuit Judge Court of Appeals contended that jail terms for court contempt of court yesterday afternoon. He had sentenced 21 on similar charged earlier in the day and 16 on A lawyer said later that one of the releases had been released because health reasons and a release because city records showed mistakenly that they were working Monday with the company. "I feel ashamed of what we are doing here in the city," he said, "to be firefighters. 'It is a shame that the city is prosecuting those men who have put their lives on the line not once, not twice, but every time." SPECIAL PROSECUTOR John Gibson said content matters for 50 other cases, he gave postpone to today until Monday to give postponement to paper work in the case. Citations have issued for about 300 of the nearly 900 union members said he planned to issue more content matters. Two firefighters and a retired fireman were charged with felonies yesterday in connection with two grass fires set in the city Wednesday. Firefighters Frank J. Tierney, 33, andeward R. Philip, 53, spent postponed nights in which they were charged with a fire Wednesday night on the city's south wall. DALTON W. McNabb, 49, who told police he was a retired fireman, was charged in Clay County with setting a fire Wednesday and on the north side. Bond was set at $1,000. A striking firefighter, Christopher Gussman, 34, was arrested for disorderly conduct and interfering with a police officer in a scuffled scuffle with a police outside a city fire station. The policeman was one of some 500 officers who have been filling in for the suspect. Teadale met with city officials and union leaders Wednesday night in Kansas City and said he would remain in the city until the strike was settled. Aides had received a report yesterday morning, and had a series of meetings scheduled during the afternoon. MEMBERS OF Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters walked off the job Monday evening after the firefighters were dismissed by firefighters dismissed during the last slowdown. Union officials have said firemen would not return until the 42 men are City police, aided by nounion fire, department personnel), continued to provide: fire protection, while National Guard troop provided security at the city's fire stations. World Court hears hostage case Police Chief Norman Caron told the City, council yesterday that there had been 68 fires in the previous 24 hours, compared with 21 for the same date last year. Police said there were 14 confirmed arson fires and 35 others. The city's average a year of 19 arson fires per day. THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP)—The U.S. government, appealing for an urgent U.N. investigation, hosted hostages, wagered yesterday that Iran might increase its defensibility and merely undermine world peace. "No one in this courtroom has any way of knowing whether the Ayatollah Khomeini will continue to hold the hostages in captivity, or to hold the year for a or decade," he said. "The signals which now are coming out of In-terior China are alarming," hostages may continue indefinitely. Robert B. Owen, State Department legal adviser, told the International Court of Justice on Friday. OWEN DID not elaborate on what the leaders were referring to the disagreements and indecision among Iranian leaders about whether and when the hostages might be freed. Concluding the United States' case, which first was put before the court Nov. 29, Owen said tenuous U.S. hopes for a quick release of the student. "I don't know when a U.N. investigative commission visiting Tehran was frustrated in its mediation mission. HE SAID the court, the main legal arm of the United Nations, was the most promising hope for the ultimate release of Haiti, and he called for a swift final judgment. If it becomes clear that a country like Iran can seize diplomatic agents and hold them hostage for indefinite periods of time in order to coerce desired political action, it will be a complete unraveling of the fabric of a successful international relations." Owens said. Owen's presentation to the 15-member court ended three days prior to the hearing. The D.J.S. case detail. The court now will consider the case in private and will issue a judgment, but it probably cannot be done. hostages, who have spent 138 days in the hands of young Moslem militants holding the U.S. Embassy. Signs grew in Tehran, meanwhile, of definite delays in any action to free the Revolutionary leader Khomeini said that the new Iranian Parliament must decide the hostages' fate, but vote counting in last Friday's first round of parliamentary elections was going more slowly than anticipated, pointing to new delays in the election process. The Iranian officials had said the question would probably be taken up in mid-May. The ruling Revolutionary Council named a commission to investigate the allegations, and President Abolbadass Bani-Sadt met yesterday with Khomeini to discuss them. HOMENI, in a Persian new year holiday, was one of the groups have caused group of fraud in last Friday's voting. Such loud complaining before the rest of the world is anti-Islamic. Afterward, Bani-Sadr told the Iranian news agency Nars News that nullifying the entire election was out of the question and that the vote was only in those towns where fraud was proved. IN WASHINGTON, U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, apparently concerned over increasing public anger among U.S. politicians, told reporters that American attempt to end the crisis by sending a bomb to create an explosion in the entire Middle East. Waldheim also said, however, that he had received indications in recent days that the crisis would be resolved regardless of the election outcome. He did not elaborate. RepublicanSen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, in a statement Wednesday endorsed Senator Mike Pence and Baker, called on the Carter administration to prepare for a naval blockade of Iran and Iraq. TGIF at THE HAWK Sunday Brunch Buffet 11 am to 2 pm Level 2 $4.50 Includes Beverages! Make Sunday Special! LEVEL 2 KANSAS UNION THE KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE U Three Day Jeans Sale 842-3963 Three Day Jeans Sale Every pair of jeans in stock on sale! Today, Friday and Saturday only. Savings up to $10.00. Originally $21.00 to $30.00 Now only $13.99 to $19.99 (Does not include Calvin Klein and baggies) 842-3963 927 Mass. THE ATTIC Find it in Kansan classified advertising. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MFG List $7.98 In Concert Wed. March 26 at Lawrence Opera House Iggy Pop is gunning for you... on "Soldier." On the heels of "New Values," his biggest American album in years, Soldier is another Iggy Pop sensation! Co-produced by Iggy himself! It features a cast of trendsetting all-stars, including ex-Sex Patricia Glen Mallock, and Ivan Krol from The Patti Smith Group Rock'n'roll for the 80s—the way no one else could play it! GGY POP: SOLDIER INCLUDES TIME CARE ONLY PLAN IS SAFE ANDOKING EM DOWN IN THE OIL ARISTA THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. LAZA On the heels of American album Iggy Pop sensatic GGY POP: SOLDIER ARITA includes TIME CARE OF ME PLAY IT SAFE KNOCKING EM DOWN in the City Friday, March 21, 1980 University Daily Kansan 2 Regents committee OKs 4 new degree programs Four proposed new degree programs at the University of Kansas were approved and one was shelved yesterday by the Academic Committee of the Kansas Board of Review. Three of the approved programs were listed under the category described as "Recommend strongly—should be established as soon as feasible." These included the initiation of a bachelor of science degree program in toxicology, a bachelor of science degree program in pharmacy, and a certificate program in medical dosimetry. The fourth proposed program approved was the initiation of a Master of Historical Administration and Museum Studies. This program, however, was listed under the category of "academic approval, but subject to low priority if other factors indicate the wisdom of such delay." The program, designed to train students in computer science, curators, was the subject of concern of several educators said the program might duplicate the Joint Institute for Education program at Emphasized State University. But Chancellor Archie R. Dykes told the board that the program was not viewed by Kus compete with the Emporia State program, but as supplementary. The four approved programs will be presented for a final vote today before the full board. Approval of a proposed master of science engineering management was postponed. A similar question of course duplication, this time with a program offered at Kansas State University. Del Shankar, executive vice chancellor, said the program would train those students with a bachelor of science in engineering wanted to enter the management sector. Shankel said that if such a program was instituted, an estimated 60 students were waiting to enroll in it immediately. Approval of the engineering program will be delayed at least until the Regents April meeting, after further study of possible duplication with the K-State program. KANSAN On Campus **TODAY:** A JUNIOR SCIENCE AND HUMANITIES SYMposium will be held all day in Nichols Hall. The IHPER DANCE DEPARTMENT ART AND HUMANITIES symposium will be shown at 9:30 a.m. in Room 203 Bailey Hall and at 2:30 p.m. in the basement of Lippincott (Old Green). The SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART will have a gallery installation by John O'Boyder at 3 p.m. in the Surfside Room in the Upton. TONGHT: AN OBSERVATORY OPEN HOUSE will start at 7 p.m. in 500 LANDER CAMP, where the guest will meet at 7 p.m. in the FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7 p.m. in the International Room in the Union. The KU CONCERT CHORUS PUNG CONCERT in BROOKLYN will meet at the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murray Hall. TOMORROW; The KANSAS SCHOLASTIC PRESS ASSOCIATION will have its annual meeting at the KU Basketball Hall. The KU basketball team will start a doubleheader against Fort Hays State University at 1 p.m. at Quincy Field Paul Manoir. (MANO RECTAL at 1 p.m. in Murphy Hall) AURH accepts late candidates By BILL VOGRIN The election of officers for the Association of University Residence Halls will be more than a formality this year. Staff Reporter Election committee chairman Shannon Murray decided last night to accept three late entries to the election, assuring a contested battle for the two positions. In an emergency meeting of the AUHR Executive Board last night, Murray explained her decision to allow the late entries onto the ballot. "I've decided to the three late candidates run," Murray said. "There was a communication problem, and a problem with the system, one of the balls, so we extended the deadline. CANDIDATES WERE first eligible to file for office more than two weeks ago, and the deadline for filing was extended three times before the final March 19 mark. Filing late for president and vice president were Larry Kolster, Warrensburg, Mt., sophomore and Scott Tempelman, junior. The former Village junior, registered for taurure. The late filings raise the total number of candidates for the four AURH positions to seven. The race for secretary is uncontested for candidate Amy Handleman, Overland Park freshman. Incumbent president Jay Smith and his running mate Mark Fouts, current vice president, are seeking candidate Eddo Sodo freshman, is running for treasurer. SMITH AND Fours won an uncontested election last year and AUHK board members feared students apathy would force a change in the administration, president receives his room free, and the other successful candidates receive a single room for the price of a double. But Murray said these incentives had little to do with the decision to run. She attributes the small number of candidates to several factors. Student apathy, the time spent on jobs, and students leaving the residence kids next year hurt participation, she said. A debate between the presidential teams will be scheduled before the March 25-26 elections. Dinner to demonstrate Thailand's culture A dinner of traditional foods from Thailand and a show of Thai fashions, martial arts and dancing will make up Thai night Sunday and will mark the opening of an exhibition of Thai art and handicrafts set to be brought next Tuesday at the Kansas Union. Tickets for the dinner and show are $4 and can be purchased at the SUA ticket office. The exhibition is free. Servanna Tolpanichuk, a spokesperson for the KU Thal Student Association, said Thai night and the exhibition were being held to combat misconceptions Americans have about the Far East. "Most people, when they think of the Orient, think of China and Chinese things. But Thailand isn't like that, it's very different." Tolpinichuk said the exhibition would probably include demonstrations of silk flower-making and Thaun music, as well as an orchestra and modern musical instrument and teak furniture. ★ Opening Night Paul Gray's at Jazz Place ★ 926 Mass.upstairs Now a Private Club Monday, March 24 . . . Te Te Monolio Spanish pianist & recording star on his first U.S. tour Don't miss this great artist! Call 843-2644 For Reservations and Information "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 Matthew 9:38-38 reads: “WHEN HE JESUS) SAW THE HARVEST THAT WILL SEND FORTH LABORERS IN HIS HERD, THEM, BECAUSE THE FAINTED, AND WE SO CARET TEBER ADDED AS SHEEP HAVING NO SHEPHERD THEM, BECAUSE THE FAINTED, AND WE SO CARET TRULY IS PLENTE AND THE LABORERS ARE FREW PRAY ME THEFRENE THE LORD OF THE HARVEST THAT WILL SEND FORTH LABORERS IN HIS HERD, THE HARVEST IS PLENTEUS AND THE LABORERS ARE FEMM?" When Jesus said that "the woods were full" of Leah, Priests, Scribes, Doctors, Teachers, Overseers, and many of the doctors who DOCTORS OF DARKNESS, and many of the doctors who DOCTORS OF DARKNESS, Read what HE told them about their condition in the 23rd chapter; He told them how to GET him Crucified! The 23rd chapter of Jeremiah is somewhat like the 23rd of Matthew, where about 600 years before God had warned the spiritual leaders of their own punishment he his servant Isaiah, chapter 56:10, 11, 12, 13, warnened them by - Note in this passage D.D. means "dumb dogs that cannot bark!" God asks us this question: "Who makes them to die from another, and what hast thou that thou did not suffer? Who makes them to die from another, and hypocrisy, we should remember that it is the mercy of God that has delivered us and made us to differ from the ungodly, and that his blessing has been received from God, who sent him in whose name make us proud, rather humble, and stir us up to work, testify, and pray that the Dry Vines might receive Life and bear much fruit; that the Doctors of Darkness must be repaired, that they should watch Blue Watchmen might have sight restored, cease to be ignorant, dogs not dumb but capable of barking and warning of the "thief climbing up some other way and not coming down," dogs not quilted, and quilt sleeping, living down, loving to stumber?" True Protestantism believes in the "Priesthood of the Believer." If you consider yourself a "Priestly Believer," in view of the wickedness, evil, shame, crime, etc. on every person and in all situations, conditions without harm and sorew when God says: "BUT IF THEY HAD STOOD IN MY COURSE, AND HAD SHOULD HAVE TURNED THEM FROM THEIR EIVL WAY, SHOULD HAVE TURNED THEM FROM THEIR EIVL WAY." P. O.BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 MASS. STREET DELI Inc G4I MASSACHUSETTS Blueberry or Cherry Cheese Cake 50¢ reg. price $1.00 No coupons accepted with this special offer good Mar. 19-23 Thurs.-Sun. Enjoy Coke No coupons accepted with this special offer good Mar. 19-23 Thurs.-Sun. Enjoy Coke Special Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 FRIDAY & SATURDAY 12:15 A POLICE WOMAN MEETS A CAPTAIN ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE LAW! LATE SHOW PETER L. MCDONALD IRELAND ANGIE WILLIAM DICKINSON SHATNER GO UNDERCOVER in FRIDAY & SATURDAY 12:15 BIG BAD MAMA WHEN IT COMES TO VICE MAMA KNOWS BEST! R RESTRICTED GRAD STUDENTS Why type all of your thesis drafts? Have Encore do it with word processing. We type in the handwritten rough draft and give you a perfect typed copy (including justified left and right margins, bold lettering special symbols, etc.) Plus, we store the original on disc, so when you need to make revisions, we only correct what needs to be changed. The machine then prints out the entire corrected thesis. Easy and cheap. (We can also communicate with the KU computer system.) We also feature copying, drafting (for figures and drafts) and binding. That's why we are the "One Stop Thesis Shop" Call us at 842-2001 Ensure Copy Corp Lawrence Kansas 42-2001 for your typing odyssey. Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza 25th & lowa Holiday Plaza (just west of Kief's) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorslals Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan author. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers. March 21, 1980 Legal fee unjustified Double taxation, taxing a person twice for one possession, is an unfair practice that many people, especially property owners, have to guard themselves against. They have to sit on their wallets to maintain governments don't pick their pockets for taxes they are not entitled to. Most students probably don't have to worry about double taxation yet, but they do need to keep a wary watch out for double fee assessments in college—it's a big risk. You can fringe a few dollars more from the pockets of fee-paying students. A case in point is the $15 court representation user's fee proposed by the KU administration and approved by the Student Legal Services Board earlier this week. The proposal will go to Senate March 28 for consideration. KU students should be asking a lot of questions about this fee, including where will the money go? why $15? and, most important, why is it even being considered when every full-time student paid $1.25 through student activity fees to finance Legal Services? Previously, the Legal Service Board had voted against setting a user's fee. Now that they have approved one, they are indeed getting away from their principal philanthropy and from students, as board member Bob Rocha has pointed out. Presumably the money collected from the fee will go toward financing Legal Services, in spite of the $1.25 already assessed of students. But why $157 According to Steve Leben, Legal Services Board chairman, this amount would represent a significant reduction in the number of students seeking court representation. "You can't just say, well, let's have a $1 user's fee because that would be making a farce out of an administrative requirement," he said. Perhaps it has never occurred to Leben that some administrative requirements ARE farces and hardly deserve to be justified at the students' expense. If that is the only rationale the Legal Service Board can offer to explain, $15 would be deducted as a fee for the somewhere, somehow, something went away in the effort of the Board to secure the right to represent students in court. However, in addition to the proposed user's fee, students using court representation services also would be required to pay all court costs, including a $35 filing fee. There is not a student on this campus who would not consider those costs in themselves a significant monetary commitment. Because of an apparently arbitrarily set user's fee, Surely the court costs alone would be high enough to discourage unnecessary and trivial cases. No one is doubting or questioning the Board's sincere good intention to help students with legal problems. But in deliberating the case of the user's feet, the Board's lawyers are among students by returning an incredible and unjustifiable verdict. Leben goes on to justify the amount of the fee as a face-saving measure for the administration. If Owens goes,woes to descend on foes To the Editor: All of you "Gong Owens" fans, get your mallets ready. You may be able to strike the gourd heard around the Big Eight. Yes, Ted Owens himself may give you what you have learned about his team's approach to about Ted being on the bench if he decided to go to Oklahoma. (The public does not know if he really even is considering it.) No more of Ted Owens coaching teams to Big Eight Championships. No more of that Ted Owens. No more of that Owens "touch" in recruiting fine high school and junior college prospects. More of that valuable experience of Owens. Now we may be able to hand Oakahoma all of our accomplishments and millions of Owens. It was satisfying for some people to voice the opinion to rid KU of Ted Owens, when students and alumni could feel as though they were not so comfortable that Owens may leave on his own, is it really satisfying? Or is it really uncomfortable thinking that I should against us? Surely we could be at a big disadvantage. I suppose one could say that it would be advantageous to KU if Owens left for Oklahoma, because that would be more favorable to them instead of us. However, one must not forget that KU will have to obtain a new coach, one at least as qualified as Owens. This task certainly is not an enviable one. In order to succeed, you need a good opportunity when they see one. Owens' position of leaving on his own instead of us giving him the boot should not be taken. We should always thing and sometimes do not realize it. Hopefully, others in more influential positions than I am the same way. If not, we would have to look at our resistance does not come back to haunt you. Jim Doyle Jim Boyle Prairie Village graduate student KU offers no forum for pro-Palestinians Tutee Editor: It has been a political custom of the University of Kansas to sponsor speakers in Palestine-Palestinian-Iraeli conflict. Zionists and pre-Zionists have become the University's special guests. Aided by a biased media and speaking groups, these speakers have taken advantage of the American people by feeding them fabrications, unfounded stories and misinformation. The most recent guest in the University's chain of Zionist speakers was Nathan Yanai who lectured at the University. The new reality to this speaker is that the Israelis inhabited Palestine in 1948 because the country was a Jewish state. The Gold Medal he who took advantage of the American people's credibility by telling them that "there is no such thing as the Palestinians." Where, then, did the four million Palestinian们 are either homeless or living under occupation from? Even Darwin would be surprised that they were not so well off. The working people in the middle population in the Middle East and one of the most educated in the world. The speaker understands the cherish liberty and who stand firm against human torture, to know the Palestinian people and to know of their suffering and persecution by the Israelis, and they did against Hitler in World War II. Our University has been making sure that Zionist propaganda continues to cling to our campus. Isn't it time for the University to be more open and responsive to the other side of the Palestinian-Zionist conflict? Isn't it time for the University to invite a speaker who will explain the 32-year-old story of an entire people who have lived under oppression and who are to self-determination and to a homeland? Muhi Mishari Secretary of the Organization of Arab Students Risk of alcoholism not as likely at 21 During the period after high school, young people assume many new responsibilities. Some of these can cause stress, whether it stems from making a living or going to school, and they often abruptly during this period even though they may not affect us until later. In light of the current controversy about raising the drinking age for 3.2 beer, I would like to stress one point that I need to be seriously considered: alcoholism. Most social drivers of our age do not pay much attention to alcoholism because it is not a problem for the majority of our age who are considered less responsible. However, those middle-aged people who contribute to the statistics that show alcoholism is widespread in death in our society had the same opinion. To the Editor: I enjoy drinking socially as much as any other person my age. However, because of my lack of social skills, I am alcoholics had alcoholic parents, combined with my experience of having an alcoholic parent, I am highly cautious and indeed fearful of getting into trouble in and in the future. My point is that with a drinking age of 21, people would be a little more likely to become responsible in their drinking behaviors. Therefore in our later lives, ourselves, our livers, and those around us hopefully will be a little healthier. Randy D. Proffitt Chase senior Escorts help guard against violence Every woman attending the University of New Orleans is required to enter their bodies and are aware of the fact during their entire KU careers. They know it is not safe to walk on campus alone at night. A sad bit of knowledge, but a vital one. It is told to students by residence hall staff during each fall's Country Club on campus. Rape Victim Support Services offer courses in basic self-defense techniques. There are also online courses that alert the police to any emergency situations. MARIN Our warmings, tessels and blue phones are not enough. The campus is still unsafe. Walking home at night can be frightening. It's safer if the room is sealed or the residence halls is filled with tension. kate pound COLUMNIST each time an assault is reported, whether it is a sexual assault or not, students stop and think, "It could have been me. I've walked past there 100 times." UNSETTLET THOUGHTS. Many KU students are from small midwestern towns, where they are limited to an occasional or the only use of a school bus. School students with marijuana. To be thrust into an environment that demands constant vigilance is frightening and adds to their anxiety. Even for more widely students, the presence of violent crime on campus is a violation of the security and isolation of academic life. An institution dedicated to learning, teaching and thinking should be taught in a more distasteful aspects, one would think. Last fall, however, a group of students decided to change things on campus. They formed an escort service staffed by female students, female or male across campus at night. CURRENTLY OPERATING with about 45 escort volunteers and staff members, the Campus Safety Services is available to who needs to walk across campus at night. The escort service is based in Grace Sellars Park near Hanover, MA. The escorts work with male and female volunteers work in pairs and will meet persons requesting escorts to see them. Volunteers are needed for the escort services. The Campus Safety Services also has an education program about assault and self-esteem. It provides awareness among men, and committees concerned with additional programs; Unfortunately, the group does not have enough volunteers to staff all of its programs. It is particularly short of escorts for larger groups more than 100 escorts, so that it could operate from 5 p.m. to 8 a.m. every day, with only two or three hours a week. It is refreshing to note that many of the group's organizers are men. For too long, any assault or rape prevention programs on women were not made accessible to women. Men were not involved in the programs and were not made aware of the lack of safety on the campus. There was no correct that one sidelessness. THE CAMPUS SAFETY Services is a student-inspired, student-operated organization. It was formed independently of the Student Senate or University administration by students who care about such objectives and others step toward improving life on the Hill and is a reassuring example of student progressiveness and concern. make men more aware of the horror that is rane. THE MEN INVOLVED with the Campus Safety Services are not patronizing protectors of women. They point out that most assault and battery incidents on campus are aimed at men. Men, as well as women, are affected by the safety of on campus. Many men are more aware of the danger on campus to themselves and to women and are trying to The Safety Services may be the most effective weapon against violent crime this University will ever have. However, to survive, to do so alone, students must have a good understanding and efforts of every student on campus. Volunteer a few hours a week, it doesn't take much. Just pick up an application at the KU Information Center, in Strong Hall, or at the Student Senate office, And don't forget—safety is only a phone call to the campus, or even the campus at night, call 84-4848. The Campus Safety Services volunteers will make sure you get where you need to go. Soviets reacting to lessons of TMI Rv BRUCE BABBITT new York Times Special Features PHENOX-Three Mile Island may have contaminated the nuclear futures of the United States, Sweden, Austria and West Germany. There are plans to increase nuclear output 10 times in the 1980s. Like American nuclear advocates, the Russians say they have no choice. The Soviet nuclear commitment is most evident at Atomash, a giant new factory close to the Black Sea. Atomash is designed to mass-produce a new generation of large pressurized water reactors of the 1,000-megawatt class now used in India and China. Pressurized water reactor, the Russians are following dominant American reactor technology. Oil and gas deposits in the industrial areas of the western Southeast are seriously threatened by statewide oil deposits are locked up in the Siberian hinterlands thousands of miles from industrial areas. The first-generation Soviet pressurized water reactors now in use are about the THREE MILE ISLAND has, however, had one momentous impact on the Soviet nuclear program. It has ended complacency with its efforts to build the reinforced-concrete domes that seal off reactors if there is an accident. Soviet scientists now recognize that the containment building at Three Island was issued in 1947 and contains a release of millions of curies of radioactive gas. same size as the smaller 500-megawatt American plants built in the 1960s. The Russians have been slow in moving up to the large reactors, primarily because of difficulties with the complex metallurgy and the large-scale high-pressure reactor vessels. The first generation of Soviet nuclear plants, which includes most plants now in operation, was built without containment walls. The technology that their technology was so safe that containment structures were superfluous. One official tells of a nuclear-science delegation that visited the United States and came to believe that the technology these were places for "to placate the people." necessary because of "negative dramatization" by the American press. THE RUSSIANS ARE developing a reactor-export program. They have publicly announced communication with Ilya. Given Finland's experience, it seems likely that the export market will demand a higher level of safety in the export process. In the case of Cuba, 90 miles from the This new satety policy was probably prompted by at least two factors as well as the Soviet invasion. The Russians built a nuclear reactor in Finland, their first constructed outside the Eastern bloc. The Flims decided that the new facility would be taller and build their own containment structure. AT A DETAILED briefing on reactor safety at the ministry of power and electrical, Deputy Minister Fedor Y. Ovchinnikov told us: "The events of Harrisburg show that containment is needed to localize nuclear plants and will be covered by containment structures." The Russians had not previously made this policy explicit. AS THE FOREMAN OF THIS POWER PLANT, AFTER MAJOR BREAKDOWNS ARE REPAIRED AND WE GO BACK ON LINE, YOU HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY TO YELL SOMETHING OTHER THAN, "OKAY, LET'S NUKE 'EM!" Florida mainland, the question of containment structures and safety engineering is of more than academic interest to Americans. As evidence of their new commitment to containment structures, Soviet officials have issued warnings that the generation pressurized-water reactors, now nearing completion at Novosibirsk, have been the worst of all. OVVICHNIKON IS QUICK to assert that, contrary to some Western reports, the new steam reactors will indeed be built with containment structures. The second factor in this change of policy is a new plan to build 500-megawatt-sized reactors for direct steam heating in two Soviet cities. The plan is a return to the off-district central steam-heating plant; since steam heat cannot be effectively transmitted for any great distance, the reactor must be oriented or adjacent to services. A recent article in Kommunist, a party journal, has been widely reported in Western countries as questioning the prevailing dogma of nuclear development. Written by Nikolai A. Dolezhlah, a prominent professor of the environmental hazards of desincentive siting and operation of nuclear plants. While this article has been read in the media as suggesting the rise of an incipient threat to humanity, it emphatically denotes that Douléliat is ant-neutral. They dismiss his remote-sensing device. From all available signs, the Soviet Union will remain committed to an expansive supply of electricity. It was Lenin who wrote that "Communism in Power, power plus energy." Bruce Babbitt, Democratic governor of Arizona, visited the Soviet Union from Nov. 23 to Dec. 3 with other governors on a trip that included the National Government Association. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN US$546,048) Published at the University of Kansas at Lawrence and July 1st, 2009. Student day during June and July attended Saturday and Sunday, and student day on June 3rd or June 4th or June 5th at Douglas County and for six months Postmaster Send changes of address to the University Dial Kalyan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69045 Editor James Anthony Fittas Business Manager Vincent Coultis Friday, March 21, 1980 University Daily Kansan 5 Senator says compromise crucial for bill A proposed self-help amendment to the Landlord-Tenant Act has no chance in the Kansas legislature until compromises are made. The Lawrence sponsor of the bill said yesterday, The bill, introduced by State Rep. John Snyder, provides that the representatives, died in office, when the House failed to act on it by the Wednesday deadline for consideration in bills in their own state. The proposal would have given tenants with negligent landlords a quick and affordable means of getting repairs done, according to its supporters. Solbach, however, said that pressure by landlords was too strong. Similar proposals have failed ever year since 1975. "We've had tremendous support for the he said. But we just haven't been able to figure out how it works, will often vote against something if they feel it's going to be difficult to explain back THE AMENDMENT had been approved by the Legislature on Monday, Committee late last month, after being referred back to committee because of minor reversional errors made after the amendment. Landlords, who have labored heavily against the proposal, intensified their efforts when the proposal was referred back to committee a second time. House Majority Leader Robert Frego, who along with the speaker of the House decides what bills are acted upon on the House floor, owns several apartments in Seward County. "The landlords just raised hell over it," Solbach said. "If we could just make a couple compromises with a few key interests, they'd walk through both houses with no problem." Sbolach said that he had already begun to talk to landlords about possible compromises, but would not specify what concessions had been discussed. "I think it's very possible it might pass next session," he said, "Plus, the bill will have a better chance in an off-election year." He also said he was hopeful that a change in the House majority leaders after the November election would help the bill's chances. UNDER THE BILL, the tenant could have repair work done at his own expense if the landlord refused to do it and the tenant's health or safety were threatened. To be reimbursed, the tenant would have to give a receipt for the work, his next rent check and a filing fee to a district court clerk. The clerk would deduct the cost of repairs—limited to $100 or half the rent, whichever was greater—from the rent and send the remainder to the landlord. If the landlord objected, the tenant would have to file suit in small claims court to be reimbursed. "The opposition is amusing to an extent." Sobach said. "I got a letter from one landlord who said that all of his units were done with water, and that all repairs were done within 24 hours. "He said if the bill passed it would cost him thousands of dollars. These arguments are ridiculous. If he was making the proper repairs it would never apply to him. This bill wouldn't affect most of the landlords in the state." OPPONENTS OF THE proposal argued that the amendment was not necessary, that the Landlord-Tenant Act in its present form takes care of needed repairs. Solbach disagreed. "The Act doesnt set forth any particular rule that doesn't take a landlord to small court claim. At all previous court cases are unclear. The Court very much of a Cabc2-29 type situation." Solbach said that 26 states currently have laws similar to the proposal. The KU Gung Fu Club presents MUG-A-THUG A Practical, personal self-defense course geared towards women. Call Tina or Joe Gardner at 841-7803 —OR— Show up at 173 Robinson at 8:00 Saturday 3/22/80. $25. "Being a woman doesn't mean being helpless." --eleven west ninth TGIF at THE HAWK G. P. LoyD'S 1960 $\textcircled{1}$ Loyd-Lyfe Ent. P. Layes Lyndon G. P. Hartz P. Layes E. P. Layes However you spell it... It still means a good time! 701 Massachusetts in Lawrence Gatehouse Phone: 843-6446 2166 WEST 26TH STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 AVAILABLE NOW 1 & 2 Bedrooms Drapes, Carpet, AC, All Appliances, Carports Pool, Conveniently Located, On KU Bus Line. Rents Starts At: $225.00 Crown CALL OR COME BY TODAY Professionally Managed By: GOLD CROWN PROPERTIES, INC. Vive la différence! Heart. One unique band. "Bebé Le Strange." The new album, on Epic Records and Tapes. heart bebe le strange Stuttgart Europix Europe Bernard Hoppe Music Director Centre De Ma Buy it once. enjoy it a lifetime. Recorded music is your bestest增值服务 *produced by Mike Flicker, Conner and Howe*. Music Division & direction by Ken Kinnare, Alltracks Management Inc. "AVAILABLE AT YOUR FAVORITE RECORD STORE" Available at Kief's Records and Tapes lemon tree sandwich, burger, and yogurt shop featuring Famous Submarine Sandwiches --- NOW OPEN Bring this ad in on Friday, Saturday or Sunday only and receive 5Oc off any full size submarine sandwich offer good March 21-23 Entertainer presents The Moffet Beers Band Friday, March 21 8:00-1:00 door opens at 7:00 ALL YOU CAN DRINK Guys $4.00 Gals $3.00 Happy Birthday Mike, Bill & Sammy 841-8830 8th and Vermont 6 Friday, March 21. 1980 University Daily Kansan KU energy forum set for March 25 An energy forum, featuring experts in international energy problems, has been scheduled for March 25 in Nichol Hall. "Changing Institutional Patterns in World Energy Affairs" will be the topic of the free presentations, sponsored by the Kansas Geological Survey. Charles Heller, an authority on the petroleum industry and a consultant to the United Nations, will discuss the organization of Petroleum Excortories Countries. Vladimir Baum, director of the United Nations Center for Natural Resources and Transport, is scheduled to speak on energy production and resources. State fears unused books crowd libraries The forum will begin at 1:30 p.m. March 25 in the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall. By KEVIN MILLS Staff Reporter Rarely used library books at KU and other Regents schools have members of the Senate Ways and Means Committee concerned, a committee spokesman said yesterday. So concerned, in fact, that the committee will ask the Board of Regents to appoint a task force to study how to eliminate duplication of old and rarely used volumes among Regents schools. "s entirely likely that there are large numbers of books and magazines which aren't used very often," said Richard Green, aide to State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, committee chairman. Green compiled the research for the committee, which revealed that many rarely used books can be found in libraries. "There's no reason to have six copies of a book that hasn't been checked out in 20 years," Green said. The situation was brought to the committee's attention "The librarians at KU, KSU and Wichita State University all say that they are at capacity in their libraries," Green said. "We can still maintain a quality system without the costs of building new facilities." when Kansas State University requested funds for a facility that would house rarely used books. JOHN CONARD, executive officer of the Board of committees, has not made a formal request to the board yet. "Normally, when we get this kind of request, we ask for assistance and ask them for assistance with the matter." Conard said. KU library officials have adopted a wait and see attitude. Jim Ranz, dean of the library, said he welcomed any efforts that might help solve the space short- library already weeds out unnecessary books, although the process was limited by a small staff. CLIFF HAKA, circulation librarian, said the KU Haka said that the Big Ten college libraries had pooled their rarely used volumes into one facility in Chicago, but that the cost of a similar operation in Kansas might outweight the benefits. He said that possible drawbacks were the cost of building a facility, transporting books to and from the facility, and maintaining a staff to determine which books were rarely used. Green said the Legislature had discussed use of a central warehouse in the past, but the plan was not yet finalized. An alternative to saving the volumes would be to arrange all but one edition of each of the books. That process would make it easier to save the files. "You have to be concerned with the concepts of trends in research. Some materials can go a long time with little change." Haka said that books on coal mining, for example, had been used to mine the earth until the current climate o veen used for many years until the energy crisis. volume would be costly. GREEN SAID some committee members believed that librarians made unnecessary book purchases to patrons. Ranz said that wasn't true. Haka agreed. "Some libraries may have done in that the past, but it isn't today," he said. "It's very difficult to measure the quality of a library. And therefore, quantitative measures have often become the criteria for deciding which libraries are better. "But I am skeptical that libraries or library directors really transform the desire to be the biggest into buying "If that is being done, it's just horrible." Douglas County racquetball open March 28,29,30 2500 W. 6TH 841-7230 - Men's and Women's Classes - Men's and Women's Classes * 4 trophies awarded in each class * Each tournment shirt, at least 2 tournament matches, and use of the hospitality room (compliments of Greenbriar's Deli.) SPAULDING RACQUETBALL CLUBS TOURNAMENT SPONSORED BY: KLZR, LITWIN'S, GREENBRIAR'S DELI This tournament is open to Spaulding Lawrence Club members. Douglas County residents, K.U. students and Baker U. students only. ENTRY DEADLINE: March 26 at 10 p.m. ENTRY FORMS AVAILABLE AT: LITWIN'S AND GREENBRIAR'S DELI For further information call Spaulding Racquetball Club at 841-7230. SATURDAY, MARCH 22,10 A.M.-6 P.M. AT THE HOLIDAY PLAZA (JUST WEST OF KIEF'S) Plan to Attend Our GRAND OPENING ENCORE COPY CORPS . . . We offer you one convenient center for all office and scholastic copying, typing, word processing, printing, art work and drafting. Convenient hours, fast service, professional consultation and discount prices on the most frequently used services are just a few of the reasons you will want to consider ENCORE!! GRAND OPENING SPECIALS (GOOD THROUGH APRIL 5) XEROX COPIES (featuring the Xerox 9400) 3c EACH TYPING 99c PAGE featuring: Enquire Copy Corps Lawrence Kansas since 1980 - COPYING - WORD PROCESSING - PRINTING - DROETING - TYPING - EDITING BINDING - EDITING - PICK-UP & DELIVERY SERVICE - THESIS CONSULTATION - ART WORK - FAST SERVICE - BINDING - OFFICE SUPPLIES - PRINTING - PROFESSIONAL HELP - EDITING we feature exclusively: • VOLUME DISCOUNTS OF UP TO 40% OF SINGLE-COPY XEROXES. • PICK-UP & DELIVERY SERVICE. Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday 12 p.m.-5 p.m. we feature exclusively: Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza (just west of Kief's) 842-2001 - CONVENIENT HOURS - OFFICE SUPPLIES JUNIORS Mortar Board is a Senior, Co-ed, National Honor Society that is committed to the development of the individual and the progress of the University. We select Junior Men and Women based upon their scholarship, involvement, and commitment. We require an approximate 3.2 grade point average and strongly encourage everyone who feels qualified to apply. Applications should be picked up and returned to 220 Strong. Due Tuesday, March 25. MORTAR BOARD Ballet by Bass B. Ward royal college shop eight thirty-seven massachusetts 843-4255 Rent it. Call the Kansan.Call 864-4358. BARBECUE EAT IN OR CARRY OUT 'S NOW AT VIRGINIA INN We now serve BREAKFAST Hot, fast and delicious! TRY IT! 6:30 to 10 a.m. — Tues.-Sun "It's in the sauce" 2 Locations: 2907 W 6th, 841-3402 642 Mass., 841-7818 BBQ Lunch Buffet 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Tues-Sun. Open 11-10 Tues.-Sat. Sunday 12-8 Open 11-7 Tues.-Sat. University Daily Kansan Friday, March 21, 1980 7 All that Jazz By RICK HELLMAN Reporter Bv RICK HELLMAN Stan Keporter Carole Corer and Dianne Gregg had no idea they were making history when they organized the first Women's Jazz Festival three years ago. "If we'd realized that," said Comer, "we might have gotten scared off." But, of course, they didn't and, thanks to their efforts, the third Annual Women's Jazz Festival will be held this week in Kansas The idea of a jazz festival for women occurred to co-directors Conner and Gregg in 1977 on the way from home to Wichita Jazz Festival. Corner and Gregg then decided to put together a concert featuring female jazz artists. "We were lamenting the fact that Kansas City didn't have a festival of similar stature." Comer said, "and we were struck by the fact that there was a noticeable lack of women in the Wichita program." They called their friend, pianist Marian McPartland, who was enthusiastic about the idea. According to McPartland spread the word of the festival wherever she saw playing and soon they were receiving calls from women all over the country who To accommodate them, clinics and workshops were added to the concert program and the first WJF was born. Corner said the snowballing effect was "like giving birth to a baby and chasing it before it learns to crawl." With two festivals under their belt, Corner and Gregg think this one will be the best yet. One reason for the good feeling is that this year's man's concert will be held in the Music Hall in Kansas City, Mo. rather than the acoustically inferior Memorial Hall in Kansas Laine, who can sing everything from opera to pop, will be appearing with the John Dinkworth Quartet. Dunkworth and his friends will perform in the park on Monday. Also making its first KC appearance will be the Carla Bley band Bley and her husband, trumpeter Mike Mantler, have been involved in the free jazz movement for many years. Bley has lent her compositions to groups like the Gary Burton Quartet, the Liberation Music Orchestra and the Jack Bruce Band. Bassist Steve Gorby has contributed the Gary Burton Gurp group is featured in Bley's band. Returning for the second year to the main concert will be the Joanne Brackeen trio. Brackeen has stuck with acoustic jazz and has been compared to piano purists like McCoy Tyner and Keith Thomas. She also assists Eddie Gomers, a long-time member of the Evans bills Trio. The fourth and final act of the night will be the Women's Jazz festival All-Stars. Each year women are chosen from across the country to attend. The leader of this year's group is *Jibra McManus*, a New York pianist. Also in the group are: Barbara Merjan, drums; Louise Davis, bass; Stacy Rowley, trumpet; Jane Fair, reeds and Janet Lawson, vocals. The main concert will start at the Music Hall at 7 p.m. Sunday Ticket prices range from $7.50 to $9.50. Although the main concert should be spectacular, it is not the only event of interest this weekend. One of the main purposes of the WJF is to give women from around the country a chance to jam and measure themselves against their peers. Therefore, several jam sessions have been set up at the Crown Center complex. Tonight from 5:30 to 8 a.m the International Cafe in Crown Center will there be a student-apple jam session to give students The big jam session will take place tomorrow from 4 p.m. to 1 a.m. in Crown Center. The first half of the session will be open to men and women, but the second half of the program will be restricted to female players. Corner explained the restriction was to ensure that all the women who came to the festival would get a chance to play. All were allowed. The other main business of the day Saturday will be the clinics hein offered from 10 a.m. to 4 o.m. There will be clinics for advanced and beginning reeds, brass, vocals and rhythm instruments. One of the most interesting clinics should be one on the business of jazz from 3 to 4 Saturday afternoon The leaders of that session will be Carla Bley, who has her own record label. Watt Works, and noted jazz critic and historian Feather, publisher of Downbeat magazine, has been a long-time supporter of women's jazz. He has been the encer at the two annual concerts in Atlanta. Feather has always thought that women get the short end of the stick in music. Corned, and has done more for women in jazz "They were relegated to voice and pi:no." Corner said. "They had no role models playing bass and drums, which we have provided." SAXOPHONE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN the arts Bobby Bell not just a figurehead but a worker, at new barbecue By JON BLONGEWICZ Kansan Reviewer One learns quickly that this is not a case of celebrity casing in on fame and just lending his name to a business number 78 of the 'glory years' tor Kansas City Chiefs football team, Bobby Bell, bells much more than his name to Bob Bell's B-B-Quack. 121 Yale St. Bell, at 6' 4" and not far from his playing weight of 228 pounds, could be the world's biggest waist. On a normal day at the fast food barbecue restaurant, Bell, a former All-Pro linebacker, can be seen cleaning tables, bringing out orders and supervising the "That's the price you pay when you run the place." Bell said. Bell stops to chat with customers with an air of genuine concern and unmistakable friendliness. He greets each customer with a smile, and often assures him that he lives as lard as the slab of ribs he serves. Yet, this past week at his grand opening, his main activity was chatting with the kids. He made sure to furnish tures for the kids that flocked to his place. He was joined by former teammates: quarterback Len Dawson, place-kicker J茎 Stenner and offensive lineman Jim Tyer "The first job I had was when I was 12 years old in North Carolina at a barbecue place." Bell said. Bell moved from table to table, domestating the small room, which has a seating capacity of about 75 people. The church is a place for the Church and some pictures of Bell in action. "I love it," Bell said. "I love meeting all the people, making people happy." Yet, Bell tells that the barbecue and talking to people. After retiring from football, Bell worked for three and a half years at Gates and Sons' B-B-Q in Kansas City. But why open a restaurant in Lawrence after achieving fame in Kansas City? Bell pointed to the large number of barbecue restaurants in Kansas City. "There are not that many barbecue places in Lawrence," Bell said. "Lawrence is a good town." This week's grand opening was not the real opening of the business. Bell's restaurant has been open since December, and it has had only one out-of-KU and many students are out of town. "People told me I was crazy to open up with the students out of town," Bell said. "But the townpeople have to eat it." At Bell's they can pick from a variety of animals, but the chief ingredient is beccaped chicken. Yet, the specialty is beef. Bell said that all the meat was prepared on the spot and that it was purchased either for the soup or the burrito. traditional Kansas City barbecue land- scape. But that's not what Sainsbury's, but it does follow the KC tradition of plain white bread for sandwiches and an excellent sauce. The main problem is that it tastes better with marinara. Bell's beef does not match-up to such On several trips to Bell's, the size of the beef portions varied, and were usually a little on the small side. Although the size of the beef portions may vary, there is little variation in the quality of the aroma that greets you outside and the flavor of the beef comes from the big man that greets you inside. BREWERS CAFE MARKETING ASSOCIATION Autograph hound Bobby Bell signs autographs at the grand opening of Bobby Bell's Bar-B-Que. spare time FRIDAY MUSIC: The Secrets, 8 p.m. Lawrence Opera House, 7th and Massachusetts. ART: Painters Invitational, The Gallery in the Marketplace, 745 New Hampshire, through April 4. Print from the Boydite Shakespeare Gallery, Spencer Museum of Art, South Balcony Gallery, through March 20. Gallery installation and reception for Brian O'Doherty; Patrick Ireland, 3 p.m. Spencer Museum of Art. SATURDAY MUSIC: The Secrets, 8 p.m. Lawrence Opera House, 7th and Massachusetts. THEATER: "The Cat Who Walked by Himself," 1:30 Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont. ART: Lecture: Brian O'Doherty, 3 p.m. Nelson Gallery, Kansas City, Mo. SUNDAY MUSIC: Chick, Corea and Friends, 8 p.m. Midland Theater, Kansas City, Mo. KU Chamber Choir and Lawrence Chamber players doing Haydn's Theresa Mass, 3:30 p.m. University Theater. ART: Lecture: John Szarkowski, "Ansel Adams, Alfred Sieglitz and The Wilderness," 3 p.m. Nelson Gallery, Kansas City, Mo. WEDNESDAY MUSIC: Iggy Pop, 8 p.m. Lawrence Opera House, 7th and Massachusetts. THURSDAY MUSIC: Two movies, "Unmade Beds," and "The Foreigner," starring Deborah Harry, 8 p.m. Lawrence Opera House, 7th and Massachusetts. LECTURE: Alien Neuharth, president, Gannett Co., 8 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. Fans 'born to be wild' for Steppenwolf show RVKEVIN MILLS By REVENA: Kansan Reviewer Stepwellpw. Goldie McJohn, keyboards; Kerry Ray, guitar and vocals; Nicky Graham, guitar and lead vocals; Lawrence Crowhill, bass guitar. Conrub, bass guitar. With The Clean; Shawn Kelly, keys and lead vocals; Jay Francis, guitar; Mark Waltrip, drums; and Todd Kitchen, bass guitar and vocals. 327 New Hampshire, Sound by Rev Barnes. The crowd was crying wolf in anticipation of one of rock's legendary supergroups. And when Steppenwolf finally appeared onstage after several false warnings, the wait proved worthwhile. Three hundred-plus fans had crammed into the 280-seat Off-Wall Hall to hear the band that spawned "Born to be Wild" the carpet Ride; "rock anthems of the early Carrie." This was not the same Steppenwoll, to be sure. Only keyboardist Goldie McJohn remained from the original. But it didn't matter. What mattered was that the new song was written on the old, despite being plagued by sound problems through the first half of the show. K Wolf Calls Steppenwolf performs to a howling crowd at Off-the-Wall-Hall Tuesday night. The quartet, whose members are KU material, is based in the town. Town was reminiscent the Animals "House of the Rising Sun" and "The First," the group's best chart, should be the third. What's more astonishing, they succeeded without their own instruments and equipment. To save expense and set up time, they acquired equipment from the opening act, The Clean. The Clean clearly was the wrong choice to open for a Steppenwolf crow. The band's new wave sound was their own, with the band's third renditions of rock standards like "My Generation," "The Kids Are Airtight" and "Blue Suee Skies" to elicit much Most of the Steppenwolf fans seemed amused at the proceedings during the Clean's set. Dancers clad in tattered clothes wristedly spathed on the floor, occasionally crashing into the subdued audience with their frugal, talk about your generation gains. Steppewolf wolfished the crowd from the outback, launching into "Hey Laudy Wama" and "Magic Carpet Ride." *Sadly*, both songs echoed the loud public problems that obscured the lewd vocals. The mixture of old material and new struck gold with the heavy-metal-derived crowd. By the time "Born to be Wild" was played, the crown had abandoned its seats. Further sound deterioration forced an early intermission, but it was worth it. The band's keyboards at last could be heard, and the band radiated a new confidence and finally The group followed with "The Pasher" and some new songs that seemed more skilful than the past. And now they are old. Only Kerry Ray's blistering blue guitar raised these songs above the orchestra. After the show, McJohn, the sole survivor of the first group, seemed oblivious to the crowd's response. "It's the saddier situation of a group that means so much," he said, in reference to the group's small-town tour. An audience that had been in hiding since the demise of heavy metal and the advent of New Wave was reluctant to leave. But no amount of protests could change the law. The band has planned a tour of Europe, however, and Stallion Records in London will make an album from those appearances. After one encore, the lights were back on and drummer Lawrence Hammett said, "We'd like to play more, but these places close early in Kansas." McJohn said the original Stepenwolf disbanded because of mentality conflicts. "The lead singer went off on this 'star on his own trip,' he said. "He wanted to quit in the summer and not play." We finally drifted apart in 74, and there have been many comeback attempts since. The new combination has been together for only a month and a half. McJohn said he met the other members in Savannah, Ga. "There's a possible fusion of blues here," McJohn said. "I was raised in Toronto, and the other guys are from the South. Maybe we come together to form something better." McJohn is cautious about the group's prospects of returning to the limelight. Their music is contrary to what is popular nationwide, he said. "I've been in the L.A. area recently, and every pub there books the same old crap," he said. "Everyone's under this one per person, so it catches the same fish with different names." If the Lawrence concert was any indication, the core of Steppenwolf's popularity is still thriving. This just might be the comeback attempt that succeeds. 8 Friday, March 21, 1980 University Daily Kansan CAR STEREOTUNE-UP SPECIALS Spring is the natural time of the year to get your car stereo in tip-top shape. And Nelson's gives you an even better reason; we ve watered our prices on Sanyo FT-645 AM/FM Indash with Auto Reverse Cassette. Digital display equipment check Four-way fader control too too expensive $149^95 SALE PIONEER 10:28:88 MIXED Stereo CD ROM FM AM Radio USB AUX Input GPS Receiver Sayno FT-C4 Mini-Size Indash AM/FM Cassette. Locking fast for word reward. Fits all Hondas. Toyota, Datsun, etc. Retail: SALE $7995 $109.95 - 0 - 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12 - 13 - 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 - 18 - 19 - 20 - 21 - 22 - 23 - 24 - 25 - 26 - 27 - 28 - 29 - 30 - 31 - 32 - 33 - 34 - 35 - 36 - 37 - 38 - 39 - 40 - 41 - 42 - 43 - 44 - 45 - 46 - 47 - 48 - 49 - 50 - 51 - 52 - 53 - 54 - 55 - 56 - 57 - 58 - 59 - 60 - 61 - 62 - 63 - 64 - 65 - 66 - 67 - 68 - 69 - 70 - 71 - 72 - 73 - 74 - 75 - 76 - 77 - 78 - 79 - 80 - 81 - 82 - 83 - 84 - 85 - 86 - 87 - 88 - 89 - 90 - 91 - 92 - 93 - 94 - 95 - 96 - 97 - 98 - 99 - 100 top quality car stereo to make room for new shipments arriving daily! We even have complete systems including tape units and installation as low as $99.95! Don't wait though, all prices are in-stock merchandise only! Pioneer Car Speakers. All Sizes To Fit Your Car. 51% off and 60% off and KID, all off ferent magnet sizes available low vs. $19.99 per pair 25% off ECOLO Sayno Speakers—The Full Line. The specialists in bi-improved auto storage. Save as $9.95 per pair 50% off Pioneer KP-5500 Indash AM/FM Super Tuner with Cassette Player. Pushbutton station selector. The model desired model on the market! Now, you can have it at new price Retail $299.95 SALE $1599.95 [Image of a speaker unit] 10:30 AM 2ND TERM DVD MODEL 7405A SUBTITLE MEDIA CD PLAYER FM 96.1 AM 89.7 MP3 PLAYER USB PLAYER FREE INSTALLATION! WITH THIS COUPON! BUY ANY IN-DASH CAR STEREO OR CO-AXIAL SPEAKERS OR TRI-AXIAL SPEAKERS AND GET IT INSTALLED FREE! Excluding sale items. Coupon is required. Pioneer KE-200 Indash AM/FM Super Turner Cassette with Electronic Tuning. Pre-set lo station memory and Pioneers famed quality Retail: $349.95 SALE $19995 Pioneer CD-Player 2.0 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 SPRING STEREO CLEAN-UP SPECIALS This is it! Our Spring Fling with hundreds of demos, one-of-a-kinds, and discounted deals at savings that will amaze you. Complete factory warranty on all units in our store. Get the package today. 8 BRAND & MODEL CAR SPEAKERS RETAIL SALE Advent EQ 169 * A&M amplified Car Speakers 180* $^{1}$ **199** Concept CP-8121 5% Super Slim Door Speakers 35* $^{1}$ **144** Concept CP-869 6% Super Triax High Power 35* $^{1}$ **144** Pansasonic EAB 920 6% W100 Watt Away Speakers 159* $^{1}$ **197** Pansasonic EAB 950 6% Co-Asial Door Speaker 159* $^{1}$ **197** AM/FM CASSETTE & 8-TRACK AIX 1000 SCSI Drive Clarion PE 452 Underdash B-Tracker Player **189**' '195' Pioneer TP-727 Underdash B-Tracker Player **119**' '195' Seveny FI 406 Underdash Cassette Player With Retro Reverse and Slide Mount **119**' '195' Motorola TC 833 AM-FM Cassette With Pushbutton **219**' '195' Motorola TC 887 AM-FM Cassette With Pushbutton And Auto Reverse **299**' '195' Pioneer KP 8005 AM-FM Cassette Superwinter With Pushbutton **249**' '195' Marune M 8400 AM-FM B-Track **119**' '195' Motorola T 850 AM-FM B-Track **119**' '195' Motorola T 9006 In Dash B-Track Supertwister **249**' '195' RCA 200 Series II RCA 200 Series II AMPLIFIERS, TUNERS BRAND AND MODEL AND RECEIVERS RETAIL SALE JVC A-53 20 Watt Per Channel Amplifier 189¹⁰¹ JVC V-73 40 Watt Arm-Shower Tube 149¹⁰¹ JVC V-34 20 Watt Per Channel Amplifier 189¹⁰¹ JVC JA-52 20 Watt Per Channel D. C amplifier 119¹⁰¹ JVC JA-52 With Power Meters 239¹⁰¹ Sansui A-48 25 Watt Per Channel Amplifier 199¹⁰¹ Sansui A-60 25 Watt Per Channel Amplifier 199¹⁰¹ Sanyi SXR-182 25 Watt Per Channel D. C receiver 239¹⁰¹ Sanyi B-80 25 Watt Per Channel Amplifier 199¹⁰¹ Sanyi B-80 With Power Meters 239¹⁰¹ Sanyo JX-280 25 Watt Per Channel Amplifier With Power Meters 239¹⁰¹ Sanyo JX-340 25 Watt Per Channel Amplifier With Power Meters 239¹⁰¹ Sonya JCK-2900 120 Worth Per Channel Deliveree 469** '299*** Sonya Plus 15 With Digital DC Receiver With Digital Display 469** '249* Sonya Plus 75 With Digital Per Channel Deliveree Receiver With Digital Display 349* TECHNICA BSR Quante 400 Belt Drive Semi-Automatic Tumbleback With Base And Dust Cover *1891** ***3495*** Fisher MT 6535 Linear Motor Direct-Drive Lostrobe And Pitch Control, Completes With Base And Dust Cover *2791** ***1195** Sansui XR-Q2 Deluxe Automatic Tumbleback With Direct-Drive Quarts Tumbleback And Compomer Control Operation, 2 Motors *4991** ***1993** Technics SL-82 Belt Drive Semi-Automatic Tumbleback With Pitch And Dust Control *1291** ***795** Technics SLQ2 Quared Locked Semi-Auto Direct Drive Tumbleback With Strobe And Pitch Control *1891** ***995** ALL PHONO CARTRIGES AND REPLACEMENT NEEDLES 50% OFF MP3 PLAYER VOLTAGE CABLE INPUT OUTPUT RECEIVER MODEL UNIT MIXER CHANNEL EQUIPMENT MEDIA PLAYER MIXER CHANNEL EQUIPMENT MEDIA PLAYER MIXER CHANNEL EQUIPMENT MEDIA DVD ROM DISC DISC 1 DISC 2 DISC 3 DISC 4 DISC 5 DISC 6 DISC 7 DISC 8 DISC 9 DISC 10 DISC 11 DISC 12 DISC 13 DISC 14 DISC 15 DISC 16 DISC 17 DISC 18 DISC 19 DISC 20 DISC 21 DISC 22 DISC 23 DISC 24 DISC 25 DISC 26 DISC 27 DISC 28 DISC 29 DISC 30 DISC 31 DISC 32 DISC 33 DISC 34 DISC 35 DISC 36 DISC 37 DISC 38 DISC 39 DISC 40 DISC 41 DISC 42 DISC 43 DISC 44 DISC 45 DISC 46 DISC 47 DISC 48 DISC 49 DISC 50 DISC 51 DISC 52 DISC 53 DISC 54 DISC 55 DISC 56 DISC 57 DISC 58 DISC 59 DISC 60 DISC 61 DISC 62 DISC 63 DISC 64 DISC 65 DISC 66 DISC 67 DISC 68 DISC 69 DISC 70 DISC 71 DISC 72 DISC 73 DISC 74 DISC 75 DISC 76 DISC 77 DISC 78 DISC 79 DISC 80 DISC 81 DISC 82 DISC 83 DISC 84 DISC 85 DISC 86 DISC 87 DISC 88 DISC 89 DISC 90 DISC 91 DISC 92 DISC 93 DISC 94 DISC 95 DISC 96 DISC 97 DISC 98 DISC 99 DISC 100 CASSETTE 8 & T-RACK DECKS RETAIL SALE Sony TC355 Dalby Cassette With Dialy and Ferrite *1299* '1495' Sony TC455 Dalby Cassette Deck With Digiboard Display and Ferrite *1299* '1495' Sony TC551h Dalby Cassette Deck With Solenoid Controls Also Sen- cured Metal tape Capability *1299* '1495' Sensui-D 20 Dalby Cassette With Dialy *1299* '1495' JVC KDA2 Dalby Cassette Deck With Solenoid Controls *1299* '1495' Fisher CR208 Dalby Cassette Deck 2-5peed Metal Capability *1299* '1495' Sony CRA208 Dalby Cassette Speed 3 Head and Ready Connector *1299* '1495' CASSETTE & 8-TRACK DECKS complete component systems from name-brand manufacturers as low as $269.95! no rainchecks, no layaways, all prices are limited to stock on hand! FisherER8150 Combination B-Track And Cake Board With Dual Dial Digitaire Circuits JVC KDZ Professional Portable Portable Digiware With Dual Dial Super ANRS Also Sanduil Digitaire 129*129¹ 13¹ SONY BLANK TAPES FECR 90 Retail '5'' Sale $^2$$^9$ HFX 90 Retail '4'' Sale $^2$$^4$ BOSS LOUD SPEAKERS Priced in Prices Advent Powered 2 Way Power Aligned System 160 Warm With Pull Fault Fisherman ST440 12' 3 Way Speaker System 75 Warm power handling Fisherman ST420 8' Two Way Power Aligned System with Pull Fault Inner Bass Sansui SPX7900 2 Way Speaker System with Pull Handling Capability Sansui SPX7700 2 Way Speaker System with Pull Handling Capability Sansui SPX 8700 2 Way Speaker System with Pull Handling Capability Technics SBL-200 5 Way Phase Aligned System BROWNIE RUSS CAROLINA RUSS JULIEN RUSS COMPACT MUSIC SYSTEMS ihar MC-4024 /MS-115 Speakers Includes An AIR Flat Receiver With S Band Graphic Equivalent Front Causee Passive And Integrated Bath Or Furnishable With Magnatic Curriculum Compile with Full Range Air dyne Full Range Air dyne RETAIL SALE Hitachi SDT-9310 H Fisher CR4029 Includes An AM-FM Receiver With In- tegrated Tunnelbus And Full Range Speakers. 299* '149*' 2 Full Range Speakers. Hitachi SD-8100 H AM-FM Receiver And Integrated Changer With Matching Full range Speakers 189$^{1}$ 199$^{5}$ MIDI MIDI MIDI PORTABLE MUSIC MACHINES | | RETAIL | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | JVC RC-204 | AM-FM Short Wave Radio With Cassette Tape Disk 2-Way Power Supply And Built-In Mic. | **1109**¹⁰ *169⁵* | | JVC RC-343 | Deluxe AM-FM Short-wave Radio With Tape Disk 2-Way Power Supply and Full Range Speaker. | **1139**¹⁰ *189⁵* | | JVC 3050 | AM-FM Radio, With Built-in Personal Size B. B.W.TV. | **1219**¹⁰ *1129⁵* | | JVC 3070 | AM-FM Radio, With Built-in TV. And Cassette Tape Recorder. | **1299**¹⁰ *1149⁵* | | Sony CFS-55 | Stereo AM-FM Cassette With Two Built-in Speakers. | **1199**¹⁰ *1129⁵* | | Sony CFS-65 | Deluxe Stereo AM-FM Cassette With Large Range Speaker and Multi Way Power Supply. | **1249**¹⁰ *1149⁵* | | Pioneer SK-1 | Deluxe Stereo AM-FM Cassette With Built-in Mic. Counter and Multi Way Power Supply. | **1209**¹⁰ *1149⁵* | 2319 LOUISIANA 841-3775 NELSON'S TEAM ELECTRONICS Fridav. March 21. 1980 9 Equality gained as women accept biological functions, lecturer says University Daily Kansan Women are slowly becoming free of the burden that their biological age makes them face. Ms. Lizka L. Jenkins, University of Cincinnati professor of philosophy, told about 70 people last night in New York City. "I think there have been advances for women to gain equality in the past 10 to 15 years, but there are still many questions to be answered," she said. Jaggar said she thought that because women had been forced into traditional roles in the past, they were expected to remain in these roles now. Changes in the beliefs of modern radical feminists have brought more women into their ranks, according to Jaggar. "Radical feminists are taking another look at what the biological functions of women can accomplish. This tempts to ignore women's given biological functions force many women to join the fight." Jaggar defined romantic feminism as the belief that passivity and motherhood made women the purer sex. Philosophies exist today that claim biological differences make women inferior to men, garra said. Tw examples she gave were the belief that women cannot function to full capacity every day because of their menstrual cycle theories of influence of Freudian theories in psychology. She also said that in the ideal societies of many feminist science fiction writers, men and women shared the raising and nursing of the children. Men and women should raise the raising of children equally, Jagar said. She read from an article from the New York Times on Tuesday that some hormones to enable him to nurse his child. Jaggar has published many papers on sexual equality, abortion, and the political philosophies of women's liberation. Alison Jaggar Legal defenses claiming insanity obscure the law,KU profs say By JON BLONGEWICZ Staff Reporter Several bizarre and highly publicized murder cases have recently raised some questions and caused confusion for both the public and the legal community about its "capacity" and "insecurity defenses," according to two KU law professors. The professors, David Gottlieb, associate professor of law, and Katherine Meyer, president of the College of Arts and Sciences, White, who shot and killed San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and supervisor John Burrill, recently received John Gacy case in Illinois have led to the confusion about murder and man- White was convicted of voluntary man-slaughter under a California statute that provided a defense for murder if the THE PROFESSORS said that cases when the defense could argue successfully that they had been slaughtered or for acquaintance of inference may have broader circumstances and stimulate the public's desire for revenge. Gottliebs said that the White and Gay cases were similar. defendent could establish "diminished capacity" at the time of the homicide. Gacy last week lost his in-not guilty by reason of the murder trial for the murder of 33 young men and boys. Gottlieb said that in White's case, "diminished capacity" is half way between murder and insanity. However, the public is disappointed and angry if the defendant is convicted of a lesser degree homicide, or is judged insane and remanded to a mental hospital for an crime that appears particularly brutal, he said. IN KANAS, AND most other states, first degree murder can be proved only if the prosecution establishes that the murder was premeditated and deliberate. Most legal scholars agree, Gottlieb said, that to establish preemption it must be proven that the defendant did think about the murder for an "appreciable amount of time." "But what is an appreciable amount of time?" Meyer asked. "Is it five minutes, an hour or 30 seconds?" Many juries have been persuaded that it takes only a few seconds of reflection for a kill to become presenitated, although the jurors preferred legal definition, the professors said. From page one TEMPLETON SAID he didn't expect the Board's decision to close the Washburn issue. However, he said, Washburn's Senate committee has approved the statute because its budget limitations. ASK... Ragdale said ASK was not in close enough contact with Washburn's Senate. Liberty Ragsdale, former Washburn Senate president who left office March 17, said the Washburn Senate cut ASK funding because of inadequate ASK representation and increased money. Washburn's student fees decreased $8,000 this year that last year. "People were unhappy with ASK because they paid money and never heard anything from ASK." Ragsdale said. "The ASK campus director never worked with Senate." THE WASHBURN Senate "overwhelmingly" passed a bill designed to keep closer tabs on Washburn's ASK director at its meeting last week. The bill requires Washburn's campus director to attend Senate meetings at least once a month and to keep Senate abreast of ASK issues. Bender said the bill was not intended to be hostile toward ASK. "We don't want to hassle them, we just want to watch them," Bender said. The bill also provided for taking another vote on ASK membership one week before budget hearings next year. Engineering conference planned The 25th annual KU Structural Engineering Conference has been set for March 28 at the Kansas University. Specialists in bridge design, energy and structural aspects of modern buildings will give presentations and discuss new techniques in the field of structural engineering. A presentation also will be made regarding structural engineering research being done at KU. Sponsored by the department of civil engineering, the conference will be dedicated to George W. Bradshaw, KU professor of engineering who died in 1977. Bradshaw initiated the structural engineering conferences at KU. IN THE CASE of lesser degrees of homicide, where much of the confusion les, second-degree murder is defined as murder with mallice, but without premeditation. Manslaughter, on the other hand, usually involves a murder without mallice after an act of provocation. An example of the difference may be found in a barroom brawl, the professors say. A person who is provoked in such a case would probably be accused of a party with a chair, killing that person, probably would be accused of voluntary manslaughter. But if the same person killed someone with a chair without being involved in the murder charge might be second-degree murder. Sessions will be held in the Forum and Kansas rooms of the Kansas Union. Further information about registration and fees can be obtained from the division of continuing education. "Essentially the system is saying that the guy who in cold blood commits a slaying is more culpable than who has been wrong, and the other is suspect where in between." Meyer said. "These laws simply tell a jury. You decide how bad an actor this guy is and punish him accordingly," "Mever said. GOTTLIEB SAID that perhaps people should盗取 insanity after determining what wrong they have done in guilt, but should instead affect the punishment — where the defendant should be acquitted. Neither Meyer nor Gottlieb saw less confusing homicide statutes in the future. "The states will continue to differ," Gottlieb said. "They differ on capital punishment and they differ on this too." Gottlieb said that there had been attempts to make the application of insanity pleas more consistent across the country, but that there was little chance for change. Running cockroaches may unlock unsolved mysteries of nerves By DAVID STIPP Staff Reporter Soon this semester in a darkened room in Snow Hall a spotlight positioned over a large, black plastic sphere will be switched on and the room running as fast as it can and going nowhere. The cocktail will be the first guest star on a very special stage—the first two-dimensional treadmill in the United States. The treadmil, which is a sphere 50 centimeters in diameter, will be made to rotate in any direction by a combination of the handles and a computer. It will keep the cocktail in one place no matter how fast it rolls. In the audience will be William Bell, professor of entomology and writer of research more than $100,000 into the design and construction of the computer-controlled THE SERVO-SPHERE will let the researchers perform experiments that may answer fundamental questions about the operation of nerves, according to Bell. "Nerves have almost the same structure and operation in rats, humans or cockroaches." Bell said. Information which is applicable to the operation of nerves in man as well as insects should be obtained after study of the nervous system of the coccockh, he said. The servo-sphere will permit the motions of small animals such as cockroaches to be precisely observed. Cockroaches will be induced to move on the sphere by such stimuli as sex pheromones. Pheromones are chemicals, usually air-borne, used by insects to relay messages in the form of mating. The messages prompt male cockroaches to look for the sender. BY CONTROLLING the quantity of sex stimuli that was sent, Bells hopes to investigate how cockroaches on the servo sphere stimulate and translate these perceptions into action. As a cockroach crawls on the sphere, its motions will be picked up by photoelectric sensors that can detect light reflecting off it. This allows you to have a small piece of luminous tape on it. "To the cockroach it will seem as if it is crawling unimpeded upon a level surface," Bell said. The cockroach's motions will be fed into a set of electrodes, and how fast the insect has moved. At the same time, the computer will control a set of electric motors that will keep the cockroach moving. THE TECHNICAL problems associated with the development of the servo-sphere have been formidable, according to Bell. The development of a lightweight sphere ended when a power and light company in West Germany supplied them for use on street lights used as lamp covers for streetlights. In addition to cockroaches, other small animals may find themselves jogging in the open grasslands. Lillywhite, associate professor of systematics and ecology, is interested in using the servo-sphere to perform exoskeleton movements on small toads and salamanders, Bell said. "When we get all the equipment set up, it will look like the bridge of the Starship Enterprise." "Surber said. Jim Surber, Lawrence senior, has developed much of the electronic "in-interface" controls it controls, and the photoelectric sensors. This interface consists of specially designed electronic equipment as well as computer written specifically for the servo sphere. AFTER PERSISTENT investigations, Bell and his assistants finally found suitable motors in France. "Our biggest setback came when we started trying to find high-torque, quick-responding motors to drive the servo-motor." Bell said. "The technology at college has changed so that the only subject about which I have been able to find someone to help me at KU." By DAVID WEED Staff Reporter Another problem was finding electric motors capable of responding instantly and without any vibration or noise. The National Institute of Health and the National Science Foundation are jointly funding the servo-sphere project. Burkard Awards honor KU 'celebrities' "What event features Norman Forer, Darnell Valentine and Don Bambrough?" asks Richard Burkard, Kansas City, Kan., senior. Only the Burkard Awards Night, Burkard said yesterday. Burkard billed the awards night as "the social event of the evening," if the nominees attend the awards ceremony next week at the Kansas Union. "It's halfway serious and halfway tongue-in-cheek," Burkard said, "but it's so terrible to the extent that the winners receive cereal and prizes selected especially for them." Burkard said the nominees who had called him were unsure of what the Burkard Awards were because they had never heard them. "It was a prank. A prank. Everything on the level." Categories include Comeback of the Year, which Don Fambrough, Brian Bethke and Norman Forner are nominated for. The awards night is part of Burkard Awards Week. Burkard said he expanded IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MAAS. 8:30-8:00 M-S Thurs. till 8:30 p.m. the awards from a night to a week to give them more credibility. He said he held an award ceremony his senior year in high school, and he planned for three years to hold the awards ceremony again, but he was too busy. Events during the week include a paper airplane throwing contest, a card game tournament and an Othello game tournament. "But I figured that since this was my senior year I had to do it now or never," he said. Burkard spent much of semester break compiling a ballot for the awards night, he said. But Burkard said the response to the week's events had not been good. "I said limited entries, but in fact no one has responded to my personal ad yet," he said. "I decided that if I was going to organize this," he said, "I'd name it after myself. "I didn't even vote. I'll be the master of ceremonies, but my name is about all the glory I'm going to get." Burkard also plans to hold a Burkard Awards Ball after the awards ceremony. "I got the idea for the awards four years ago on a snowy January night," he said. 544 W. 23rd St. 841-6181 W.C. & Me Pizza $^1^{00}$ off a delivered pizza PLUS a FREE quart of pop. Good Thursday through Sunday. One coupon per delivery order, please. Coupon expires Friday, April 4, 1980. TRAILRIDGE W. W. - studios - apartments 843-7333 2500 W.6th - townhouses Canvas For Spring Handbags Duffle Bags Back Packs Totes OPEN Eventoga & Sunday Holiday Plaza BAG SHOP SPENCER'S MEN'S WEAR BIG and TALL sizes Halliday Square 2077 S. Tapoka St, Tapoka K. 913-267-3104 TODAY - Indoor Recreation - March 21, is the last day to sign up for SUA committees in these areas: - Outdoor Recreation - Special Events - Travel - Forums Stop by the SUA Office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477 for information GET INVOLVED! SUA NEEDS YOU! - Public Relations BUT DO IT TODAY! J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! FREE BEER! Friday, March 21 $3.50 cover Doors open 8 pm Come to the spring dance featuring XANADU Latin rock and funky rock 9:00 p.m. Saturday, March 22 TOFU TEDDY rock and roll $2.00 Doors open 8 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Off the Wall Hall 841 0817 737 New Hampshire THE RESTAURANT NEW YORK OMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown. 843-3788 PG Starting Gayy Daughter Ew. 7.10 and Ew. 9.30 Ew. 7.10, Sat. mat. 2.30 Varsity Downtown. 843-1085 PG Hero At Large Starting Hunter Ew. 7.10 and Ew. 9.30 SNEAK PREVIEW! "Serial" (Tonight only) Rw. 8.30 Separate admission Hillcrest 510 & low. 842-6000 PG Starting Martha Mason and James Caan Ew. 7.15 and Ew. 9.45 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2.00 Starting Talum O'Neal and Katy McIlhoch Ew. 7.15 and Ew. 9.45 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2.00 Kramer vs. Kramer PG Starting Dustin Holmman and Mary Streep Ew. 7.15 and Ew. 9.45 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2.13 Cinema Twirl 131 & lower. 842-6000 PG All That Jazz Starting Roy Schiff Ew. 7.15 and Ew. 9.45 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1.30 Little Miss Marker Starting Walter Mathias and John Andrew Ew. 7.15 and Ew. 9.45 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1.30 Sunset Drive-In- NOW OPEN! Friday-Saturday. North Dallas Forty plus Up In Smoke Shows start at dusk Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 PRES TABULAR ON AMENDMENTS VILLA VACUUM LAMBDA CHI ALPHA AT KU WELCOME BROTHERS TO GREAT PLAINS CONCLAVE 1980. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA AT KU WELCOMES BROTHERS TO GREAT PLAINS CONCLAVE 1980. Central Missouri Missouri at Rolla North Dakota Missouri Western Braille Nebraska Coe Nebraska at Omaha Drury Eureka Simpson Illinois State South Dakota Iowa South Dakota State Iowa State Western Illinois Kansas State William Jewell Missouri Pittsburg State UMKC Southwest Missouri State (All KU sororities are invited to the party at the Elks Club Saturday) VS ALBERTO FERNANDES VII VI CIVILIS 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 21, 198 More companies seeking employees at KU By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Opportunities for KU students to hire hiring companies on campus have increased despite a lighter job market and an increased number of graduates, according to the University Placement Center. During the past three years the number of corporations, government employers and schools interviewing on campus have increased from 400 to 618, University Placement Center director, said this week. Geissler said personal contact from the center had increased the number of corporations coming to KU. "By personal contact we've gotten some companies to come to KU that haven't been here for years," Geissler said. "For example, Macy's and Russell Stover came for the first time in a long time this year." FRED MADAH, placement director for the School of Business, said 173 companies had come to KU this year and he expected to exceed last year's total of 180 corporations. In 1974, 172 companies visited the school. "A lot of the large companies are coming back on a continuum basis," he said. The engineering department has increased company interviewing at KU to 120 and expects more next year, Theresa Pischny, of the engineering placement department said. "The recruiters have said they've had good interviews," she said. "If they have good interviews, they'll send it to me." GESISLER SAID the Placement Center set the interviews, but students had to rename for them. He said an effective resume and knowledge of the company a student interviewed with was essential. Arthur Thomas, Career Counseling Center counselor, said "You can't just out of bed or 10 minutes later "Wearing patched jeans is not a good idea. You'd be surprised how many people do not dress neatly or appropriately." He said dress should be compatible with the duties of the job. A three-piece suit for businessmen and comfortable working clothes for an engineering foreman would be appropriate. BERNIE SMITH, regional director of HAR Block, said he placed importance on the appearance of an intruder in a computer system. Smith said an interview was the screening process. He said he had seen skills decision-making, skills self-motivation and skills decision-making. He said displaying confidence was beneficial in an interview. "I consider the way a person shakes hands," Smith said. "A wet dishstir is uncomfortable and a firm handshake, whether it's a man or a woman, displays self-assuredness." Gleissner said interviewers looked at education, extra-curricular activities, work experience and grade point "They like to see where you have excelled, where you've competed and won," he said. "Leadership qualities, creative imagination and even high school activities should be summarized in some form." SMITH SAID resumes should include any information about organization membership and hobbies as well as what kind of work you do. "They may be overlooking saleable skills," he said. "Sometimes we learn things through a resume about extra-curricular activities that enhance the interviewee marketability as an employee. That two-way street includes students asking that which indicates interest in the company, Smith said. - "Campus interviews are like going to the grocery store." Students shop the campus just as interns do. * "Campus interviews are a two-way street." THOMAS SAID he counseled students to ask questions because the employers liked to think the applicant was busy. He said he had seen people He said interviewers were impressed when students showed concern about their future and whether the teacher was doing well. "It's not a good idea to ask about money first." Thomas said. "but questions are appreciated." Gallup . . . From page one for all" and protect the voters from having "to choose between Tweedledee and Tweedledum." Along with Louis Harris, Gallup is probably the most well-known public opinion analyst in the United States. Gallup is most closely identified with the American Institute of Public Opinion and the Gallup Organization, often referred to simply as "the Gallup Poll." The Gallup Organization conducts polls on a wide variety of social, economic and political issues. Gallup first sprang into national prominence in 1986 when he won over Allard Franklin-Rosevelt's presidential election win over ALLARD. CHAIRMAN OF THE Princeton, N.J.-based Gallup Organization, Gallup founded the American Institute of Public Opinion in 1934 and the British Institute of Public Opinion in 1836. The Gallup Organization has affiliates in 35 countries. Gallup taught journalism at Iowa, Drake, Northwestern and Columbia universities in the late 1920s and early 1930s before becoming research director and later vice president of a New York newspaper. When he conducted public opinion surveys on behalf of its clients. [Photo of a man speaking into a microphone. He is wearing a dark suit and has his hand on his cheek.] Home away from home planned for relatives of ill George Gallup BvSTEVEMAUN Staff Renorter The Children's Oncology Services of Mid- America, Inc. announced plans yesterday for a home away from home for families of children with long term illnesses in Kansas City. The organization plans to renovate a 16-story apartment in the streets, Kansas City, Kansas into a 10-bedroom residence where families can stay while their children are being treated at a hospital. Carolyn Gilhouen, president of the Careylens family of families are in the city three weeks to three months, sleeping in cars or lodges of food, food, lodging and travel are so black. Parents and medical personnel have been aware of the problem for a long time but some parents brought it to the attention of the Junior League of Kansas City, Kan., last spring, she said. GILHOUSEN SAID an architect had been approached about donating his services to renovate the three story colonial house and be called the Romal McDonald house. The Heart of America, McDonalds, the Junior League of Kansas City, Kan., and the Spearst at the First National Bank of Kansas City are major supporters of the project, she said. THE HOUSE WILL have a community kitchen, a laundry room and a playroom for other children. Gilhauer used it. Also will the needs of these families, $ \theta_{b_{hoe}x}$ , meet the needs of these families, $ \theta_{b_{hoe}y}$ . There are 15 other similar houses in the nation and 10 more are scheduled to be completed before the end of the year. W.C. & Me Pizza 544 W. 23rd St. 841-6181 UNION BANK "Someone, somewhere has seen something. They're just not coming forth and saying I saw a gun pointed from that window," he said. Even if the snapper could be observed in the act by a KU police officer, problems in apprehending the suspect would still remain, Denny said. The He said detectives have followed some leads but have no satisfactory conclusions. 'DEEPEST" in TOWN! Try our New Whole Wheat Crust it's Delicious. Delicate Flavored Seafood and Fish complimented with French Chips, French Fries and Cole Slaw Wednesday night KU police investigated three incidents of people hearing gunshot fire. Police officers could not confirm the incidents, however. "The power of suggestion is coming into play. All of a sudden there are more pellet guns around than ever before," Denney said. "It's difficult to catch people in the dark and there's not much evidence to go on after the incident has already happened," Denney said. Served Each Friday, 5 PM - 9:30 PM Seafood Platter $2.75 "We're trying to keep a very close eye on Daisy Hill," he said. Before spring break several students' cars and several patrol cars were damaged by pellet gun fire near Ellsworth Hall and other KU residence halls. 23rd & Iowa "One family had been living in their son's room, who had been dying of cancer, for years. They were Dodge City and had another son they hadn't afforded months because they couldn't afford to go." Holiday Inn Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358. The possibility that a pellet gun sniper is still active on campus is making some people jumpy, Jim Demney, University of Kansas director of police, said yesterday. With the return of students after break, Denney and the police force is waiting to see if any surfaces this weekend. This is your LAST CHANCE to see it this year! THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW a different set of jaws. Saturday —midnight ONLY R Varsity Downtown 843-1065 This is your LAST CHANCE to see it this year! THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW a different set of jaws. Campus authorities pursue Daisy Hill pellet gun sniper THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW a different set of jaws. Saturday —midnight ONLY R Varsity Downtown 843-1065 ICELAND BIG BIRD AND A LOW FARE s499 s533 ICELANDAIR TO EUROPE Roundtrip from Chicago to Luxembourg No restrictions Roundtrip from New York to Luxembourg Confirmed reservations *free* wine with dinner, cake after *no restrictions on stays to 18* or advance purchase. Prices valid from U.S. from March 10th to May 14, 1980. All schedules and prices subject to change in approval. Purchase "We hope it's not going to happen again and we're doing all we can to be there if it does," he said. Icelandar P.O. Box 103, West Hemlock, NY 11552 A KU student reported the theft of drafting tools from a locked locker and unlocked desk draw sometime during spring break. The tools were valued at $300. See your travel agent or write Dept. #CN West Hemipastel NY 11552 Call in NY, 759-875-1862, elsewhere, call 800-553-1212 for the toll-free number in your area. Please send me: □ An overnight flight timeable. □ An airport travel package. KANSAN Police Beat Still your best value to Europe Maintenance crews were busy yesterday trying to remove red spray paint from sidewalks on campus. Early Thursday morning, a group of students written on a sidewalk west of Fraser Hall and on the north side of Blake Hall. Wednesday night words were painted on two sidewalks near Wescoe Hall. Stop the door from entering the building. Police estimated the damage at almost $300. ICELANDAIR @ "Where Cards & Gifts Around" PHOTO ZERCHER We're hopping into Easter with a huge selection of stuffed animals, cards, baskets, & party supplies. 919 IOWA 1107 MASS. MILSTEAD MEISNER= RETAIL LIQUOR FEATURING VIN FINE IMPORTED AND CALIFORNIA WINES 30 VARIETIES OF COLD BEER! COLD BEER! FOR KEGS CALL 842-4499 IN HOLIDAY PLAZA (2 DOORS WEST OF KIEE'S) sua films Presents A man went looking for America And couldn't find it anywhere... easy RIDER Peter Fonda · Dennis Hopper Jack Nicholson R COLOR Plus: "Interviews with My Lai Veterans' Sunday, March 23 2:00 pm $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium —No refreshments allowed— Friday, March 21, 1980 Golfers 9 down with 1 round left 11 By KEVIN BERTELS Snorts Writer By KEVIN BERTELS Nobody remembers the last time the KU men's golf team won a major invitational tournament. They did so at Sports Information Department. With one round left, only nine strokes separate KU from the leaders of the Gulf Coast Intercollegiate tournament at Padre Island, Florida. Kansas, however, trailed by six after Tuesday's second round. The golfers dropped three more strokes in yesterday's game than nine behind Southwest Oklahoma University. KU had a team score of 365 for 74 tournament total. Southwest Oklahoma shot a 382 for an 888 total. Despite the nine-stroke win, the Nets finished last in the winner. The final 12 holes will be played today. round, but we feel like we still have a good chance," he said. "Nine strokes is really not that many to make up." "Of course, we're not happy with today's KU will need a better performance than yesterday's, however, if they hope to make a run at the title. University Daily Kansan THE TEAM was led by Mark Crow with a 2-over-73 that left them for four place with a 223 total. He was tied for the lead after Monday's round. Doug Anderson, of Toronto, took the lead and turned in his third 76 of the journey for a total of 228 and a share of ninth place. John Lyons shot 77 for a 240 total, while Wednesday's leader for KU, D.R. Sensenbam, maneuvered to 79 and a 242 total. The two scores that didn't count for KU were the most disheartening, Randall said. Mark Stenker, who tied for first after two weeks in Miami, said he was surprised. He is tied for seventh place with a 227. Sports KANSAN- The other KU golfer was freshman Chris Collatie, who is playing in his first college tournament. He was 3-over-par after 10 holes before disaster struck. In his last four holes, Collatie collapsed. he had three beogys and finished with 80 and a 247 total. "CHRIS WAS doing really well for a while," Randall said. "He's starting to play better and he is ready to do well." Some other KU golfers had similar troubles at the end of their rounds. Randall attributed this to the "winter blues." "We lost a lot of strokes coming down the stretch," he said. "It was little mistakes that hurt them, but the more they play, the more confident they get." KU was being pushed by Southern KU, who had 51 strike outs as strokes hit at 91. Randall said that no problem and that the team's goal was to win and not worry about second or third. "I think we are in a position where we will try to win and not worry about anyone else," he said. "I've not to get them to concentrate on what we're doing and not on what other people are doing." There is an 11-stroke gap between third and fourth. Southwest Missouri was fourth at 924 followed by Wisconsin at 928 Southern Illinois — Carbondale at 942 and Coffeyville Community College, Kan.at 947 were in a group of their own. Women at national meet; scholarship talk delayed By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer The women's gymnastics team enters regional competition this weekend, overshadowed by its uncertain fate in to-be-eliminated gymnastics program. There has been no official word from the athletic department about the continuation of scholarships. Athletic Director Bob Marcum said athletic that a meeting would be held before he meets with Ken Snow, and Assistant Athletic Directive Officer. No date for meeting has been announced. The women's gymnastics team is in Minneapolis, Minn., this weekend for the regional trials of the AIAW. have a direct effect on who goes to national competition. The regional meet, however, does not "The girls work on a seasonal season. The team scores they earn during the season are averaged, then added to twice their regional score for a national season "Anyway, it's pretty confusing and hard to say who will get in." KU's Kathy Ross has the best chance, according to Snow. Both the men and women's teams were cut from KU's athletic program for a shorter period earlier this week that all gymnasts did not transfer to another school. "We don't want to talk about who's leaving until after this meet," he said. Ford-fueled Kings whip nuggets KANSAST City, Mp. (UIP) - Gurdes乌尔斯 Birdson and Phil Ford combined to score 57 points last night to help the Kansas City Nuggets win a 121-106 victory over the Denver Nuggets. Birdsdon scored 32 points, the 14th time he 'topped 30 this season, and Ford chipped in 25 points to help Kansas City pull within 8 points of Midwest Division leader Mikeaukke. Kansas City led the entire game, getting 20 points from Birdsong in the first half and 23 from Ford in the second, to help offset a performance by Alex English of the Nuggets. City, which has played one less game than the first-place Bucks. Denver has now lost 24 of its last 26 road games. King Edgard added 19 for Kansas Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W 8 L 18 Pret. 68 GB y-Honor 38 54 22 - y-Filh 34 22 11 - New York 38 39 494 20% Washington 38 49 494 20% Hawaii 32 45 17 - Cleveland Group a Atlanta 35 28 618 6 San Antonio 38 38 608 9 Charlotte 34 42 652 12 Indiana 35 42 652 12 Cleveland 34 42 652 12 Charlotte 34 42 652 12 Midwest Division × Milwaukee 45 42 .584 — × Kansas City 45 32 .579 — Denver 29 27 .377 16 Chicago 29 48 .377 16 Atlanta 29 63 .300 12 --sua films Over 15 years in the business 843-2931 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL Lawrence, Kansas 66444 Where economy comes first - Rentals start at $7.95 a day plus mileage - Free pick-up and delivery - A choice of any of these economy minded cars Toyotas Chevettes Firebirds LTD Wagons --sua films Bucky's SPECIAL! Now at Bucky's get a DELUXE BUCKY, FRIES, AND SMALL SUNDAE all for only $1.89 Through Sunday, March 23 Bocky's 2120 W. 9th Pacific Division Fleet Names - Los Angeles 31 22 214 - Phoenix 51 28 658 - Pacific Coast 35 42 658 - San Diego 35 42 658 - San Jose 31 42 455 - *inclled aircraft title* Last Night's Game Cleveland 109, Houston 96 Boston 124, Denver 178 Washington 118, Philadelphia 113, OT Kansas City 121, Denver 106 WALKING TALL BOUTIQUE Ladies TALL Fashions Junior and Misses Show on June 12 All Widths 4016 S.W. 21st Topeka, Kansas 66604 273-0900 STUDENTS --sua films We are now leasing for Fall and Spring. - SUMMER STORAGE * Lease now with 2 month storage package. Can you haul your belongings home for a small storage fee? Call Park 25 and see. Choose your home, now, for next year and ensure location and color of decor. Offering 10 and 12 month leases. PARK 25 Apartments APARTMENTS Large 1 and 2 bedroom-bath, 2 bedroom-2-bath 2 pools—2 laundry rooms—bus service Call or come in ADVENTURE WORLD 80 Telephone... School... Call or write for our free ful color brochure. EUROPE AND BEYOND! Traveling the open road. There's something about it that makes you want to experience you will ever have before. The joy of vacation we never get to experience. e. Call or come by and talk with Gary, Ellen or Kathy And you have over thirty onions of which road to hit the mountains was built into the villages of the real Europe, the Greek Islands, Scandinavia, Russia, the Middle East, Africa. And you have a hard-dive, adventure to adventure Take a modern coach, add young people from all over the world, and hit the road. FLYING INFER COLLEGIATE HOLIDAYS INC □ Yes! Send me more information about AdventureWorld 80! 501 Midtown Avenue New York, N Y 10022 (212) 355-4705 Name Address THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA FREE PITCHER Enjoy Coca-Cola with purchase of any pizza WED. thru SUN. March 19-23 Bring This coupon Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358. Friday & Saturday March 21-22 ROCKY II Dir. Sylvester Stallone, with Stallone, Dr. Silvester Stallone, with Burgess Meredish, Burt Young. Also a woman a rematch with Rocky Balboa. Plus, "Muscle Beach," a short by Sylvester Stallone. Midnight Movies DESPERATE LIVING Dir. John Mole, with Liz Renay, Mink Stale, Edith Massley, Susan Winston, and Linda Rowe, director who made Baltimore and a taste famous. By the director of FLAMMINGS and MONO TRASHO. "Love letter to Egg" (the Egg) Sunday, March 23 EASY RIDER DIAL M FOR MURDER Monday, March 24 Hitchcock: DIAL M FOR MURDER Dir. Dennis Hopper, with PETER Fonda, Hopper, Jack Nicholson, Luke Askew, Karen Black. Two disillusioned men travel by motorcycles to a small town where the Mard Gras, Plus: Joe Stickle's "interviews with My LA Veterans." Dir. Alled Hiltchick, with Grace Kelly, Ray Miland, Miller Cummings. A man plots his wife's demise at the hands of a third party. Tuesday, March 25 Peckinpah: RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY Dir. Sam Pepinchak, with Randolph Scott and McCrea, two cinematic symbols of the romantic old West, and Bonnie Brown, a pioneering a new century Pepinchak's kind. Unless otherwise noted, all t竿 will be shown at Woolfudd Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R竿 are $1.00 and $1.50; S竿 are $1.50 and $1.50 start and at 3:00, 7:30 and Midnight on Fri, & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday; tickets available at www.kansas.edu/college/Schl.Lev.info-8644-3479. No refreshments or refreshed meals. FREEGAS Purchase ANYTHING for $100 or more, and Audio Professionals will credit your purchase $7.50. This amount represents the average cost of fuel round trip between Lawrence and Kansas City.Offer ends March 1 ONE COURON PER PERSON PER DAY OVERLAND PARK, KS. 8079 METCALF C 813 341 1787 INDEPENDENCE, MO 8000 GLO NOLA RD 813 341 1787 OMAHA, NEBR. WEST DODGE RD 802 305 1000 LINCOLN, NEBR. 803 379 1000 HEAVY DUMP AUDIO RECORDER SYSTEM VOLUME RECORD KENWOOD KR-6030 AM/FM-Stereo Receiver Watts per Channel Mini RMS at 8 ohms. from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.05% total harmonic distortion MANUFACTURERS' SUGGESTED SELLING PRICE $5351 $1^{87} A WATT! Very low distortion, 80 Watts per channel, plus super sensitive FM tuning at the wildest price ever. That's real performance and value...only at Audio Professionals. $299 AudioProfessionals 12 Friday, March 21, 1980 University Daily Kansan Dayhawk 'Shoulda swung' KU shortship Steve Jelt grimzes after taking a strike in recent baseball action. Jeltz hasn't been caught looking too often this season, especially on the base paths, Jeltz, who holds KU's all-time stolen base record has stolen eight bases this season in nine attempts. DO'S DELUXE 801-754-3005 (911) 227-6101 Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints AOTT Panda Bear Brewery Would like to thank all those who contributed to the success of our Philanthropy project of raising money for Arthritis Research. sua films Presents ROCKY II - ROBERT CHARITOFI IRWIN WINKLER SYWESTER SALINE "ROCY II" DAIA SHAH BRUTT UNIQUE CARL WEATHERS BURGESS MEREITH BILL COINT BILL BUILTOR IRWIN WINKLER ROBERT CHARITOFI SYWESTER SALINE Friday & Saturday, March 21-22 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 pm $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium —No refreshments allowed— Baseball team has busv weekend By KENDAVIS Sports Writer With a 94 record, it would appear that the Kansas baseball队 is purling along smoothly in the early stages of the season. But KU Coach Floyd Temple is the first to admit that the Jayhawks have some hinks to be worked out. The Jayhawks have woven seven of their games against the Cincinnati Reds in the season. A more of that kind of action this weekend with double-headers against Baker University today and Fort Hays State tomorrow is 1:30 p.m. today and 1 p.m. at Quietley Field. TEMPIE IS hoping for some improvement by KU players in two areas this weekend: field and base The Jayhawks have committed 30 errors in their first 13 games for a .928 fielding percentage. Last season KU had 77 "STEVE JELTZ is the only one right now." Temple said. "And when you can't steal and you have people that can run, you're limiting your offense. It's just an individual thing that they've got to work on." "Our outfield play has been good, but the infielders have got to start concentrating and relaxing. Our pitchers are basically control pitchers and for that reason we're going to hit a lot of ground balls hit against us. We need to field them." "We're still not really fielding what I hope we 're capable of.' We've said yesterday. "We have to have good defence." One area that Temple has been pleased with is the KU team, who beat the Bronx Bucks and Scott Wright is batting .417 with a team-leading RBIs. Roger Riley follows with a .368 mark and Jelz has闪击 with the .349 mark which ties him with MATT and RIPPLE. Temple's other concern is the Jayhawks' base-steing record. KU has swiped 19 bases so far this season, but six Jayhawk runners have been gunned down. In the past two seasons they've speeded effectively in both the stolen base and the hit-and-run. attempts. He now has 48 stolen bases in his career and has only caught six times. "LAST YEAR we stole 74 out of 82 attempts and that's an outstanding record," Temple said. "But we're not getting our leads and we're not getting a good enough jump against the pitcher. Mark Gile, Wichita freshman, get four his in Tuesdays's double-header with Benedictine and is now hitting. 333. Gile has played a steady second base as well. He hasn't committed an error in the last six games. "The stolen base has been an effective weapon for us the last two years. And I told the team that if we don't use it, we will not win." TEMPIE SAID his starting pitching in today's twinhill will be Mike Watt and Kurt Kafiae. Watt, 2, has struggled with the appearances this season, giving up 13 earned runs in 9% of innings, 1-4, will be making his second start for the Jayhawks. Shortstop Steve Jelz hasn't shown any signs of slacking he's a forceful feet-footed junior already has eight shots in nine attempts. He also has 16 rickets. Jeltz set a school record last year, swiping 28 bases in 31 Eleventh-hour Bruins make good, look good INDIANAPOLIS (AP) – The UCLA Bruns, a team that came into the NCAA basketball playoffs virtually through the season, will continue of walking out the front this weekend. "We've dominated the NCAA tournament the last 15 years and we have a responsibility to play well here," UCLA coach Larry Brown said yesterday. His young, enthusiastic team will meet Purdue in the national semifinals tomorrow. In the other semifinal game at the Market Square arena. Louisville will face fowa. An 11th-hour choice by the NCAA selection committee for this 42nd tournament, the Bruins have proven themselves with success in the league, far including one over-raped DePaul. "I first realized we could get to the Final Four after we beat DePaul," said Roder Foster, one of the freshman guards in the team. "We got it, we got it, we got it. Ohio State, I realized we could win it." Old Dominion and Clermson, in the West Regional finals, were the other UCLA victims in the Bruins' charge to Indianapolis. It has been a long and winding road to the Final Four for UCLA and one not without humps. The Bruins, who have dominated the Pac-12, virtually own the NCAA playoffs through most of the 1960s and 1970s, had a less than auspicious season. Not only did they not win the Pac-10, but finished a dimal fourth and lost nine games overall. Their 17-4 record did little to hurt them, so they tournament berth, as Dave Gavitt excels. "Hardly anyone wanted the Bruns in the tournament," points out Gavitt, the Providence coach, the director and a member of the ACLS selected team. He is also coach of the U.S. Olympic team. But still, there was the UCLA image, the mystique that still lingered from the John Wooden years when the Bruins won a record 16-5. The team went on to win a 48-team field to fill the latest in history. "Once the Bruins were in, nobody wanted them in their region," said Gavitt. "Then they were treating them at the Boston Celtics." And so the Bruins were accepted after long and heated arguments among the NCAA committee members. And they've been playing that way of late, too. "I guess we're not in such dire straits as some people thought, 'Brown, who is in his wheelchair?' But we felt people felt people felt they didn't belong in the NCAA tourney, but I knew we were among the NCAA 48 teams in the country after the way we played the second half of the season." like UCLA. The Hawkeyes finished tied for four in the big Ten conference and lost eight games. And just like UCLA, they have been playing excellent ball recently. The Bruins will have to continue to play that kind of ball if they want to beat Purdue and towering Joe Barry Carroll, its 7-foot-2 All-America center. They come into the Final Four on the wings of victories over Virginia Commonwealth, North Carolina State, Syracuse and Georgetown in the East Regionals. "The only player on the West Coast that compares to Joe Barry performs for the Los Angeles Lakers," Bain said, in a reference to Kareem Abul-Jabbar. Carroll has lived up to his All-America billing in this tourney, leading the Bombermakers to the Mideast Regional championship with victories over LaSalle, St. John's Big Ten champion Indiana and Dale, Coast conference playoff winner, Dakke. Louisville, ranked second, made its way to the Final Four with overtime victories over Kansas State and Texas A&M and a rout of LSU A sellout crowd of more than 17,000 will be on hand at the Market Space arena to watch TOMORROW'S television audience in the millions. Tomorrow's winners will play for the championship trophy. Women netters open home slate KU's women's team will have a chance to turn around what has started out to be a disappointing season Sunday as the U.S. team was on Iowa State University in Lawrence. coach Mark Hasking. "The girls may not think so because they've been losing a lotately, but they've been playing excellent games," he said, gradual improvement in their play." Kansas won only one of four matches over spring break on its way to a 4-5 overall record. KU lost matches to North Texas, Southwest Texas and Oklahoma State in three games. Texas A&I to capture six place in the Olympic Olympics In衣 Inlee, Texas. Marcie Esry, Independence, Mo., freshman, and the No. 2 singles player, agreed about the team's improvement. "When we were in Texas we got a lot closer," Esry said. "Before that we were never too close. While the men team grew more and more resigned, losing. We are going to do a lot better." AUDIUTIONS FOR THE 1980-81 SPIRIT SOUILD will BE HELD MARCH 30, 1980. ALL ROUTINE FOR THE AUDIUTIONS WILL BE TAUGHT DURING CLINICS ON THE DATES LISTED BELOW. NO PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. A PREMIARY MEETING FOR ALL MEN AND WOMEN INTERESTED IN THE AUDIUTIONS WILL BE HELD on MARCH 25 at 4:30 p.m. in the NORTH BLEACHERS IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE. SPIRIT SQUAD AUDITIONS REQUIREMENTS: 1. FULL TIME STUDENT 2. 1.8 OVERALL gpa 3. WEIGHT IN PROPORTION TO HEIGHT CLINICS 5:00-7:00 p.m. ALLEN FIELD HOUSE MARCH 26-27-28-27 PRELIMINARY AUDITIONS MARCH 30 FINAL AUDITIONS APRIL 3 MINORITY STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE ASSOCIATE MEMBERSHIP It's the foundation behind our fraternity. Associate Membership teaches you to be a good brother. Not to be a good pledge. Associate Membership makes our fraternity strong. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA has an Associate Member program to offer you. Check us out! Discover the Associate Member program at A The Fraternity of Honest Friendship member program at LAMDA CHI ALPHA Visit us at 1918 Stewart Ave. or call 842-9577 and leave your name. Our recruitment staff will return your call. "We're getting better." said Kansas See you during spring rush! Presenting Linda Helm Corn's Studio of Beauty Linda Specializes in Haircuts for both Men & Women Specials cut, shampoo, blow dry Reg. $15^∞ NOW $9^∞ We carry **REDKEN** hair and skin products manicure Reg. $5^{∞}$ NOW $3^{∞}$ 9th & Vermont Call Linda for an appointment 843-6666 Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri, Sat 8-5 Tonight & Saturday K.C. Rockers The Secrets with opening acts each night AND $1.50 pitchers & nibbles from 8-9 pm Coming Soon March 28—`IGGY POP & The Janet Jamson Band` 27—`Debbie Harry in UNMADE BEDS & THE FOREIGNER` 28—`JOHN MAYALL & Used` 29----999 & The Dickies - Advance tickets on sale at Kiel's Better Days & the 7th Spirit Club April 3—N.Y. EROTIC FILM FESTIVAL plus many more great shows to be announced Adm. only $2.50 ($2.00 for 7th Spirit mem.) The nightspot for you? Where else but the . . . Lawrence Opera House Call for contact info 642-6390 THE HISTORY TRAIN Call for concert info. 842-6930 1 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 21, 1980 13 KU beats Kearney 7-1 By PATTI ARNOLD Sports Writer The KU softball team left its power at home, but still managed to defeat Kearney (Neb.) Stake yesterday in the first round of the Sooner Invitational in Norman, Okla. A cold rainy day in Norman greeted the Jayhawks and forced KU coach Coach Stancilt to forge batting practice before the game. KU managed eight hits, all singles, and combined with six Kearney forges, forged a 5-4 lead after three innings. Leftfielder Rose Rader led KU after singling in two runs. Rightfielder Keli May singled, walked and scored twice. Julie Snodgrass, KU's second baseman, banged out two singles and scored two runs in three trips to the plate. victory for the 'Hawks. She surrendered three hits and struck out seven. But while the KU hitting attack was somewhat stifled, the defense sparked. KU played errorless ball. "WE PLAYED pretty well defensively, but Kearney was not a strong team." Stancliff said. "The kids sensed that early and we lacked good concentration." Tracy Estes played short because of an injury to June Koleber, the starting centerfielder. Pam Cox was moved from short to center. Koleber sprained her elbow diving for a fly ball in practice Tuesday, but Stanciff said she would probably play today. He's New Mexico State and Illinois State. "Her arm is better, but I made up my mind that I would wait and see how she looks in battle practice before I put her in it." a game," he said. "I still haven't seen her swing a bat." Another reason for the sluggish KU offense, according to Stanciff, was Kearney's pitcher. She was slow and that throw the women's *timia* off. Stancliff said KU lacked concentration because its big game is this morning against New Mexico. The Lobes beat KU 7-4 week and the Jayhawks want revenge. "Thos things happen," he said. "It was a sloppy game. We were getting a lot of easy runs. We got a 5 lead early and it was hard for them to concentrate at the plate. "THE KIDS are really looking forward to that game." Stancliff said. The strong start, team member Mike Forth said, is because of the recent trend toward serious rudenity. There is one KU team that is still undefeated after several weeks of the spring season. The team is the ruddy club. The ruggers defeated the Wichita Old Yellers last Sunday in Wichita, 39-0. The other match was such a rout no one could keep track. "Maybe the score was 50-0—it was bad anyway," Steve Merdinger, captain of the KU club, said. Stancilft said he would pitch LuAnn Stanwix against Neví. Mexico today. "The caliber of the game is better," Fort said. "Our club has grown to become one of the better clubs in the area, despite the fact we have a great deal of turnover." Forth said that the rugby team no longer got together, got drunk, and then took to the field. The team takes games seriously. final selections for the 'A' and 'B' side—the captain, the vice captain, and the coach. This year we get drunk after the game." The team travels to Kansas City, Mo. tomorrow to compete in the Heart of America Rugby Football Union trials. The union consists of teams from Iowa, North Warmington, Missouri and New Hampshire, but they were recently selected to the Heart of America all-star squad. KU had more selections than the team. Lee makes martial arts comeback Ruggers season off to fast start James Lee is making a comeback "The Topeka match is just a warmup for some international matches which I will be fighting in this year." Lee said. The 28-year-old KU law student will end a four-year absence from tournament karate when he competes in a national karate match in Toekop March 25th. Lee, considered by his peers to be one of the premier martial artists in the world, will represent Canada against national champions from France, Canada, England, Japan and Korea this weekend. "I was invited by the martial arts governing bodies in the different countries which I will be competing," Lee said. Although Lee has complied an imprint, he referred to the record he prefers to discuss Vanguard in a team of KU students which Lee instructs. "They are a very dedicated group of fighters," Lee explained. "And they are really good. There is not one person on the team who has won at least a regional championship." "That is what I try to develop in my students. The University Dailv KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one ten times two times three times four times five times six times seven times ten times ten times ten times Dawn of the Flower $2.25 $2.50 $2.80 $3.10 $3.40 $3.70 $4.00 $4.30 $4.60 Dawn of the Flower $2.25 $2.50 $2.80 $3.10 $3.40 $3.70 $4.00 $4.30 $4.60 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Monday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kansan 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. F fund 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 Kansan Business office at 843-1580. ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Watch for trunk pitted at 9th and Illinois, then return to the backyard. (And the Hole-to-the-Wall) Selling Fresh Fruits peanut in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit. (And the Roasted Bean). Also selling wooden chopsticks. Ruth Abendah. Also selling wood-burning stove. THAI ARCHITECTS THAI NIGHT DINNER & SHOW 5pm Sunday, March 23. 1980 The Fourth, Classical Fashion, Dance, Fashion The Fourth, Classical Fashion, Dance, Fashion Dinner: Caterina Woodhouse Auditorium Diner: Caterina Woodhouse Auditorium EXHIBITION The Fourth, Classical Fashion, Dance, Fashion The Fourth, Classical Fashion, Dance, Fashion EXHIBITION The Fourth, Classical Fashion, Dance, Fashion THE KAMAKURA MUSEUM 3-22 Free to Public Park 3-22 Free to Public Park Inter Fraternity Council will sponsor SPRING FORMAL RUSHI March 21, 22, & 23 for Lawrence campus students. Contact IFC Office at 864-359-31 Ronalee's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 THE DAM RUN Sat March 29th These all new and contemporary powhouses are three-bedroom from 1938 and downsweep! Starting at $479,000 each, including an upgraded kitchen, all appliances window & door lock, all appliance windows, window coverings & your private bell; 841-8451 or 841-8252. THE DAM RUN Sat, March 29th at 10:00 a.m. 6.5 and 13 mile race Additional Info.-208 Robinson, Recreation Services, 864-3546 FOR RENT Nassau, Bahamas) Departing Wichita, May 24 & 31. Rates starting at $75 per week/person. Enjoy free golf, tennis and the luxurious Playway Cave Resort. Nassau, Hawaii) Departing Wichita, Kaiseh, KA 67280, (3) 263-453-8 Jiahawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment 842-4444 or see at 254 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's East. tf Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, $323 lbs. M²; The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and/or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 900 sq. ft. Contact 8342-1034 or 8342-0777. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. If CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & summer Apply now Call 842-583-5838 at 6:00 p.m. NAISMH 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. tf New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances cable 1 block from the Union. Call 854-7930 8079 COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperative lived within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downstream Lawrence. For more information, evertings 842-9421. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tt LEASE NOW FOR FALL AIR CONDITIONING RATES! On campus, 2 BR apartments with all utilities furnished. 3 BR apartments with Aparitions Apartments 100. W 15, W 84-9633 - 3-21 On campus. 2 BN apartments furnished or unfurnished. Apartments 103 W. 85 - 149 8933. 3-21 Apartment 1 bit from Union. 2 bedrooms; $235 Apartment 2 Contact Street. 2 baths; $435- $434-314 SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 br. furnished apt, 1 blk. from campus. Call now, 842-9737. 3-25 Summer sublease. 3 bedroom. 2 stories. 1 block from stadium. Call 841-7890. 3-25 Room-large, semifurnished, private frig. and bath. Upstairs includes a large and Mass 150- square foot apartment, now 843-4178. 3-25 2 Bedroom unfurnished apt. (Mark I Apt., 1015 Miss) for summer sublease, also for a year's lease in Aug. Laundry. A/C D, balcony. Call 841-2642. **M. & I. kit II, now NOW RESTING FOR SUMMER** *Made with 1 & 2床adulta afts, 7 walk to bed* *dukse 1 & 2 bedadulta afts, 7 walk to bed* *babiescene, off street parking, dishwasher, laundry room, fridge for info.* *drugstmr for info.* *842-903 at 1015 Michigan* ARE YOU FED UP WITH THE HIGH COST OF A daycare? An attractive family-friendly housing can be found at an elementary Eldwarewood Park have some 2-bedroom openings for families to stay in and school and schools to determine your needs. Two-year-old two-story house 3 bedrooms, 2 full bathroom, living room with vaulted ceiling, kitchen with granite countertops for appliances, laundry room and garage in Centennial, Arizona. Not available on or after April 1st. Utilities required: 84-502-7021. Summer sublease. 2 Br. Trailridge Townhouse 200 yds. from pool, tennis. call 842-1447 for info 3-26 SUMMER APT. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, a.c., dishwasher, new carpet, on bus route, x-large living area. Call 842-6623 3-28 FOR SALE Staying in Lawrence this summer? Subway w/o option for next year. One bedroom, furnished apartment on bus route. 841-7480. 3-27 Must sublease 1 bedroom apt. AC, water paid, next to pool and laundry room Call 842-2215. Keeptry. 3-27 Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! Make use of the following notes and questions to use them *i*. As study guide, guide 21. For preparation. For exam preparation. New on sale. For preparation. For exam preparation. For WATERBED MATTRESSES, $39.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1386. TF Alternator, starter and generator specialties. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-809-3900, 390 W. 6th. tph (1) 15 Speed Miraca Gran-gleaning bicycle. Features a high-performance rack and rear mounting rack, canister heel mount, front and rear tracking racks, cantilever heel mount, and cable. Odometer, decline, brake, and cable. *Price to be determined.* $799 for $280 or best offer Call KKK 799-426-2600 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Ricks Bike Shop. 1033 Vermont. 841-6642. tf Incoming Medical Students: Don't be a fool like I and insist on a new microscope. Mine is in condition and conditioned, call Richard Christy at 362-8200 in K.C.K. sellings. 3-25 Vivitar 35-105 mm zoom lens. Canon Mount excellent condition virtually unused. Aking #250. Call Marty #82-6895 evenings. 3-21 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mattress sets. Be sure to check on prices. Ledom's Brand spanking new 1990% Datum 210—$47.98 × lax delivered 844-824-440 for Hooke and Sigma Casette Deck-Sharp RT-1165 with Automatic Cardboard. Best offer over $115 takes Call 843-173-175 SunSpec—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF Football Table in good condition with coin mech. $300. 841-7870. 3.25 10-speed bike for sale, call 842-5152. 10 p.m. 3-25 Bicycle: Viacomount classical GP. 1 year-old. Best extensive classical class record 4: 570-760 3: 25-32 Honda Express Moped—10 months old —90 MPG Excellent condition. Call 841-5838. 3-21 Navy blue women's size 9 Nordica ski boots. $20. > #311 after 5.00. 3-25 1976 MGB. buttercooked with black top. Good condition. 841-3100 or 843-1008. 3-25 1975 Honda 125 street bike. Excellent condition, with helmet $400 or best offer. 843-7855. 3-21 1974 Ford Maverick, basic transportation at a价你_pu can afford. call Jim from 5-3-26 to 3-26-26 Brand new, never Rovee 48cm band Brain radio. Baw mobile. RF/MIC Gain, RP Power. M.E.D. Indicators. Reg. $180, only $145 430-645. Mare W. FOUND Olivetti Underword Editor II electric typewriter. Excellent shape, must sell. Call 842-5480. 3-26 Gold bracelet. Call 842-2625 after 5:30 p.m. tf Found at 31st and Iowa. Silver class 10th. Blue stone from Manhattan High School. All time number. Call 866-524-2591. On campus. On 8 rows. Bag name: Call and identify contact. after 6 p.m. 10:41-10:51. 3-21 HELP WANTED Found: A green and blue blaid tote bag in front of Wesco on Tuesday, March 18. Call 864-6281. Initial bracelet on Naimith Drive. Call 841-6874 to identify and claim. 3-24 TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES ORDERS: a service as a public nurse to nursing home residents; or as a public nurse to nursing home residents required for Nursing Homes (KINI), need your help in providing nursing care, supervision and treatment of the residents, and correspondence with the hospital. KINI 142-8300 (between nine and five or write us) KINI 927 (between nine and five or write us) Now taking applications for floor/door and wain- tables, 14 Fri. to Sun., 9 a.m.-5 p.m. W. 7th at 8:30 p.m. Ask for Shelter CISCHIESMES' SAILING EXPEDITIONS*SALL-* HERATION NATIOLE, INFO BANK*SALL- NATIONE NATIOLE, INFO BANK*Sall-* for APPLICATION INFO REFERALS, to APPLICATION BOOK 60129, Sacramento 935060 Microsoft Box 60129, Sacramento BECOME A MONTESSORI TEACHER! Summer classes begin June 2. Call us or write Montessori Plus School, 1257 Western, Topkaka, Ks. 6004. 323-5185, 862-192, or 842-6858. Biology major to teach elementary children first week of summer Montessori Plus School, Topkush, Tajikistan Position open-residential facility for developmentally discharged adults is seeking the fulltime position in a medical services area is required. Routine should be forwarded to MCDS, Box 68, Memphis, KY 45102. Video Games Cartridge Exchange needs campus and local representatives. No selling, no experience required. Write: Video, Box 27348, Mpls. MN 54827. Position open-small community facility serving the developmentally disabling is seeking the full-time service of a licensed social worker. Resume to KAES at MCDS, 150 N. Wesley Street, Kansas, KOAE. 3-27 Summer Pain Creat. Approx. 12 positions available. Minimum age 18. Personnel will begin work May 27. Apply at Personal Office, Adm. Center, 2017 La. 842-8220 EOE. Gift Shop Manager, Museum of National History and Bookstore, publishing bookskilling ability to manage books in library setting. Preferred. Need to be enrolled in at least two positions offered for appointment call Mary Ann Munson 212-578-6944. Families with well-adjusted adolescent boys to participate in brief research. Family members will be paid for their participation. For more information call Brian or Claire at 864-323-8788. COMPUTER SERVICES AGENCY needs Keystroke Operator to punch and verify data use on a computer. Requires operation of machine record equipment, THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER is not a museum. It provides information and a pool of applICATION for April 18th through May 4th, 2016 at 10:30 a.m. in 185 Strong Hall Plaza at 5:00 p.m. in March or April. Opportunity Affirmation of Kunan University is May 28th. Free Lance Photographer is interviewing female subjects for project photography. Experience and photo help but not necessary. Paid by session, ref. Fee: W-0 P.O. Box 514, Lawrence, MA 02034. K6044 Part-time cashiers for evening shifts and weekends. Also need one person for noon hours. Apply in person. Henry's Restaurant, 6th and Missouri, 3-26 ACTING COORDINATOR UNIVERSITY INFORMATION May 1, 1980, and ending December 17, 1980. no later than June 30, 1981. Responsible for the education of the student body, including providing a 24 hour telephone information, referral, and Lawrence community, including the coedicating faculty, University offices, community agencies, and city libraries. Providing research sources, the administration retrieval NORWEST KANSAS AREA HEALTH 524-308-7160 ABEEC PROGRAM--The University of Kansas in KANSAS ABEEC PROGRAM—The University of Kansas in Health Education Center (AHEC) has developed an awardable for administering programs, personal assistance for educating students and serves a multi-county region in northwest Kansas. The AHEC program works closely with health care professionals to the state of Central Kansas AHEC Program which provides educational enrichment for health care educators. The internship program in their area of education invites health care educators to work in education, health care or health education institution, health care or health education program, health care or health education position, health care or health education request for information to Program Director, health care or health education director of a health education and/or health education program Day care needed for five month old twins every and every other Thursday 8-4 p.m. 41-8866 3-921 DAY CARE STAFF need in for before-after advice. Applicants should have experience working with children and adults. Lawyers can provide experience working with children and adults. Lawyers Extended Day Program, Moodswank Workshop. Employees must be employed by a nonprofit employer, qualified men and women with the appropriate training and experience. Sanctuary Catering needs part-time help. Apply in person at the Sanctuary. 3-21 **OVERSEAS JOBS - SUMMER year-round, Europe.** S. America, Australia, Asia. all. All funds $600-$1200 monthly, expenses paid, sifting fee. Separate Ma. Ca., Mar. 9225. 4-10 LOST LOSS YOUR CONCENTRATION YOUR DRIVE HANDS ON YOUR EQUIPMENT TO GO ON STUDIING. Come to our class. Now Taking, and Testing Sal. March, Reading, Not Taking, and Testing Sal. March, Learning, Not Taking, and Testing Sal. March, and or come by the Student Assistance Canteen. Lost puppy: Female, Golden Retriever with wire-like hair; has flat wrist and white spot on chest, and is 8 week old. Lost around Robinson if found. If Call 381-5240 for Kijupek Lost: My light-colored collie pup Lindy. It wanderd or followed someone from my home at 2124 Kentucky. If you have her or know where she is, please call 842-9917. 3-25 NOTICE Rewarding summer experiences in the Colorado Desert is one of many exciting activities working with children in a camp setting, backpacking, horseback riding, wildlife education, hiking and camping. Experience San Bernardino Camp, Friars Trail, Santa Fe National Park, Western San Antonio Camp, Friars Trail. B'nal B'rith Hillel Student Organization Bagel's & Lox Brunch All You Can Eat! Sunday, March 23 12:30 P.m. $1.50 for Hillel p.m. $3.00 for non-members Lawrence Community Center KU Frisbee Club meeting, Wednesday, March 26, 1980, 4:30 p.m., 202, Robinson, Films on Film Frisbee Championships will be shown. Discussion 3-25 PERSONAL VOYAGERS--Fellowship-Christian Alternative for Single Adults-First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 3rd Street, 9:00 a.m., 841-171. If you need to find a local doctor? Call Legal Counsel. Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tt FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abnors up to 17 weeks. Pregnant treatment. Birth Control, Chlamyne. Natal Health Station. For appointment. Pharmacy. Outlet Park. 430-641-4609. 109th St. Overland Park, KS. The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cool beer, pool, pihlah and unique hunters. Color TV can show your awacks are away. You can get a ship together with the Harbour Lite 101 Mann. A first-class dive. GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head quarters, 841-2345 and KU info., 864-2356. . . tf INTERESTED IN FRATERNITIES? Participate in men's spring formal rush. March 21, 22, 23. To register, contact Inter-Faternity Council Office at 864-3559. 3-21 ALL YOU CAN EAT Hokom Sports Complex, ALL WINNERS of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda 竞赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda竞赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. All YOU CAN EAT Hokom Sports Complex, ALL WINNERS of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda 竞赛 and winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Alameda赛和 winners of the Basketball West Pt. Basketball West Pt. Alameda games for game-porn. Contact John Zimmel 843-305-8100 Encore! Encore! 3-21 The corps is coming! 3-21 Dial #850-7901 for Corp Detention 4-6 PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843- 4821. Being a woman doesn't mean having to be helpful. Personal Practical self-defense under experienced male and female instructors $25 for the first class (411-803) sponsored by the Gun Club Fu. Need powerful rock vocalists to join established instrumental band. Call 842-7738. 3-25 Roadsurety is a community of people willing to work on behalf of the city or drop by one who can help with traffic control, public safety problem, other personal problems, trustworthiness problem, other personal problems, etc. Roadsurety professionals with more experience who might be able to help with more complex problems would also be invited. Roadsurety is funded by United Fund Dg. Cu. and private education nations 4-11. The first time I ate at My Brother's Mouthsteak, the food was bad. The other day I gave them another try and a difference! They've got new management now and it's excellent! 3-21 TENNIS PLAYERS. Spring and warm weather tennis season is here. Get your(request) gear out and play in a strong, stringless Stingers and, as stinger K. Varity, Very reasonable rate on good grips 4-3 Col-brate EASTER with ASTA alinging tergite Baskets delivered daily, 842-8741. 4-1 Would the girl who found my license in FI Lauderdale? please return it. Call Titl 842-9800 SKI WINTER PARK MARY J. EASTER Ski Park 4602 West 34th Street, Ski SKI TRIPS THRIP INCLUDES a 3 full day group transportation, and limited accrued im- munization benefits. SKI TRIPS D-6555. Meal and on package fees. Junior's Mortar Board applications now available, in bold. We'd like you to apply DU **FREESTYLE:** Workshop on Time Management, Text Book Rewriting, Note Taking, and Testing Sat. March 22, 9:00 AM Full Hall room 360 **Book Rewriting**, Note Taking, and Testing Sat. 121, 850HR for more information 3-21 **TIGER FOR JOHN ANDERSON SUPPORTERS** March 21 for 2:30-4:00 p.m. at The Entertainment. All you can drink for $3! All proceeds go to Arriadn Campaign 3-21 Meadowlough open house coming soon! Join us March 29-30. 1-5 p.m. **TOFU-1.** A traditional East Asian soybean feed in popularity in asia—a high-protein, low-fat formulation. 1414 BC .3 Hot Coconut Hill. Increasing in population. Saturday, 22; at Off-The-Wall-Hall. Saturday, 22; at Off-The-Wall-Hall. We don't believe that there are any real parties in Lawrence! We think that they're all in Tupaoka. Try to prove us wrong! 3-21 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUORING MATH: 600-102 call 847-5855 MATHS 115-710 call 847-5855 STATISTICS PHYSICS 115-710 call 847-5855 PHYSICS 100-500 call 847-5855 ENGLISH AND SPANISH call 847-7057. 10f Tired of paying hard cost for good quality clothes and alterations? Excellent sanitary womans will need for men or women. Reasonable prices. Repeat customers 81-298-309 after 4 and weekends. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uhrfer Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM on 1 PM on Tuesday to 88 Mast. EXPERIMENTED HOUSEPAINTERS now making EXPERIMENTED HOUSEPAINTERS,daniel CAMELton at 3:24 2980 or 6:55-553. - Takes a minute to wash. IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES. Professional Tutoring: Math 000-115. 864-2375. 3-28 Professional Wedding Photography specializing in enlargements & enlargements from $500 to (913) 284-5169 3-26 Raffo's Auto Repair, Foreign & Domestic vehicles. On the spot service. Free estimates. 841-3658. Massage Therauw or women at the Serendipity club in St. Louis. call for appt. 841-8829 or 841-7198, 3-87 TYPING Why cues about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tt Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selcirt. Call Donna, 842-2744. tt MASTERMINDS professional typing, Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. iff I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4167 TP Tipsy Editor, IPiM Brite Picra. Write work, reasonable rules. These discretions welcome editing layout. Tony. 842-9127 TP Experienced TJerm-term papers, thesis miti, experimental research, spelling competency, rejected. 843-954, Mrs. Wright PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICED. 841-4980. TP Experienced hybrid-duo, disksuplication, term paper, manuals, IBM correcting database. Birth after 5 mpm. 842-330. tf Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selectric. Quality work. References available. Sandy, evin- ning & weekends. 748-9818. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing. Self-electronic seallectric. Cal Elen Jeannam. 841-2172. 5-5 Examined Typet—management, papers, thesis, Scientific and technical experience. IBM Correcting Selectric. 841-4328. tf Dial 842-2001 for a typing Odyssey 4-5 Word processing exclusively at Encore-Copy Corpus, 842-2001, 25th and Iowa 4-5 I'm your type: for thels, dissertations, ten papers, etc. Jo Ann 864-3819 or after $50 per book. WANTED Female roommate: age 23-30, trailer house; $100, washer, dryer, waterizer, dryer washer, 822-5008 ROOMMATES. Nailshunt Hall has a couple of Contact Office at 833-839-any time of the day. Office at 833-839-any time of the day. PSychiatric ADES AND HEALTH SERVICE (913) 264-2056 Meet with Peggy Harrison, Job Service Center, 312 W. 8th, Topkaka, KS, Phone: (913) 296-5180. Male applicants to receive an equal opportunity. Mail resume to ADES, 75 West 26th Street, WANTED TO RENT Journal graduate student Jennifer Sternberg, 26, JAMI to 31 December. Military officers and have 2 children but no pets. Require plenty of sleep and a primary elementary school. 3-27 1-682-4672 Roommat= For 3 bedroom townhouse at Park 25 Apts. Bus route. 104.50 plus 1/3 utilities. 811-3 486. 3-25 Female roommate to share Jayhawk Towers apartments with warm cool lawn cords 864-1234-5678 3-25 Daring partner for a summer-long trip drop in the Missouri River. Montana to K. C威 832-824-5016. Wanted: VW's, running or not. Call 841-5496 or 842-4029 3-24 Participants in Workshop, Topics covered. Tune in Monday, March 12. Participants in Testing, Tang, March 22. 9:00 - 11:00 Hall ball room 300. Call 644-8644 or come by the door. Test on Wednesday. 121 Strong Hall more information. 211 $36.00 Weekly Guaranteed Work 2 hours daily at home (178.00 for one hour daily). Free brochure Mister B, 2231 Broadway, Suite 2D-2F, Colorado 80302 Female roommate for quaint townhouse living, nice quiet neighborhood. Fireplace, garage. Non-smoker. $110 plus 1-3 utilities. 842-409. Keep trying. 3-27 I am looking for a student married couple to work with me at summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. I would be interested in a summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. I would be interested in a summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. I would be interested in a summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. I would be interested in a summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. I would be interested in a summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. Work for couples. Provided My own private homes for swimming, tennis, mountain climbing and skiing. To give name of local person who can provide names KING OF THE ROADS KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! If you've got it, Kansan Classify sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Hospice and have it to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES to run: Monday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Saturday 5 pm Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm 1 time 52.25 03 additional words CLASSIFIED HEADING: RATES: 15 words or less Write ad here: CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 4 times $3.00 .05 5 times $3.25 .06 DATES TO RUN: to NAME: _ ADDRESS: PHONE: KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD 14 Friday, March 21, 1980 University Daily Kansan 86 Wonderful Waddell FORMER KU star Waddell Smith had another brilliant year with the Edmonton Eskimos the Canadian Football League. The Eskimos won their second straight Grey Cup title this season and Smith led the league in receptions, receiving yardage and touchdown catches. Home runs, walk lift KC FOR MORTYRS, Fla. (IUPi) Ken Phleis, Perry McGraw, Dana Sullivan runs in the dust hush to power the Kansas City Royals to a 12-11 come-from-behind win. Pitches by Pirates in exhibition basketball yesterday. The world-champion pitchers scored all 11 runs in the fourth inning, sending 15 batters to the plate and gaining 6 hits and two walks against three Royalts pitches, Paul McGillery, Jason Jones and Randy McGiberty. Lee Lacy led the carriage with a two-run homer. Wilson led off the bottom of the sixth with a homer off Andy Hassler, a former Royal pitcher who Philips扑击hit three runs in the first inning of the scoreboard in left field, and right-fielder Hardie讲到 that with a blast over the batter. In the bottom of the ninth, pinch-hitter Steve Bauman was walked by Gene Penz with the bases loaded and none out to force home Ots Concipience for the Royals win. Dan Quisenberry worked the final two innings and picked up his third victory against no exhibition losses. Smith strikes it rich in CFL By MIKE EARLE Snorts Editor He's exuberant. He's confident. He might be the most recognized sports figure in Canada. He'daddle Smith—'84 and '92, he was a big player, catching footballs, not hockey pucks, for the Edmonton Eskimos in the Canadian Football League. "I want every eighth grade kid in Canada screaming my name. I want my poster on their bedroom walls. I want to be known as the best in Canada," says Smith nonchallantly. "I leave a mark where I go." THOSE STATEMENTS exemplify the dynamic personality Smith possesses. He might be called a braggart, but he backs up his words with his performances on the football field. Smith played wide receiver for KU in the 1974 and 1975 seasons. Jawkay fans might not remember him because of the run-oriented teams, led by Nolan Cromwell, KU fielded those years. "I'm not knocking Nolan, but if I'd been on a pass-oriented team my name would be right up there with John Jefferson (star wide receiver for the San Diego Chargers of the NFL," Smaill said. "My junior year I said I'd be the next Ron Jessie to come out of Kansas. All I know that it can happen, I would've caught it, whether people give me credit or not." Smith, KU's leading pass receiver with nine receptions in 714 and 10 in 1975, don't raise many pro scout's eyebrows on his passing. HE DID, however, get a tryattow with the Kansas City Chiefs but was released in the final cut. Undaunted, he cast his lft with the Edmonton entry in the Canadian league and suddenly became the best receiver in Canadian football. "I was the last man on the team the Chiefs cut," Smith said. "In our last preseason game, I caught three catches against Atlanta for 80 yards and didn't drop any. I was the fastest man on the team, but they let me go." "It was probably the best thing that happened to me. I'm not going to sit on your bench if I'm going to im- Smith improved enough to be All-Pro three of his four years. This year he had 74 receptions for 1,214 yards and 13 touchdowns. The past two seasons the Eskimos have won 85 games, including six in a double bowl. They whipped the Montreal Abelettes both years. HE SCORED THE first touchdown in this year's Gray Cup on a 47-yard pass from quarterback Warren Moon, who led the University of Washington to an upset victory over the University of Michigan in the 1975 Rose Bowl. "There was one cornerback before a game this season that said with every breath I took he would be right with me," Smith said. "I told him he could breathe all he did, but he was going to see the back of my jersey all day." "I talk a lot, but I what I do on the field says it all. There so my wayhuman possibly someone can cover me for an "I make the best out of bad situations. If somebody is down around me, I get them up. I excite people. I dance after every touchdown I score and I throw the ball into the stands. No one can cover me for a minute." Covering a receiver with 4.3 speed in the 46-yard dash would give any defensive back nightmares. And if seeing Smith fly on the field is too much for them to handle, they are advised to stay away from their television sets. SMITH ALSO DOES TV commercials for Kool-Aid and a photo-film company. A deal is in the works for him to be part of his marketing campaign. In addition to his television revenue, Smith's lawyer is in the process of working out a half-million dollar contract with Fox News to get his own network on. Those figures are comparable to the salaries paid to American football players are just as talented. Smith contends Canadian player figures are just as talentful. "Canada has their university football teams just like America," Smith said. "There are a lot of Canadian players in the states right now. They have their draft and scouting systems." "THE TEAM I'm on is comparable to the Pittsburgh Steelers. I'm not saying we're as good. I don't think anybody in the world could beat Pittsburgh. They have the most powerful team in the world. "But we are just as powerful as the top NFL teams. Since I've gone to Canada we've lost only four games in three seasons." Losing was never something Smith had to become accustomed to. He was a track All-America eight times while at KU and was on the football team that upset Oklahoma 23-10. The team also went to the Sun Bowl, KU's last bowl appearance. At the time I played football here, out of the 22 starters, like Eddie Lewis, Kurt Knopf and Nolan Cromwell in the defensive secondary. Our linebackers were Steve Towle and Terry Beeson. Out our four defensive linemen, three "I WON't BE surprised to see KU rise to a national power in the next three years. When Bud Moore was coach, I'd tell a kid not to come here if he was going to be a wide receiver because he ran the ball so much. Rumor mill churns out beauties "For Don Fambrigh, I'll talk to any kid who can play. He's a fair man and he makes you want to play for him. I truly believe KU football is on an upswing. When they get there I'll get a lot of those dollars back that I lost on bets." Ted Owens is headed for Nome (Alaska) Juco. Ricky is off to the Boston Celtics. Darnell Vallentine is retiring. Don't believe it? You're not the only one. But runners just as silly as those have been floated around the Kansas basketball team since it started founding. Take Ted. Please, many have cried. FIRST, OWENS, KU'S 16-year head coach, was supporter of the SMU. Now SMU. Now Oklahoma. Maybe he'll go, I don't know. First, Ross, KU's glossy freshman, was supposedly on his way to Kentucky. Fellow freshman Keith Douglas was supposed to tag along, a package deal no doubt. Now it's Wichita State or Georgia. Maybe he'll go, I don't know. OFF ON A TANGENT gene myers FIRST, VALENTINE, KU's stud student was supposedly the winner of the NBA. Now it's Lawrence. Maybe he didn't know I know The biggest of them all is the fate of Ted Owens. Right now, he's at home with the boys he wants. Okapenga or Lohanhahe has offered him $250. That's just some of the many rumors. If you haven't had your ear in tune to all the backcourt gossip, here's a little Reports from our friends at the Oklahoma student newspaper say that Owens refuses to be interviewed by the reporters. The university said the reporter's Lawrence and Topeka say that Owens is in his final days, Says who? MAYBE IT'S THE same famous "KU source" that constantly appears in the Kansas City Star. This mystery source was there when Owens first came under fire in April, if it was there again in February. It was back again this week. Who is the mystery sources for Topeka and Lawrence? The same mystery man/woman? Is it a high ranking administrative/athletic official? A disgruntled player? A manager who like ice cream on Saturday? Archie R. Dykes. Well, their source(s) say Ted is失神,但 ours says he stays. And our source is a high-ranked athletic official. At least this speculation has some credibility. Owens will either stay or go. But the workers of the rumor mill who were involved in the plot have said MY FAVORITE ONE had Athletic Director Bob Marcum take the overrs of the Big Eight conference. In need of en **n** **u** **n**, was supposed to move in. In needs of a head coach, *Akwansas* 'Edid Sutton was supposed to fly in. To top it off, Jojo White, the famous former Jayhawk and player, was supposed to up the wandering new life and become KU's too assistant. That rumor, at least, had creativity. At best, it was illogical. The chances of getting Sutton here are about the same as any other game in the league. Both Sutton and Smith, native Kansans, would miss on a little money if they came to Lawrence. A coach's salary isn't his only source of income. Many have basketball camps and TV shows. Owens has a standout, big boy, and he plays in the Nets. But the department has no major market TV show. Kansas City does not want the Owens or Jack Hartman's show. IN OTHER JUICY rumors, remember the one that Owens wasn't canned because the athletic department didn't have the bucks to absorb the remaining two years of college and have to pay $50,000 switch coaches. With a possible $100,000 budget deficit this year, a large payoff could be costly. To make three hundred dollars equals the death of about four $70,000 MARSHALS Hear who of Owens' competitors is supposed to be for the Oklahoma job? Bill Russell, the famous Hall of Famer, coach and announcer. And I guess Wilt Chamberlain will be back at KU. Maybe, Wilt will return, I don't know. It's Fun, It's Free, and It's Exciting Foreign & Domestic Parts DON CHICK AUTO PARTS *Part Size* 1029 East 2348 841-2200 it's the Intramural Basketball Hill Championship at Allen Field House on March 21st at 7:00 p.m. All people are invited to attend this event. K. U. Gung Fu Club in Women's Self Defense Classes starting Saturday, March 22nd at 8:00 a.m. in 173 Robinson Center. 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The blazer $54. the pleated skirt $27. the other skirt $25. Jay SHOPPE FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 835 MASS. • 843-4833 • LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044 A bird is walking in the sunny sky. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY CLOUDY KANSAN Vol. 90, No.114 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, March 24, 1980 Baseball Team sweeps twin bills See story back page Shah en route to Egypt Rv the Associated Press PANAMA CITY, Panama—The deposed shah of Iran departed Panama for Egypt yesterday aboard a chartered American jet, ending an 100-day residence in this tropical country where he faced extradition proceedings, U.S. and Panamanian officials reported. U. S. national security adviser Zighnie Brzezinski said in Washington that the self-exiled monarch left Panama to receive medical attention. Physicians have said Mohamad Shahem Reza Pahlavi, 60, suffers from a brain tumor, which may have spread to his spleen. "I think one needs to look at it as a 'temperate problem, not a political problem,' Brezinski said. "The shah is merely trying to obtain medical treatment, and he feels under the circumstances he's in Egypt nor there needs there in Egypt than anywhere else." Iran's revolutionary regime, which seeks the extradition of the shah on charges of mass murder and corruption, has said that it will release a record of about 50 American hostages held by militants in Tehran. A legal representative for Iran said Saturday he planned to meet today's demeaned for filing evidence from Panamanian authorities to support the case. A Panamanian government spokesman in invitation from Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, chose to move to Caro. "Brzezinski also said the shah had accepted Sadat's pledge." However, spokesmen for Satad yesterday denied that the shah was coming to Egypt. A Panamanian air force officer who asked not to be identified said White House adviser Rachel Maddow, who was Washington aboard a U.S. government jet, Jordan arrived here Friday, apparently to investigate a drone. The Panamanian officer said the shaw was aboard a DC-8 jet chartered from Evergreen International Airlines of Oregon. A Panamanian air traffic controller said the company had scheduled a flight plan that would take them to the islands in the North Atlantic at 8 p.m. EST. The officer said the shah, accompanied by his wife Haraf, eight aides, their pet dogs, and 1,000 pounds of luggage, departed from Davao in Panama City at about 1:40 p.m. EST. At midday, the shah and his wife have a few in small private plane from their residence on the island of Bali to be by former Panamanian ambassador to the United States Gabriel Levine. The former prime minister and foreign secretary. "The empress and I have spent very happy moments on Contadora", he said in a brief news conference at the island's landing strip. "Our thanks to Gen. Omar Torrijos and the Army," he said. "We remember Pamela with gratitude, he said, adding that facilities provided to him were 'beyond mere humanitarian aid'." Pamanian television reported that Jordan and Torjirs, a former Pamanian president, met with the shah Saturday on Contadora Island, where the former monarch has lived since Dec. 15 after receiving medical treatment in the United States. Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh Gobehzadi warned Saturday that any attempt to move the shah from Panama would delay the withdrawal of US troops, began their 21st week as hostages in Tehran. On Nov. 4, less than two weeks after the shale entered the United States, Moslem Tehran and held the hostages, then demanded the extradition of the shale and Since he fied Iran in January 1979, the shah has resided in Egypt, Morocco the Bahamas, the Bahamas, a New York hospital and a U.A. Air Force base in San Antonio, Texas. Senate to hold budget hearings Bv SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Reporter After a year in storage, the five-month rental of a commercial allocation machine will crank up tough with $406,593.00 in student fees to allocate or review during budget hearing If all goes smoothly, seniors may churn through the 64 organizations' budget requests and 15 line allocations within the department. But complications can lead to hours of overtime, sleepy senators and short tempers. THERE ARE 15 line allocation organizations which receive a fixed amount of money evaluated by the Senate at budget hearings and at Senate meetings throughout the year. Line allocation organizations must be proven unworthy to lose funding, while groups under the regular organizational standards derive themselves worthy to receive funding. "Every night we ran over, until the people who ran the Kansas Union threatened to throw us out by the scruff of our necks," Organization requests The organizational funding accounts for $1.35 of the $48.50 Active Activities at the discretion of the Senate. This year, 64 organizations areying for $48,460.50 Line allocations Academic Affairs 38,973.50 Communication 4,642.19 Media 4,161.41 Culture 13,134.75 Science Services 13,134.75 Total requested 152,082.31 Total requested Line allocation organizations account for $9.75 of the $11.10 Student Activity Fee. Line allocations are fixed sums which are entered in the line of all the requested line item increases were passed individually in a Revenue Code amendment bill during last year's Senate. The increase was because a quorum call interrupted a vote on the bill. Student organizations 49,450.50 Zuther noted that K-State had not settled for the 8 percent pay increase recommended by the Kansas Legislature. "The one thing that has come to my attention is that K-State has . . . asked me to leave for a year, because the faculty salaries. They are certainly on record that the 8 percent meets with the 40 percent." Organization Allocation increase Recreation Services . . . 2.55 . . . 4.7 Chamber and Concert Series . . 85 . . . 1.7 University Theatre . . . 80 . . . 31 Student Council . . . 41 . . . 0.6 KU Bands . . . 30 . . . 1.6 KJHH . . . 25 . . . 1.1 KU Foresignes . . . 10 . . . 0.4 University Daily Kansan 2.00 Student organizations . . 1.35 Student Legal Services . . 1.25 Student State . . . 0.88 Unallocated . . . 38 Associated Students of Kansas . . . 25 Architecture and Urban Design Student Council . . 02 Federation of Student Social Workers . . 02 Student Bar Association . . . 02 11.10 1.32 "Next year, unless we ask for something The meeting focused on comparisons of the various salaries and salary increases at the seven Reed's schools. Zuther said. Total Student Senate Budget $406,593 Zuther says KU raises lag behind other schools The 8 percent pay increase slated for KU faculty members year in not keep in with higher increases in other Regents who are under the supervision of Faculty executive committee, said Friday. Ruther reported to the committee after attending a joint session of FacEx presidents from the seven Kansas Regents schools last week. BUDGET HEARINGS were scheduled for last week but were postponed after Senate officers looked through last year's Senate timetable. What came out of the meeting, Zuber said, was the fact that KU was falling behind the Regents schools in the size of faculty salaries increases. "We have not done very well with these institutions in the last year," he said. "Unless things change in Topeka, it's unlikely we will hold our ground." The Kansas Regents schools are KU, Kansas State, Wichita State, Pittsburgh, Emory University, Fort Hays State States and the Kansas Technical Institute. Budget hearing this week are to run Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 6:30 to 11:00 p.m. on Tuesday from noon to 6:50 p.m., on Wednesday, there will be a regular Senate meeting. Brad Jay, Academic Affairs committee chairman, said. Jay sat in on the Academic Affairs budget hearings last spring. ZUTHER SUGGESTED an increase of about 15 percent. much more sizeable, it will be unlikely we will be able to hold our ground." Most Regents schools have some sort of provision for retired faculty members to lake courses at their schools free of charge. These course extends to their families as well, or by appointment. KU also does not have dental or health plans for faculty members, as do other schools he said. FACEX PRESIDENTS will meet today in Emporia to discuss this and other budgetary matters. Zulah said. In a meeting of the University Senate executive committee, SenEx received a report from the Senate human relations committee on the University videotaping policy. The report recommended abolishing "extreme cases" in which violence may occur. KU was also falling behind the other Regents schools in the area of fringe benefits. Zuther said, Zuther said that out of the 15 percent increase he suggested for next year, about 2% should go toward fringe benefits. "Of course, we have nothing like that," he said. "We found out we had more time than we thought," said Matt Davis, Senate vice president. "It is a tough row to hoe to get pelove back right after spring break." "While we did not do very well on legislative issues, we did very poorly on the fringe benefits," he said. If Senate budget hearings are synonymous with late nights and frustration, lack of preparation is part of what touches off the long debates, according "Frustration—that is the easiest way to deal with a group of groups because they are not fully aware of Senate rules, and it is frustrating for us because we don't know how much the group knows." Jay said many groups went into budget hearings ignorant of Senate rules and without a careful estimate of their expenses. SenEx moved to place the report on the agenda of the University Council, which will meet this Thursday. "A lot of groups just guess how much funding they need. They pull some estimate out of the air." THE SENATE RECEIVES its allocation money from a $11.10 Student Activity Fee paid by each full-time student in an enrollment each semester. Of that Student Activity Fee, $1.35 is earmarked for organizational costs and is allocated at the discretion of the Senate. This year 64 organizations are requesting $120,821.35 in funds, which is $71,370.85 over the available Senate funds of $49,450.50. In addition to those Senate groups, 15 line item organizations are considered important enough to be structured into the Senate budget, and are much less likely to have their funding cut. These organizations account for 7.5% of the total $11.10 Student Activity费. "I wouldn't call their evaluation a rubber stamp process but most of these organizations are a sure bet for funding because they are hurting for money," Davis EXAMPLES OF LINE allocation The budget allocates $2.50 to Board, which receives a line item allocation of $2.55. University Daily Kanan, $2.00. The budget allocates $757.142.50. The budget allocation budget totals $757.142.50. Davis said that in the past, some committees had blindly cut group allocations, See BUDGET page seven THE CHAMPIONS Tenacious Ted BEN BIGLERIKansan staff Flanked by his assistants, Bill Hill and Lafayette Norwood, Kansas' head basketball coach Ted Owens instructions to teammates. KU's head coach for 16 years, will be back for number 17. After two weeks of silence, he announced yesterday that he was not interested in the coaching job at his alma mater, the University of Oklahoma. Owens intends to stay Associate Sports Editor By GENE MYERS Ted Owens is anywhere. Owens, KU's 16-year head basketball coach, stopped in Lawrence briefly over the weekend that meant that he end speculation that he was pursuing a similar position at the University of Oklahoma. Owens, however, met with the Sooner selection committee in Norman, Okia, Friday night. He left yesterday afternoon on a recruiting trip to Amarillo, Texas. OKLAHOMA, OWENS' alma mater, has been searching for a new head coach for two weeks and a Sooner booster group, the Tip-In Club, recommended Owens. In a prepares statement, Owens simply said he gave no other details to KU" and gave no other details. "wow lime to put an end to speculation, that I might leave the University of Kansas," he said. "I look forward to the challenge of next year returning our team to the level of excellence that has enjoyed both the great coaches who preceded me." Owens, who has been in communicative since Dove Bliss resigned as Sooner head coach, continued his silence after returning from Norman and before leaving yesterday KU'S ATHLETIC DIRECTOR, Bob Marcum, who gave Owens a vote of confidence after the season ended, is in Indianaapolis for championship and unavailable for comment. Ananoma athletic officials were also silent, as they have been during the search for a head coach. The only one who has accused the team has been the Tip-Inpiration Warmer. "Lots of people in Oklahoma will be disappointed," she said last night. "Naturally, it would be a hard decision for him to leave. "He's had a really great career at KU and has brought his team to the final four twice and has had a lot of All-Americans." SEVERAL TIP-INS who played with the committee. But we considered an interview with the search committee. But for unspecified reasons, Owens decided after the interview to stay at a day off. "It was a very difficult decision for him to make." Warner said. Yesterday's announcement, however, did not surprise KU assistant coach LaFayette Norwood. "I haven't talked to Couch Owens for the last couple of weeks because I've been on the road, but I wasn't surprised," said Norwood, who has been at KU for three years. "Couch Owens gave a lot of his that he has some additional years to give it. "I think the announcement exemplifies his feeling that he has a lot of confidence in the program and our young men." "We agree with Coach Owens that it has been a disappointing season, but I am confident of his abilities to continue the team's success in basketball at KU." Marcum said then. THE KANSAS program produced a 15-14 recumbent record and Owens, who has two more wins from the league, fled from some alumn and fans. Two days after the season ended, Marcus issued his report. But later that week, Bliss resigned his Oklahoma to move to Southern Methodist University. A few days later, the Tip-Ins met and almost unanimously decided to start a draft Owens movement, though Warrior said no one had contacted him. WORD SPREAD quickly in Oklahoma and Kansas because Warner sought public support for a move to draft Owens. At the same time, Owens and Wade Walker Oklahoma athletic director, stoppee talking. "I am honored that the University of Oklahoma expressed an interest in my research," Owens said in yesterday's statement. "It is a fine university which I attended and to which I owe much. I am flattered that so many people have made up for me as head basketball coach." Owens has not discussed the situation with KU's players vet. Junior Botto Neal said, "I just am happy it's all over. It takes the pressure off him and takes the pressure off us because we know who our coach will be." "We can get back on the ball and play ball again." In Norman, interviews are continuing for the vacant coaching position. The 10-member search committee, which includes Walker and T-in-Pin代表, has met with John Underwood, a former Sonner coach who went to SVM with Blisz and others. The committee is supposed to move now in Indianapolis to arrange meetings with several other candidates, including aideJOey Meyer of DePaul and head coaches John Thompson of Georgetown, Nell McElderry of Webrer State and Lee Rose of Johns Hopkins. In Lawrence, Norwood said Owens' announcement would boost recruiting. National letter-of-entertaining signing day is April 9. "It has to be a positive effect on our recruiting," he said. "He had established himself among recruits, as well as in the area of college basketball." In Amarillo, owers, whose career record is 284-144, after Victor Mitchell, a 6-10, 200 pound center from the local junior college. In New York, he scored 73 points in Texas are among the many pursuing him. Job outlook bleak this summer Rv KIRK TINDALL. Staff Renorter Summer jobs essential for some college students to finance their return to school next fall may not be available this summer, and employment officials in Kansas. The combination of double-digit inflation and 18 percent interest rates have slowed the pace of new graduates. Manufacturers who usually hire students as summer help have laid off hundreds of their Paul Jones, Youth Coordinator for the Kansas Department of Human Resources, described prospects for summer employment. "There had been lay off throughout the state." "It has happened to so many companies that there's no point in listing them all," Jones said. It is a dilemma, he said. The workers who have been laid off absorb jobs that usually go unpaid. Some students who student would normally be in the job market are looking for work to help out the economy. JONES SAID construction was lagging in Wichita. Toneka and the Kansas City area. Road construction and commercial building, which use public funds or moneys from the city's budget, rates, will not help students looking for summer jobs. Workers must be unionized to get fair wages. Jones said he was contacting employers and trying to make the public aware of the critical need for summer work for students. "Young people will have to look hard and take what they can get." Mills said. Lawrence usually has more young people needing work than available jobs, according to the Lawrence Job Service's office manager. Ed Mills. That could mean part-time work at minimum wage. he said. "I'm not as concerned about summer jobs HOME BUILDING in Topeka, which traditionally created many summer jobs, has virtually stopped, according to Mike Eckord, owner of Ecdor Construction, Inc. "Most of the cost of owning a home comes from the money investing on the loan. "Ecocert recommends that all owned house payments and the income required to qualify for financing. It has put a whole new dimension to its services." as I am about contractors who are paying 15 percent interest on money they have invested in houses they can't sell." Some high-paying construction jobs may be available through Laborers Local 142 in San Francisco. A management manager Alan Dallen, who said prospects for work now were nil, but he expected them to keep up. Students should contact the union about a week before they are ready to work, Dollen said. The union requires $75 payment for a summer work permit. "Then you just sign up at the hall and wait to go out like anyone else." Dollen said. THE UNION will provide work for its regular members before sending anyone out on work permits, Dollen said. The union hail See JOBS page seven --- 2 Monday, March 24.1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Reagan woos Kansas voters WICHTIA-Ronald Reagan brought his presidential campaign to Kansas yesterday, denouncing the Carter administration's "politically inspired cheap food policies," but adding that he didn't know enough about parity to say he supports full parity. "It's time to stop stopping the farmer against the city dweller, the producer against the consumer," the Republican Reagan told about 2,000 farmers packed "If that advice is a policy of full parity, then I would support 100 percent parity." "I have to confess to you I am not as familiar with some things like that," Reagan said on the parity issue. "But I would seek the advice of farm leaders for the proper way to get farmers put out of the cost-price squeeze and into making a profit. But after Reagan left to a standing ovation from the farmers, he told reporters he feared full parity "might literally put agriculture back in the farm." Asked why he didn't tell the farmers that, Reagan said, "I said as much as I needed to say—that I didn't know enough about it to fully discuss it." Reagan also called for elimination of the inheritance tax, saying it "makes it almost impossible for farmers to pass their farms on to their families. How does the farm remain in a family when the inheritance tax forces the family to sell just to the tax?" He said he would seek the advice of farm leaders in making national farm policies and he claimed that the farmer Earl Buz as the 'greatest supporter of agriculture that country ever had' Reagan criticized President Carter's grain trade embargo against the Soviet Union, saving it "makes no sense." Reagan winning in Missouri ST. LOUIS—Republican Ronald Reagan took a giant step toward winning Missouri's 37 delegates to the GOP national convention as his supporters swept the state in October. "You win or lose in this state at the county caucuses," said Reagan State Chairman Glen Broeden of Kennett. "I believe we have basically done our work." We thought we'd win it two-to-one and it's close to four-to-one," he said. "We thought we'd win it two-to-one and it's close to four-to-one," he said. The delegates chosen at the county level will attend other meetings in April at which the national convention delegates will be selected. Three national delegates will be from Bournemouth's 10 congressional districts and will be invited by award of laurel degrades. With a few scattered counties uncounted, Reagan had virtually all the delegates, with only two for George Bush, one for John Anderson and 10 uncounted. Reagan would need a little more than 700 delegates to carry the state convention and capture Missouri's 37 national delegates. He garnered 285 during the weekend. The rest of the delegates will be chosen at meetings through the weekend with the Kansas City area voting tomorrow and St. Louis County Thursday. Kennedy vows to stay in race Sen. Edward M. Kennedy attempted to overcome his underdog image in New York's delegate-rich presidential primary tomorrow, while a confident Ronald Reagan all but rejected his Republican rivals as possible vice-presidential running mates. "I'm going to stay in the race," Kennedy said in a national television interview before he toured a poor black neighborhood in New York City and met The Massachusetts Senator, who so far has won only two primary and caucus contests compared to President Carter's 16 election triumphs, again attacked Mr. Trump as a "propagandist." Kennedy said he would not withdraw from the race even if Democratic Party leaders asked him to. The former California governor was asked at a news conference whether either of his main competitors for the GOP presidential nomination, George W. Bush, or Mitt Romney, would be elected. Reagan dugged a reply about wait, without enduring in any way. About asking a question? No, he didn't say "No, I don't believe he doesn't want you as president and couldn't support you." It's a case of his fear. At stake in the New York primary tomorrow are 232 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in New York next August. On the same day, Kansas to survive budget cut TOPEKA-Kansas officials are squirming but not panicking this week over TOPEKA's Jimmie Bass proposal to cut states' portions of the federal pension. In Kansas, local governments did not develop a dependency on state funds to supplement their own revenue sharing allotments because the state used all of its money for projects. Other states funneled an average 44 percent of their revenue sharing allotment to their local units. Nor will there be a large-scale layoff of workers or abandonment of state projects, because the revenue sharing windfall was used mostly for building projects at state universities and bolstering general fund resources for homestead property tax refunds. Since the beginning of the program in 1972, Kansans looked down the road, anticipating the inevitable cutoff of cash at the expiration of the Federal Reserve. Govern. John Carlin's proposed budget for fiscal year 1981 anticipated only two quarterly payments from the state's $23 million annual entitlement. Refinery workers end strike EL DORADO—The Oil, Chemical and Atomic workers announced a routine two-year contract with Gety Refining and Marketing Co., ending its relationship. ne agreement, which was offered by Getty late Saturday, was accepted by union local $241. The contract, which runs through Jan. 8, 1982, includes a wage increase, health insurance premiums, addition of a dental plan and an extra week of vacation. - 100 university workers at the Getty plant to work today at 8 a.m. - Illinois University, 606 OAW worker at the Philips Refining Co. yesterday - Virginia State University, 450 OAW worker at the Philips Refining Co. yesterday Paper says patients sterilized RICHMOND, Va.-Up to 70,000 mental patients in 30 states may have been involuntarily sterilized over several decades, many of them by doctors who believed such operations would help rid society of human maladjustment, the Richmond Times Dispatch said yesterday. The American Civil Liberties Union is considering legal action against Virginia, where 8,000 sterilization have been performed in mental institutions, to stop the state's attempt to make such actions common. The newspaper said many of the patients at state mental hospitals were never told of the operations or were operated on for no other reason than convenience. And the newspaper said authorities in the mental health field had added that the national灾难 did not include thousands of sterilizations performed on women. "We're now beginning to look into the national problem," said Suzanne Lynn of the Reproductive Freedom Project of the ACU in New York. The newspaper reported that 3,000 people had received the operation in Kansas by 1964. In 1936, the American Medical Association concluded that there was "Very little scientific basis to justify limitation of conception for eugenic reasons." Weather... Cloudy skies will decrease this afternoon, with a high of 50 degrees, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be northerly at 15-28°. Skies will be clear to partly cloudy tonight with lows in the mid-20s, and a 30 percent chance of precipitation. Skies will be clear to partly cloudy tommorrow with temperatures in the mid- 50s. KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Grown men weep openly at 71 firefighters released from jail yesterday ran to the waiting arms of fearful men and were told the prison in an emotional hero's welcome. Teasdale pardons jailed firemen "We felt like it was wrong to be there, although we knew we'd broken the law," fireman Roy Campbell said. "But we thought we had done something that was wrong." We men in an emotional thing, I saw grown men put their arms around me and cry." When Mrs. Lee Donnic's husband, Gary, a Kansas City firefighter, was jailed last week, she said it was "like someone put us all in the twilight zone." "I was falling apart," she said yesterday while awaiting her husband's release from the city's Municipal Corrections Institution. Scores of firefighters and their families who attended a rally for the 71 firemen jailed for contempt of court convictions during a six-day strike which ended Saturday. They were released yesterday after being saddened by a pardon from Gov. Joseph Teadeale. THE PARDON was part of a settlement held in March 2016, which also called for the reinstatement, by court order, of 42 firefighters dismissed on December 12-day work slowdown in December. "I'd hate to go through another thing like this again," said firefighter Tom Chunning, after he emerged from jail. "But sure. I do dawn as if it was a matter of getting the men back." Chuing啄ed the thoughts of most of the jailed firefighters, some of whom had been confined since Wednesday. Their lawyers accused the judge of the jail sentences had caused in their lives. The nearly 900 members of Firefighters Local 42 walked off their jobs at p.a.m. last Monday after City Manager Robert Kipp refused to reinstate the 42 men. DO'S DELUXE BCX 14 MARS 0H12-31 "My two oldest children, ages 9 and 11, were the strength; 'said Mrs. Dominic, Home Home Ex-Con, to greet her husband," like soldiers. The two youngest ones didn't understand. They'd say, "Are they going to make 6- and 5-year-old students?" for the jailed firefighters, which was held on a field near the corrections facility. The rally featured hundreds of protestors, leaders and politicians. Many of the speakers criticized city officials and called the settlement a victory for firefighters. Others praised Teadale for their bravery. ABOUT 200 PERSONS attended the rally The firefighters' strike settlement did little to soothe the bitterness and that spawned between firemen and the police officers who crossed their picket There have been ill-feelings between the groups since 1975 when officers were first pressed into fire protection service during a firefighters strike. The city's policemen are in no mood for a celebration however. The firefighters called the police strikebreakers. The police responded that they couldn't condone illegal walkouts by public safety employees. The same situation occurred in December, 1979, during a work slowdown and every walkout. Again the police crossed picket lines and the walkout failed to bring about a settlement. The policemen were able to avert a disaster though. No fire-related deaths occurred during the strike and only one severe injury was reported. The six-day absence of a professional firefighting department left the city with nearly 1,000 acres of scorched grassland, 75 acres of burned farmland and 28 perennial in detection on sarcony of arsenon. The strike officially ended at 8:40 last night when a court judge signed the city contract that will give them the same salary and pact that will give them the same salary and the city had offered before the TRAILRIDGE IN COMPARISON, the recent tragic strike by Chicago firefighters, which lasted nearly four times as long as the Kansas City walkout, left 22 dead. ... 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Earlier this month, Pickert told the Senate Select Committee on Appeals that he wanted to present a presentation of "Equus," a play with some nude scenes, on the Emporia State University campus because he did not have a female audience, and because it involved young people. "My statement came about by the fact that prior to 'Equus' taking place on campus, Pickeret said Friday, "a group of students with me asked asking that this not be shown on campus." "I IN TURN signed the petition asking that it not be shown simply because in our opinion, a group of extrenses of Emma Cannon was needed. I kind of upset the city people. "I did not see the play, and understand it was done ouite well." Pickert said that as a Regent he would have to take each instance on an individual basis. But in response to a question from a member of the appointments committee, he said he would favor a statewide ban on nude production. Last spring, "Equus" was presented, complete with nude scenes, by the KU University Theatre with no visible public reaction to the nudity. "But then again, I'm one of nine Regents and certainly don't want to speak on behalf of the others," he said. Pickert also said that nude plays not produced on campus, or presented by touring companies, should be controlled in the same way. "I guess its legal for them," he said, "showing the plays they elect to show, but it is my feeling that could be controlled by invitation to the campus." NUDE MODELING for art classes, including instructional materials featuring men should be judged by community reaction to them, Pickert said, in deciding whether they are appropriate. Pickert said he could not comment on nude art films because he had never viewed any, but said he accepted nude art films and would run into any adverse public sentiment to it. "Basing on the fact of lack of reaction to it," he said, "it must be an accepted practice. "I're reacting to public feelings. Since the news media released my hearings statements, I've received a couple of letters from some of the indicating appreciation for my stand. "I do believe the general public is offended by this." Pickert said that to date, he had received no show of opposition to his stated stand. "I would guess it would be the same across the state as in Emporia," he said. PICKERT SAID his moral values figured greatly in his stand on nude plays, but also said he felt the Board of Regents had a duty to become involved. "From the very outset, if it wasn't for my personal stand," he said, "I would not have signed the petition. "I certainly feel we (Regents) have the obligation to the taxpayers to look into it and determine any solutions." Pickert's appointment will probably be presented to the full Senate this week for final approval. He said he did not expect approval to his final approval as a new Reagan. Pickert succeeds James Basham, Fort Scott, whose term expired Dec. 31. A former mayor of Emporia, Pickert graduated from Emporia State University in 1961. He served six years on the Board of Trustees and four years on the Lyon County Commission. Latin Week returns by demand By popular demand, Latin Week, an exploration of the Hispanic experience, has returned to KU this week. Frances Lever, assistant director of the office of minority affairs, said the week had been scheduled in response to inquiries by students. ' : A lot of students contacted us all at once asking if we were going to hold Latin Week again this year,' he said. It is sponsored by the Latin American Student Association, Latin American Solidarity, MECA; a Mexican-American student organization, and the office of minority affairs. Events scheduled for the week include a film about Puerto Rico at 7 onight in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union; two films of values of Latin American women at a PWednesday in room 4025 Wesley; a film about the guerrilla movement in Uruguay at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room in the Union; and a MECA conference next month. Jerry Apodoca, former governor of New Mexico, will speak at the conference. Neighborhood leaders start fund By ANN SHIELDS Staff Reporter Two neighborhood association presidents, threatened by a recent city commission decision to overrule the Punckney neighborhood trustee and the legal aid fund for distrustful property owners. Tom Gleason of the Oread Neighborhood Association and John Pitcheon of Neighborhood Association start the fund to help owners sue to regain losses in property value caused by city compulsory rent. "We want to let the city commission know that the rest of the neighborhoods don't want people swooping in and overruling their plans." Gleason said. THE LAWRENCE NEIGHBORHOOD Protection Fund is a reaction to the commission's recent decision to allow commercial development of the Bluffs—a half part of the Puncheen neighborhood at 6th street—despite protests of nearby residents. Four of Lawrence's six neighborhood associations supported the Pinkney appointment, and the city's plan 95—the city's guide for development through 1986—recommended that the Bluffs Lawrence Mayor Barkley Clark said that because the city did not buy the land, as Plan 96 recommended, the neighborhood's recommendations were no longer "The neighborhood plan assumed we'd be using the Bluffs for a park," Clark said, "and we just can't buy another park. "So we decided that, for land like that at the location of the two major arteries, it made sense to put in some offices and townhouses." THE NEIGHBORHOODS do not agree, and Gleason said that if money could be collected quickly enough, a suit over the court would be the first cause supported by the fund. Because the neighborhood association could not show it was harmed by the commission's decision, individuals would have to file the suit. he said. And private individuals needed the fund to offset the developers' and landowners' economic and political power, he said. For example, all seven of the lawyers Pinckney residents considered hiring to represent them had some connection with the Bluffs or has developer, he said. city commissioner Marci Francisco said, "It's scary to think that the developers' pressure was so great that the Pinchney association had to hire a lawyer from out of town." The selection process should be completed by the end of the semester, Del Brinkman, a graduate student in the selection process is similar to that used for regular faculty. The position will be advertised nationally and individual journals will be contacted to identify candidates. SHE SAID SHE thought the threat of a lawsuit, generated by the fund, would encourage developers to confer with neighborhoods. If "the developer does not cooperate with the neighborhood, he may get into a court case that would delay his project," she said. The company was also suing the fund to affect the commission's decisions. Chairman of the committee is John Bremner, O. Sta. Suffer Distinguished Professor of Journalism. Other committee members are J. C. Beale, professional-in-residence, Chuck Chowins, assistant professor of journalism, Paul Jess, associate professor of journalism, Tony Fits, Scottslaffs, Neb., senior and junior faculty, Deli Debi Reichmann, Prairie Village senior. "We don't make a decision on whether or not we get sued because certainly the suit could come from either side," he said. Cleggon, cold and shrewd also, Robert Giles, executive editor of the *Journal of American Veteran*burg, veteran New York newspaperman and journalism educator, and Richard Reid, assistant to the editors of the *Military Times*. J-school starts hunt for Gannett teacher Although no specific requirements regarding candidates' academic degrees have been established, they are interested in classroom teaching. In the past the professional-in-residences have taught reporting, editing and editorial and interpretive writing classes and have engaged with them. Gleason said he and Spear also were The Garnett Newspaper Foundation, established by the late founder of the Garnet newspaper group, has contributed a $13 million for journalism education. The Gannett Professional-in-Residence Program was started at KU in 1975 and is sponsored by a $0.00 grant from the Frank E. Gannett Newspaper Foundation of Rochester, N.Y. The grant pays for the salary and sales decision process expenses. organizing regular meetings of neighborhood presidents to unite on important issues and combat what Spear called the vicious殴ing and conquering the neighborhoods. FRANCISCO SAID she was encouraged by the neighborhood's work to overcome their differences and work together to become an effective political force. A committee of students and faculty from the William Allen White School of Journalism has begun searching for the 180-81 foundation *Foundation professional-in residence* "The present commission tends to feel that every problem needs to be dealt with equally," she said, "but the older neighborhoods are in different situations. She also said she thought the commission needed to recognize the special problems of older areas, such as the Pinckney and Oread neighborhoods, when rearing Past professionals-in-residence include Now that you have a great looking spring tan. Let us give you a great looking spring style. 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OFFER IS GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST Vista RESTAURANTS Great Food * Great Service * Vista and you! 1527 W. 6th UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of other editors. March 24.1980 Iran policy ineffective Last Wednesday the United States received another kick in the teeth concerning the continuing plight of the migrants kid in the U.Embassy in Tehran, Iran. Iranians began electing the new Parliament last week. The second round of elections to fill the 72nd-governing body is scheduled for April An Iranian diplomat, who had met with the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomini earlier that day, said that he was told the hostage issue would not be resolved before May 15-194 days after the Americans capture—because the hostage would not be a primary consideration of the new Iranian Parliament. If this blatantly smug "we've got them, you can't have them" attitude doesn't elicit further, more severe action from the White House, the United States may as well write itself off as politically impotent in international affairs for years to come, if not forever. President Carter has tried unsuccessfully to passively pave a way to freedom for the hostages. So many words have been spoken and so little has been made. The hostages still are located where they were 142 days ago. Iranian and American officials alike have made many allusions to progress, or, in this case, illusions that have dismally dissipated in the stark light of reality. By now, Americans surely must have the feeling that their desperate desire to resolve the situation and to bring their fellow Americans home is being trivially towed with by Iranian officials, who seem to be testing the American government's continued heartache and uncertainty. President Carter's tail-between-the-legislation tactics have done little to stop or even alleviate this senseless taunting, and the Iranians are using that to their full advantage. Carter has warned of the potential consequences as having serious consequences for Iran if that country persists in its illegal hostage-holding activities. There is no reason why the militants should let the hostages go. They have the United States tied to a chain of officers that match poised to the tinder at all times. However, any medical authority can attest to the fact that prolonged psychological stress can have very real detrimental physical effects. And no one can deny that the hostages are not likely to psychologically taxing conditions. Carter could be commended for not doing anything that threatened the hostages physically. There have been isolated reports of rough treatment of the hostages, but there has been no convincing evidence that they are not in relatively good physical health. But how long will this go on? As things are now, it could last for years. The Iranians obviously aren't in any hurry to free the hostages. They apparently couldn't care less. It should be clear to President Carter from this latest leddown that the situation in Iran has deteriorated far beyond the “crisis” stage to a stage of desperation. Death penalty poses an insoluble dilemma May 25, 1979-John Spenkelink, a fresh towel under his chin and a harness and hood on his head, was electricated in a Florida Jan. 17, 1977—Gary Glilmore, his head tween in a tennis booth and his feet in tennis shoes, was shot dead by squad at the Utah State Prison at Point of the Mountain. His was the first legal death in the United States since 1962. susana COLUMNIST namnum prison. Voltage shots singed—then black ened—his flesh. His was the second execution in the United States since 1967. A death for a death, we clamored in the cases of Gilmour and Spenkellink. The two cases were similar; both averaged victims and deterred the murderer, but also to the restoration of the state's right to trial. I recool in horror from the cruel concept of execution just as I cringe in despair at the deprivacy of murder. Their twin atractions are inseparable. Jointly, they stand as death affirmation of the new principle of execution "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." My own reaction to capital punishment is just as paradoxical as it is painful. For example, the Supreme Court ruled in 1972 was "cruel and unusual, or violent of the Eighth Amendment," the States Convention. Now I am not so sure. ALTHOUGH THE COURT in 1972 categorically invalidated the lethal laws of the land, it the door open for states to acquire the right to a more, "merciful" death penalty laws. State death statutes, the Court said, gave juries and judges so much discretion that they were unable to determine if an irrational and unjust. Blacks often were put to death in court, but white victims, they could afford a face law. In instances, the same crime resulted in death for a poor man and imprisonment for a rich man. The 1972 ruling spurred state legislatures to formulate new laws that they hoped would be more in keeping with the Court's notion of a certified, qualified license to kill THE FATE OF CAPAL punishment in the United States during the 1970s was stormy and tortuous at best. Lawns were upled, vowed to be vowed and revamped all across the land. Much has been said about the specter of execution as a deterrent to crime. Despite all the statistical and scientific matterings from lawmakers, law enforcers, and corrections officials, we will never find another the fear of death can prevent murder. The theory of deterrence, although it all stings of stark legalized murder, is beside the point. It will be forever fruiting to try to define, quantify or predict what causes one human being to snuff out the life of another. This is no easy matter and goes, but murders will always be with us. Those who readily embrace capital punishment, although they may carry the weapon, are also sanctioning all forms of murder. The summaryally reject it are slighting the sacredness of the victim's life and easing the burden of murder by celebrating the killer's death. WE HAVE TALKED as much about revenge as we have about deterrence. Civilized, rational people, we are told, are拒绝 the raging, primitist desire for revenge. In a moment of deranged, barbaric passion or of steely, inhuman delibration, who's to say whether a statute will stay the death-dealing hand? Yet anyone who does not rise up in vengeful fury at an act of legal or illegal murder is not sufficiently humbled by the sacredness of human life. Neither my sense of mortality, nor my conscience, nor my allow me to support the death penalty. Nor do they permit me to be against the death penalty. Why should a man or woman who violates cardinal rule of law be allowed to live? It is a matter of human rights. Rather it is a conflict that lies at the very core of our existence as individuals and as a It is a morally and philosophically insoluble dilemma. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY 108764906440 Published at the University of California daily August through May and Monday and Thursday and Saturday by The San Diego Times. Copies may be ordered by mail or fax to 800-253-5711 or e-mail sales@sdsu.edu for six months or 800-253-5710 or e-mail sales@sdsu.edu for yearly Disney Cruise and HH for six months. Custumers must be 18 years old and a United States citizen. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansan, Lawrence, KS 69045 Editorial Editor Brenda Watson Editor James Anthony Fitts Managing Editor Dana Miller Business Manager Vincent Goulter Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins General Manager Rick Musser Ron Kuby: martyr or motormouth? or both? Maybe a KU committee on freedom of speech will shed some light on this question. The report could end up a little “misunderstanding” between Kuby and KU of understanding. Kuby gets KU administration moving The "misunderstanding" concerns a Regents policy governing the display of banners at University-sponsored events. If you are a KU official, the issue is whether the Regents banner policy should be replaced, specified or junked entirely. If but you are Kuby, the issue is not only that you are not allowed to use the banner, should use police officers to enforce a policy that no one else really understands. NO ONE WAS seated near Kuby and his banner did not impede the view of any spectators. However, within minutes, Kuby was arrested on charges of "interfering with" a police officer." Kuby spent the rest of graduation night at the police station. The controversial fasco started last May at KU's graduation ceremony. Kuby, then a KU student, displayed a rather sizable poster that proclaimed "KU Out of South Africa." Perched on an empty bleacher in the northwest corner of Memorial Stadium, Kubu might likely realize he would incur the cost of a burglary. But that Kubu considered his actions to be wrongdoing; he thought he had every legal right to display a banner. KU officials COLUMNIST david lewis Kuby, before this incident, had long been active in every cause imaginable. But Kuby's name became more prominent in the 1980s and early '90s. Moreover, he gained the sympathy of faculty and the community members as well as that of many civil rights groups. The school then denounced Kuby's arrest and said freed speech at KU was virtually nonexistent. to keep up with them, but he has been successful. That statement is debatable, but Kuby nevertheless made his point. And KU officials have gone so far as to admit that Kubu was a terrorist in city later dropped its charges against Kubu. No other student at the University of Kansas has been more successful than Kukan in getting the KU administration to move. But in the past, he moved when it didn't want to. In recent years, the state has shifted its focus in cutting the tape of KU's bureaucracy. KUBY'S SUCCESS can be traced to his charisma and his ability to deal with the media. He has never been accused of hiding secret press; he always has something to say. Kuby has no interest not to go to the media. The University administration is public relations-oriented and will judge it treated with negative publicity. But surely you know that better than anyone else. CAN ONE NAME a student besides KU who has single-handedly prompted the administration to hastily call closed meetings and form committees to rectify problems? Rarely, if ever, has one student received attention from the KU administration. The Blue Ribbon committee on freedom of the press probably would confirm that the Report on the use of a more specific practice to control a more specific practice. The change would be a moral victory for Kuby, but he had a bad taste. Although Kuby's actions may be exasperating, she is also refreshing. While the majority of KU students have been apathetic, Kuby has had enough drive to compensate for everyone. Kuby was active in the fight to rescind a bill that helped lead a freedom of speech group that constantly aggravated Strong Hall. Now the distribution of literature policy is in the hands of Kuby. Kuby's latest drive is the anti-draft registration cause. And one can be sure that he will be working round the clock to help the security team and involve in so many causes that it is difficult Kuby certainly is sincere in his efforts, but his overabundance of activism may come back to haunt him. He could lose a lot of respect. He causes that crops up during the school year. And that would be a shame. After all, a KU protest is just not a protest without Ron Kuby. Joe Bartos KANAN '09 ... and the University does hereby accuse the defendant of publicly displaying a contrary opinion ... Forer, Dillingham should be praised To the Editor: negotiating with their friend, Balmire Dilhom, Bonner Springs junior, in the March 18 Kansan: Norman Forer and Clarence Dillingham should be praised for their unselfish attempts to do some good work during their trip to Iran. The U.S. government should be successful in resolving the crisis. Why shouldn't private citizens do what they can to help? The University of Kansas should be proud to the university they have attended the two weeks prior to whom they have given their time and money to try to help resolve the crisis. These two are representative of a university with a history of resiliency. People should become acquainted with the facts of the incident before they condemn two people for doing something that could potentially have been of some help. Most MKU students don't understand the need for government's policy or what Forer and Dumham were trying to accomplish; basically the whole issue is misunderstood. For example, one thing that isn't common knowledge is that they lost all of their saxophone skills after they were absent. Why should these two be "made an example of" when there are many other professors who leave their jobs to play golf, to interview for other jobs, etc? Dillingham and Forer were given the opportunity to facilitate a dialogue of reconciliation . . . and accepted the challenge. What would you do? Say, "No I want to up a month's salary and face ignorance from my peers. I don't want to get involved?" I just wish there were more professors like Forer and Dillingham at the University. Then KU would have a "high standard image." Susan Walker Lawrence resident Right to bear arms wards off tyranny To the Editor: I want to address two issues in response to Susana Nammum's editorial advocating gun control. First, the availability of guns was wrongly identified as the cause of crime. The cause is not the gun, but the criminal. Therefore, the way to reduce crime is not to force the law abiding citizen to register, and ultimately forget his gun, to provide a more secure crime by seeking tougher sentences and more severe punishment for the criminal. Second, like most gun control advocates, Nnamum does not understand the original and current need to "keep and bear arms." The main issue is not crime control, but the population means of a means by which the populace may resist any potentially oppressive tyrant. KANSAN letters We learn from history that the most serious final obstacle to tyranny has always been the ability of citizens to rise to their position, and in the past it was by the American Revolution. Had not been for a well-armed population, the men would have been overpowered and won-not probably even attempted—by the colonial forces. The first battle of the war actually was fought in defense of the fortress at Boston, where Gage set out from Boston with British troops to confiscate or destroy American weapons stored at Concord. Wherever freedom has been reinforced by well-armed citizens. For this reason, tyrants, in the process of bringing whole populations under their absolute control, invariably have had to suppress tended subjects all arms which could be used for incarce resistance. Twentieth century dictators have also known this. Lenin said that one of the basic conditions he imposed on people is to be social people. Since then, communist dictators have adhered closely to Lenin's dictum to "make searches and hold executions for found arms." Staind said. "If the opposition were successful, they would之 to disarm, shall we disarm it ourselves?" Czechoslovakia was disarmed as the people surrendered their weapons. Rumania, Latvia, Poland, Hungary, Estonia, and Lithuania were also easily disarmed, since the private owned guns in these countries were registered and could be systematically without spreading alarm or something happened in communist China. to keep and bear arms has justly been considered the paladium of the liberties of a republic; since it offers a strong moral pillar, the rule of law is one of the powers of rulers; and will generally, even if these are successful in the first instance, help people to resist and triumph over them." On October 28, 1969, former President Nixon signed Executive Order No. 11490 which assigns to the president the power to appoint the secretary and the government of every facet of life in the United States whenever he decides that such action is necessary—"in any emergency situation." Nowhere is this imprecise mention of the power to leave left to the discretion of the president. It is because of this that Executive Order No. 11490 has been labeled a "Blueprint for Tyrannacy." Has President Carter rescinded his executive order? The answer, unfortunately, is no. Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story explained in 1833: "The right of the citizen Is there a possibility that dictatorship may happen in the future? Could any reasonable American believe that conceivable that any president of the United States has ever harbored such a thought?M Private ownership of unregistered firearms is an inherent right, not a natural right. If you own firearms in our country cannot preserve without it, long as men are governed by men, the right to maintain arms must be indispensable as a final recourse against tyrannical incarceration. Rob Munyan Shawnee Mission graduate student To learn of Christ, read Bible for self To the Editor: Doug Lambert in his March 17 letter makes the mistake all so-called-born-again Christians make. They resort to the dart-throwing method of reading the Bible. If you read past John 3: 1 (Unless one is born again, he cannot see the Kingdom of God), it is obvious that Jesus was referring to the resurrection of the dead, not some other event. The Bible verses 5 and 6, He says, "Unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the Kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is fish, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." If that is true we have a lot to learn from Jesus and that is where the kingdom and at least one in the White House. My point is that if you want to believe in Christ you should read the Gospels and get the Word straight from him instead of making some last-day Dharisse says He meant. Jon Barnes Lawrence resident Monday. March 24, 1980 6 Galleries enhance art, critic says By KEVIN MILLS Staff Reporter BY KEVIN MILLER Staff Reporter KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Planners of art gallery exhibitions must be aware of the effect of the container on the contained, galleryburner, 1980; philosophy Lecturer in Land Sculpture, 1980. A gallery and the artwork inside should merge to create a unified experience, he said. Neither art nor gallery space should be viewed as separate entities. The Murphy lecture series, started last year in memory of former KU chancellor Frank Murphy, is sponsored by the Helen Nelson Art Gallery and the Nelson Art Gallery-Akims Museum. "An ideal gallery subtracts from all artwork the idea that it is art." O'Doherty said. SATURDAY'S LECTURE was entitled "The Gallery as a Gesture." Last week, O'Doherty spoke at Spencer on "The Artist and the Studio." O'Doberty, born in Ireland, was an art critic for the New York Times for four years and is currently the director of the Media Arts Program of the National Endowment for the Arts. He has authored several articles and books, and is working on "Inside the White Cube," a study of the effect of gallery space on art. As an artist, his work is displayed under the pseudonym of Patrick Ireland, a political name he says he will retain until the British leave Northern Ireland. On Friday, he unveiled a Patricia Ireland Installation at the Spencer Museum, entitled "The Red Room." He said the two-tier configuration of ropes and walls emphasized the spatial realities in "the work." The work will be displayed for two months. In his lecture Saturday, O'Doherty said galleries should be designed to allow the art to take on a life of its own. Elimination of windows, quiet floors, and the ceiling as a screen has been taken to achieve this effect, he said. "IN THIS CONTEXT, a standing ashrift becomes almost a sacred object," he said. "The space is devoted to the technology of the aesthetics. "Indeed, the presence of that odd piece of furniture, your body, seems obtrusive, an intruder." One of the first to utilize the art gallery as a venue was Vye Klein in 1918 of *Obertary* (a 19th-century French publisher) arrangements evoked a "Buster Keaton sorrowness" that was neither humorous nor notational. CINEMAS Right Angle Brian O'Doherty, 1988 Murphy Lecturer in Art, helps Sandra Williams, assistant instructor in art therapy, find exactly the right position from which to view his newest works. The installation, titled "The Red Room," occupies an entire room in the Museum's Krest Gallery. Visible behind "The Diority" is part of the work, a three-dimensional sculpture by Daniel Leiter. IN 1968, Daniel Burren further explored the gallery's function by arranging an exhibition composed entirely of junk, piskel, and other objects that stretched to the ceiling, O'Doherty said. Barry Barbert made perhaps the ultimate gesture in 1969, O'Doherty said. A sign he placed on the doors of a gallery read: "In this exhibition, the gallery will be closed." Also in 1969, the artist Cristo was asked by the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago to an exhibition. He responded by creating a miniature inside and out with canvas, O'doberty sailed. "It was unquestionably the most daring collaboration between an artist and museum director in the 1860s," he said. "His work of packaging was a parody of the divine art." "Barry was very smart. 'O'Doherty said, "it's hard to believe the mind behind the individual. As they build templates the empty gallery, it begins to answer. The walls are now sets of assum- O'DOHERTY SAID that art gains context through time, that "serendipious curve of history into an echo chamber." "As modernism gets older, context becomes content. Memory is forgiven in modernism, which is always trying to remember the future," he said. In the 1960s, he said, an international dialogue was conducted on value systems in artwork. The dialogue was liberated in one and always suffered from intellectual pride. By the mid-70s, the trend was to literalize everything, he said, by transforming quantity into quality. "So at the end of modernism, what have we got?" he asked. "We're trained to look at galleries differently." Assembly to scrutinize B.G.S. Staff Reporter Bv RICK HELLMAN The College Assembly will meet again tomorrow to continue its discussion of stiffer requirements for undergraduate degrees at the University of Kansas. committee to task force to seminar and back again. Proposals now before the Assembly call for the extension of English, Math and Speech requirements to the Bachelor of General Studies degree. The move to extend the requirements to the B.G.S. degree begin in the fall of 1977. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences created four faculty seminars to discuss current law degree requirements and their effectiveness in providing a liberal education. SINCE THAT TIME, recommendations and proposals have been shuffled from At the last meeting of the College Assembly March 4, two proposals were submitted, one by the committee on policy and educational goals and the committee on undergraduate studies and advancing an earlier set of recommendations. The Assembly voted 94 to 83 to adopt the committees' joint report for discussion at tomorrow's meeting. That report recommends extending the current requirements for English, Math and Oral Communication to the B.G. degree, as math are required under the present system. It also proposes to create a "degree candidacy status." Students would be required to complete three English courses, one Oral Communications course requirement, one course beyond course M00 022 and one course in each of three distribution degrees, at least 45 hours before receiving degree. THE MINORITY REPORT would have required the Ore department's communication requirement and the minority standing and would have substituted one requiring completion of 10 hours of foreign training. This plan would also call for interdivational, or "capstone" courses to be taken once a student had achieved degree requirements. The students would overlap two or three of the traditional distribution areas in an attempt to help students integrate knowledge gained from different schools. meeting could portend a spirited debate at tomorrow's meeting. Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said he expected several motions to amend the proposal now before the Assembly. If the proposals can make it through tomorrow's meeting with no more than a "little fine tuning," as Cobb suggested, they would have to take the final proposed decisions to its members. A close vote on these proposals at the last If a consensus cannot be reached by the next two meetings, the Assembly may decide to drop the whole revision project. Anthony Genova, chairman of the philosophy department, said after the last meeting that a proposal represents the consensus that need. If that consensus can be reached, fine. University Daily Kansan On Campus UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TODAY: THE KU OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS will sponsor a conference titled "Beligion and Modern Human Aspirations: An International Conference on the Council Room of the Kansas University. The KU CREEM TWEAM will meet at 3 p.m. in front of 205 Robinson. The GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP will meet at nock in the Cork Room of the University. The CLASSICS COLLOQUIUM titled "The Uses of Eliot: An Emperiled奏陶机" at 3:30 p.m. in alceo D of the Kansas Union. An ENGLISH COLLOQUIUM titled "Historical leadership and Curriculum Literary study" at 3:30 p.m. in Ames University at 3:30 p.m. in 4025 Wesley. TONIGHT: THE THETA TAU ENGINEERING SOCIETY will hold an initiation dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. The LATIN AMERICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION will show a film titled "Puerto Rico" at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The JAYHAWK STRING TRIID will give a recital at 8 p.m, in Swoopborst Renaissance Hall at Marphe. TOMORROW: Leon Fleischer will give a piano MASTERS CLASS at 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy. The KU BASEBALL TEAM will visit the Kansas Field. The KANSAS GEOCOLLECTIVE SURVEY will sponsor a forum titled “Changing Institutional Patterns in World Energy Affairs” beginning at 1:30 p.m. in the Apollo Christian SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. LATIN WEEK FILM: PUERTO RICO MONDAY, MARCH 24 1980 7:00 P.M. JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION FILMS: SIMPLEMENTE JENNY & THE DOUBLE DAY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1980 7:00 P.M. 4025 WESCO DISCUSSION BY: PROF. ELIZABETH KUENSEMF & PROF. ROBERT OPENHEIMER K.U. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY FILM: TUPAMAROS THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1980 7:30 P.M. JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION MECHA CONFERENCE "OUTLOOK TO THE 80's" FRIDAY & SATURDAY, MARCH 28-29, 1980 KEYNOTE SPEAKER: JERRY APODOCA, FORMER GOVERNOR OF NEW MEXICO THE WEEK IS SPONSORED BY: LATIN AMERICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION, WEST MESA AND MINNOLLY AFEIRS MEGA AND MINNOLLY AFEIRS O Sarto Inquirito play by Alfredo DiaGomes The Holy Office March 25-29 8:00 p.m. Inee Tues-Sat. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL: OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS 864-4351 Vanessa Redgrave's critically acclaimed "THE PALESTINEAN" The movie that caused an uproar at the Academy Awards PENGUIN SHOWING FRIDAY, MARCH 28th HOCH AUDITORIUM 7:30 P.M. Muslim Students Association = Kansas University (Children under 7 not allowed) Babysitting provided $1.00 Donation at the door "From now on anybody who owns a factory that makes radioactive waste has to take it home with him to his house." - - - - - "SIMON" —— He loves you. Do what he says. A MARTIN BREGMAN Production ALAN ARKIN "SIMON" With **MADELINE KAHN** Executive Producer LOUIS A. STROLLER *Produced by MARTIN BREGMAN* Screenplay by MARSHALL BRICKMAN Story by MARSHALL BRICKMAN & THOMAS BAUM Directed by MARSHALL BRICKMAN *Technicolor* © 1984 Paul Powers. All rights reserved. **ORION ACTUATURE Release** WARNER BROS. Pictures **A Warner Communications Company** OPENING THIS MONTH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! 6 Monday, March 24, 1980 University Daily Kansan Theaters see SUA as competitor By JUDITH LYNN HOWARD Staff Reporter Everything doesn't glitter behind the silver screen. The theater business involved booking films with distributors, promoting them at the box office, up the popcorn and facing the commotion. Eldon Harwood, district manager of the eight Lawrence Commonwealth Theaters, said recently that any bids for en- Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints sua films Monday, March 24 Hitchcock: DIAL M FOR MURDER Dil. Alfred Hitchcock, with Grace Kelly, Ray Miland, Robert Cummings. A man plots his wife's disease at the hands of a third party. Tuesday, March 25 Peckinpah: (1962) RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY Dir. Sam Peckinpain, with Randodd Scott, Joe McCrea, Mattie Harrell. Scot, Jill McCrea, symbolizes the romantic old West. Scott was entering a new century, while Jill was entering a new century. Wednesday, March 26 The Lubitsch Touch. TO BE OR NOT TO BE (1942) Dir. Ernst Lubbisch, with Jack Benny, Corbin Lombard (in her last film), and Robert Koehler, Europe is the setting for this bilingual satire of star actors traveling across Europe. - with- HEAVEN CAN WAIT Dir. Emrst Lublsch, with Don Amenche, Gene Tiernay. A very entertaining story of a recently deceased ne-do-well who must justify to the devil why he should be allowed to go back to school. By KU alumnus Steve Johnson by KU alumnus Steve Johnson Thursday, March 27 (1979) Dir. Benjamin Bertoluci, with Jill Clayburgh, Matthew Barry, Freddy Gwynne. An American star opera star, who also worked with her heroin-addicted teenaged son. From the director of 1900 and LAST TANGO IN PARIS. 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, in 35mm! $1.50 Unless otherwise noted; all will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M RM bills are $1.00 and $1.50 for a 3:00, 7:30, or 8:00 and Midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday; tickets available at http://woodruff.edu/schools/Sk-15.5-Hewlett Information--8644347 allowed. or refreshments allowed. tertainment—even films by Student Union Activities—were considered competition by Commonwealth. "Anybody who competes for entertainment time, whether they are a beer joint or whatever, is competing for the time as well as the business," he said. But Katherine Gile, assistant director of the Kansas Union, said that SUA students were intended only for the people on campus who were willing to tryrying to appeal to anyone but KU students. Last month, the bookings nearly did. STEVE EADS, manager of Commonwealth's Varsity Theater, 101 Massachusetts St., said, "I don't care what happens as long as the bookings don't coincide." SUA and Commewithbook books nearly coincided when the "Rocky Hour Picture Show" was scheduled to be shown at the UCLA gym on March 1 at the midnight showings. Harwood said that when Commonwealth discovered that SUA planned to show "Rocky Horror," the Varsity Theater showing was canceled. "Rocky Horror" also was scheduled at the Varsity Theater. When SUA canceled, Harwood said, Commonwealth rescheduled its booking and showed "Rocky Horror" that weekend. SUA ALSO CANCELED the movie the week before it was to be shown, saying that its "districtator failed us." Dow Cornet, SA midnight films chairman, said he had booked "Rocky Horror" for SUA and that he did not know why the film had been cancelled. "I wasn't pleased at all."he said. "It worked fine then," he said. He said that the film had been shown simultaneously last year by SUA and Hillier Theater. Ninth and fowls streets, he said, had to be turned away from the SUA theater. Cowart said that in scheduling the film or other films, there was no thought about competing with Commonwealth. But he said competition did exist when good films were playing at both places. GIELE SAID that 16-milimeter theaters were restricted to advertising only in campus publications and admitting only faculty and staff to movie showings. SUA schedules popular films as part of its film series. It is a 16-millimeter market, meaning it has 18-millimeter projectors. However, Giele said, films scheduled by SUA are frequently cancelled by the distributor if the movie is to be re-released to the 35-millimeter market. "Distributors reserve the right to book movies to whom they want. The release it first to the 35-millimeter market," she said. Union, county to decide custodial service future A decision on the future of the University of Kansas Medical Center housekeeping department is expected to be reached today. The Med Center's housekeeping contract with American Management Services expire April 17, but the合同于2024年4月到期。Gerole. director of support services said. The custodian's union and the Warehouse Board will meet to discuss a new contract, Francis Jacobs, president of the Kansas Public Service Employees Union, said. Jacobs said it was possible that AMS would be phased out until the Med Center could assume direct control of the housekeeping department. The Med Center must advise the state division of purchasing and accounts of its plans 90 days before the acceptance of a contract. Jacobs said. But KU has not yet told the division of its plans even though the contract expires in less than one month, Jacobs said. The program at the Med Center is still being studied. Jacobs said that because of this, it would be easier for the Med Center to gradually take over the housekeeping and assume complete control on April 1. KU had a housekeeping contract with AMS on the Lawrence campus, but it was not renewed when it expired last November. At that time there were complaints by the custodians concerning alleged harrassment of employees by AMS. Regents to request more phone bill money By CINDY WHITCOMBE Staff Reporter The Board of Regents decided Friday to request more than $1 million from the Kansas Legislature to cover 50 percent of the costs for Regents schools over the next two years. The increase, which affects commercial businesses and industries, was initiated last month by the Kansas Corporation Company, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. The additional costs require $345,901 more than had been budgeted for the rest of this fiscal year and $281,902 more for next year. The Board had built a 7 percent increase into next year's budget, Gee Smith, Larson Regent told the board members, but it had underestimated the telephone rate increase. The University of Kansas will receive $219,397 this year and $501,303 next year if the funds are approved. The money would be used to cover telephone equipment and KANS-A-N line costs for the Lawrence campus and the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. THE BOARD ALSO requested the Kansas administration to appoint a project coordinator for the construction of a continuing education center at KU. Federal funds $23,000 were required. Chancellor Archie R. Dykes told the Board he was skeptical about additional funds for the center. The proposed center would serve all of Kansas, not just KU. Dykes told the Board. Dykes also asked the Board to consider at its next meeting a new payment plan for veterans attending KU on the GI Bill. THE PLAN would allow veterans to pay enrollment fees in two installments because some do not receive their checks by the enrollment deadline. The plan, effective next fall, would require the school to hire an additional enrollment fees when they enroll on Oct. 10 for the fall semester, by March 10 for the spring semester and by July 10 for the fall semester. "With the mood of the federal government these days, I doubt that a lot of federal funds will be given for the project," Dykes said. The Board approved four building drawings for the renovation and were approved and the Board directed Design/Build Architects to prepare con- sua films Presents The board also approved final plans for the remodeling of Summerfield Hall. THE BOARD APPROVED a building committee amendment to its 18th budget request for the City of Iowa to entrance to KU at 15th and Iowa streets. The cost of the project is $10,000 and would be funded by donations. The purchase of four trucks, a total of $85,500, was approved by the Board. The trucks would be used by the Water Department of the Kansas Geological Survey. It was announced that Jordan Haines, chairman of the board, would attend KU's graduation May 19 and make comments on behalf of the Board. The Board also heard a report from Tom Rawson, Regents research officer, stating that enrollment at Regent schools had increased over last spring in 2,842 students. SUPREME SUSPENSE UNFURSL! ... NISS BY NISS ... BLACKMAIL BY BLACKMAIL! KU had the largest increases. On-campus enrollment increased by 2,151 and off-campus enrollment increased by 6 according to Rawson's report. MISS BY MISS... BLACKMAIL BY BLACKMAIL! ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S "dial M for Murder" WARNERCOLOR Starring Ray MILLAND Grace KELLY Robert CUMMINGS Tonight, March 24 7:30 pm $1.00 Woodruff Auditorium No refreshments allowed. 2500 W.6TH 841-7230 This tournament is open to Spaulding Lawrence Club members. Douglas County residents, K.U. students and Baker U. students only. - Men's and Women's Classes * 4 trophies awarded in each class * Each team wear an enrollment shirt, at least 2 tournament matches, and use of the hospitality room (compliments of Greenbrent's Dell.) SPAULDING RACQUETBALL CLUBS Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS —Part Store 1098 East 23rd 841-290-7656 TOURNAMENT SPONSORED BY: KLZR. LITWIN'S, GREENBRIAR'S DELI ENTRY DEADLINE: March 26 at 10 p.m. ENTRY DEADLINE: March 28 at 10 p.m. ENTRY FORMS AVAILABLE AT: LITWIN'S AND GREENBRIAR'S DELI For further information call Spaulding Respectual Club at 841-7230. racquetball REGULAR PRICE $1.00 GET ONE FREE LIMIT 1 W/COUPON open WHEN YOU PRESENT THIS COUPON AT YOUR LOCAL VISTA RESTAURANT. COUPON GOOD: COUPON GUEST MON 3/24 TUES 3/25 WED 3/26 THURS 3/27 1527 W. 6th Vista RESTAURANTS COUPON Let us know of your coupon printing and we can process your order now. SAVE $1.00 S/ Fri, March 28 at 7 & 9:30 pm Sat, March 29 at 2, 7, & 9:30 pm THE MOUSE THAT ROARED DYCHE AUDITORIUM $1.25 and 75* for kids under 12 presented by KU Science Fiction & Fantasy Ass'n Partially funded by Student Senate The Power of Success lies beneath the surface of your mind... Harness it! THE WOODLAND SCHOOL OF ARTS Harness it! through the use of subliminally programmed cassette tapes, designed to help you realize goals - effortlessly Meta Communications Internationals can deliver. That's why one of the country's leading psychologists and researchers, which can actually help you study, do better in athletics or enjoy life more How do subliminal tapes work? It's a proven fact that many of our dominant behavior patterns and attitudes are determined by our unconscious minds. Many times our subconscious blocks progress by making us feel a lack of confidence or fear, the use of successful subliminal techniques - positive changes can occur! Our clinically-tested subliminally programmed tapes provide gentle background sounds conducive to a relaxed, altered state of consciousness. The powerful audio subliminal messages contained within the tapes are designed to help students need as a student, to give you maximum results in the following areas: - Success in School - Sexual Enhancement, Female - Sexual Performance, Male - Social Skills, Popularity Other tapes are available in areas of Smoking, Weight Control, Stress, etc. A complete listing will be sent with each order or on request. To obtain one or more of these 10 subliminal self-improvement tapes, just fill out the attached coupon and send $14.95 per tape to Meta Communications International. Cost includes postage and handling; allow two days for delivery. CH Meta Communications International Dept. S P.O. Box 676 Englewood, CO 80151 Make check payable to above No Cash, Check and Money Order ONLY - Success in School * Sexual Enhancement, Female * Social Skills, Popularity * Social Skills, Performance, Male Tapes at $14.95 each. (4 or more tapes pay $13.75 each.) Total amount enclosed. Name Address City State Zip Monday, March 24, 1980 University Daily Kansan Budget 7 From page one not considering their merits but to keep funding in line with the committee budget. "The thinking is there," Davis said. "Say you know your committee has $7,000 and near the end you know you're going to miss a long shot. Well, then you start cutting." "A lot of groups deserve money, but then some don't deserve anything. We have no choice but to consider each budget separately." TO HEAD OFF automatic cutting, Davis instructed all the committee chairs to make sure the committee budget was. If the allocations surpass the budget then the committee will review its allocations, but again without knowledge of how many dollars should be Last year some committee chairs did not cooperate with this Senate rule, Davis said, and the result was that a few committees . . Jay said the policy also led to budget padding. automatically cut every groups' funding request in half to fit them into the budget. "One group doubled their funding request because they thought Senate would cut it in half. People were given the impression they had to pad their budgets," Jay said. If individual budget padding sends committee wheels spinning, future enrollment trends may put the entire Senate budget in a skid. $1.35 Student Activity fee remains constant every semester. How much money is generated depends on the number of students enrolled with a full-time equivalency enrollment of 36,630 students for spring and fall semesters. The Activity fee generated $48.95. Full-time equivalency is computed by dividing the total number of credit hours taken on the Lawrence campus by 15, the average full-time student class load. ALTHOUGH ENROLMENT has so far defied official predictions of a decrease, the inevitable enrollment downturn will lower the Senate budget. "That is very much on our minds." Davis said. "It will be a few years before the grounds feel the crunch." Inflation has also taken its toll on the Senate budget. In 1979 the Consumer Price Index climbed 13.3 percent, the largest single-year increase since 1946. Like a taut rubber band, less money will have to stretch across approximately the same number of programs. Davis said he doubled what would be a precipitous "decline in enrollment over the next few years. He said Senate would be ready for the loss of recovering the补偿损失 of funds. Jobs... The Goodyard Tire and Rubber Company in Topkha he, in the past, employed 150-200 students as summer relief, according to a recent report from the officer. This year, however, the company will not be using summer relief. Godyear has laid off 80 people who have up to five years of experience. Wages, according to Dollen, are $7.95 per hour for building laborers and $7.10 per road construction. The union now has 150 members out of work, he said. THE SLUMP in construction also has hurt macro steel openings and can cause inadequate drainage pipes and has laid off 32 of the 70 employees, according to Georgia Daughter, company spokes- provides laborers to contractors who request them. From page one "Our lay-offs are due to gas prices and indirectly to interest rates," he said. Ward Brennenness of Kansas Job Services said last year's closing of the General Motors plant hurt the general economy of High interest rates make it harder to buy cars, and anything that affects the automobile industry also affects the tire industry, Brownlee said. the area. The roof of the plant collapsed July 4 and the plant was not back in operation until the middle of October, Brenneisen said. The GM people had supplementary pay," he said, "but 67 other manufacturers depend on GM for their business and they didn't have supplementary pay." "I'm afraid that hysteria over economic conditions might cause employers to cut jobs," he said. "It is not a nice idea then." I don't think I would want to be a student who needs a good job in order to be a teacher. Brenneisen said the GM closing would contribute to the number of young people looking for work this summer. THE CONSTRUCTION industry in Kansas City also is experiencing hard times, according to Bill Stapling, business director and General Laborers Local 264. Wedding Reception? Cal The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 AUDICTIONS FOR THE 1980-81 SPIRIT SQUILL will BE HELD March 30, 1980 ALL ROUTINE FOR THE AUDICTIONS will BE TAUGHT DURING CLINICS ON THE DATES LISTED BELLOW. NO PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. A PRELIMINARY MEETING FOR ALL MEN AND WOMEN INTERESTED IN THE AUDICTIONS WILL BE HELD ON MARCH 25 at 4:30 p.m. in the NORTH BLEACHERS IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE. two were part of a group that made a trip to Iran in an unofficial effort to help resolve the hostage crisis there. REQUIREMENTS: SPIRIT SQUAD AUDITIONS 1. FULL TIME STUDENT 2. 1.8 OVERALL gpa 3. WEIGHT IN PROPORTION TO HEIGHT PRELIMINARY AUDITIONS MARCH 30 "The facts should be laid out on the table and the case should be laid to rest." Srinivasan said. "We are impressing on the FaceEx that there is a need to put this case behind the year is over. The point because the case is controversial, somewhat because the case is controversial." FINAL AUDITIONS APRIL 3 CLINICS 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. ALLEN FIELD HOUSE MARCH 26-27-28-27 MINORITY STUDENTS In the requests, the AAUP executive addressed the urgency on the Fere-Dillingham issue and report its findings before the end of the spring semester to T.P. Swain, president. AAUP asks FacEx to investigate Forer's December trip to Iran Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and Dillingham, instructor of social welfare, were suspended without pay during their trip to Iran last December. "Tight money sure has hurt us," Stapleton said. Secondly, AAUP adopted a resolution requesting that some KU professors may have been lax in meeting their classroom responsibilities. Srinivasan requested the request was in direct effect on the Pune University. The KU chapter of the Association of American University Professors adopted resolutions Friday asking the Faculty executive committee to formulate three committees to investigate issues related to faculty and to inform by Norman Foster and Clarence Dellingham. Stapleton said his union had 300 men out of 400 who are proposals for the summer will be taken. All of the related unions also are having trouble keeping their men working, according to Stapleton. Last year, Wichita had more summer jobs than people to fill them, according to Jean Kalvert of Job Services. ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE "Some of them were good, high-paying jobs," Kalert said. "But this year I think things have turned around." Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Hero At Large Staring John Ritter Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. Chapter Two Stamiring Marissa Mason an Eve, 7:15 and 9:45 2. Little Darlings Stirling Tatum O'Neal and K Eve. 7:45 and 9:50 Coal Miner's Daughter Starming Sisay Spacek Eve. 7:15 and 9:30 Men's Shop-1st Floor 3. Kramer vs. Kramer Staring Dustin Holtman and Meryl S Eve 7.30 and 9.40 Devin, The Rich Country Fragrance for Men from Aramis. Unhairred freshness. Come to relish in the fragrance and groom yourself with it. The rich blossom of a blended blossom with its roots in the earth. Devin brings the big bold, breath-taking outdoors home to you. Enjoy it—anytime, anywhere! Along with these two requests, the AAPU asked FaxEx to create a committee to research present due process regulations in the Faculty Code. Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 A wonderful way to weekend away—DeVin makes the goose greater. This plush pincushion corduroy bag is as practical as it is goodlooking. Sporting an adjustable shoulder strap for sturdy carrying... three spacious zipper compartments for efficient storage... a vinyl lining to keep everything dry. It measures a man-sized **11 x 8 x 6**. It's yours right now at our DeVin counter. 1. All That Jazz Staring Roy Schreider Eve. 7:30 and 9:40 2. Little Miss Marker Staring Walter Mattheu and Julie Aeve, 7:20 and 9:30 "Relating to the Forer case, there have been several innumerous in the reporting to suggest that there have been lapses," he said. "There are no unfair. If there are lapses, then appropriate measures should be taken to rectify them. Such rumors such runners should also be put to rest." 9 N STREET MASSACHUSETTS 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 Yours for only 12.50 with any Devin purchase of 5.00 or more. WeaverS Inc. PUT DEVIN INTO YOUR GETAWAY PLANS. THE CORDUROY WEEKENDEK ALEXANDER Sexwing Laurence . . . Since 1857 JAMES LEE HARRIS Coming Soon March 7-27 Debbie Harry in UMMADE BES & THE FOREIGNER 28 *JOHN MAYALL* & Used Parts 29-999 & the Dickens 3-N.Y. Erotic Film Festival 4-PATS BLAZE RIDIMB BAND 17-Divine in PINK FLAMINGOS & FEMALE TROUBLES * Advance tickets available at Kiefs, Better Days and the 9th Club Spirit IGGY POP Opera House Productions presents One night only Wednesday, March 26th The With "I've been through it all, and proved that I'm equal to anybody you'd care to mention." - Mr. Pop Janet Jameson Band Featureting Janet Jameson former lead vocalist for Cole Tuckey Get your advance tickets while you still can at Kiefs, Better Days and the 7th Spirit Club. Only 6.50 adv. 7.50 d.o.s. Doors open at 8 Show starts at 9 Where else but the . . . Lawrence Opera House Lawrence Opera House Call for concert info. 842-6930 PUT POOLING IN YOUR SCHOOLING W SPECIAL SUMMER RATES jayhawker towers On the KU Campus 8031 wm Lennard 8 Monday, March 24.1980 University Daily Kansan Two similar teams meet for coveted NCAA title INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-For the teams involved, the NCAA championship game tonight will be just like looking in the mirror. "I'll go to be a classic matchup of two quick teams," pregame press conference before tonight's game against UCLA. "pregame press conference before tonight's game against UCLA." Along with the similar attributes of quickness, the finalists also have relatively short lineups and are similarly studied with young players. Louisville has three sophomores and a freshman among its to five players. UCLA starts with an all-freshman backcount. The comparisons continue to the type of offenses the teams run—the high-post. Both coaches get the idea from former UCLA coach Jack Mason. There's a reason for that in *Crum*'s case, of course. He played at NAIA and coached there under Wooden, who won 16 NCAA championships. "I had the opportunity to learn from the best coach I've ever seen." Crum said. Crum also had the opportunity to learn from his own experience in these NCAA playoffs. He coached in the 1972 and 1975 championship rounds, ironically losing both times to UCLA in the semifinals. He holds no animosity against UCLA as a result of those losses, however. "I wouldn't be here today without them," Crum said. "I learned everything I know from UCLA." ever ying knew from OCR. One of the crucial things that Crum learned was the importance of the pressing defense—a tactic that has carried the Cardinals through the Midwest Regionals and past Iowa into the national final "A lot of people look at us as a run-and-gun team," Crum said, but our strong point is our defense. You don't get far without it. Most everyone in Market Square Arena, though, no doubt will be more cognizant of Louisville's offense—particularly Darrell Griffith's griffith. Griffith, the Louisville "skywaker," with the 48-third pick in the Cardinals' 80-72 victory over Iowa in Saturday's semifinals. UCLA Coach Larry Brown hopes to keep the 6-foot-4 guard considerably below that future tonight. "We haven't decided yet who's going to guard Griffith." Brown said. 'I don't think you can stop him altogether. But if we can make him tougher and keep him off the foul line, we'll be doing the job.' Griffith can do more things than score, however. Brown is aware of the All-America's all-around game. "He reminds me a lot of David Thompson," said Brown, who once conferred that pro superstar with the Denver Nuggets. "Griffith is very unselfish. He will give the ball up to a teammate if he can play better." Griffith on the boards and he makes the hit play to get his team go-ahead. Griffith will be the third All-America player that the Bruins to contain in this tournament. Early, they were successful against DePau and Mark Aguirie in a second-round upset. UCLA, the West Regional winner, then beat Paul and 7-1-foot 1 Joe Barry Carroll. Despite errors, KU softball team places third By PATTI ARNOLD Sports Writer Errors plagued the KU softball team this week and but the Jayhawks finished third of 24 teams in the Sooner Invitational in April, by beating Michigan State 1-4 Saturday. KU committed seven errors in seven games, but the miscues came in bunches. Three errors gave Illinois State a 42-11 winning victory Friday and three more losses helped Missouri coast to the finals by scoring KU-30 in the semifinals Saturday. But the experience wasn't all bad for the Jayhawks, who boosted their record to 13-6. The Hawks have placed in the top three in the N.C. All-Star Game which is better than any team KU coach Stancklil has coached. KU was second in the New Mexico State tournament over spring training. "IM REALLY pleased we've placed in both the tournaments," Stancliff said. "We never done this well this early, and we're still learning to teach some of the soaks we want to reach." Good pitching was the story in the 'Hawks 1-4 victory over Michigan State. KU put together three singles and a sacrifice in the Rookie sparks Sonics past KC SEATTLE (UPI) -- Rookie Buailey, starting his first game of the season, scored a career-high 25 points to move the Kansas City Kings to a 112-90 rout of the Kansas City Kings. the day, Messi led in the first inning but missed a four-hitter and scored the bases. However, the 'Hawks could in the following inning KU errors gave the Tigers three runs, dropping KU into the conclusion. fourth inning to score the only run of the game. Although Stanciff was pleased with the third-place finish, he said that with more consistency, KU would have been in the winner's title by beating Missouri S-2. Rose Radeir off the inning with a single and Pam Cox followed with a bunt. Jill Larson sacrificed Cox and Rader to second and third before Kelia May hit a two-out run on first by Danny Garrison. Sanxiw scattered nine Wolverine hits and got herself out of tight spots several times. 国家税务总局监制 IN THE semifinals, KU's third game of Seattle's bench contributed 51 points to the effort. Wally Walker led the reserves with 14 points and 12 rebounds. Balley got the startling role when forward Loanie Shelton twisted his right knee at night. And at Saturday night, The Kings were led by Ols Birdson's 16 points and Scott Wedman's 15. Encore Copy Corp. 842-2001 "We deliver" 3$ ^¢ $ copies Now through April 5 We also do typing, editing and art work. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza ASK THEM WHY DALA Ask Peace Corps volunteers who they travel to Africa, Asia and Latin America to work with farmers, teachers, and trades people. Ask VISTA volunteers who they work for a year organizing poor in their American neighborhoods. And nicely, say they want to travel help people, see new places and meet different people. Ask someone who's been there SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARRHOT-O' LEARY BEFORE APRIL 2, 1980. PEACE C RPS VISTA it's Lunchtime Again at The SANCTUARY! Our chefs are back at it again. Stop in for a lunch that will bring you back, over and over again. From charbrolled Hamburgers to buccaneer Prime Rib sandwiches, the SANCTUARY has a meal waiting for you. EVERY TUESDAY • It’s Ladies Night. Ladies get a ticket at the door for a free daiquiri from 9 p.m. on. EVERY WEDNESDAY • Fresh Fruit Daiquiris. Choose Apple, Nomplapple, Cherry, Strawberry and Lime. Try them all! Only at... And of course The SANCTUARY nightlife never stops. Memberships always available The SANCTUARY 1407 W. 7th 843-9703 Free Hors D'ouvres every Friday during happy hour. Happy Hour 4-7 pm Every day of the week illustrations cartoons artwork logos 5 phone—841-7650 PRE-LAW? films sua Attorney Then come to the Chancery Club the Pre-law Club-meeting Thursday, March 27, 7:30 p.m. JILL CLAYBURGH "LUNA" INTRODUCING MATTHEW BARRY VERONICA LAZAR. RENATO SAVATORI TOMAS MILIAN GIUSEPPE BERTOLUcci CLARE PERELO BERNARDIO BERTOLUcci GEORGE MALNO VIVITORIO STORARO PRODUCTIONS GIOVANNI BERTOLUcci PRODUCTIONS BERNARDIO BERTOLUcci N RESTRICTED Room 203 Dr. Carroll Edwards English Dr. Louis Michel Architecture and Urban Design New Green Hall LUNA Dr. Sharon Poggenpohl Design SERVICE MASTER WORK BOGUS TO HOSTING FOR ELECTRICAL INSTALLATION AND COMMUNICATION SERVICES. LAWRENCE PREMIERE! Colt Knutson; Lawrence City Dr. Frank Pinet Business - Enjoy informal discussions with: Mike Malone; District Attorney Keith Meyer; KU Criminal Law Professor A FILM BY BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI MORTAR BOARD is pleased to announce the recipients of its 1980 Outstanding Educator Awards Funded by Student Senate - Whether Sophomore, Junior, or Senior, learn how you can prepare for law school admission and schooling. Everyone is welcome! Special Showing in 35mm at Hoch Auditorium Thursday Night. 8:00 pm $1.50 D Dr. Ronald Borchardt Biochemistry Dr. Jan Wildgen Human Development and Family Life Dr. Zamir Bavel Computer Science -LUNCH: Light?or Lively! Served Monday-Friday, 11:30 a.m. 1:30 pm. Choose from fried chicken or any of our live fish dishes, and own your own fish dish. Your own, your own salad. The right price on a light lunch...Build your own! Salad Bar $1.50 The Buffet Line $2.50 Holiday Inn 23rd & Iowa 251d & Iowa Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843-9100 Holiday Gifts BEST OF THE WEEK HOLIDAY GIFT BOOK CHRISTMAS & NEW YEAR (913) 843-9100 --all you can drink $1 from class members $2 from non-class members 4th Senior "Farewell to Bars" Mr. Bill's PARTY Tues., March 25, 8-12 p.m. (memberships available) SENIOR FAREWELL MOVIE will continue filming --- Monday, March 24, 1980 5 Linkers finish second at tourney University Daily Kansan By KEVIN BERTELS Friday wasn't a good day to make a ground on the leader for the KU men's golf team. Sports Writer The 'jayhawks, who were second after the round four of the Gulf Coast Intercollegiate Basketball Tournament, did not catch the leader in the fourth and final south. Southeast Oklahoma won and KU finished nine strokes back. Third place went to the Memphis Tigers, who finished six strokes behind the Jayhawks. "We just didn't play well on the last day," Coach Ross Rassall said. "It was tough to shoot down around 74 in that wind." THE SCORES OF KU's golfers indicated that the wind had a bearing on the totals. KU Mark Stenker shot 71 in the final round KU's Carver team. He was followed by Mark Cawley with 74. Crow placed fourth with his 201 total and Steiner was sixth at 304. KU's Doug Anderson just missed a medal by shooting a 307, placing 11th. KU wasn't the only team bothered by the high winds. The best individual score turned in Friday was 74 and the next was a 5-overpar 76. Despite the wind, Crow and Steiner placed among the top 10 individual medal winners. D. R. SENSEMAN shot 79 for KU for a 313 hit. Chris Colliatt finished at 334 with his 87. Perhaps KU's most displeasing performance was turned in by John Lyons. Lyons, a member of last year's third place Big Eight team, shot 88 in the final round and finished with a 328 total. Women netters beat Iowa State The KU women's tennis team evened its record at five wins and five losses yesterday with a 7-2 victory over Iowa State. The match was KU's first test of Big Eight competition this season. Kansas won the dual by winning five of six singles matches. defeated by Kim Wishard of Iowa State 6-2 6-2. "Lyons just needs a little work on his game, a couple of swing adjustments," Randall said. "With a little practice, he'll be all right." Winner for Kansas in singles were Mary Stauffer, No. 2; Maureen Guilfo, No. 3; Shari Shruffer, No. 4; Shawn Wilson, No. 5 and Kathy Merrion, No. 6. Freshman Marci Eary, who played her first match at the No.1 singles spot, was the only KU singles player to lose. She was "Everyone played super but I was especially pleased with Maureen and Mary," Hosking said. "They pulled out really close victories which helped us take the match." Other winners were the doubles combinations of Merrion and Lissa Leonard, No. 2, and Erys and Shruffer, No. 3. "This was a big match," Hosking said. "Now the girls are feeling much better themselves. They were a little down now, but they will get stronger now they will gain some confidence." "OUR SUCCESS GOES TO YOUR HEAD" Uppercut Featuring professional curling brushes and curling irons on sale! only $9.50 reg. $15.00 841-4894 1031 VERMONT IN THE BAY BUILDING REDKEN The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twenty thirteen forty-five sixty-seven八十 ninety nineteen twenty-two twenty-three twenty-four twenty-five twenty-six twenty-seven twenty-eight twenty-nine thirty-three thirty-four三十五三十六三十七三十八三十九四十五十五十六十七十八十十九二十一二十二二十三二十四二十五二十六二十七二十八二十九三十三十三十四三十五三十六三十七三十八三十九四十五十五十六十七十八十十九二十一二十二二十三二十四二十五二十六二十七二十八二十九三十三十四三十五三十六三十七三十八三十九四十五十五十六十七十八十十九二十一二十二二十三 AD DEADLINES to run Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 6 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 7 p.m. Friday Wednesday 8 p.m. The Kansan 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 F found items can be advertised FREE or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 844-138. ANNOUNCEMENTS ERRORS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864.4358 Renaal's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bell. in for perceptive individuals and free spirits. no books; for information, write: Harper, Kansas 76058. 4-4 Nassau, Bahamat) Departing Wichita, May 24 & 31. Rates starting at *42k/week* person. Enjoy free golf, luxurious Playaway Bay and N Ski Poitier, N Ski Poitier, N Ski Poitier, KaSta KS, (316) (316) 58-42-4 42-2 Watch for truck parked at 9th and Illinois, and watch the tail lights turn red. Watch the *The Role-Hee*-the-Wall* Sweet fruits fresh fruit peanuts in the shell. Varieties of dry and sweet fruits are available daily. Also selling wood stoves and Albertsons. FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt, next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. **tf** The Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor is responsible for the dissemination Heal Board for three year institutions. The Heal Board, which has approval of the Board of the College to be承认 complaints of alleged violations in the academic programs and requirements to the Executive Vice Chancellor, will accept such complaints by the segments of the University community, including the School of Business, staff. Nonmissions should be submitted to the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor, 16, 1900. For additional information contact the Office of the Advocative Action. New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances and cabie 1 block from the Union. Call 843-9f7 Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-579 or 842-4185. If A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. If COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperative located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 842-9421. tf Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 922' Mast; The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Up and lower or floors 728 sq. ft. or 890 sq. ft. Contact 834-2034 or 844-077. ff NAIMISH HALL has a couple of openings for girl rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. tf Jayhawk West Apt. 1 Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished for $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 524 Front Room, Next door to Russel's East. **tf** HANOVER PLACE NOW LEAVING These all new and contemporary low露台 are installed on UD and downstream starting at around 80 feet. They are available in garage with operable appliances, all appliance wifi support, private garage space, cell phone access, private bathroom, 841-4455 or 841-8252. Apts, and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF **CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING** for this fall & summer. Apply now. 648-253-8 at 6:00 p.m. Booms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. If Summer subleave. 3 bedroom. 2 stories. 1 block from stadium. Call 841-7890. 3-25 SUMMER SULSELE 4, br furnished 1 aft. lib from campus. Call now. 643-9737 Room-large, semifurnished, private frig and laundry facilities, and Main $148. Available now. 843-1788 3-25 Apartment 1 bil. from Union 2 bedrooms. $25/ 84-3114. Contact Steve Rudley 814-3114. 84-3114 2 Bedroom unfurnished apt. (Mark 1 Apt. 1015 Miss.) for suburban suite, also available for a yearly lease in Aug. Laundry, A/C, DW, baleen. Call 841-2642. Mark & I & II. NOT NOW REQUEST FOR SUMMER breakout rooms! 1 & 2 bedrooms, 8床 walk to parking lot, 3 bedrooms, 7床 walk to petting balconies, off street parking dibsher- ers, outdoor breezes for info for info 822-603 at 1035 Mission Street for info for info 822-603 at 1035 Mission Street ARE YOU FED UP WITH THE HIGH COST OF housing in your area? You could be found at an affordable price. Housing can be found at a local pharmacy, store with water & gas utilities paid. Comfortable Quiet, close to shopping, parks and schools. Call 1-800-234-5202. Spacuol, two-bedroom, AVALON apt. available for June at a cost of $200/mi; all utilities paid not electricity. Dilwashar. Air conditioners. Capacity included. Includes Finder 3-28 642-1536 anytime Two-year-old two story house 3 bedrooms; 2 bathrooms; kitchen with microwave, family room, dining room, kitchen with all major appliances, laundry room and garage or ceramic tile floors. $149/month. Available on or after April 15th. Summer sublease. 2, Trailr Trailhouse Townhouse yds from pool, tennis, call 842-1436-34-26 2-36 SUMMER APT. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, a.c., diu- washer, new carpet, on bus route, x-large living area. Call #812-6023. 3-28 Staying in Lawrence this summer? Subbase w: option for next year One bedroom, furnished apartment on bus route. 841-7480 3-27 Most mustilea 1 bedroom apt. AC, water paid. Most mustilea 1 bedroom and laundry room 4B2-37 Keep trying. Summer sublease, one-bedroom, apt. 2, blocks from campus. Furnished, new, with private patio. WHY WAIT UNTIL LATER TO MAKE YOUR DEPENDENCY MORE RELIEF? A bedroom 1-bedroom apartment, a walkway distance to campus air-conditioned buildings, or a parking lot within the mall? All of these off-street, office calling. Park Call M464-all from 2 bedroom, living-dining area, kitchen, bath & dressing room. 2-4 people—Meadowbrook Apartment. Call 849-2889 or (818) 331-1518. 3-28 Must unibase 3 bedroom furnished. A/C and pool. Utilities paid except electric. $405 a month. Trailside. 841-6052 or 841-7333. 3-28 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-508-3000, 290 W. 6th, tfr MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-508-3000, 290 W. 6th, tfr Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make a Maker's Kit. Get the kit and make your own Maker tools. Ask for study guide preparation. For free exam preparation. New information at www.westerncivilizationnotes.com. From Town Crit, Maalbookstore and Graed Bookstore. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-138F, TF New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. Be sure to check on prices. Lodem's Furniture. 128 New York St. S 813-3228. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor. from $59.95. Rick's Bike Shop. 103 Vermont. 841-6624. P. A. Speakers. Four Mitchell model MULT-1 (sitan to Bose 901). Over 100 Watts each. Excellent power stereo, small band P.A., heavy-duty power amplifier, best offer for bose 525 or best offer for bose 442-118. SunSpeed-Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-3700. TF Brand spanking new 1980's! Datum 210—$4729 Tony's Bike 648-8444 ask for Bob Smith Tony's Dady Tang 15 Spied Mirage gran-tour hockey, bicycle, fashion, and golf equipment. Front and rear touring rackets, cantilever bicycle, and cable edometer, bicycle, and cable edometer, bike lock Casette Deck - Sharp RT-1165 with Automatic Cassette System. Best offer value $115 than 848-1725 1-2-26 Football Table in good condition with coin mech. $300. 841-7870 5-25 Navy blue ski boots 9 Nordica ski boots. $20. 841-$331 after. 4.00 5-25 Excellent shape, must sell. Call 842-5460. 3-26 10 speed for sale. Motobike Mirage in extreme condition. Copper metallic with Suntour Drillers. 811; 714-871. 3-28 1976 MCGB, butterscotch with black top. Good condition. 841-3100 or 843-1008. 3-25 Oilman Machines Co. Epiphone acoustic guitar and case. Excellent condition. Only $125. Call Mike at 841-7074. 3-28 1973 Camaro LT. 350, auto, ps, ph. Good condition. Must sell. 842-7824. Mike. 3-29 FOUND Incoming Medical Students: Don't be a fool like I was and imitated on a new microcope. Mine is in mind condition and prized to pick. Call Richard Chirrty at 392-8308 in K.C.K. evenings. 3-25 Top quality PA, excellent for rock band or in- strumentalist. Costs $1000 firtm 684-257 after 6:30. Aik for Sale. 10-speed bike for sale, call 842-5152. 10 p.m. 3-25 Bicycle: Vittceun Aerospace GP 1 year-old. Best offer. Also extensive catalogue of bicycles. Gold bracelet. Call 842-2625 after 5:30 p.m. tf For sale $18' 19" color TV, RCA-XL100, 3 years old, Call 845-745-2888 Olivetti Underdower Editor II electric typwriter. Excellent shape, must sell. Call 842-348-30. 3-26 Cockatiels= same pair for sale. May use for breeding. Bird cage included, call 842-988-328. www.birdcages.com Honda 50 (moped) like new, has basket, cm: 300 ml 895.849.7943 9.99 Found: A green and blue plaid tote bag in front of Wescow on Tuesday, March 18. Mile 846-62418. Initial braceret on Naimuth Drive. Call 841-6874 to identify and claim. 3-24 HELP WANTED One pair Yamaha hi-flex skis, 210 cm. in tyrolean bag. Contact Hal at 864-3477 or 841-3094 to identify tfr. TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER ORDERS. Will you share your work experience with us? We want to learn from our customer organization. Kanuri for Teachers. Our customer organization helps and input on nursing home conditions and residents. All names and correspondence will be received by KANURI (between nine and five) in writing. KANURI 927-830-1655. Now taking applications for door floor and watt- her, we are in line 13. Time: 7:20 a.m. Bake for Sheffield. If 7:20 a.m. after 8:00 a.m. Bake for Sheffield. CLIENTSHIPES/SAILING EXPEDITIONS/SALL- WARE NATIONWIDE $495.00 NATIONWIDE NATIONWIDE $495.00 FOR APPLICATION REFERRESALS, to SACRAMENTO WORKBOX 60129, Sacram- mento WORKBOX 60129 52860 Position open-residential facility for development distanced office is seeking an Emergency Dept. human services area is required. Renshame should be forwarded to MUCS, Box 68, McKenna, Kernville. Position open—small community facility serving the developmentally disabled is seeking the full-time service of a licensed social worker. Req. Master's degree or equivalent to MCSB, BSN, 6-32 T, KANSAS, EAST. COMPUTER SERVICES AGENCY needs Keypoint Operator to point and verify data using a computer system that operation of each unit received equip, some of the equipment is provided by Computer Office. Adm. Center, 2017 La., B-622-8230. Families with well-adjusted adolescent boys to participate in brief research. Family members will be paid for their participation. For more information call Brian or Carla at 864-383-327- Free Lace Photographer is interviewing female subjects for project photos. Experience and photo skills not necessary but useful. Write a Job. P.O. Box 3155, Lawrence, Kansas 69044 3-25 KANSAS APPLIFIED REMOTE SENIOR PROGRAM needs graduate or upper division undergraduate work. May 15-August 15, 1989 with possibility of graduate study. Photography, remote sensing, mapping or field work is preferred, but not required. Applications form available in Room 257, Nielsen Hall, McGraw-Hill University. Part-time cashiers for evening shifts and weekends. Also need one person for noon hours. Apply in person. Henry's Restaurant, 6th and Missouri, 3-26 NORWEST KANSAS AREA HEALTH EDUCATION AIBC PROGRAM - The University of Kansas in Kansas Health Education Center (AIBEC) located in Kansas City, Missouri is a nationally recognized employer responsible for administering programs, personnel and facilities within a county-level region in northwest Kansas. The AIBEC center will work closely with health care professionals and with the staff of the Central AIBC Program to develop and implement health care educational initiatives that promote healthy development and improve health care educational initiatives. AIBC serves as a mentor or equivalent to health administrator positions at a health education and/or health care educational institution. Request for information to Program Director, John R. Dugger, 2010, Rainbow Blvd., Kansas City, KS 66018. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity employer. Employees with disabilities are encouraged to contact the Office of Disability Services. DAY CARE STAFF need for before-and-after appointments. Applicants should have experience working with people of all ages and backgrounds. Employer Expended day was 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Lawyers Excluded day was 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Employer Expanded day was 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Employer expended day was 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Employer expended day was 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Employer expended day was 10 a.m.-6 p.m. ACTING COORDINATOR UNIVERSITY INFORMATION MARKETING May 19, 2018, and ending December 17, 2018. Work will begin June 1, 2018, and last no later than June 20, 2018. Responsible for the university's annual information marketing program for the first two months of the year, plus a 21-hour week in internal office work, and personal assistance service in the University Information Marketing Program with other government agencies. The services offered by the university are coordinated with other government agencies to manage the Center's information marketing programs. The staff and the training and support of the staff are required as part of the curriculum. Students must obtain a student status or clinical or unaccredited status before registering for the 18th year. Students must obtain the knowledge of the history of Student Affairs and the requirements of the 18th year. $13,000 for the 18th year. Local college students must apply for a response and a payment of $180 to the Student Affairs, 241 Strong Jail, University of Kansas City. A successful application activates equal employment opportunities. OVERSEAS JOBS - SUMMER year-round, Europe, S. America. Australia, Asia. all fields. Fees $1200- $1800 expenses expensed nighttime. Lightroom. Mar, Ca. 9225. Bk, CA 22-54. Car, Mar. Ca. 9225. THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER is positioned at April 19, 2018 and a pool of angi- legists will begin training on April 19, 150 Strong Hall Hall Destinations 5.50 m. March 19, 2018. Opportunity Affirmation Action En- rollment INSTRUCTORS—Human Relations Instructors needd pft full time. Conduct seminars. Tring. program in KANSAST CITY. April 25-27. Call time Free Toll (FEE) 839-320-9798. X-256. 3-28 PART TIME-15 to 20 hours, wk in the event, with local building cleaning service. Exclude individuals who are interested in additional income. We are especially interested in interested students during the summer session. Call 862-5430 for additional information. Burray of Child Research, Achievement Place has been appointed as a position available. Rates from $595 to $750 per hour. Duties are to conduct telephone interviews with parents and potential students who must have private abide and must possess personal skills essentials Application deadline: 12/31/2014 Opportunity: Contact Mildred Joll, 111 W. 12th St., New York, NY 10016. LOST Lost puppy, Female, Golden Retriever with wire-leg hair, has white skin and white spot on chest, and 8 weeks old. Lost around Robinson and If found. If call 865-739-2740 for Kupkeup. Lot: My light-colored collie pup Linday. It ornamented or followed someone from my home at 2124 Kentucky. If you have been her or know where she is please call 842-9917. 3-25 NOTICE KU Frisbee Club meeting Wednesday, March 26, 18:00, 4:30 p.m., 50 Robinson, Flims on World Frisbee Championships will be shown. Discussion follows. Community Passover Seder Tuesday, April 1st 5:30 P.M Kansas room, Kansas Union Admission: Students $6 In Advance General Adm. $9 In Advance $10 at the door Call or come by Hillel by March 27 864-3948 Reno call! In Lawrence Driving School: Receive drivers license without Highway Patrol Traction; Transport provided; Drive now, Pay later! 842-6015, 3-23 PERSONAL YOYAGERS—Fellowship-Christian. Alternative for Singh Adults—First Presbyterian Church, Sunday, 9:30 a.m., 844-711-6. Cant’t afford to find a local attorney. Call Legal Id: 844-564-644. The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cold beer, pool, pinball and unique hunters. Color TV and sewer for the Hawks are away. You can watch The Harbour Lite on 103.8 Man. A first-class dive. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-ablent up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Admittance upon appointment. call 9 AM to 5 PM (932) 4601-7919. St. Ollen Court, PK-KS. 620 GAY COUNSELING REFERALS through Head- quarters, 812-1435 and KU info. 864-3566. Dial #42-2001 for Copy Odyssey. 4-5 PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843- 4-10 PREGNI Headquarters is a community of people willing to want to talk or call by drop or by we can help with information, research and other practical investigation. relationship problems. other personal questions. We can also help you talk about. We can also help you get in contact with us. 801-2543 or drop by 1064 Manitou Park. 801-2543 or drop by 1064 United Fund Dg. Co. and private individuals. TENNIS Spring and warm weather matches the season, ready now! Call David 864-3288. Member Professional Stingers Ain, and stringer K. U. Vari. Tennis. Very reasonable rates on golf attaches and stingers. Celebrate EASTER with ASTA singing telegrams. Baskets delivered daily. 842-8741. 4-4 Need powerful rock vocalists to join established instrumental band. Call 842-7738. 3-25 **LORINEA:** Your prize it took you months to collect. Take a warm and reflectent *tire*. A cold night the car was blue *is* a good thing. The *snowmobile* that time though, Drop a line and let me know Juniors: Mortar Board applications now available in 220 Strong. We'd like you to apply! Due by Tuesday 3/25 3-25 Meadowbrook open house coming soon! Join us March 29-30. 1-5 p.m. 3-25 To the girls in Red River over break—Hi—From the girls in the chairlift. Girls: I need a date for a formal 4/12. Call Jim at 843-7043. 3-28 LAST CHANGE- ENTRY TO SKI THAT EASTER LAST CHANGE- excursion costs $16,000 per day. Hike in the snow on Saturday and Sunday. Three days lift ticket. Three days lift rental and excursion fees. Excursion fee is $350. Including returnings Call Darryl Doyle at 212-796-4895. LATIN SHIP ionite at OPERATION FRENDSHIP 7.60 min. at the center, N292 West 19th, 1' bleak w of olive Hall on 19th, 4' bleak w of olive Hull on 19th from the people: Central and South America. ADOPT AN ATLETLE-Help keep a student at school and support KU abilities. I’m looking for a house龄 or age to house it or sit on租赁席位. We will track athlete rankings only. 814-723-3-27 Want to spend the 1st night of Pasover-Monday, March 31st at a Family Sider? Call Hillel at 864-3948. 3-27 Pupuses—free; half German shepherd, half lab- rador. Ten to choose from. Call Dave at 843. 3583. 3-27 Chest, Mork, Mac, and Derf! This means war. We're not all washed up but yells away! Three wet kiss, Jina, Jesa and Ssuite. 3-24 Two Boo, Florida, was in "mud". We're so tired of the mud. After Alison Gunther food, the Tik Tok Lounge Beach Admiral Cooking Food, the Mini Montana Movie theater food, Keet's en la playa, Monica Montana food cream, Keet's en la playa, Ory Grieben-Dry D. H. Difflurene, Zook food, Drink Beverage D. H. Difflurene, tipping up to the best time of our lives We will be, the Holiday Inn, "Curtis" and we will be, the Holiday Inn "Curtis" and we will be, the Holiday Inn "Curtis" Looking for people to lend each other moral support on Scaraldi Medical Diet. Lynda-841- 0742 SERVICES OFFERED PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uwharra Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday. 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 838 Mast. @ --- EXPERT TUORING: MATH 000-102 call 64-5785. MATH 115-700 call 64-5785. STATISTICS call courses: 64-5900. C.S. 100-600 call 64-5900. SCIENCE call courses: 64-5900. ENGLISH call 64-5900. AND SPANISH call 64-5900. las For Service Fast... We have auto glass of all kinds! KENNEDY GLASS INC. 730 New Jersey 843-4416 Mamasa Therapy or women at the Svendring Shop in the Marketplace (8th & New Hampshire) call for appl. 841-8629 or 841-7198. 3-27 Professional Wedding; Photography, specializing in wedding photography & enlargements from $850. (913) 345-5169 5-26 Radio's Auto Repair, Portrait & Domestic Services. On the on spot service. Free estimates. 841-263-3266 PROVE YOUR MATH GRADES. Proof- er your math grades. 90th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th, 31th, 32th, 33th, 34th, 35th, 36th, 37th, 38th, 39th, 40th, 41th, 42th, 43th, 44th, 45th, 46th, 47th, 48th, 49th, 50th, 51th, 52th, 53th, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61th, 62th, 63th, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th, 68th, 69th, 70th, 71th, 72th, 73th, 74th, 75th, 76th, 77th, 78th, 79th, 80th, 81th, 82th, 83th, 84th, 85th, 86th, 87th, 88th, 89th, 90th, 91th, 92th, 93th, 94th, 95th, 96th, 97th, 98th, 99th, 100th TYPING Why cuts about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional training. Betty Grammer. 842-6097 after 5:20 p.m. and on weekends. **tf** PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. TF Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Sellite Call, Cormorant. 842-724-1161. ff MASTERMINDES professional typing Fast, accurate Spelling, grammar correct. Critical Experienced typethree-discus, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correct selectric, Bath After 5 p.m. 842-2310. ff Typist/Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, web development. Welcome to www.ibmwelcome.com/Layout/Call on 845-921-3927 Experimented Tzipit-term papers, thesis, mit papers and books. Experimented spelling, spellin- g cursive, 843-5544. Mr. Wright DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980. Experienced KU typist. IM Correcting Selective work experience. Send resume. Sandy, ex- cellent communication skills. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, biography, correspondence correcting Eljen Jeannan. K141-2722. 5-5 Experienced Typlist-manuscripters, papers, theses Experienced Tystit-manuscript experience. IBM Correcting Scoring 841-4229 Dial 842-2001 for a typing Odyssey. 4-5 Word processing exclusively at Encore-Covy Corso-Mar 2000, 25th and Iowa 4-3 R-portals, dispersations, resumes, legal forms, tapes, memorandums. Corrective Sincere Call 5 10 or Johnson, 841-212-7222 I'm your typ . . . for thesis, dissertations, grams, etc. Joe Ann 864-3819 or after 5:00 at 841-8055 4-18 I'm your type, for thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Joan E0483-3819 or 05 at 811-620-2578. WANTED ROOMMATES. Naiamitah Hala has a couple of office business at office 83-859 any day of the week, if not on the day of the workday. PSCHATICHATric AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICE CENTER, 214 W. 8th St., Job Center, JOB- 312 W. 6th St., Topkapi, KS; Phone (1) 292-510-3810. Male encourage to apply. An equal opportunity Female roommat; age 23-30, trailer house; $100 '!' utilities, private room, washer, dryer, dish- washer, M42-9599. 4-13 Wanted. VW%, running or not. Call 841-5496 or 841-6799. . . . . WANTED TO RENT Journalism graduate and current law student at 12 December; Military officer and who have 3 children but no pets. Require plenty of time to complete primary education. 3-27 1-042-6772 Female roommate to share Jashawk Tower; apartment with three dawn cool ladies for fall 1980 semester. Call 864-6701. 3-25 Roommatz—For 3 bedroom townhouse at Park 25 Apt. Bus route: 104.50 plus 1/3 utilities 2-25 2-25 Female roomsate for queuing townhouse living, nice quiet neighborhood. Fireplace, garage. Non-smoker. $110 plus 1/3 utilities. 842-4696. keep trying. 3-27 Mia rentmate immediately to share a spacious two-bedroom apartment with one other mail-through the month of May $125-$130 per month ($8 call; $61 require for Larry). 3-28 I am looking for a student married couple to join us in summer home on Lake Champlain, NY for a summer camp at Lake Champlain, NY. You will be invited for course. Provided: Your own private tuition for swimming, tennis, mountain climbing, basketball and other persons who can provide character reference CITY KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 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 coupon to Hall. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write ad here: to run: Tuesday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Sunday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Write ad here: ___ 2 times 3 times $2.50 $2.75 .04 .04 ___ 3 times $2.75 04 RATES: 15 words or less CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 3 4 5 times times times $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 .04 .05 .06 5 times $3.25 .06 DATES TO RUN: to NAME: ___ ADDRESS: ___ PHONE: ___ KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD 10 Monday, March 24.1980 University Daily Kansan 1 1 Jumping Jeltz The throw was there in time for KU shortstop Steve Jelow to make a double play against Bucker University in a double-header at the Arizona State University. following day, the Jayhawks improved their record to 13-4 with a double-header-sweep of Fort Hays State. The team has now won two straight. Temple uses squeeze bunt to cap successful weekend By KENDAVIS Sports Writer There are two necessary ingredients for the successful squeeze bunt in baseball. First, the runner at third must wait until the pitcher has started his forearm before breaking for the plate. And second, the batter must make contact with the pitch. That was the situation the Kansas Jayhawks found themselves in Saturday afternoon at Quigley Field. Roger Riley did his part. So did Dick Lewall. And all that went for the Jayhawks over Fort Hays State. They held the weekend of the season and their seven in town. LEWALLEN, WICHTA FRESHMAN, laid a perfect bunt down the third base line in the bottom of the ninth inning in the second game of the twinnil. The Tigers had play on Riley and KU put the lid on another game. The Jayhawks had won the first game-3. Friday afternoon the Jayhawks had an easier time with Baker University, breezing 9.0 and 9.2. And as darkness descended Saturday, KU coach Floyd Temple gave a sigh of relief when he saw Lewallen's bunt drop in place. "Just another routine double-header.", Temple said after the game. "Really, that's OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)—Kansas City Royals All-star catcher Darr尔 Portler, who dropped out of spring training under undisclosed circumstances, has been receiving treatment for three weeks to recover from alcoholism, his father said yesterday. Porter battling alcoholism, his father reveals Ray Porter of Oklahoma City said his 28- year-old son Darrell had suffered alcohol- coholism and was a professional job, professional career. Porter's father blumed his son's problem, in part, on "pressures and the environment professional athletes Fourteen—hit attack lifts KC past Texas "There are a lot of lonesome times you have to spend," Porter's father said. "Darrell's not any exception." POMPAO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)—Amos Otis and Jamie Quirk led a 14-hatch attack as the Kansas City Royals defeated the Texas Rangers 7 in exhibition bayeryster Ranger starter Steve Comer was touched for 10 hits and five runs in five innings. "Winter is his play time. Darrell doesn't have that much of a drinking problem during the season, his father said, "but you can't drink without some continual involvement." his son faced with his rehabilitation was anticipated public reaction. Quirk, the reserve catcher, had three hits in six innings in the second single in the fourth and two more with a single in the fifth. Ots delivered a solo homer in the fourth and singled in a run in the sixth. THE AMERICAN League catcher left the Royals' Fort Myers, Fla., training camp March 14. Royals Executive Vice President and General Manager Joe Burke would say only that Porter left to seek medical care in very confidential and personal problem." PORTER'S FATHER said his son's greatest alcohol consumption had been during the off-seasons. Besides Quirk's two RBIs in that inning, Pete LaCock contributed an RBI single. "It's a pretty big thing to him. Darrell doesn't know how people are going to feel about this thing," Porter said. "Him being a professional athlete, the fans always ask the question." And he is just the greatest of everything going. But there is immense pressure out there." John Grubb gave Texas an early lead with a two-run homer off Leonard in the second innning. But Otis' homer and Quirk's two-hit outburst set up the Royals went ahead for good in the fifth. The elder Porter said the biggest problem Porter's father said his son's career would balance on his team's acceptance of his treatment. He is expected to join the team after his release. The season opens April 10. PORTER'S FATHER, who would not receive the treatment center's location, sent her to work in a hospital recently and reported the treatment was "coming along fine." The program should be reviewed. Porter had talked intimately with his father over a three-year period about his alcoholism. Porter's father said. "He will probably come back, assuming the Royals still want him," Porter's father said. "He will have to give himself back into it. He will have to earn the right to play again." Kansas City improved its exhibition record to 11-3, the best in baseball, while the Rangers, who had a split-squair victory against Atlanta yesterday, now stand at 4-2. J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! Paddy Murphy Missing Since St. Patrick's Dav Paddy Murphy, past-kid student and member of Sigma Alpha Epifalearn fraternity was reported as "missing in action" this fraternity brothers yesterday. Paddy was a native of New York City and attended St. Pat's Day when while experiencing some local motor distunctioning, he fell off the staircase at the university related to St. Pat's day parade in the Westport business district of Kansas City, Missouri. HEADLINE: "It's o'd. Withers pointed out, "I heard him scream, *Get drunk and be told*, and the other man said, "I knew it." The fraternity requests that anyone with information of Padda Murphy's purse The traternity requests that anyone with information of Paddy Murphy's whereabouts, please call the SAE house at 843.5770. (Advertisement) Dances, slides, music, and cultural information from the people of Central & South America LATIN SHOW TONITE 7:00 at the Center 1629 W. 19th (I block west of Oliver Hall) Operation Friendship ! SEND YOUR HONEY A SINGING BUNNY!! ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS 842-8741 Basket delivered with each telegram. A 8-1- Building Bridges Between Cultures PHOTO "Where Cards & Gifts Abound" EVERYTHING FELL IN place for KU on Friday as the Jawahyers handed Baker, 2-11, with case. Mait Watt and Kurt Kairbs both went the distance for the Jawahyers. We're hopping into Easter with a huge selection of stuffed animals, cards, baskets, & party supplies. ZERCHER A "I've had some trouble with leftoins in the past," Gray said. "And I got to another start this year. But the last few games, we have had more things and things have started falling in place." 919 IOWA 1107 MASS Gray, who came back from the Jayhawks' trip south with a 214 batting average, has been the most consistent average to the 340 mark after the weekend. His homer came off Kevin Kewni, 1, 14, in his first start. Watt turned in the first shutout of his career, blanking the Wildcats on three hits and striking out six in the opener. a pressure situation. But it was a beautiful bunt. The thing about the squeeze play is that there is no defense for it if the runner makes a move down the field did. If back it, then it's bad catching. Temple's decision put a lot of pressure on Lewallen, a freshman outfitter who had struck out his previous three trips to the plate. "I SCREWED ONE up earlier in the year when I missed a sign," Lewallen said. "So it was kind of nice to get this one down. The team threw a tastellight right down the middle." The bunt capped a stunning rally by the Jayhawks, now 13-4, after the game went into overtime. The Tigers won three. Both teams failed to score in the eight inning, but the Tigers pushed across the goal line with a touchdown. KU pitcher Jim Phillips, who picked up his fifth win of the season with 4 innings of relief, walked Fort Hays second baseman Jake Snyder and scored and scored on Dave Folt's fatigue. The Jahways fell behind 34 in the buil- talled four runs on five singles in the fourth to pull ahead. Brian Gray, first baseman, added an insurance run in the fifth with his first home run of the season. He also shot to lifttec field after two outs. But Riley tied the score again in the bottom of the ninth. Matt Gandell fingerledger led off the innings with a double to left field and then came home on Riley's sharp simple to Riley went to second when the throw went home to try to cut down Gundelinger and then went to third on a passball. After reaching the goal, Lewenau was called on for the squeeze. Phillips came in to relieve KU starter David Hicks in the fifth innning when the fights tued the game. Phillips struck out and now has a 2.4 ERA to go with his bidding. Paul Mallete, 0-1, took the loss for Fort Hays State as the Tigers' record dropped to -2. "CLAYTON WAS throwing pretty well, but they had two left-handed hitters coming up in a row. Temple said. And McIntosh did a superb high pitches. He just did a superb job in relief." open 9-5:30 Mon-Sat In the first game Saturday, Clayton Kaifes improved his record to 2-0 in the nightcap as he scattered five Baker hits. merman, I-2, walked Steve Jones to sona the sixth and Temple decided to bring in a rookie player who was a striketeer and retired six straight Fort Hays battles. The Lenaephox sucessor KU's only left-hander, got the save. McIntosh not only saves in five appearances this season. F84 Fleeman picked up his first victory of the season, yielding three runs and six hits before giving way to Randy McIntosh in the sixth ingining. CREAMERY Keeps tools off your drawing table, desk or easel Drawing desk tool holder-$6.20 Drawing desk tool holder $6.20 "Drop-lack" air brush holder $4.40 Encore Copy Corps 842-2001 "We deliver" 99¢ /page Typing (pica) pen&,inc. art supplies 623 vermont 841-1777 ArtCadi Tool holder for litho line-up light tables:$7.40 ($1.10 elite) CHANDI GROUP "One Stop Thesis Shop" New Additions 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza Roller Skate outdoor / indoor From $5995 Franchised Dealer For: RALEICH-PUCH-AUSTRO-DAIMLER CENTURION We Service All Bikes RICK'S BIKE SHOP 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence, KS 46041 738 MASS. B:9:0-8:00 M-5 Thurs. III 8:30 p.m. IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS From $59^{95} Roller skate Bicycle Salad Bar Special $1.95 reg. price $2.25 NEW YORKER 1021 Mass. Offer good 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mon.-Fri. till March 28 SOUTH AFRICA NIGHT Listen to Dumasani Kumalo Exiled African journalist Potluck Dinner Talk to D.S. Kumalo Later: Entertainment Wed. March 26 Partially funded by Student Senate 6:30 p.m. 8 p.m. Ecum. Ministries Building Sponsored by KU International Club Frog in the Clouds THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Louisville wins NCAA title, 59-54 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Vol. 90; No. 115 Tuesday, March 25, 1980 See story back page Questions linger in Crawford investigation By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter Although an investigation by the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare failed to uncover enough evidence to prosecute KU professor of anthropology Michael Crawford for alleged fraud, U.S. Attorney James Buchle said there was evidence of fraud in Crawford's handling of federal grant money. In a letter sent to the Office of the Inspector General Kansas City, Mo. field office Wednesday, Bubchele said his review of investigation reports strongly indicated that "Dr. Crawford's activity in handling government grant funds was highly unethical," and he said it was tantamount to abusing him any worse." "The investigation report contains considerable information which indicates a possibility of violations of laws or regulations. It is important that the report be published." Crawford said yesterday that the decision not to pursue prosecution supported his own statements of CRAWDHOP SAID that although some of his procedures in handling the grants were "irregular," they were practiced by many researchers for reasons of efficiency. "This is an irregular practice but it is a more efficient way of spending the taxpayer's money. It essentially does not cost." *Grants are given for specific categories, he said.* *I think all researcher will cross grant lines to be The grant requirements mentioned by Buchele said Hew grants should be used "solely for the benefit of the project for which they are approved and must be administered autonomously." HEW's investigation, according to Bucchie's letter, was conducted to ascertain whether Crawford in- tentiously misappropriated HEW grant funds through improper fund transfers, kickbacks of research assistants' salaries or payments of improper consulting fees. THE INVESTIGATION also attempted to deter- them. Crawford made false statements in HEW. **3418366** The HEW investigation began in September 1977 after the Office of Special Investigations in Kansas contacted Crawford to conduct a Crawford's handling of grants during a research project in Belize in Central America during the early 1980s. Elizabetht Murray and Nanyse Mempels, who sent the list to the office, worked as research assistants to Crawford in Belize, along with six other graduate students. They developed samples for scientific research on sickle-cell anemia. BUCHELE'S LETTER concluded by recommending that consideration be given to *purus* administrative sanctions against D. Crawford. The letter also said, "It is our opinion that civil action for recovery should definitely be considered." Crawford said the HEW investigation brought out no personal misuse of any funds. Fred Mosley, special agent in charge of the Kansas City, Mo., field office of the HEW office of the Inspector General, said that department policy prohibited him from confirming or denying information about any investigation by his office, or the Hewlett-Packard Company, unless the investigation resulted in an indictment. Buchael said that he did not know how HEW would take his suggestions, but that the department, and not his office, would pursue any actions against Crawford. "HEW probably hasn't taken what to do yet," he said. "They probably just received my letter." MURRAY AND Sempelski asked HEW to look into Crawford's alleged misuse of grants and his maintenance of a "stush fund" used for expenses on the trip. Murray said Crawford had asked her to pay back $400 of her salary into this fund. In a memo issued in January 1978 by William Argersinger Jr., then vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, Argersinger said that the "slush fund" arrangement was "not proper because it is not intended that what was paid Ms. Murray, is intended to be payment for service rendered, in this case to the project." See CRAWFORD page six Baker awaits word on sports magazine By STEVE YOUNG Staff Renorter More than three weeks have passed since LDC Enterprises announced it was going to sell its campus sports magazines, including editions at KU and at four other Big Eight schools. Amid speculation that the sale of the profitable magazines is being arranged, LeDuce has yet to announce—either to the magazine's editors or to the magazine's subscribers involved—what it intends to do. The future of LeDuc is a $26,000 question for the KU athletic department, Don Baker, sports information director, said yesterday. Baker said the department bought almost 800 subscriptions of $25 each, totaling nearly $3 million in commissions from contributors. The department also spent more than $4,000 in promotional expenses. LeUCU HAS pledged to reinburse the department and all subscribers, Baker said, but the company's lack of communication compelled him to contact University lawyers. "The company has not communicated fully with the schools. At least with the teachers, I think we have good communication," he said. "Because of that, I have reason to be concerned, and it was one of the reasons—in fact, the reason—that I made Mike Davis ('University general counsel')." Davis said this week that a suit against LeDuc was still being considered but that no work had been done on it. Baker, who said two weeks ago that a suit against LeDuc was a high probability, said yesterday that no further entitlement had been set by the department. "When they said it might be six to nine months, I took that to mean that they didn't really know when it would be." he said. Baker discounted a claim made several weeks ago by leDuc that subscribers could be reimbursed within six to nine months. AT THE OTHER Big Eight schools where LaBac once published magazines—Oakland, Santa Monica, Missouri—athletic department officials had little more information than their KU students. At Oklahoma State, department officials declined to comment. Tom Dirate, editor of the OSU magazine until it was dropped, said yesterday that LeDuC was negotiating with a buyer in connection with the OSU and Nebraska magazines. "I've heard of a prospective buyer who wants to purchase Oklahoma State and Nebraska together. That's one way LeDuce is trying to nail its bills," he said. Dirato said that 2,400 subscriptions had been sold at OSU—compared to 1,500 at KU—and that both the athletic department and subscribers were waiting to see how the university would respond. "The issue has not come to a head here," he said. "The school is much like myself—it's looking for the sale to be consummated, but you might also maybe other things must be considered." DIRATO SAID subscribers had been "ultra-patient" and that there had been few complaints from OSU alumni. At Nebraska, Bill Bennett, assistant sports information director, said he had heard nothing about a possible NU-OSU magazine sale. "I'm sure Tom LeDuc (company president and founder) would like to get the things sold, but I think it's still up in the air," he said. The Nebraska magazine, Leuc's most successful in the Big Eight, which was started a year ago, had about 6,000 subscribers when it "suspended. As its number twice as many subscribers and the low revenue rate concerned Leuc, Bennett said. "They were not happy with our renewal rate. It kind of leaves all of us here scratching our heads and wondering why. I can't explain it, but asking themselves the same thing," he said. BENNETT SAID that the department hoped the magazine resumed publication. "I hope it gets going again. It was a good thing." At Colorado, athletic department officials were less supportive of the publishing company. Bill Crowder, assistant athletic director at Colorado, said the CU athletic department . - c.ALDC.com six See LeDUC page six Med Center renovations await governor's approval By STEVE MAUN Staff Reporter A bill providing $700,000 in fiscal 1980 supplemental funding for renovations at the University of Kansas Medical Center awards Gov. John Carlson's signature after it Staff Reporter A story on page one of yesterday's Kansan incorrectly reported that Gerhard Zutter, university Senate President and chairwoman of the University of Kansas was falling behind the other Board of Regensburg schools in the size faculty salary inference. Zuther actually said that Regents schools were having trouble keeping up with their peer institutions in faculty salaries and fringe benefits. We sent the salaries would be discussed at the next meeting of Faculty Senate presidents, which will probably be April 17 yesterday as reported in the article. Correction KU's peer schools are the University of Kansas, Low City; the University of Colorado Boulder; and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The University of Oklahoma, Norman; and the University of Pennsylvania. Peer schools are selected schools that have similar enrollment, courses, research and per capita tax funding. The funds are part of a multi-year appropriations act amended earlier by the Senate to enhance renovation funds for the Center, and the Committee had initially recommended that the funds be included in the Med Center's budget. The Board voted to concur with the Senate amendment. More than 300 rooms in the old hospital do not compare with the rooms in the new hospital because they need new paint and carpeting, he said. David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for the College of Health Sciences, said, "We're hoping that the bill will go right on to start renovating rooms in the old hospital." received approval from the Kansas House yesterday. About 200 beds in the old hospital are being used now, but some people would rather be in the new hospital than in the old, or go to a different hospital, Waxman said. State Sen. Frank Gaines, chairman of the Senate State and Means committee, which made the amendment, said, "The reason we are not allowing a doctor to the Medical Center. The Med Center is running at 88 percent occupancy, which, for all practical purposes, is 100 percent for a hospital. This money is to be used to paint actual hospital rooms so they can be opened." He said he hoped to renovate about 50 rooms with 100 beds within the next year. MICHIGAN HOUSE Lookin' up Tom Waller, a lieutenant for Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, radios instructions to another crew helping to lay underground telephone wire at Ninth and Michigan streets. The phone wires are attached to a steel cable which is pulled through the ground. Residents to oppose mall secrecy By LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter The secretive nature of downtown mail planning in Lawrence will be countered tonight when some Lawrence residents take their own policy guidelines for downtown development to the city commission. Kail Fleetcher, a member of Citizens for a Better Downtown, said yesterday that the group disliked the closed planning process the "The impetus for the downtown mall is coming not from the See related story page five Lawrence people, but from the developer of the mall." Fletcher said. "That process should be reversed." Fletcher called Lawrence a "prime economic market" and said the city should explore many alternatives for downtown areas. FLECHTER SAID that because Lawrence was a strong seller's market the city could afford to shoon around for a shooning mall. "We have a lot to offer a developer," she said. "We don't need to take the only three they offer us." Fletcher said the CBD standards for downtown development were prepared to complement Plan 96, which is the city's master development blueprint. The plan recommends that the downtown should be compatible with surrounding neighborhoods. The CBD, Fletcher said, will ask the city to adopt its standards. They also will ask the city staff to draw up a separate plan for the downtown area, study alternatives to downtown growth and begin contacting other developers. The city has dealt only with a Cleveland mall developer, Jacobs, Vicepresso, Jacobs. Fletcher stressed that other cities exploring mall construction had promoted public discussion on the needs a downtown should serve and how it should look. She said she hoped the CBD standards would create a public forum for discussion of those issues. THE COMMISSION also will discuss a proposal for a jitney service for Lawrence. The service was developed by Ward Thompson, owner of the Lawrence Yellow Cab company. It would provide a middle ground between the existing cab service and the transportation services of the Council on the Aging. Commissioner Marci Francisco said recent fire department studies indicated that firefighters thought their response time in The commission also will discuss the need for a new fire station in southwest Lawrence. In addition, the commission will discuss the length of the mayor's term of office. The commissioners now annually choose the mayor based on the number of votes he receives when elected to the commission. Rec Services sports committee differ on budget Although most organizations went into Student Senate budget hearings last night asking for more money, Recreation Services asked for $6,000 less. Tom Wilkerson, director of Recreation Services, told the Senate Sports Committee that the projected increase in the minimum wage expected increase in the minimum wage because of President Carter's ceiling on wages. Despite the reduction, the budget proposal is $20,000 more than the Finance and Auditing Committee's recommendation of $120,311. To correct the difference, the committee discussed trimming a project cost or capital improvements from the budget. The committee also made preliminary cuts in the KU Volleyball Club and the Crew club budgets. The Volleyball Club had requested $865 and the Crew Club $1,435. The Graduate Student Council asked for a $6,300 increase over last year's funding. Included in that figure was $6,000 for travel and equipment in supplemental budget hearings last fall. SEVEN STUDENT organizations presented their budget requests to the Academic Affairs Committee, but the Graduate Student Council was the only organization to have its entire budget allocated. The committee used the short deliberations after the hearing. The committee heard budget request from Astronomy Associates, $780.20; Engineers University, $149.60; MEBE, Undergraduate Anthropology, $1,301; Alpha Rho Gamma, $3,440; Counseling Student Organization, and Graduate Student Council, $812.31.70 "The graduate students have resolved to work within the system, but if people screw around with the budget there are going to be some fights," Bob Frigo, graduate student and committee member, said. "Graduate students will point of contention. It is a agree point." THE RECOMMENDED GSC fund would increase its line allocation from 41 cents to 47 cents per student in the Student Activity Fee. Line allocation items are required because they are considered more important and less likely to receive a budget cut. Six organizations presented budget proposals to the Student Services Committee for 2013. $10,397; Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service, $1,248; Black Student Union, $45; Douglas County Legal Aid Foundation, $1,846; Hillip Child Development $2,240. The Academic Affairs Committee also recommended cutting $480 from the Counseling Student's organization request. The Student Legal Services requested about $45,000. "We will need $1,007 to meet the fiscal '181 we demand." Steve Lepke, Legal Services Director at McGraw-Hill, asks the committee for approval of $4,000. The rest can be appropriated later." THE COMMITTEE will deliberate on all of the organizations' budget requests Saturday. The Cultural Affairs Committee heard requests from three organizations. The Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble requested $2.552. Greg Hickam, Lawrence freshman and treasurer of Tau Sigma, said the organization had been running on "a bare bones budget" for the past few years. Jackie Davis, director of the University Concert and Chamber Series, requested an increase of $4,000 for the concert series and $3,500 for the chamber series. Davis said the increase was to pay for better talent and increases in performers' fees. Apollo Dimo, Port Harcourt, Nigera, Junior and secretary of the African Students Association, said the association wanted an award to recognize the African Student Journal, Waafrika. Dimbo, editor of Waafrika, said the increase would be used to print the magazine monthly instead of bi-monthly. --- 2 Tuesday, March 25.1980 University Daily Kansan INVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kennedy. Bush futures on line Sen. Edward M. Kennedy new New York while George Bush sought votes Connecticut Republicans who threatened to shred the Republicans as serious preridential contender. The New York Daily News said that while Kennedy was about even with President Carter among the state's Jewish voters—about one-third of the population—he did not make any changes. At least two Kennedy aides were prepared to tell him to quit if he loses New York badly, but Kennedy said he would not. On the Republican side, front-runner Ron Reagan was already a winner in New York, where the GOF content effectively boiled down to a choice between "President" and "Rick Santorum." That left Bush focusing on Connecticut, but a University of Connecticut poll showed Reagan with a sizeable lead in that state. Many of the uncontested slates were likely to support Reagan since he was the favorite of the state party organization. Rep. John B. Anderson, R-III, also was on the ballot in Connecticut, but concentrated his campaign on the upcoming primary in Wisconsin. NRC starts Wolf Creek probee BURLINGTON - A Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman confirmed yesterday that the NRC has begun a probe into allegations of shoddy conduct by the agency's nuclear weapons unit. Clyde Wisner, chief spokesman of the NRC's regional office in Arlington, Texas, said the on-site investigation was started last week after the regulatory agency was made aware of the allegations contained in a Dec. 21 story in the Emporia, Kan., Gazette. Among the allegations were reports that: The prime contractor, Daniel International Corp., had hired incompetent supervisors. Unqualified workers were hired as journeymen for key jobs. A foreman had certified satisfactory completion of a weld which had not yet been completed. -Conected had been poured from five or six feet high, increasing the possibility that it would separate and weaken. —The company did not demand quality work of its supervisors and employees. The NRC's findings will be released to the public in six weeks, Wisner said, after a 20-day review period which the plant's builders, Kansas City Power & Light Co. and Kansas Gas and Electric Co., are allowed to make sure no proprietary secrets are revealed in the report. Trains come back to Liberal LIBERNAL - The beginning of service yesterday by the St. Louis Southwestern Railway, a subsidiary of Southern Pacific Transportation Co., represented a major victory for the community which fought hard to preserve the line once operated by the defunct Rock Island Railroad. Gov. John Carlin was on hand for ceremonies celebrating the first train to come to Liberal in more than 90 years. The service yesterday marked the beginning of the Southern Pacific's takeover of the route from the 128-year-old Rock Island. The line runs from Tucumcil, N.M., through Liberal, Pratt, Topeka, Kansas City, Kan., and on to St. Louis. The Southern Pacific's operation remains temporary until plans to purchase the line are finalized. Freight service along much of the Rock Island track was halted yesterday because of a federal appeals court ruling, but the Southern Pacific was granted temporary operating rights. Firemen get hero's welcome KANAS CITY, Mo.-The city's firefighting force returned to normal after a circuit court judge dismissed 700 contempt of court charges against the city's fire department. Firefighters, released from jail to a hero's welcome from families and friends, returned to the job at the 3 p.m. shift change. Deputy fire chief of that shift, Edward Wilson, said the transition was smooth. The regular crews replaced a patchwork firefighting force of police, battalion units and firefighters. Wilson said there would soon be a major change in the department under a new contract pushed by the Firefighters Union Local No. 4, a 18-hour shift. Fire Chief John Waas said he was not sure when the new work hours would be implemented. The main factor in the settlement by the City Council was the disstatement of 42 firefighters dismissed for refusing to work overtime during a strike. Rancher seeks PCB paiment TOPEKA—Newton rancher Don Buseinit, who last summer lost 168 cattle to contamination from PCB-based transformer oil, yesterday asked the Senate committee to ban PCBs in the nation. Before considering paying off Busenitz's loss with money from the state, the committee decided to investigate the possibility of compensation from manufacturer Dow Chemical or the federal government, which banned PCBs—polychlorinated biphenyls—in 1976 after linking them to cancer. Bensitz said he is innocent of wrongdoing and had no knowledge PCBs could be dangerous when he purchased the transformer oil in 1972 from a salvage After tests determined that 53 of his cattle, which died last May at the Pawnee Valley field in Houston, had a high level of FCB contamination, Buenaiz's NPCO detected no trace of E. coli. Mel Gray, deputy director of Environment for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said byproducts from the cattle, which had already been recovered, were taken to the facility and recovered and destroyed after the incident. They included Carnation dog food, fed caked by chickens in Arkansas and leather products manufactured in The rest of his 168 head herd were destroyed in September. Governor's secretaru ousted TOPEKA—Sister Jeanne McKenna was ousted from her position as appointments secretary to Gov. John Carlin effective yesterday. In a tenet statement issued through his press secretary, Carlin would only contribute to this administration. I feel at this time that a change is necessary. Carlin named Sister McKenna's chief assistant, Shirley Allen of Hiwatha, as acting secretary. Those criticisms broke into the open in mid-1979, but Carlin said he had no intention of replacing her. Sister McKenna came under fire frequently from some Democrats who considered her unresponsive with their suggestions in recommending persons to vote. Weather... Skies will be cloudy today with a 30 percent chance of snow this afternoon, with the high in the low 40s, according to the National Weather Service in Chicago. There is a 70 percent chance of snow tonight and the low will be in the 20s. Tomorrow the snow will be ending and the high will be in the low 40s. WASHINGTON (AP)-The United States warned Iran yesterday against punishing the American hostages held in Tehran as part of the capture of the deposed shah from Panama. Shah's move upsets Iran Insisting that the decision of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to leave Panama for Egypt was made by the former monarch alone, Carter administration officials also tried to cool tempers in Tehran by offering them the 1/2-month-old hostage crisis ends. The officials said the Soviets posed a common danger to U.S. and Iranian interests in the Persian Gulf and reaffirmed the 50 American hosts were liberated. The shah's sudden departure from Panama on Sunday upset the 'hell out of people' in Tehran, a senior administration official acknowledged. Teban radio called for a march on the occupied embassy to demonstrate what it is doing to the people in the States and Egyptian President Awar Salat to help the shah escape extradition. THE MOSLEM embellish holding the Tehran embassy said again their 50 American hostages, captive for 142 days, on the shack and his fortune are returned in Iran. Even so, the administration issued a statement from the State Department spokesman Hodder G. Holding that the Iranian government is aware of the consequences and condemnation that would result. In Washington, a senior Carter administration official dismissed the threat of hostage trials. WHITE HOUSE official, who asked that he not identified, indicated that the administration does not attach "the same For the most part, officials within the administration indicated that they felt the United States could not be affected by the shah's move to Egypt. He left Panama after two presidential advisers, Hamilton Jordan and Lloyd Carter, held quot negotiations with "The concern we would feel has not changed," the official said, "but our assessment of the problem is certainly less than it was before." degree of concern" to the trial threat that it did when Iranian officials earlier suggested the Americans could be placed before courts. THE IRANIAN government had hoped, through legal proceedings, to have the shah returned to Tehran for trial as a war criminal. Punishing him is the principal demand of the Moslem militants who seized the hostages and the U.S. Embassy on Nov. 14. Still, the White House official said flatly that "there was never any prospect that the shah would be extracted to Iran and made clear to him and to his people." Panama has no extradition treaty with Iran. However, Iranian officials had taken a number of steps to circumvent that problem. The families of the hostages were assured on Saturday that the shah would not return and the family would have no need to come back here," the White House official said. "Those involved in the attack had been made no request to come back here." THE SHAH and his wife, Farah Diba, took off from Panama on Sunday aboard a chartered American tiltiner. He left Panama just a day before Iran's lawyers were to submit documents requesting his extradition for alleged mass U. S. officials said medical reasons led the shah to accept Sadat's long-standing invitation to reside in Egypt. The shah's doctors say he requires surgery to remove an enlarged and possibly cancerous spleen, but U.S. specialists and Panamanian men had been wrenched over who would be responsible for the operation in Panama. murder and corruption during his three decades as Iranian monarch. IT WAS ALSO clear, however, that the Islamic nation had a Panamanian willingness to consider the Iranian extradition request—even though some Panamanian officials said he would be held accountable. The shah was met by Sadat at Cairo airport. Sadat accompanied the shah to a second-floor, river-view wing that he and his entourage will have to themselves. Hospital director Dr. Sabry Ismail said it FASHION & STUDIO Encore Copy Corps 842-2001 "We deliver" $3^{\text{¢}}$ copies (8½ x 11 regular) Now through April 5 We also do typing, editing and art work. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza THE MOUSE THAT ROARED Fri, March 28 at 7 & 9:30 pm Sat, March 29 at 2, 7, & 9:30 pm Sr DYCHE AUDITORIUM $1.25 and 75* for kids under 12 Partially funded by Student Senate presented by KU Science Fiction & Fantasy Ass'n --was too early to tell when an operation could be performed, pending medical testing. Opera House Productions presents IGGY POP One night only Wednesday, March 26th "I've been through it all, and proved that I'm equal to anybody you'd care to mention." - Mr. Pop With The Janet Jameson Band March Coming Soon Featuring Janet Jameson former lead vocalist for Cole Tuckey & FEMALE TROUBLES • Advance tickets available at Kino 27 Debbie Harry in INMADE BEDS & THE FOREIGNER 28 JOHN MAYALL & Used Parts 29-99 & the Dickens Egypt was Pahlavi's first stop when he began his exile 14 months ago, and he successively moved on to Morocco, the Netherlands, Mexico, the United States and Panama. Sadat, asked by reporters whether the shah would remain in Egypt, said, "Yes, yes,permanently." 3-N.Y. Erotic Film Festival 4-5-PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND 17-Divine in PINK IMAGINGS Get your advance - Advance tickets available at Kiefs, Better Days & the 7th Spirit Club Get your advance tickets while you still can at Kiefs, Better Days and the 7th Spirit Club. Doors open at 8 Show starts at 9 Only 6.50 adv. 7.50 d.o.s. Sadat, who has branded Iranian kings in the past, is known for Khomeini's 'hunical', is unlikely to entertain any extratition request by Iran. The two countries do not have diplomatic relations. Where else but the . . . Lawrence Opera House Farm House Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Call for concert info. 842-6930 sua films Tuesday, March 25 Peckingah: RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY Dir. Sam Peckinpach, with Randolph J. McKeen, Marathew Hartley, Jillian Worthington, symbols of the romantic old West. as it was entering a new century, as it was entering a new century, Wednesday, March 26 The Lubits Touch: TO BE OR NOT TO BE (1942) Dir. Erinn Lubish, with Jack Benny, a lawyer and an executive of Robert Bess, Inter-derm Europe is the setting for this bitting satire of star actors traveling across the world. HEAVEN CAN WAIT LUNA /10701 Thursdav. March 27 Dir. Ernst Lubitsch, with Don Krasnykh, was the historian of a recently deceased noードer who must justify to the authorities that he heavens up "home-children," a short story to heaven. *"Home-children,"* a short story to heaven. Dir. Benarrodo Bertoluciu, with Jill Clayburgh, Matthew Barry, Fred Gwynne. An American star opera star, she is the author of her with her heroin-addicted teenaged son. From the director of 1900 and LAST TANGO IN PARIS. 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, in 35mm! $1.50 Dir. Luise Bunnel, with Fernando Rey, Carole Bouquet, Molina Angola. A man in his fifteenth fade maltly in love (Bourke), and a woman, played by two different actresses, spurs his affections with an unseen man of his own passion. A delightful friend, the young L'AGE DOR and BELEE DE JOUR, Francis tubillies. The ballet, "A Miracle," by Friday & Saturday, March 27-28 THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE Midnight Movies ROCK 'N' ROLL HIGH SCHOOL (1927) Dir. Alarkan Attack, with P.J. Soles. The Ramones. New Wave rocks the Rainy Mountains. A band roll band who are ostracized by school officials; however, anarchy reigns. Lots of fun and loud music. A short film with Cheap Trick. Unless otherwise noted; all tickets will be shown at Woolford Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R firms are $1.00 each; S-A firms are $1.50 and start at 7:30, 9:00 and Midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday, Tickets available at the SAU Office, Union 5th Level. You can smoke a smoking or refreshments allowed. SOUTH AFRICA NIGHT Listen to Dumasani Kumalo, Exiled African journalist Wed. March 26 Talk to D.S. Kumalo Potluck Dinner Later: Entertainment Partially funded by Student Senate 6:30 p.m. 8 p.m. Ecum. Ministries Building Sponsored by KU International Club Tuesday. March 25. 1980 University Daily Kansan 3 KU professors to lobby for merit pay increases By GRANT OVERSTAKE Staff Reporter With higher salaries for faculty members, Kansas Regents schools may soon face shortages of young professors to fill the vacant positions to the business and professional world. Two University of Kansas professors will carry this message to Topaka today at the State University of Iowa Means Committee. They will be lobbying for nighttime salary increases for the university's faculty. The two professors, T.P. Srinivasan, president of the KU chapter of the Association of American University of Tennessee, will try to convince the member of the KU Senate Executive Committee, will try to convince the committee members to raise their salary increase proposal to a figure closer to the Senate's proposed 10 percent raise. THE HOUSE and Senate proposals will be blended when three members from the Senate meet in a conference committee in early April. The purpose of today's visit, Strimwasan said, was to see that the final document was as close to 10 percent as possible. "It's going to be a compromise, but I hope that in a compromise that we don't lose," he said. President Carter's recent announcement allowing wages to increase to 9.5 percent should help the faculty at a large university increase is too small, Stringrass said. "It is no longer realistic. I hope that the conference committee won't go below that. We will certainly work for it," he said. Members of the Senate were responsive to his appeals two weeks ago, Srinivasan said, approving a 10 percent merit salary increase. "We were able to get our message across," he said. "Usually the Senate is more supportive of faculty salaries. They're at stake in terms of the funding." "That's the kind of damage which can not be undone over night," he said. "The penalty will be paid by the younger generations in the years to come." THE LOSS OF young and experienced professors would have an adverse effect on society, Srinivasan said. Compensation for the needs of inflation might be enough to persuade faculty members to stay in education, he said. By CINDY WHITCOME Staff Reporter Consumers check travel agency Confusion caused by high employee turnover prompted an investigation by the University of Alabama into International Travel Service. Dan Dixon, spokesman for the travel service, Consumer affairs decided to investigate the Roseville, Calif. company after Lawrence residents received letters and phone calls soliciting money for vacation "We have hired a lot of new girls here and they don't really know what's on yet," he said. The association became suspicious when the travel company resisted giving information to the consumer group, according to a report. The education publicist for consumer affairs. Griekspoor said she had tried to call the company almost every day for two weeks. She said she had also talked with Dixon Dixon said he had not received the messages to call consumer affairs from his office secretaries. Friday about the association's investigation. CONSUMER AFAIRIES has requested that the Kansas attorney general's office investigate the travel service, Griekspoor said. "We have sent the request, but when I talked to the attorney general's office yesterday, they still had not received the request," she said. DO'S DELUXE BOLT # F035 PHI 2251 Dana Brady, an investigator for the attorney general's office, has been consulted about the case by the Lawrence consumer group. Another association concern was that the letters sent by the company were unsigned and contained very sketchny information, Griekspoor said. The letters instructed readers to give "It was sour fire for not clearing this whole thing up sooner." he said. Beach, Fla.; the Catskill Mountains in South Fallsburg, N.Y.; and Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla. Bill Reynolds, customer services manager for the Lawrence post office, said he had not received a complaint letter. The fact that the letters received by residents were unsigned was also an office staff mistake, Dixon said. DIXSON SAID HIS company was revising the letters so they would clearly state what the $7.20 paid for. The $7.20 pays for two nights of accommodations in one of five resort areas that hired the travel service to solicit business for them. Dixon said. In addition to the $57.20, a $10 refundable deposit is required for all areas, Dixson said. Back by Popular Demand at THE HAWK . . GRIKEKPOOZ SAID that one consumer who had contacted consumer affairs said he was going to file a complaint with the post office about the travel service. $5.20 to their postunit to pay for "handling and distribution costs." Within three days, the letters said, the readers would receive details and reservation forms for the trip. "About the only thing he can do is send a copy of the letter and any other information about the company to the postal inspector in the town where the company is located," he said. "We usually advise a suit of 30 days for the company to reply to any charges." The five resort areas that ITS recruits visitors for are: Las Vegas, Nev.; Runaway Bay at Lake Bridgeport, Texas; Miami NATURAL LIGHT FLAIR PILSNER A 12 oz. Flair-top glass with 2 color Natural Light label. NATURAL LIGHT TONIGHT ONLY TUESDAY, MARCH 25 Order a "Flair-full" of Your Favorite Brew for $1.00 (Michelob $1.10) The Glass is Yours to Keep Starts at 7 p.m.—Come Early to Get a Seat "FLAIR" REFILLS: Light, Bud, Busch 40° Michelob 50° It Could Only Happen at . . . EAGLE BARBECUE S NOW AT VIRGINIA INN We now serve BREAKFAST Hot, fast and delicious! TRY IT! 6:30 to 10 a.m. — Tues.-Sun. "It's in the sauce" BBQ Lunch Buffet 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Tues.-Sun. 2 Locations: 2907 W 6th,841-3402 642 Mass.,841-7818 Open 11-10 Tues.-Sat. Sunday 12-8 Open 11-7 Tues.-Sat. --- GET IT OFF YOUR CHEST And onto one of ours! Enter the K.U. Bookstores' DESIGN-A-SHIRT CONTEST Now thru March 28th The winning design will be printed and sold at THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main Store, Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop, Satellite Union 1st Prize—$25 Gift Certificate 2nd Prize—$15 Gift Certificate 3rd Prize—$10 Gift Certificate For details stop by one of the Kansas Union Bookstores We are the Only Bookstores to share profits with KU students. GARB-AGE GOING OUT OF BUSINE$$ all stock 50% off or more! GARB-AGE 840 Mass. 842-8831 Mon.-Sat. 10-6 Thurs. 10-9 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials . . Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanas editional staff. Signed columns represent the views of Keep self-help teeth March 25.1980 If you are wondering what happened to the Landlord-Tenant self-help amendment, wonder no more—and the Landlord "landlord" Legislature killed it last week. The bill, which would have given tenants a legal tool for making repairs that negligent landlords refuse to make, died when the House failed to act on it by the Wednesday deadline for consideration of bills it originated. The bill was introduced by State Rep. John Tipton and three other representatives. The only hope for Kansas tenants now is that Solobach and his supporters do not allow the amendment to be buried, but instead resurrect it. Solbach seems to think that compromise is the key now and already has begun to talk with landlords about possible concessions to facilitate coming to terms with them. Maybe that will work, Representative. Maybe that will get the bill's foot into the door of the House, at least. Just beware of door-slamming landlords. In other words, don't give your concessions to the landlords as to render the amendment a useless token. Kansas tenants need places to live, decent places to live. Landlord needs tenants. That basis for a good working relationship has been around for years. But for years the concessions have been heavily one-sided against tenants in a租房 reality they should also be hazardous to their health. Adults stealing show The grouwns are at it again. They are trying to step into the spotlight of, and steal Kansas legislative approval from, a group of Hutchinson grade school children, who not only are students of the state but their state. The children are backing a bill that would designate the channel catfish as state fish of Kansas. The bill, and fish, glided through the House last week, 109-10, and now awaits Senate committee action. However, the waters in the senate pool are not a group of natural history graduate students from the University of Kansas. These students want the Topeka shiner, a three-inch fish with red fins, named as state fish, primarily because they think it is more distinctly "Kansas." Fine. But why ride on the cottails of the kids' momentum? The children have conducted an all-out lobbying effort to have the catfish named, including initiation of the bill through their representative and sending information packets to legislative leaders. They are prepared to go to Topea to testify in the catfish's favor. The graduate students sent a letter signed by 22 persons to Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, advocating that the Topeka shiner be handed over to the cathedral. That was it—no hill, no loot, no show of dedication determination. Grownups are always criticizing kids for their lack of initiative. But who can blame them for not putting out when their efforts are often put down or belittled? There are a lot of fish in the sea, and in Kansas waters, too, for that matter. So, why not let the kids have this one? WEST BANK ROOTS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4328 1087694646460 Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday 1087694646461 Published by the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday 1087694646462 Submitted by mail for $4 each for six months a year or a Douglas County Bank for $6 each for six months a year. Mail to: Douglas County Bank, 151 W. Michigan Ave., Duluth, MN 55813. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall, The University of Kannan. Lawrence, KS 6904 Editor James Anthony Fitts Managing Editor Dana Milner Editorial Editor Bradley Watson Campus Editor Austin Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Art Director Sports Editor Departmental Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Copy Chiefs Brenda Walters Rhonda Holman, Jeff Sjerven, Lois Walkerhue Workaholics Makeup Editors Pamela Landon, Bob Pattman David Lee, Mick Holden, Kole Pound, Brennan R. Schneider, Bob Pattmann David Eddie Senior Staff Writer Staff Writers Photographers Mark Anderson Staff Artists Editorial Editor Bradley Watson Carol Beer Adam Woodburn Amy Holloway, Ellen Marshman Cyndi Hughes Mary Johnson Mary Greenwood Rhonda Holman, Jeff Sjerven, Lois Walkerhue Workaholics Pamela Landon, Bob Pattman David Lee, Mick Holden, Kole Pound, Brennan R. Schneider, Bob Pattmann David Eddie Business Manager Vincent Coultis Vienna Coaches Retail Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Marketing Manager Classified Representatives Hospitality Manager Skill Photographer Hair Artist Traffic Manager Sales Representatives Kenna Koster, Candy Price, Mike Rosenthal, Paul Witter, Nancy Clayton, Stephen R. Hammel, Hannah L. Healey Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins General Manager Rick Musser The tracks sprawl across the state, arteries that brought life to the Plains. They are the far-reaching tentacles of the railroads and made possible the settlement Railroads more important than ever In the 1800s, the railroads began to carry immigrants to the Plains. The roads needed new access to the countryside, and trucks across the empty prairie. With promises of cheap, fertile land and advertisements describing the Plains as a gateway, roads lured newly arrived Europeans west. The towns that sprang up around the railroads became either tiny havens of cattle or large, sprawling cowtowns. Abilene, Newton, Dodge City and Wichita became the settings of dime novels as the cowboys who drove the cattle through the streets used reputations for violence and lawlessness. The railroads brought in settlers and took over the land to feed, heat, corn and cattle were carried east of Chicago. Grain bins and stockyards of Chicago. The railroads were used for livestock and forestry (for eastern Missouri) and fabrics, books and machinery to help turn the sod hats of the settlers into frame homes. AND SOME TOWNS, like Herington, Parsons and Newton, came into being only because of the trains. They are rail centers, terminals, roundhouses and freight stations. The railroads flourished during the last century and the first half of this century. Before the coming of the railroad, the trains were the only means available for transporting produce or people. The roads were famous then, spoken of with affection by many travelers. The rest of the nation. The Southern Pacific; the Northwest; Rock Island; the Missouri; Kansas, Texas; the Frisco; those were the lines on which the economy of BACK THEN, the roads operated unfettered by regulations. They were indispensable and they knew it. Improvements and the road was better because the railroad officials knew they could survive without them. But regulations and tariffs favored diesel truck traffic made trucking cheaper than rail shipping. And the railroads became caught in their own negligence as their tracks and buildings were damaged, moving and making the trains unreliable. One by one, the roads began to father. Without government help or investment dollars for capital improvements, they began to go bankrupt. The latest victim of the creeping cancer that has killed or several rail lines is the Rock Island. THE ROCK ISLAND labeled bankruptcy and failed last year. A major road in the state, the Rock's failure created a panic among railroaders and the farmers dependent on them. The busiest stepped in with a $4 million subsidy that allowed the 12 railways of the Kansas City Terminal Railway Co. to take over the Rock's lines. The subsidy, however, Rock were to have run out Sunday night. Attempts by Kansas Senator Nancy Landon Kassebaum, Kansas Congressmen and the Midwestern states to enact legislation saving the Rock have been unsuccessful. was intended to be a temporary measure allowing farmers in the Midwest to ship their harvests on the Rock's tracks. kate COLUMNIST pound Without funds, the KCT cannot continue serving the people who had been dependent on the Interstate Commerce Commission, which has the Interstate Compliance plans for the Rock, announced a proposal to extend their contracts to track, terminals and 7,000 landers over to several other rail lines. Unfortunately, as the other lines would have to operate the Rock system, it is not certain the Rock's service would have been cut. Kansas were to have been eliminated. The cuts would have left such towns as Clay Center without any rail traffic at all, and would have been the economic death knell of the towns, such as Herington, which depends on Rock for most of the town's employment. LAST THURSDAY, however, the towns along the Rock's tracks received a reprieve from the storm. Interstate Commerce Commission, giving new plans for the Rock's future, make up new plans for the Rock's future. The largest portion of the service cuts were to have been in Kansas. More than 500 miles of the Rock's 1,083 miles of track in The extension has thrown all plans for the Rock Island into limbo. No, one including the ICC, the Department of Transportation and National Parks, is the Rock's tracks. knows what will happen. It is unlikely that legislation now before Congress will be passed this week. It is also likely that Congress will find the funds to carry all of the Rock's projects out, which would be a blessing for a cycle of exertion, not a burden. SINCE LAST FALL, the ICC and Department of Transportation have paid ridiculous amounts for staff serving the Rock's customers. But the stoppages haven’t been able to fill the holes in the rock. All the IFC and Department of Transportation have done is confuse everyone involved and create one hell of a mess. The IFC does not know how they will get their grain do not know how they will get it. Employees do not know if they have jobs. Towns that depend on the Rock for freight deliveries and tax money are unsure of how they will receive lumber or machinery or equipment. The loss of the Rock's services must be avoided. Had the ICC and Department of Education allowed the Rock more decisively, the loss would have been avoided, as would be the current confusion. The railroads are no less important to transportation than the roads. Kansans and their railroads deserve, and should demand, greater concern and effort to ensure government agencies regulating the railroads. IN AN ERA of fuel shortages, the railroads are an important means of transportation. Grain, livestock and machinery shipment is less expensive and more efficient on the railways than on the highways. And in Kansas, where small farm railroads connect to major transportation centers and major highways, the railroads are doubtly important. Mr. Mishari, where were you on March 3, 2016? He told me to speak at the答辩 to give a speech in the Kansas Union? He was continually interrupted by pro-Arab Palestinian students. Justice has its price... $1.25 fee $15 fee $35 court costs fee Free Legal Services MARTIN PARK MAN Enough voice given pro-Palestinians To the Editor: I am writing in response to Mr. Mishart's letter in the Kansan last Friday title "KU offers no forum for pro-Palestinians." Mr. Mahisari, you assert that KU students hear only one side in the Arab-Australian conflict when Fazwal Turki, Arab Palestinian author and activist and a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization delegation to the Israeli government in the Kansas Union ballroom? Where were you on April 3, 1979, when Hassan Kasfi, Arab Palestinian journalist, gave a speech were you on April 10, 1979 when Union Activities showed "To Live in Freedom" and "The Guest of Urgent Call" was shown in McColum Hall, and "The Warrior" was shown in Dyce Hall. All Arab Palestinian movies. If you're not busy Friday night, you can plan to see the film when it is released. Mr. Mishari, where were you on March 27, 1979, when members of the Mosleem Association marched along Jawahir Road and met with members of peace treaty? Where were you the following day when members of the Organization of Arab Students led a similar march? can't you remember where you went centrate in my history class with all the noise outside. I remember seeing one woman walking to the machine gun at the bystanders. I remember that day because a pro-Arab Palestinian demonstrator grabbed an Israeli soldier's roommate and disappeared with it. In addition, where were you at noon and in the evening on April 7, 1978, when the Mosheim Students Association, the Organizers of Student's Association and the Students Association all demonstrated along Jayhawk Boulevard against former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzkhak Rabin? Were you in Hoch Auditorium that night when Rabin was disrupted by 160 Arab students and standing in a queue and standing in chairs, while chaning and booming, forcing Mr. Rabin into silence 26 times? Did you hear about the bomb threats that were phone into Hoch Auditorium, Green Hall, McColum Hall, Organizers and KAU radio station that same night? not allowed to speak, and those who came to listen were not allowed to listen. Mr. Mishari, haven’t you been handed any money? You have never pre-arab Palestinian letters in the Kanan in the last few years? Are you not a member of any of the pre-arab Palestinian families in Kanan? Philip S. Braverman Wichita senior Now really, Mr. Mishari, are KU students; only one hearing side of the debate is KU's own. We have no control over the unrestrained interruption of speakers, noisy demonstrations that disrupt classes and bomb threats, is that you do not want an Israeli side. You need to hear the iO-iraeli side. SUA films provide more for students To the Editor: The Student Union Activities film schedule includes more than 100 feature films each semester. There are only 15 days in the entire semester when no films are offered, eight of those are during Spring Break and five are during the David Mould's editorial in the March 17 Kansan, SUA gives students, faculty and staff much more to the Marx Brothers. 1) The variety-SUA has seven separate series (plus a summer series) in which you watch the actors play different foreign films, a concentration of a specific director's films, classics, documentaries, animation, a strong midnight series, plus a weekend series which shows entertaining new stories. 2) The cost-basis the variety and volume of films offered, admission to SUA films are more in line with what most colleges offer at 1.00 or 1.00 on weekdays or 8 on weekends. 3) Shorts and previews—instead of bemonning the fact that he sees no more cartoons before the movies downtown, Mould could have been writing about the excellent short films that SUA shows before almost half of its movies; we also show previews, but we refuse to show commercials. 4) Premierees—throughout each semester SU brings a number of films which are likely premierees. Usually this is because at one time the local chain has been frightened to release such movies and the SUA feels an obligation to bring films that students may not have the chance to see. I think the Kanasan would be doing itself and Iku students more of a service by spending more time in covering the extensive programs available on campus than in complaining about the dealings of a Lawrence business and remembering the Steve Howard SUA Board Film Programmer Arabs' supporters forget Arab history To the Editor: After reading the recent letter written by the secretary of the Organization of Arab Students, I find that I can only avoid shaking hands with them because he which he expressed—that being the fact that both sides in any issue should be permitted to express publicly their rationale for holding a particular opinion, regardless of the fact that of rationality involved in arriving at it. If Mr. Mishir's allegations have any truth, that is, if a Zionist conspiracy is taking advantage of us Kansas University protariants by somehow preventing the government from writing reputable Palestinian speakers, then end, surely, the practice should be ended. However, I have a special request to make of any Arab sympathizing speakers that might find their way here after such events. They are in need of removal. Please, air(s), don't come to our University babbling the same old lines about how seven million Palestinians conspire to take over Israel and bring them here to tell us how oppressed those educated, freedom-loving Palestinians are, and how they can be used to jew them put them in those stone age refugee camps in the first place. And yes, while you are maybe, you won't mind it if you join the movement to wolf down the West Bank in 1948. After all, as Mr. Mishari said, even Lawn would be surprised that four million oppressed Palestinians could "evolve" there only since the imperialist action took place. In short, on behalf of all Americans, I thank the Organization of Arab Students for calling to our attention just how duped we are in this regard. We also ask the Arab nations aborted their people's autonomy, established by the UN and accepted by Israel back in 1948. That action, along with another that was taken in the U.S., led to dilemma of deciding how to reconcile one nation that wishes to exist, another that wishes autonomy, and others with so poor a standing that they compare Israel with Hitler's Germany. Robert Hockett Stilwell freshman Marcum mistreats non-revenue sports To the Editor: For the last four years we have swum for the University of Kansas Swim Team. the year the treatment of non-revenue sports by the athletic department has gotten considerably worse. This time things have grown old and cob under Atletic Director Bob Marcum. We understand that the department is under a financial strain but certain behavior is inexcusable. Last year Mr. Marcuum made promises to the entire swim team that were recently broken with no explanation. He also failed to explain that Marcum has been athletic director he has spoken with the team once, only after numerous invitations by the coach. Last week our fellow sport, gymnastics, was dropped by the athletic department. Mr. Marcum not only never talked to the gymnasts but is considering cutting their financial aid for the remainder of their stay in France, unaccounted in the unheard of at other major universities. We feel that the athletic director's job is to help and communicate with the student athletes, not only alumni and influential supporters. We have enjoyed our years at the school, where we were in the school well with two Big Eight championships. It is a shame that we aren't well represented by the athlete department and it is sad to see the Peter Bakker-Arkema Jim Sauer Contains 1979.80 KI Sws Captains 1979-80 KU Swim Team --- Tuesday, March 25, 1980 University Daily Kansan 5 Testimonv on mall revenue bonds restated By SCOTT C. FAUST Staff Renorter TOPEKA--The Kansas House Local Government report业绩 disagreement on a bill that would allow cities to use low-interest industrial revenue bonds to finance municipal projects. The bill would ease financing of a proposed downtown Lawrence shopping mall. The committee delayed action on the bill until today or tomorrow after hearing the same cast of characters who spoke at the conference to meet (two weeks) against test化石 on the bill. The bill, sponsored by State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, received Senate approval last week 37-2. CITIZEN GROUP and downtown merger will be the bill because it gave too free a hand to the city in subsidizing retail development and making what kind of ma lawrence should have. Speaking for the bill, Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson told the panel that The deadline for entering a design is 7 p.m. Friday Creative minds have their chance. The Kansas Union bookstores are sponsoring a "design-a-shirt" contest. First prize is a $25 gift certificate redeemable at the Kansas Union bookstores. The winning design will be printed on a Dower Wear T-Shirt. Union bookstores sponsor contest Second prize is a $15 gift certificate; third prize is a $10 gift certificate. All design entries become Kansas Bookstore property. Bookstore property. Kansas Union employees may not enter the contest. industrial revenue bonds used to finance industrial revenue bonds and to finance investment tools and the financial flexibility to make the project work' when combined with tax increment bonds for financing of site development. Tax increment bonds are repaid through property taxes when industrial revenue bonds, usually used to attract new industry investors, are repaid with interest by the developer. WATSON SAID the tight money market strategy in skyrocketing demand development of a downstream mall, but that the lower rates available with industrial revenue bonds could make it easier to compete. "It is quite evident to us," he said, "that the market money is going to have a tremendous effect on whether or not we are able to redevelop the downtown." he said. Currently, Action 80, a private group of educators, includes the math of which both Walton and Mayor Barkley Clark are ex-officio members, is conditional study for a 600,000-square-foot building. Because the bill requires use of revenue bonds for development only in areas which meet "blighted area" qualification, the end goal is to ensure that the bond is being considered as a possible site. THE MALL, which would be developed by a Cleveland developer, Jacobs, Visconi, Jacobs, would be enclosed and anchored by three department stores. The developer had originally proposed a suburban mall for Lawrence, but city commissioners and downmarket merchants it would cripple Lawrence's downtown. Bob Billings, a member of Action 80, said the gropb's study would be completed within the next few weeks and that the plan would be reviewed to generate encouragement for public discussion and review. "Without a public commitment to redevelopment efforts," Billings said, "and without a broad inventory of redevelopment tools, such as tax increment financing and industrial revenue bonds, central business redevelopment is simply not feasible." Mall opponents argued just as strongly against the bill. Larry Fliannery, president of Weaver's Department Store, said the bill would force competitive retail businesses to face the challenge from a government-subordinated developer. HE SAID low rental rates for major department stores in the proposed mall "Competition we welcome; development we welcome. However, the retail community should not be competing with sub-funds awarded developers for retail building." Barbara Willis of the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association echoed Flanier's concern that the mail would create unfair competition for downtown merchants and accused Action 80 and Lawrence city in its mall proposal. would make small shops' rents as much as $14 to $16 a square foot. "What you would have," Flannery said, "is a mail of unused storerooms not only in the mall, but on the streets surrounding the mall. "The moment the city is on the side of the developer," Willis said, "any attempt to modify the plan is put down as selfish interest or as against progress. Student art displayed on campus By JUDITH LYNN HOWARD Staff Reporter Although the Birger Sanzine painting that once hung in the Student Assistance Center is gone, two student paintings now decorate the wide white wall. Zacharias and Allen said that student art on display in administrative offices was a good idea. Colleen Zacharias, Topea junior, and Greg Allen, Liberty senior, were recently chosen to display their works in the student Assistance Center. "I think it's great that students can have their work exposed," Zacharia said. "It's especially good when they get their work viewed by their peers who are not in the art (list)." Her opportunity came when the Student Assistance Center requested art work from students after the Sanzine painting was removed. Initially, the painting was loaned to the Dean of Men's office, a division of student affairs, in the 1960s because of the lack of space inside the old art museum, Grunze said. Lorna Grunz, director of the center, said the Sanzine painting had been placed in the center after the Student Affairs office was reorganized in 1978. When the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art opened its doors in January 1977, it recalled paintings that had been lent to administrative offices. Grunz said although she did not like the museum recalling the Sanzine painting, she could understand its motives. Janet Dreiling, Spencer Art Museum registrar, said after the construction of the museum, the staff wanted to display as many as possible. A lot more possible. Moreover, requests were made for paintings that previous donors knew were included in the collection. "A lot of people who have given things, when they find those things are on campus, are upset. That's not a reason (for the recall) but it's certainly a fact," she said. There were also practical reasons for recalling the paintings, such as insurance coverage and unsuitable display placement. The paintings had been susceptible to light damage had been hung in improper lighting and that other painting techniques, like using oil paints, had potential damages to the paintings. "It was time, professionally speaking, for a professional museum to make those changes," she said. "Questions are swept aside because they have already been settled in private." "In most cases we had receipts," she said "Over the years, the staff had lent things because of storage. As the staff changes, the things that they know change." She added that sometimes it was not known whether University paintings were displayed unless someone called the museum staff. Dreiling said the museum had reconsidered loan paintings, but they were needed at the museum for classes, exhibition and photographic purposes. The museum does have paintings hanging in the chancellor's alvee, in private rooms in the Kansas Union and in the Endowment Association offices, she said. The museum staff encourages students to borrow paintings from the Student Union Activities office, which has an art loan program. Dreiling said. SHE URGED amendment of the bill to make the use of industrial revenue bonds depend on public approval by referendum. Barbara Waggoner, a member of the Lawrence Citizens for a Better Downtown, allowing use of industrial revenue and training development involved an abuse of public power. "Let Lawrence's experience be a lessen for all of us," Waggoner said, referring to Action 80. "A group standing from gain to loss will have the governmental powers to decision making, meeting in secret, can as we are seeing just now, take effective control of a city." She asked for safeguards against abuse of power and said the city should be required to formulate a detailed plan downto town and to develop a city's existing general development Plan 96. WAGGONERla the new plan should explore options to a massive downtown mall and make requirements for maintaining a turn-of-the-century downtown architecture. "Now we're being confronted with a non-choice," she said. "We're going to have tones of open meetings," Carter said. "It's obvious that there's going to be a downtown mall, there's going to be community discussion." With all the testimony directed at specific downtown projects instead of the bill as a whole, the council's members Kearns, R-Merriman, cautioned the committee against deciding the fate of in- "It's unwise to expect the committee to decide whether a project here or there is good," Kearns said. "We need to avoid getting into hometown issues." FREE After hearing March 29 - 7:30 p.m. - 3:159 Wescoe Rosabeth Moss Kanter "Power and Powerlessness in Organizations" Come listen to presentations and information regarding the participation of women in the workplace WOMEN AT WORK Conference Room, Satellite Shine, University of Kansas Lawrence, KS Saturday, March 29 10 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. 5. Abbeyin Groupational Segregation / Bradshawman Labor Force Negotiation M. White, Center and Faculty Walks, McKenna Center, University of Kansas Lawrence Nickelman Center, University of Kansas Lawrence Jones Center, University of Kansas Lawrence Hill and University of Kansas Lawrence FREE new life forum a film & lecture series LECTURE/ SCIENCE Dr. Gary Parker—the Institute for Creation Research- Tues., March 25 7:00 PM Big 8 Room, Ks. Union Coming Event: DavidC.C.Watson Tues. Apr. 1, 7 PM Akase a Peace Corps volunteer why she teaches math and general science to high school students in Liberia, West Africa. "We have physics in the Pacific Islands. They'll probably say they are here to use their skills, travel, learn new language and experience." MATH-SCIENCE SIGN UP NOV FOR INTERVIEW IN CARRUTH-O'LEAPY BEFORE APRIL 2, 1980. PEACE CORPS A. S. M. --all you can drink $1 from class members $2 from non-class members 4th Senior "Farewell to Bars" PARTY Tues., March 25, 8-12 p.m. Mr. Bill's (memberships available) SENIOR FAREWELL MOVIE will continue filming --sua films JUST ROUND THE ROAD THERE'S A PLACE LIKE HOME ... COUNTRY KITCHEN BROADWAY Community Day $3.99 CHICKEN All You Can Eat Tuesday 5 p.m.—8 p.m. Complete with chicken, potato vegetable, soup or salad and roll & butter. COUNTRY KITCHEN 1503 W.23rd More or what you go for. Lawrence Premiere! "Bertoluciella's 'LUNA' has a wonderful and unique sensory richness. Jill Claybury has never been as impressive...seductive, compassionate and compulsive." — Jack Krohl, Newsweek Maazine "A lucid and uninhibited journey to the outer limits on human behavior. 'LUNA's' images are so hypnotic, erotic and beautifully shot. By sheer cinematic force, Bertolucci seduces us. Both the film and its star, Jill Clayburgh, are perfect." —Frank Rich, Time Magazine JILL CLAYBURGH Luna **A Film by Bernardo Berrodino)** International Screenwriter Veronica Laarz- Benrota and with Tomas Milian Screenwriter of *Vitruvio Vittorio* (Bernardo Berrodino) English Adaptation by George Malik-Director of Photography Vitruvio Vittorio Malik Produced by Rachel Benson (Rachel Benson) **R** A film directed by Bernardo Berrodino DOG Thursday, March 28 8:00 pm $1.50 HOCH AUDITORIUM —One Showing Only— University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 25.1980 Cost index exaggerates inflation, prof says By JON BLONGEWICZ Staff Reporter Reports of an 18 percent inflation rate for the first few months of 1900, which spurred President Carter's new inflation program. University of Kagawa economics professor. Lawrence Radeck, assistant professor of economics, said last week that the problem with the CPI is the analysis of the monthly Consumer Price Index. Home mortgage rates are included in the CPI, which calculates the cost of services purchased by typical households. When the CPI is calculated, it is figured at the price it would buy to a new home at the present rate. The prices have jumped recently from 10 to 15 percent, depending on the location, Radecki THIS JUMP would not affect people who do not purchase new homes. For these people, an 18 percent inflation rate is an exaggeration. he said. Consumer Price Index, the inflation rate would be only about 8 percent. Rises in the price of gasoline have also contributed to the recent rise in the inflation rate from last year's 15 percent. Rudecki said that higher interest rates on mortgage rates were not considered in the "It turn it around. Now Carter is catching hell for inflation," *Radecki* said. "If mortgage rates go down, he is going to look good." One aspect of the inflation program, which Carter announced March 14, is a budget expansion to $11 billion of proposed cutting $13 to $14 billion from the proposed 1981 budget to balance federal taxes. RADECKI SAID he and many other economists were skeptical about the effect a balanced budget would have on the nation's finances. He said that the National Product, which runs in the trillions of dollars, the proposed $13 or $14 billion of federal spending are a "drop in the bucket." "It is not going to have much of an impact," Radeeki said. "$13 billion is not going to make that much of a difference." According to Radecki, any impact that it may have would not occur for some time. But the latest report indicates that the 1981 fiscal year budget, which would not take effect until at least October 1981, more than a year away. Carter has suggested cuts in the first six months of the fiscal 1980 budget. MORTAR BOARD APPLICATIONS DUE TODAY BY 5:00 P.M. IN 220 STRONG A majority of people want a balanced budget and Congress is going alone he said. Day 2 Tuesday, March 25 After an extensive two county manhunt, Paddy Murphy, escaped K.U. student and member of SAE Fraternity, has still not been located. Sheriff Earl Bennis from Remo County said. "We have our bloodhounds out and had a decent trail for awhile. But all we came up with was the contents of his stomach. You know—chicken bones, glass, assorted loose change . . . the usual." Naked Body in Park not Paddy Murphy's In the past, Paddy has been known to wander for days looking for things and places no one else ever dared see. On several occasions, he had set out looking for his long lost girlfriend, Elvira Fish, at the Lonely Hearts Trailer Court. Miss Fish commented, "He was just disgusting. Always drunk. He would belch, then cry out 'room for more' and down the closest thing with alcohol in it. It would be nice if you could find him, but it's really no big deal." Citizens should be cautious with Murphy, as he is reportedly suffering from illusions of grandeur, the heartbreak of psoriasis, the pain and itch of hemorrhoidal tissues, and several other commercial diseases. Advertisement Fraternity members are grieving over their missing brother and should appreciate the public's help in finding him. A reward has still been offered. Bucky's Bucky's introduces . . . "A lot of people in the United States vent their frustrations with inflation on the federal government," Radecki said. "They want a scapegoat and they pick the federal government to do an easy thing to pick on. You want to blame something, blame the federal government." CHEF'S SALAD Now at Bucky's, refreshing CHEF'S SALAD-crisp lettuce, tomatoes, and onion topped with ham, cheese, and eggs. We serve it up fresh with crackers and our own house dressing. It's a deal you can't afford to miss! "There are businessmen and politicians here and there we seem to think a balanced budget is the cure to everything." Radecki said. only 96¢ because labor costs in the automobile and steel industries have risen. A balanced federal budget would have little effect on industry and this aspect of inflation, he said. ANOTHER REASON Radecki and others are skeptical about the effect of a balanced budget is that the price of goods and services are greatly determined by fixed labor Radecki said most labor contracts had already been signed, so wages were lestied to run. For example, he said, the price of automobiles is expected to rise Crawford . . . From page one Murray and Sempolski also said that several facets of the research project itself were conducted in an irregular fashion. Argersinger called the arrangement "imprudent at best," and said Crawford should have avoided it. MURRAY AND Sempolski said Crawford's project did not obtain necessary approval from the KU Advisory Committee because it was deemed to improper consent procedures in obtaining human volunteers and missed volunteers about the purposes and results of their blood test. Arsinger's memo said that while research protocol should have been fully reviewed by the advisory committee, Crawford's actions were not censurable. Argersinger's memo said he found no "substantial basis for the charge that informed consent was not obtained." nor for any implication of misrepresentation. nor for the suggestion that parental consent may have been a cause some cases of minors involved in the project." "The issue is not scientific freedom," Murray said, "it's accountability. You're free to research what you want, but society should have an input." The American Anthropological Association is conducting an investigation of methods used in the project. Sempisoki said, "Crossing over of grants is not that common. The project's books are supposed to reflect the actual use of the grant." Crawford was less than candid when he indicated on his General Research Fund application in January 1765 for support of a medical project that it did not involve human subjects.[4] Murray said, "As citizens we were concerned with this creative account. The way the money was handled didn't look proper enough. THE MEMO SAID Crawford's "n neglect of the required University procedures on the use of human subjects" was a violation of the Faculty Code of Conduct. Crawford was to be warned, the memo said, that similar conduct in the future could be cause for more severe disciplinary action than a written warning. March 1979 and in January 1980 referred its findings to Bucheli for legal advice. Murray said the Office of Special Investigations concluded its investigation in "Apparently the government didn't think so either." LeDuc . . . From page one "I'm very bitter about it, "Crowder said, "because I was in on it from the start and they haven't done what they said they were going to do," and come in and build it up, but they didn't. was upset because LeDuc had not met its commitments Crowder said he thought about 3,000 illustrations cartoons artwork logos creative illustrations phone 841-7650 s phone—841-7650 Kinko's Kinko's For Your Theses and Dissertations 25% Cotton paper We collate at no charge Hours 8-8 Mon-Thurs 8-6 Fri 904 Vermont 10-5 Sat 12-5 Sun 843-8019 The Associated Students of Kansas, the statewide student lobby organization, has an opening for CAMPUS DIRECTOR at KU. FOR LEADERS ONLY Only students with an interest in politics and with organizational and leadership abilities need apply. The Campus Director, paid by ASK, is responsible for organizing and coordinating all lobbying activities at KU. Applicants should have a knowledge of campus and state issues. Lobbying experience would be helpful. Applications and more information about ASK are available at the Student Senate Office, 105B in the Kansas Union. Return applications to the Senate Office by 5p.m. Monday, Mar. 31. The Associated Students of Kansas ask subscriptions had been sold but that 1,000 of those had been purchased by the athletic department itself. HE ALSO said the department was angry because it had received little communication from LeDuc. "We have no reason to be from LeDuc about what the hall's crane on." Crowder said the magazine itself had been good and that CU would like it to be continued. Students Working for Students At Missouri, athletic department officials were unavailable for comment. LeDuc Enterprises was also unavailable for comment and has been since the March 3 announcement that its campus magazines were being drowned. Jim Shelden, former assistant sports information director and editor of the KU team, said he'd probably be wrong to keep from injuring the prospective sale of some of the players. KANSAN On Campus LEON Fletcher will give a piano MASTERS CLASS at 3:00 a.m. and 1:30 a.m. at the KANSAS GEOLOGICAL Hall. The KANSAS GEOLOGICAL SURVEY will sponsor forum titled "Changing Institutional Patterns in Energy AE- ficiency" p.m. in the Apollo Room in Nichols Hall. "The fire ignited above and behind a french yr unit in the kitchen," McSwain said at a press conference. TONIGHT; WESTERN CIVILIZATION ACADEMIC FILM FESTIVAL will present "The Drive for Power" at 7:30 p.m. in Room 13 Lippincott Hall. The March 14 fire in the Old Carpenter Smoke House began accidentally, Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain said yesterday. Smoke House blaze started in kitchen He a team of three investigators, two from the state fire marshal's office and a city fire investigator, determined the cause of the blaze by retracing the path of the fire. The fire caused an estimated $100,000 damage to the downtown restaurant, 719 Massachusetts St., which is owned by Bob Schumm, a city commissioner. McSwain said the fire was discovered about midnight. "The fire travelled upward through the walls and floors before it was apparent," he said. "It smoldered about four hours before the alarm." McSwain said some recent repair work on the hood system near the fryer unit might have aggravated the blaze. Three firefighters received minor injuries while fighting the blaze, but they were not hospitalized. The fire damaged the building's roof, which partitally collapsed, and caused smoke and water damage. A neighboring photography store and clothing store were also damaged by smoke and water. Both businesses have since reopened. Schumm said the restaurant might open in two weeks. BAHA'I FIRESIDE Everyone is welcome. KU Baha'i Club will meet on Tuesday, March 25th at 7:30 P.M. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. films sua presents Sam Peckinpah's "Ride the High Country" Starring Randolph Scott, Joel McRae and Mariette Hartley. Woodruff 7:30 Tonight, March 25 $1.00 The Intercollegiate Association for Women Students Annual Convention March 26-30 Downtown Towers Holiday Inn Kansas City, KS For more information call The Women's Resource Center 864-3552 Partially funded by Student Senate University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 25. 1980 7 Bed shortage keeps Cherry Manor patients waiting By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter Cherry Maman Nursing Home is trying to relocate four of its patients. The home is not overrowed, operating at only half of its capacity. But the home is losing money. The four people are in limbo because they need 24-hour care, or skilled nursing, and Cherry Manor no longer wants to offer care. To find another skilled nursing center, she must move out of the county, to either katie Hicks or Topela, wherever they can find a bed. None of the other eight nursing homes in Douglas County offer skilled nursing, not nursing home care. Nursing Home. Because of a shortage of registered nurses in the area, and a small number of people needing constant care, Mary Moran wants to change its skilled status. CHERRY MANOR HAS requested that it no longer be required to maintain a register nurse on duty 24 hours a day. A registered nurse should intermediate care home starting April 30. Charles Pomeroy, owner of Cherry Inn, admitted in January 2014 that he had received his classification for several years. He blamed the deficiency on the shortage of cherry juice. Yet members of Kansas for the Improvement of Nursing Homes say a skilled nursing home is extremely necessary. Group members have been active in improving the facilities of nursing improvements of the county nursing facility Valley View Nursing Home. B218 Ridway Court KINH and county citizens composed a fact-finding committee that looked into the feasibility of the county purchasing a new facility, and outpinging out Valley View. THE NUMBER OF OPEN beds in skilled nursing facilities outside the county is dwindling, indicated these Cherry Manor's and others in these counties another home. If Cherry Manor is unable to find a home for these patients in the Kansas City area, he will be forced to maintain its skilled ratings. Cerf said that the expense of issuing bonds to皮质 Wakarusa Manor would be outweighed by the advantage of having a nursing officer and operated skilled nursing home. Cerf is critical of the area's nursing facilities, but a backer of the purchase of Wakarausa Manor by the county. Medicare benefits cannot be used in an unskilled home. Often a patient no longer needs the full-time care of a hospital, but needs more attention than is available in an unskilled home. During home Medicare pays for the extra costs when a person needs full-time care. "Nursing homes pay for themselves," Corf said. "It wouldn't cost the county anything to issue bonds for the purchase of Wakuraus. fair to the people of Douglas County to deprive them of the benefits of a skilled nursing home." BUT KATHY SMITH, Valley View administrator, said the operation of a new county house would cost the county at least $200 million. It now it will spend on the Valley View home. "It is unfortunate that the commissioners don't have the good of Douglass County in mind." According to an official at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, the need for skilled nursing care in the county is not a great one. Lawrence Memorial discharges less than one patient a month who needs skilled care, whereas with low low volume makes a small-profit business. The committee and four state representatives appeared before the Board of County Commissioners in November, and they were presented for the purchase of Wakarusa Manor, a privately owned home that is for sale. The commissioner, whose vestiment, but has taken no steps towards its purchase since the November meetings. The commission said that such a purchase If the county does not purchase a private home, other options are few. Old Lawrence County has no official said. The building has been evaluated and it would not meet current building codes. was vacated. Remodeling would be too expensive, the official said. clark did say, however, that the city would be open to a combined city and county effort if a workable proposal was made. Clark said, "We think we are involved in enough activities without getting into the nursing home business. "I support the idea that a new facility is needed, but the county historically has been responsible for the home. The city has never worked on it," he said. "It got involved in the nursing home business." "We would be open to that type of an effort," he said. "But who brings up an dead had better be prepared to run the home, because the city will not." The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES two two three three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.25 $2.25 AD DEADLINES to run Monday Thursday 8 p.m. Tuesday Friday 8 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 8 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 8 p.m. Friday Wednesday 8 p.m. ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be ANNOUNCEMENTS The Kanan 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. Watch for trunk cracked at 9th and Illinois, where the stems are rotting. (The Roos—the-Wall) Sell fresh Fruit from the peach pit in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit (apple, pear, lemon, and sage). Every Sunday. Also selling wood. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Rosalea's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058. 4-4 Nasaui. Bahamah* Departing Wichita, May 24 & 31. Rates starting at $282 per week. Free enjoy golf, fees and the luxurious PlayAway Club in Nassau. Hosted by Sun Set Outbreaks. Wks. #6729 (516) 263-4536. The Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor is to accept all applications for the DISTRICUTION Heard Board for "three years" from any institution that would like to receive the Board is to hear complaints of alleged violations or other issues. The Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor is responsible for recommending to the Executive Vice Chancellor the appropriate segments of the University community, including faculty, students, staff and residents, and directing staff. Normations should be submitted to the Executive Vice Chancellor by April 16, 2018. The Executive Vice Chancellor or the Office of the Administrative Vice Chancellor may accept. FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br `browntown` and apt. next to Virginia Avenue, 1836 West 45th Street. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities tilt. Quit. Feel and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-5079 or 842-4185. tt New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843-9679. tt COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student cooperative located within awalking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 842-9421. tf *NAISMITH 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. tf Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, *M22*; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Up and lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 900 sq. ft. Contact *8243-2014* or *857-fft*. Jayhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bedroom furnished and un fitted from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at 241 Fronter Road. Next door to Rustell's East. tf HANOVER PLACI NOW LEASING These all new and contemporary townhouses are available from 1st floor and downstreet. Starting at $249,000 each with three bedrooms, two baths and an all-apt appliance; wedge waver garage with four additional bedrooms; wedge waver garage with three additional bedrooms; wedge waver garage with four CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & summer. Now call New 842-8383 at 6:00 p.m. and visit www.campus.christian.edu. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-5500. TF Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tf Apartment 1 bik, from Union, 2 bedrooms, $25/- plus. utilities. Contact Steve Ruhley 841-6075 or 843-3114 3-28 SUMMER SUBLEASE: 2 bf, furnished 1 pt. 1bk from campus. Call now, 842-9737. 3-25 Room-large, semifurnished, private frig. and stove. Atv wheel pad, 13th and Mass. $160/mo. 2. birch apartments, with all utilized paying 10% tax; 3. Birch apartments, with all utilized paying 45% tax; 4. Apartments 1600 W. 15th, 843-993-63 3-28 * Bedroom unfurnished apartment (Makk Apt. - 1013 Apt. 24) for Auction. A/C, DWB, Laundry. * Bedroom unfurnished apartment (Makk Apt. - 1013 Apt. 24) for Auction. A/C, DWB, Laundry. Mark & I & II unit, NOW BENTING FOR SUMMER 2014 & 2015. 1 & 2 bedroom apts, 7 room walk to park, balconies, off street parking, dishwasher, dining room for into. 822-603-1035 MISSION drug mgr for into. 822-603-1035 MISSION **YOU FREED UP WITH THE HIGH COST OF RENT AND CHILDREN?** Waffle friendly family room. Enclosed homes have two 2-bedroom openings. Newly built homes close to shopping, parking and school are close to shopping, park and school. Saurious, two-bedroom, AVALON apt. available for June 4 at a cost of $298/mo. all utilities paid but electricity. Dilwharad Air conditioner, includes included. Required for 3-28 442-152 anytime Two-year-old two-story house 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Family room, dining room, kitchen with all amenities. Central hospital and South school district. $150 more. $145 charges. Available on after April 30th. Summer subbase. BTrail Trailhouse Townhouse 209 yards, from pool, tennis, call 842-1437 for runs. SUMMER APT. 2 bedroom. 2 bath, a.c., dishwasher, new carport, on bus route, x-large living area. Call 842-6623. 3-28 Staying in Lawrence this summer? Sublease you option for next year, dorm room. Written: 3-27 Must sublease 1 bedroom apt, AC, water paid, next to pool and laundry room. Call 842-2215. Keep trying 3-27 Summer sublease: one-bedroom apt. 2, blocks from campus. Furnished, new, with private parking. 842-119-11 WHY WAIT UNTIL LATER TO MAKE YOUR DREAMS FULFILLMENTS? Solutions 1-400-728-9655 campus air-conditioned, fuzzy new apartment to 2 bedroom, living-dining area, kitchen, bath 3 bedroom, living-dining area, bowlook Brooks Apt. 481-1899 or 333-1538 Large, excellent 3 bedroom house. Fireplace, large yard; 2 sleepings porches $375 a month plus utilities. A very nice house. Jeff Morrow. 843-6600 4-1 Available for summer. Terrific 4-12 bdm., townhouse right next to pool and tennis court. 2 full baths, fully equipped kitchen, carpeted big basement. Reasonable: 841-6423. 3-31 Summer sublease. 3 bedroom. 2 stories. 1 block from stadium. Call 841-7890. 3-25 Must sublet. 2 bdrm furnished apt. Next to stadium. Rent $255. Will sublet for $200. 841-4250. 3-28 On campus. 2 br apartments Furnished or un- furnished. Apartments 1603 W. 84th St. 483-933. 3-28 Apartments 1603 W. 84th St. 483-933. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make use of these notes to help you use them—1) As study guide, 2) For class analysis of Western Civilization, 3) Analysis of Western Civilization' available at Town Creek, Malt Bookstore and Orange Books. Alternator, starter and generator specialists Parts, service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-909-3900, 3900 W. 6th, tl WATERBED MATTRESSES, $34.98, 3 year guar- quante. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-136-ITF SunSpect~ Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF P. A. Saginella, Four Mobil model MLT-4 summer to Box 8011, 100 Over Watt chairs, A.P.E. heavy-duty road case stand in Dale's P.A. Heavy-duty road case stand in Belfast's P.A. Heavy-duty road case stand in Offe's B24-162. 3-25 Incoming Medical Students: Don't be a feel like I was and insist on a new microscope. Mike is in moist condition and prized to call. Call Richard at 362-8389 or K.C.EK. evening... 3-25 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. We sure to check on prices. Lodem's Furniture 1380 New York St. #343-328. 15. Sped Minta gran-tuning bicycle, Fenster, Front Midtown gran-tuning bicycle, cantilever front midtown rear and rear touring carts, cantilever front midtown rear and rear touring carts, terribile lock and cable, odometer, steering wheel, seat belt, car kit for $250 or best offer Cal Kelvin sell for $500 Foodball Table in good condition with coin mech. 841-7870 3-25 Brand quanking new 1980s; Datusun 210—$4,270 + tax delivered. Call 842-0445 ask for Bob Smith at Tony's Datusun 5-5 ROLLER SKATES Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Ricks Bike Shop, 103 Vermont, 841-6421 10-sped bike for sale; call 842-3512 10 p.m. 3-25 Bicycle: Viehmann Aeroplanet A1GP from offer Also extensive clinical record collection. Call 4-7686 3-25 Navy blue women's size 9 Nordica ski boots. $20. 841-8311 after 5:00. $3-25 Cassette Deck—Sharp RT-1165 with Automatic Search System. Best offer over $115 takes. Call 843-1775. 3-26 Top quality PA excellent for rock band or in- strumentalist. Send $1000 from 8422-297 after 8422-297. Ask for KA, Sax for piano. 10 Speed for sale: Motobecane Mirage in excellent condition. Condition metallic with Suntour Dervalers. $110, 841-7168 3-28 Olivetti Underwood Editor II electric typewriter. Excellent shape, must sell. Call 842-5480. 3-26 1968 Olds 98. Luxury Sidan. Dependable car for small budget. Call 842-0300 or 841-4777, anytime. 4-1 Epiphone acoustic guitar and case. Excellent condition. Only 8125 $125. Call Mike at 841-7074. 3-28 Holden 3 in Impeach like new, nask bakers, 3d- 300 mi. 832; 842-7043 3-27 1973 Camaro Lt. 350, auto, ps, ph. Good condition. Must sell. 812-784. Mileage 3-29 For sale: 19" color TV, RCA-XL100, 3 years old. Zoll: C94 843-7851. 3-28 Mobile HOME 10 x5.5, 2 bedroom, tied-down, skirted.床, $2000 or best offer. 842-915-341 4-1 Cockatiel—tame pair for sale. May be used for breeding. Bird eagle included. Call 842-9369- 3-29 1976 MGB, buttercotch with black top. Good condition. 841-3100 or 843-1008. 3-25 FOUND 1975 Honda CB750F Super Sport. Good shape, ready for spring. 842-2927 for more info. 3-28 Gold bracelet. Call 842-8252 at 1:50 p.m. tf Found: A green and blue plaid tote bag in front of Wescoe on Tuesday, March 18. Call 864-6281. 3-25 Pair one Yamazaki h-fix skis, 210 cm in tyreless bag. Contact Hal at 86341-8479 or 86340-1824 to识名 Senior class key To claim call Linda at 864-2205 3-27 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER ORESTES Will you share your work experience with our customer organization Karnis for Nurses in Homeland Health and input on nursing home conditions and students. All nurses and correspondence will be received by the two nine and five or write us, KNISI 2371. Now taking applications for door floor and wafter- now to **Apply** at the Sanctuary, 1461 街 8th Floor 8th Floor (9:30AM - 5:30PM) 9th Floor CHIUSESISHIP'S SAILING EXPEDITIONS!SAIL- ING EXPEDITIONS! NATIONWIDE WALLDURGE WIDTH $145.85 for APPICATION INFO REFERRALS NEWWORLD BOAT 60129, Sarasateam 3-28 Position open-residential facility for development of a nursing staff. Requires training of a resident/master. Degree in human services area is required. Resume should be submitted to HCBs. Box 64, McKinney, KS 75032. FOE Position open—small community facility serving the position; development is disbelieved to be the full-time service of a licensed social worker. Requires bachelor's degree or equivalent to MCRS, BS 6-37 Kansas, KANE. Offer Summer Pain Cream. Approx. 12 positions available. Minimum age 18. Personnel will begin work May 27. Applicant at Personal Office, Adm. Center, 2017 La. 842-8226 EOE. Free Lance Photographer is interviewing female subjects for photo projects. Experience and photo helpful but not necessary. Paid by session, ref. materials: F. Words: 20, B. Johns; L-325, Kanna 6004 Families with well-adjusted adolescent boys to participate in brief research. Family members will be paid for their participation. For more information call Brian or Patricia at 363-385-273 Girl Shop Manager, Museum of National History and Culture. Responsible for bookkeeping skills, ability to work in a team, knowledge of museum procedures. Need to be unemployed in at least four years or to be approved for appointment call Mary Ann Mumu (516) 239-7000. KANANS APPLIED REMOTE SENIOR SCHEDULE needs graduate or upper division undergraduate work. May 15-august 15, 1980 with possibility of photography, remote sensing, mapping or field research. Remote sensing with fieldwork will be accepted through April 4, 1980. Applications available in Room 217. Nobil Halabay University, Salzburg, Austria. Part-time cashiers for evening shifts and weekends. Also need one person for noon hours. Apply in person. Henry's Restaurant, 6th and Missouri, 3-26 DAY CARE STAFF needed for before and after employment. Austinians should have experience working with customers, using computers or law enforcement. Equated Day Program. Monsoonjob.com. Employer qualified to employ a qualified employer-mqualified man and women (not a licensed nurse) in the job offered. NORTHWEST KANSAS AREA HEALTH ADMINISTRATION (AKHC) PROGRAM - The University of Kansas is the health education center (AKHC) located in Health Education Center (AKHC) located in Northwest Kansas for administering programs, personnel and equipment to health care professionals. AKHC serves a multicycle region in northeast Kansas with work closely with health care professionals at the University of Kansas as part of the Central AKHC program at the University of Kansas. AKHC provides outreach programs in that area of the country by providing health education, health care or health education promo OVERSEAS JOB 2015 - SUMMER year-round, Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All费金 $100- $120 monthly, express pay, sighting-free. Free training exp. BSA-KA, Carolina, Mar. Ca., 92825. PART TIME-15 to 20 hr. wt. in the events room. Be prepared to opportunity for the student who needs additionals who will continue especially interested in them who will continue further information Call 642-3080 for additional information. ACTING COORDINATOR UNIVERSITY INFORMATION MAY 1, 1980, and ending December 17, 1980. Supervises May 1, 1980, and ending December 17, 1980. Responsible for the management of University Information from January 1, 1980, to December 17, 1980, later than June 30, 1981. Responsible for the development of a 24 hour telephone information referral, including aiding the University community in including the coordinated University office community agencies, and city government, the management of the Civil Services Department, the office of the budget, the training and supervision of the office budget, and the training and supervision of qualified qualifications. Master's degree, graduate or equivalent qualification. Master's degree, graduate or equivalent qualification. Knowledge of the Division Preferred qualifications. Knowledge of the Division $125,000 per year for the remainder of the 1980-1981 academic year. Applicant public are invited to submit a resume to the Office of the Director, Shawwood, Washington, DC. The Chairmen for Student Affairs at Lawrence University Kamiko Kamoa. An affirmative action position. INSTRUCTORS-HUNTER, Instructors. Instruments-HUNTER will provide instruction program in KANSAS City. April 22-17. Call any of the following numbers to register for the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER is now accepting applications for student nf2F 2018. For information on application forms will also be received. Applicants available from 11AM to 5PM, Tuesday, April 22, 1980. The University of Kansas is an East Coast university. Burial of Child Research, Achievement Place has been dedicated to the care and support of patients available. Salary ranges from $295 to $345 per hour. Duties are to conduct telelogue interviews Must have flexible schedule for attentions and referrals. Must possess an interest in personal skill essential Application deadlines completion Contact Jolley Liddle, J11 650-877-8100 or contact Jennifer.com introductory resume Contact Mollie Liddle, J11 650-877-8100 Instructors for Uwward Board program in Law Enforcement, Kaplan University, college and we have high school together with used background in teaching. I will teach you our skills, career Orientation. We have experience teaching for just a secondary education. Contact us to find out more about our programs. An Equal Opportunity Program. Tutor, counsellors for Uward Board in streamnet of Nairobi. Expited to host of at least ten hosts in college with experience with target population and knowledge of needs of target population board. Application deadline April 15, 2019. An email to tutor@uwardboard.com. Sales Help. Set your own hours. Part-time now and during the summer. 811-642-541-4 LOST Lost: My light-colored pup, colp Lunday. I wandered or followed someone from my home at 2124 Kentucky. If you have seen her or know where she is she please call 842-9917. 3-25 NOTICE KU Fridesbach Club meeting Wednesday, March 26, 18:00, 4:30 p.m., 20 Robinson, Filma on World Fridesbach Championships will be shown. Discussion follows. 3-25 Enroll now!! In Lawrence Driving School: Recruit vehicle license without Highway Patrol Test; Transportation provided; Drive now. Pay later: 842-6015. 3-25 ULTIMATE BRISBEE. Come watch and/or play. Everyone welcome Wednesday, March 26, 4:30 pm, 25 Robinson. 3-25 PERSONAL YOYAVERS-Fellowship-Christian Alternative for Single Adults-First Presbyterian Church, 1605 N. Broadway, 5th Avenue, 843-7417, info@yayversfoundation.com or call a local attorney. Call Lily (843-7417) at 843-7417. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--updates up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counting Tubal Ligation. For appointment in October 2013. 4601 N. Stairs II, Overland Park, KS. 4601 N. Stairs II, Overland Park, KS. The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cold beer, pool, pinball, and unique hobbies. Color TV and stereo for when the Hawkins are away. Ice cream, coffee, wine, lunch. A first-class Dlift. If WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR NEED CASH? XXXXXXXXX GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS, WEDDING BANDS, WATCHES . . . CALL NOW! 842-9737 or 841-7476 GAY COUNSELLING REFERMALS through Head- quarters, 812-245 and 861-KU, info. 3206-10. Dial 842-2001 for Couv Odvsev. 4-5 PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843- 4821. Headquarters is a community of people willing to want to talk, call or drop by. We can help with homework, give advice, provide information, relationship problems, other personal issues, and more. We also talk about. We can also help you get in contact with the person who asked you to do it or drug by 1603 Mass. anytime. We call 812-2545 or drag by 1603 Mass. anytime. We are United Fund, Dugal Co., and private organization. TENNIS PLAYERS Spring and warm weather mean trenis is easier. Get your requests in the morning, then do a warm stringers Stinger and, stinger K-Vari. Warm stringers. Very reasonable on rate good grims. 4-3 New powerful rock vocalists to join established instrumental band. Call 843-7238. 3-25 --ask for Larry for KYLE to help with homework for a student married couple with helpiness and maintenance at my home. June 12 to middle August $150 Summer $70. Booking date: Tuesday for Larry for KYLE to help with homework for a student married couple with helpiness and maintenance at my home. Give the name of your child for Larry for KYLE to help with homework for a student married couple with helpiness and maintenance at my home. Give the name of your child for Larry for KYLE to help with homework for a student married couple with helpiness and maintenance at my home. Write Dougant 1000 Susan Driver Phone. C-librals EASTER with ASTA singing telegrams. Bakste delivered daily. 842-8741. 4-4 M adwbrook open hour: coming soon! Join us March 29-31 1-5 p.m. 3-25 Juniors Mortar Board applications now avail- able. Wed like to apply you to Tuesday by Tuesday 3-25 LORANNE—Your prize it took you months to citil-take a moment and sit, Turkey eggs, A cold night, the car was bum-not white. If you got sick, I went back to work this time. though. Drop a trip, if I know me. To the guys in R-D fliver over break—HI—From the girls in the chairlift. 3-25 Girls: 1 need a date for a formal 4/12. Call Jim at 843-0743 3-28 ADOPT A ATLTEE - Help keep a student in school and support KU athletes. I'm looking for a bracelets or age to hours or alt best凳膝 track athlete training 3-27 臂力训练 81-4743 LAST CHANCE- ENTRY TO SKI THAT EASTER BOWL! One day only. Special events are held daily. Kenny will excursion international, be in golf hill three days. Three days 10 tickets. Three days at rental House. Three days at rental Hotel. With Birthday beginning. Call Darryl (212) 435-7659. Want to send the 1st night of Panacea-Monday, to a Farmers School at a Farmers School 861-3278 861-3278 Pupios-free; half German shepherd, half labrador. Ten to choose from. Call Dave at 812-357-327 Two Barrels, Florida was in '04! We were so excited to be able to host this event at American Guild's food, the Thai Restaurant. It was a wonderful experience and we are thrilled to continue our cream, Kevin's on the La Piazza, Mingling with us all. We got to spend time with friends, Peronus, Pascal, hamburgers, gulas, chicken wings, sushi, rice and citing to the best time of our lives. We were so proud that they had decided to bring them over to the best time of our lives. We also w/eve's The Holiday Inn "Club" and the American Guild's food, the Thai Restaurant. Last chance to ski! Still a few spots open on SUA's Vail ski trip. 864-237-477 3-28 Looking for peeps to 1 and 2 other moral losses on Scardali Diet Medical Diet 6742 3-38 ATTENTION BEER EXPERTS, your participation is a d and r for research project. Beer consumption is involved. Call Mark at 541-6398 if you inquire. d. 3-26 Returning to a residence hall next year? Let your voice be heard! Vote in the AURH general el clients-Tuesday. March 25 and Wednesday. March 26. 3-26 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH- 600-102 - call 8583- 5858. MATH- 1155-740 - call 8583-. STATISTICS (remove) call 8583-. CIS- 1000-600 - call 8583- 5858. MATH- 1155-740 - call 8583-. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 8583-7057 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIL is available with Afice at the: Houser Of Upper Copy Center; Alicie is available from 4 am to 5 PM Monday to 9am, 7 am to 8 PM on Tuesday to 894 Mos. Massage Therapy for women at the Strendipity Shop in the Marketplace (8th & New Hampshire) call for appt. 81-8697 or 81-7489; 3-282 Professional Wedding Photography specializing in weddings & enlargements from $500-$1,200 (3-26) 934-789-5499 Raffo's Auto Repair, Foreign & Domestic Versions on the apd service. Free estimates. 3-26 IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES Professional Tutoring: Math 006-115, 864-237. 3-28 Tide of paving high store costs for good quality clothes and alterations. Excellent sweatshirts will sell for men or women. Reasonable prices. Refunds 41-926-8148 after 4 and 4½ days information. TYPING Aaccurate, experienced typist IBM correcting Suliticite. Call Donna, 842-2744. fff Why cuss about typing? Experienced尔服务 secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekn tds I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-1476, 71 PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-1900 TF MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. Experimented tpind—thymus, dissertations, term evaluation of the correction correcting electric Bath. After 5 m. pH: 82-210 842. pH: 82-210 DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980. Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Thenes, distractions welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan 842-9127. TF Exporiened Typist—term papers, thesis, misc. electric IBM Silicone, Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-354, Ms. Wright. Reports, dissertations, recourses, legal form, taxation. Involvement in correcting selective 5. Ellen Jaeman. 411-272. Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Solicitre. Quality work. References available. Sandy, ex- tving & weekends. 748-9818. Experienced Typical—manufacturers, papers, theories scientific and technical experience. IBM Correcting Selectric 841-4328. tt I'm your type: for thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. do Joan 841-3819 or after 5:00 at 841-8055 4-18 Dial 842-2001 for a typing Odyssey 4-5 Word ordering exclusively at Encore-Copy Corps. 842-2001, 25th and Iowa 4-5 I'm your type, for thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. JE Ann 864-381 or later 5:09 at 818-272. Rivets, desertations, reumes, legal form, graphics, editing a Correct-Sylvic. Call B11n or Juanann. 841-2722 5-5 ROOMMATES. Naismith Hall has a couple of openings for the balance of the year. Contact business office at 813-8599 any time of the day, tr. WANTED Famul roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, $160 2/utility, private room, waher, dryer, dishw ater, 842-0569 4-12 PSYCHATIC ADIDES AND HEALTH SERVICE WORKERS WANTED to Tapestra State Hospital in New York. Call 1-800-259-4255, W 212, W 406, Tappora KS, Phone: (912) 329-580-8. Apply to an employer. An application may appear later. WANTED TO Rent Journalism graduate student recrut to 4 or 8 room house or apartment for three months. Must have have 3 children but not pets. Require plenty of space and proximity to elementary school. Please call 917-266-0699. Female roommate for spacious townhouse living; nice quiet neighborship. Fireplace, garage, non-smoker. $110 plus 1/3 utilities. 842-696. Keep trying. 3-72 Female roommate to share Jayhawk Towers apartment with three damn cool ladies for fall 1980 amester. Call 641-6701 3-25 Roommate~For 3 bedroom townhouses at Park 25 Bus route: Bus 104.56 line 1/3 lifters 2-25 Mary roommate immediately to share a spaces two-bedroom apartment with one other male through the month of May $210 plus $150 off. Call $241 643-7891 or ask for Larry for 2-28 ATTENTION BEER EXPERTS. Your participation is needed for research project. Beer conspulsion is involved. Call Mark at 841-6289 (if you're interested). COACHING --to run: Tuesday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Wednesday ... Friday 5 pm Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 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 111 Flint School to go to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES CLASSIFIED HEADING: RATES: 15 words or less CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write ad here:___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ additional words 1 time $2.25 .02 3 times $2.75 .04 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 .03 .04 .05 .06 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 DATES TO RUN: to NAME: ___ ADDRESS: ___ PHONE: ___ PHONE: KANSAM CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD 8 Tuesday, March 25. 1980 University Daily Kansan Elimination of events streamlines Kansas Relays By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer Whatever you can do this year's edition promises to be a streamlined package of years past. Call the Kansas Relays renovated, restored or rejuvenated. Plagued by sagging attendance and over-packed schedule last year, KU athletic officials decided a change was needed. "After the Laksay last year, we critiqued just what direction the Relays were headed with the coaches," Athletic Director Bob Marcum said. "There were too many events taking up too much time and resources." THE MEET'S director, KU men's track coach Bob Timmons, past said Raltles were too concerned with pleasing everybody. "We were trying to make the Relays everything "everybody." Timmons said. "We know now we can't do that. The changes we've made are going to be huge." The change ranges from slicing more than 50 events, from last year's 128 to 67, to shortening the length of the Relays. "We've been extremely careful in our decision process of deciding what to eliminate." Timmons said. "There isn't a single major area of the Relays that hasn't been cut back in some manner." The more compact format compares with the number of events at the Drake Relays, 68, and the Texas Relays, 53. THE CHANGES come as the result of hundreds of surveys filled out by coaches, officials, news media and spectators. pagery and the reyts committee, "imminis fawn" Included in this year's pugramenty is a first-time grand opening of the new store in Brooklyn. Record receipts. a result of these questionnaires, we've made changes in pageantry and the relays' committees," Timmons said. "We've also begun to lay the groundwork for a parade next year." Timmons said. "Ultimately, we'd like to get more people involved." The Relays two major committees, the 30-member Student Committee and the Greater Relays Committee, must work within a $30,000 budget. In addition, the Miller Brewing Company has contributed $10,000 of finance athletes' travel expenses. A BUDGET OF $43,000 have been requested, but following last week's athletic department budget cuts, the committees will have to make up for it. Timmons said, "I do appreciate the outside help we have received. "The future quality of this meet will depend on the amount of outside help we receive. There is no doubt we need more sponsors." "We're also going to work year round with the Greater Relays Committee," he said. "We didn't start working until mid-August." LAST YEAR there were seven major classifications. This year they are four: men, women, open division, boy's high school and girl's high school class. Among the organizational changes of the two committees is the creation of promotional and finance subcommittees. However, the biggest changes come in the Relavs' divisions. Another new look for this year is a week of festivities leading to the main events. That will be followed Sunday by an open 10,000-meter run across the campus. Competition resumes on Wednesday and Thursday with the Jim Bausch Invitational Decathlon. Everything will start on the afternoon of Saturday April 12, with competition for grade school and junior high student schools. Also, KU faculty members and students will compete on an intramural level. The bulk of the meet will take place Friday and Saturday in Memorial Stadium, concluding Sunday morning with the running of the final. One former star of the Relays said the changes were a step in the right direction. TIMMONS SAID reaction to the changes had been very favorable. "It's safe to say that last year's Relays were, at best, an intramural meet." Wes Wante, a two-time outstanding performer of "I realize some of the events are part of tradition and there is that thing called recruiting." "Santee said," but the events with the elementary school kids benefit only those kids and their parents. It does nothing for the Relays." Santee, who last competed in the 1973 Relays Master division, said the key was making the events interesting to all spectators. "From the people I've talked to, they all seem excited about the Relax and harpy with the changes." "THAT DOESN'T necessarily mean bringing in the cream of the crop of international and national athletes, although it helps," he said. "We're going to have to get people that aren't interested in either track or the Relays and get them enthused." "Timmons said. "Most people aren't knowledgeable, don't have interest or are unaware of the big stuff," publicity, the bigger the crowd. And all of this is going to take time. Crum's talk fires Cards to title INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - With his team trailing UCLA 28-17, Coach Randal McDonald did something he had never done before. Coach Denny Coon did something he had never done before. "I got on them really hard at the half. I had to do something to wake them up," Crum said. "I told them that if we beat beat, fine, but make them earn it, don't give it to them." Crum told the Cardinals that they were choking and playing tight. The talk paid off as Louisville downed the "Both teams had a lot of young players. The youth and the fact the game means so much put a lot of pressure on both of us," said Crum, who won his first national championship in 2014. Both defenses were in seminal games against UCLA. Spectacular Darrell Griffith scored 23 hard-earned points, leading the Cardinals to their first NCAA basketball championship. The loss brought the Bruins down to earth after a late-season season that saw them come from nowhere to pull off a victory. As he has done all year for the Metro Conference champions, the flying Griffith put on a shooting performance by hitting his shots through a maze of tough UCLA defenders. Griffith, an All-America guard, kept his team in the first half with 11 points. He scored 12 more after intermission, including the winning shot on a soft jumper from the outside. Two foul shots by forward Derek Smith in the last minute nailed down the victory for the Cardinals and capped a frantic defensive struggle during which there were four ties in the second half. That field goal gave the nation's second-ranked team a 56-14 lead with 2:17 remaining, and the Bruins then threw the game away when James Wilkes tossed an inbounds pass downcourt over the head of a teammate. Griffith, who said he was dedicating the tournament to a friend stricken with cancer, was lifted up by a crowd of Louisville supporters and carried around the court on their shoulders. He again signaled that the Cardinals were No. 1 in the country. The loss was the first for UCLA in the NCAA's final game, and Louisville's points total was the lowest scored by a tourney champion since North Carolina had 54 in a triple-overtime victory over Kansas in 1957. In the all Big Ten consolation game played at the All-Star Game, the Cincinnati Wildcats scored 35 points to lead Cardinals to a 7-48 triumph over low-key New York Giants. Baltimore's home run power defeats Royals MIAMI(AP)—Lee May hit a three-run homer and Rick Dempsey is a solo bastion, both in the second inning, to lead the Baltimore Orioles to a 63 victory over the Kansas City Rovals in a baseball exhibition game yesterday. The homer by May, after singles by Gary Roenicke and Dou DeCreees, was his first extra base hit and brought his first runs batted in of spring training, May, the Orioles' 76th birthday on Sunday, came into the game batting. 192 Dempsey also hit a boner off iser Craig Chamberlain and doubled to launch a two-run innings off the Kansas City starter in the fourth. The runs were scored on a sacrifice fly by Eddie Murray and an infield hit by Roenicke. KANAS CITY scored two runs in the eight off eim Stoddard on a double by Willie Akenes and added another run in the ninth on a double by Arnos Otis, following a walk and a single by U.L. Washington. Washington had five hits for the Royals, who are now 11-4, and Dave Chalk had three. The Orioles, 74, had four hits. Baltimore starter Mike Flanagan pitched one only inning and then left after being notified that his wife was undergoing emergency surgery in a Miami hospital. The Baltimore Kerrigan, who allowed five hits during a four-inning tintin. This year's Hill Championships in basketball were split between the Greek and the Independent leagues Friday night. In the men's division, the Delta Upsion Scrappers deflected the Top Dog 50-47. The women's title was won by the Evergreens, their team, who wipped the Alpha Phi 26-18. Hill basketball champs decided Ravens nip soccer team The Scrapers used the inside work of Arnie Baum and the outside shooting of Steve Smith to beat the Top Dogs. With the score tied at 47 with 40 seconds left in the game, the Scrapers switched from a 2-1-2 defense to a 3-0-2 defense and they stole the ball and drew a coul. A three-point play followed and the Scrapers captured the men's trophy. The KU Soccer Club lost in its first match of the season Sunday, falling to Benedictine 21 in Memorial Stadium. The women's game was a sesame篮 throughout, with neither team holding more than a six-point advantage. The winning basket for the Evergreenades was scored with a 21-6 lead over the Grizzlies. The Alps tried to tie the score, but a bat made as the buzzer sounded was short. Benedictine scored the goal of the first half on a deflected shot off KU kogue Bill Evans. At the start of the second half, the Ravens scored again, this time on a backstop. The Jayhaws scored their only goal on Pete Nelson's penalty kick which sailed into the upper right corner of the goal. The remainder of the game was a defensive battle. According to Evans, team spokesman, the club has played better. “This was not our finest showing, but Benedictine is a good team,” he said. “There are several aspects of our game that need to be improved.” TRAILRIDGE - studios - townhouses - apartment IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS 843-7333 2500 W.6th --hampered lately by a hamstring injury. According to Temple, he probably won't see action today. 843-2931 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 Alabama Over 15 years in the business Where economy comes first 738 MASS. 9:30-6:00 M-S Thurs. Ill 8:30 p.m. - Rentals start at $7.95 a day plus mileage Toyotas Chevettes Firebirds LTD Wagons MONTGOMERY MARQUE NISHIKI. AZUKI. WINDSOR SR blockbump Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts 842-3131 Use Kansan Classified - Rentals start at $ 9.95 a day plus mileage * Free pick-up and delivery * A choice of any of these economy minded ca - A choice of any of these economy minded cars New 35mm Prints MOTORCYCLE M FRANCE --hampered lately by a hamstring injury. According to Temple, he probably won't see action today. Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints AURH GENERAL ELECTIONS SR VOTE President Vice President Secretary Twin Bridges CANOE RENTAL A ROUTE, BOX 230 WEST PLAINS, MO. 65775 417-256-7507 INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP CANOEING ON ONE OF MASSACHUSETTS MARKET STREETS NORTH FORK RIVER-MARK TWIN FOREST CANOES KAYAKS CAMPING FISHING RELAXING Treasurer Matt Gundelinger and Brian Gray have been on a tear since spring break. He's raised his average 100 points to 340 in the past week. Gundelinger is hitting well. Voting boxes in each hall during dinner on Tues. March 25th and Wed. March 26th. jim blockbum STUDIO SINGER DESIGN Residents must show Hall ID to vote. KU's pitching is showing improvement also. Temple will go with Randy McIntosh and Mitch Lubin on the mound against Washburn. McIntosh, a left-hander, has three victories and two saves in five appearances this season. His ERA is 4.09. Today will be the first starting call for Lahin this season. He's pitched 5½ innings and given no one hit and no runs. Baseball double-header threatened by weather KU's baseball team will put its seven-game win streak on the line this afternoon in a 1:30 double-header against Washburn—if the weather cooperates. "I never like to call a ball game off until the last possible minute," KU coach Floyd Temple said yesterday. "If the sun is shining, I should call the field will be in pretty good shape." Quigley Field may not be in the best condition, but everything else has been in pretty good shape for Temple. His team, which has lost 40 percent since its trip to Texas during spring break. LEADING THE hitting attack for the Jayhawks has been catcher Juan Ramon, who has also seen considerable success during aerial batting, average, but has been Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS -Part Size 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 MOTHERS AND SONS Encore Copy Corps 842-2001 "We deliver" 99¢/page Typing (pica) ($1.10 elite) "One Stop Thesis Shop" 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! Then come to the Chancery Club the Pre-law Club-meeting Thursday, March 27, 7:30 THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 PRE-LAW? Funded by Student Senate Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 Thursday, March 27, 7:30 p.m. Coal Miner's Daughter Staring Sissy Spacek Eve. 7:15 and 9:30 2. Little Darlings Staring Tatum O Neal and Kristy McNic Eve. 7:45 and 9:50 1. Chapter Two Staring Marsha Mason and James Cal. Eve. 7:15 and 9:45 3. Kramer vs. Kramer Staring Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep Eve, 7:30 and 9:40 Hero At Large Staring John Ritter Eve, 7:30 and 9:30 Granada Downtown 843-5788 1. All That Jazz Starring Roy Schreider Eve, 7:30 and 9:40 Keith Meyer; KU Criminal Law Professor Room 203 New Green Hall 2. Little Miss Marker Pw Starring Walter Matthieu and Julie Andrews Feb. 7, 2010 & 9, 30 - Whether Sophomore, Junior, or Senior, learn how you can prepare for law school admission and schooling. Everyone is welcome! Attorney Professor Colt Knutson; Lawrence City Mike Malone; District Attorney - Enjoy informal discussions with: 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 Johannesburg, South Africa. Akase Peace Corps volunteers why they travel to Africa, Asia and Latin America to work with farmers, teachers, and trades people. Akase VISTA volunteers why they work for a yearian organization poor people in their American neighborhoods. They'll probably say they want to travel help people are homeless and meet different people. Ask someone who been there. SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARRHUTH-O'LEARY BEFORE APRI 2, 1980. PEACE CORPS VISTA oku? THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. 90, No. 116 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Kings lose, fall two back See story page 12 Wednesday, March 26, 1980 Kennedy claims two-state victory NEW YORK (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy upbeat President Carter in his 2016 re-election night, revitalizing his challenge for the White House and silencing the Democrats New York gave Kennedy more than a victory. It gave him a surprise landscape. Former U. Ambassador George Bush won the Republican primary in Connecticut, gaining a comeback of his own. But Reagan supporters won the majority of New York GOP delegates, so swell his already commanding lead in nationwide nominating Bush, in Milwaukee, said the connecticut victory bodies well for him in Wisconsin next Tuesday. "It looks to me like I was getting my point across," he said. "If it made a difference there it will make a difference here." Reagan, in Longview, Tex., said he never thought he'd win Connecticut, "it being George's territory." Bush won by five percentage points. John B. Commly, who recently withdrew from the Republican presidential race, had thrown his support away to Ronald Kruger in him "the second-best man I can think of." The Kennedy camp, accustomed to to almost weekly defeats, finally had something to celebrate. Kennedy's six wins lead to Connecticut and its 16-hole team lead in New York. Kennedy said the New York and Connecticut voters 'were sending a very clear and powerful message . . . that they can no longer resist 18 percent of their votes that made them ... I think we're going to see that "repeated in states all across this country," he said. "I think we're well on the road." he added. The former Carter in nominating delegate strength. Kennedy said he now would resume the campaign 'renewed by the expressions of support and confidence' and said he hoped that his plan would be the normation at the national convention. "The bubble's burd for Jim Carter," said Tom Southwick, Kennedy's spokesman. He said Kennedy's victories would be an enormous boost for fund-raising. Reagan said New York "certainly is going to quiet those people who are telling Kennedy he ought to set out of the race." He said the defeats were due at least in part to Carter's decision to balance the budget and to the controversy over the administration's U.N. vote critical of Israel. At the White House, Press Secretary Jody Powell said last night's losses would not lead Carter to begin campaigning actively. The House is confident she faced a difficult struggle to overcater Jackie. Robert Strauss, Carter's campaign manager also blamed the president's failure to meet a deadline for anti-Israel resolution at the United Nations—later termed an mistake—and on his own actions. Powell said Kennedy would have to win 63 percent of all the Democratic delegates still to be chosen to catch Carter. "It hurt, it hurt," Strauss said of the U.N. vote. But he told followers in New York, "I don't count this as a loss but as a dip along the road." Even in double defeat, Carter was gaining delegate strength, and in that column, he carries a nationwide lead Kennedy will find difficult to overcome. With 99 percent of the precincts counted in New York's delegate-rich Democratic primary, the results read: Kennedy 573,713, or 59 percent, for 163 delegates. BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff Carter 399,441, or 41 percent, for 119 delegates. This was the picture in Connecticut, with all the votes counted. ADVERSE Kennedy 98,571 votes, or 47 percent, for 29 national vote delegates Carter 87,108 votes, or 41 percent, for 25 deleates. California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr had 3 percent, as did minor candidate Lyndon LaRouche. Six percent of the ballots were uncommitted. Bush 70,070, or 39 percent, for 15 deleates. Reagan 61,333, or 34 percent, for 14 deleates. Rep. John B. Anderson of Illinois 40,481, or 22 percent. for 6 delicates. Rep. Philip M. Crane d Illinois received 1 percent; the balance went to a minor candidate and three entries who already participated in the campaign. Two percent were unaccounted. In New York, where Republican candidates were not on the ballot, Reagan supporters won easily. They had 73 wins. Bush only 6, with 38 uncommitted. With his New York and Connecticut delegates, Reagan had a total of 327 of the 998 it will take to win the Republican nomination. Bush had 69. Anderson 45. Neither New York nor Connecticut permit crossover voting by independents and Democratse, whose ballots had boycotted Anderson in three earlier primaries. Carter appeared likely to emerge from the two primaries with a national total of 746 delegates, Kennedy with 384. It will take 1,666 to win the Democratic nomination. grabbed bumper stickers and buttons from the Anderson supporters' booths and spent about half an hour yesterday morning stalling "All for Anderson" at cars on the street. sean reenu, 121 Crestine Drive, and Chris Stanawi, 1134 Delaware St, urge passengers to vote for their presidential choice. John Anderson. The two 11-year-olds- Kid campaigners Vote pending on BGS changes By RICK HELLMAN Staff Renorter Twos degrees They are: THE PROPOSAL that the Assembly will be voting on the number of members for graduation at the BGS degree. The College Assembly last night approved a final vote on a proposal that would extend a number of new requirements to the Bachelore of General Studies degree as part of a basic skills package. *Completion of a third course in English that employs composition or demonstration of equivalent proficiency. - Completion of Speech Communications and Human Relations 130, 150 or 230 or demonstration of equivalent patient care. would be required to complete either a second course in mathematics beyond Math 092 or one course in logic. The proposal, which will be submitted to the entire Assembly by mail ballot, is the result of a two-year process of evaluation of degree requirements by the College of Architecture. If passed, the requirements would take effect in the fall of 1982. *Completion of Mathematics 002, or approval of an answer to Mathematics 104, 102, 115, 115, or 124 or demonstration. The College Assembly is the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and is responsible for setting policies. - Completion of four courses from those designated by the BGS World Civilization and Culture requirements. Students who complete 10 hours in a foreign language would be exempt from two of the four courses and would receive an equivalent credit. All students who do not complete Mathematics 115 or 121 The purpose of the requirement is to acquaint the students with cultures, societies, nations and civilizations other than their own through study of different languages, literatures, histories and geographies. See ASSEMBLY page 11 Hearing delayed by BSU conflict Lobbying for the Black Student Union budget by the Student Senate and other departments by the committee at Student Senate budget budget. Tanya Ivy, Student Services chairman and BSU vice president, fought the committee for funding for printing expenses. After nearly an hour, the BSU budget proposal, presented to the committee Monday night, cut by 1.137 to $493.82. Ivory argued that a cut of $841 from films would cripple BSU's attempt to provide services for students. "We're talking about culture, not fun." she said. But Kevin Mebut, a committee member, said the group could raise enough revenue by charging admission to the rams rather than selling tickets. ERIC HARNESS, a committee member, said, "I think $250 would give the group enough money to obtain high quality materials." to generate a sufficient amount to provide a self-perpetuating operation. See related story page three "It will allow them to obtain adequate projectors and projector operators as well as the film itself. It gives them a one-shot chance. If they charge a $1 to $1.50 fee, it can generate enough to run other films." Groups requesting funds were Women's Coalition, $825; Commission on the Status of Women, $481.91; Consumer Affairs, $12.38; MECHA, $1,068.75; Sierra Club, $855; Campus Safety Servery, $1,087; KUYU, $2,121.07; and Immorvative Internationally, $251.36. The KU Tae Twean Do Club may not receive funds if the Sports Committee's preliminary recommendations from last night's basketball game are approved. Nine other organizations presented budget proposals last night to the committee, emphasizing expansion and advertising The committee was reluctant to fund the Tae Kwon Do club because members said Choon Lee, the instructor, appeared to be in a bad mood. "The committee members are reluctant to fund the club because it is advertising to increase the man's business," Evans, commends. THE TAE KWON DO Club want $180 of its $750 budget for advertising in the University Daily Kansas. See BUDGET page 11 Also in question was $200 the club requested for the purchase of protective equipment. Committee member Mark Holloway said the club seemed to want the money to fund equipment for the KU branch of Lee's school. A man and his dog walk along a river at night. The man is wearing a thick coat, while the dog appears to be dark-colored. The water reflects their images. Lone angler Fishing in wintery* dreary weather was Greg Marcekinowski, 12 of 31 Fipfice Drive. But the inhabitants of Potter Lake were in *dreary* dreary. Campaigns aided by Action 80 members Staff Reporter Members of Action 80, a private organization developing plans to assist companies for more than 10 percent of the contributions to the campaigns of four city commissioners, accr Ten Action 80 members contributed to the election campaigns of Mayor Barkley Clark and City Council member Robert Carter and Don Binns. Commissioner Marc Francisco did not receive contributions Francisco, Binns and Schumm were elected in 1979, and Carter and Clark were elected in 1977. The largest individual contributions by Action 80 members were $100. But Clark said he did not expect the contributions to affect the commission's vote on the downtown mail proposal. "I really don't think we operate that way," he said. "I have no idea how much any member of Action 80 contributed my efforts and I don't really care who contributed." However, Francisco, who is often hesitant to approve development in the city, said she thought the commissioners' tie to Action 80. Schumm said that despite the $230 he received from Action 80 members, he opposed an enclosed mall anywhere in Lawrence. could make it difficult to reject the downtown mall proposal. "There will be some tension," she said. "It's hard to take money from people without feeling somewhat in debt. Carter received almost $500, Clark received $270, and Bins received $120 Clark said he thought the Action 80 contributions were large because the members were wealthy and politically active. KU profs lobby for merit benefits By GRANT OVERSTAKE Staff Reporter THREE KU professors, lobbying for higher merit salary increases for Renssons school's faculty members, were in Topeka yesterday after a group of students sent messages to members of the KU宿舍 House. Evelyn Swartz, a member of the University Senate executive committee; held a series of public meetings on chapter of the American Association of University Professors; and William Scott, president-elect of the Kansas State Conference, gave an afternoon meeting minutes with Speaker of the House Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, and House Ways and Means Committee chairman Mike In addition to faculty salaries, the group, made a pitch for KU operating expenses—particularly for Watson Library. The professors called the meeting "productive." THE KANSAS Senate has approved a 10 "We presented a general notion that it is impossible without better salary increases to keep professors in the job, properly and still keep young professors," Scott said yesterday. "It matters a lot of points. They didn't promise anything, but they said they would keep the ideas in mind going into the conference." "We came out with the hope that the final salary appropriation will be at least 9% percent," Strinvasan said. SWART2 CALLED the current faculty salary situation "very serious." Every percentage point is important with merit salary appropriations because each point represents 1.5 million dollars to the school's salary budget, Strinivasan said. percent merit salary increase for Regents schools' faculty next year. The House has approved an 8 percent pay increase. When the conference committee meets in early April, the proposals will be combined. After the proposal, Hayden are likely to be on that committee. A stipulation in the Senate's salary recommendation says that two percent of the budget for the faculty members who have made significant teaching contributions, or ten percent of the faculty members who have made significant teaching contributions, or ten percent of the faculty members who have made significant teaching contributions. "This presents a problem both in terms of mechanics and the fact that unclassified staff will not be eligible for the two percent increase that teachers can receive for teaching will be amended," he said. "I know a lot of junior faculty members who have grown families who are experiencing financial problems," she said. "Most of them love university teaching and learning." would not want to change, but I don't know what's going to happen if economic conditions are not better for them, and, indeed, for all faculty members."37 "It sounds like a threat and don't it want to sound like it," he said, "but I have talked with faculty members who are extremely worried that their university has gone down in the past few years. "Many faculty members have large classes. Many also teach on-campus as a service to the University. They're really knocking themselves out. If they aren't adequately paid they will be unhappy. I don't think they're having much when they are giving more and more to help to help the University through an uncertain period if their real income goes down." SCOTT, professor of English, will become president of the Kansas State Conference of the AUAP next year. He said Regent's College would be unified on the issue of further salaries. Srinivasan was on lobbying on behalf of the AAUP during the past three Legislative sessions, but he said that traveling to the United States is not enough to secure higher faculty salaries. "This has to be a year-round operation and not just at the time of the Legislative session," he said. A 2 Wednesday, March 26,1980 University Daily Kansan NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas Wise Surveys Three Colombians aet freedom The men walked out of the embassy at 3:35 carrying small bundles that appeared to be clothing. BOGGTA, College-Leftist guerrillas who have occupied the Dominican Republic. Economics for 28 days released three of their 32 hostages yesterday. All Military sources outside the embassy identified the men as Jorge Calceo, Jorge Cendales and Fernando Bentancur, Colombian citizens who are not diplomats but who were the diplomatic reception at the embassy with whom they worked. They completed the 28 restitution missions, as well as 19 diplomats of ambassadorial rank. The released men waved at the hostages remaining behind as they turned a corner at the head of the cul-de-sac leading to the embassy. February price index up 1.4% WASHINGTON--Consumer prices for February rose 1.4 percent according to a government report yesterday. Last month's increase in the Labor Department's Consumer Price Index was the same as the 1.4 percent rise in January. At the present rate, an annual rate of increase is $0.53 per month. Price increases averaged just over 1 percent each month last year. Much of the increase was blamed on sharper higher gasoline and home The Labor Department also reported that inflation was eating into earnings as well. President Carter is still working out the details of a new, broad-based attack on inflation. However, once in place, the program is not expected to have an impact. Average weekly earnings fell 1.4 percent from January to February as in- ation hours increased of hours worked overpowered a modest 0.85 rate in hourly earnings. Food prices in grocery stores actually fell 0.4 percent, reflecting declines in the prices for fresh pork, pork, poultry and eggs, the report said. But food prices have been rising since last month. Gasoline prices rose 7.3 percent in February, nearly keeping pace with January's 4.3 percent jump. IPRISPANYP, N.J.-General Public Utilities Corp. filed a $500 million negligence suit yesterday against the manufacturer of the crippled Three Mile The action came three days before the first anniversary of the worst accident in the history of American commercial nuclear energy. Home heating oil prices rose 1.3 percent, housing costs went up 1.4 percent and medical care costs rose 1.5 percent. Three Mile Island lawsuit filed The suit, filed in federal court in New York City, charges Babcock & Wilcox Co. with gross negligence and failing to abide by its contractual obligation to provide written procedures and training services necessary for the operation of the plant. Also named as a defendant was J. Ray McDermott & Co. Inc., parent company of Babcock and Wileox. Two of two reactors at Three Mile Island, a $1.3 billion complex near Harrisburg, Pa., was damaged in the March 28, 1978, nuclear accident. The reactor exploded in an undisclosed location. Bombs rock mourning nation SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Terrorist bomb explosions rocked the capital yesterday, schools closed and the government called for national mourning for Archbishop Oscar Arruilo Romero, a critic of violence felled by an assassin's bullet while he was saving Mass. Authorities said at least 30 bombs exploded throughout the country between 3 and 4 a.m. on Sunday, according to local media. The bombing took place in the midday morning of the 29-year-old Roman Catholic archbishop. Local radio stations said the People's Revolutionary Army, one of a half dozen left guardia organizations, claimed in anonymous phone calls that they A police spokeman said no one was killed or injured. The bombs damaged storefronts, business offices, banks and factory buildings. Romero, an advocate of social reform, was shot in the chest while at the altar in the chapel of the Hospital of Divine Providence, which he established for terminal cancer patients. A radio station said four gunmen invaded the chapel, where about 150 persons had gathered. West Bank Palestinians strike HEBRON, Occupied West Bank - Palestinian Arabs staged a general strike yesterday throughout the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River to protest Israel's plan to settle Jews here, and there were signs the already-strained Israeli-European Palestinian autonomy negotiations faced new trouble. The decision prompted an almost total shutdown of businesses and schools yesterday in the Israeli-occupied Arab cities of Hebron, Nablus, Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jericho and Halhoul on the West Bank. Partial strikes were reported in Jenin and smaller West Bank towns. Israeli spokesman said the only violent outbreak was in the town of Bir Zeit, 15 miles north of Jerusalem, where younsters threw stones at Israeli vehicles. The Army Radio station reported that troops fired into the air to disperse the group. Wolf Creek shares available Gil Hanison, general manager of the Northwest Kansas Municipal Energy Agency, said he contacted KG&E twice about buying power. Hanson said Monday that in January 1978 KG&E ruled out plant sales, but that in December 1979 KG&E told him it could sell its up to 60 megawatts of the plant. KIG&E and Twenty-six rural electric cooperatives are expected to purchase another 41.5 percent of the electricity market. WICCHITA – Financial difficulties have prompted Kansas Gas & Electric Co. plans to offer 50% of its capital to the Creek nuclear generation plant in order to underwrite the Creek investment. Hanson said KG&E's offer was for ownership in the plant at a cost of $1,400 a kilowatt, if the municipalities made purchases by Jan. 1. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — More than 10 citizens are expected to testify at a public hearing this week on proposed emergency energy-saving measures, but indications are that most of them will be arguing against one of the least significant of the proosals. The U.S. Department of Energy wants to know how the public likes its nine-point conservation proposal, which includes measures from cutting most greenhouse gas emissions. DOE to hold hearings in KC The two days of public hearings are set for today and Thursday in Kansas City, the last of a series of eight such sessions across the country. - to force drivers to keep their vehicles off the road from one to three days a week, - to continue heating and air conditioning limits for public buildings; • to set up employer programs to encourage car-and van-pooling; • to provide safety training; It will be cloudy today with a 40 percent chance of rain and a high around 40, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the northwest. Weather The clouds will begin to clear off tomorrow, with a high in the low 40s. It will be mostly cloudy tonight with a low near 30. By LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter Center to conduct solar surveys The Appropriate Technology Resource Center (ATRC) and the University class at KU, Weibull said. We now has 30 to 40 members who promote "app-to-class" education that defines as "the use of small-scale, low-cost, energy-efficient, environmentally safe and locally managed meetings of meeting groups." A Lawrence energy collective, with official sanction from the city, is out to prove that it can shine productively on rich and poor alike. The community development budget recently approved by the Lawrence City Commission included a $2,000 allocation for solar panels at the Center, a lawrence company that plans to try small-scale solar experiments in community development target neighborhoods—moderate to low-income areas or federal community development guidelines. GARY WEBBER, a VISTA volunteer and staff member of the center said recently that energy experimentation moved extremely slow among individuals, as opposed to energy corporations, because no local models were available for local residents. "There's nothing people can walk up to, look at, feel the heat being produced, and say, 'That's not too bad!' " Webber said. So, with its $2,000 the center plans to saturate residents with opportunities to touch, see and warm themselves with the realthing. residents to apply for experimental energy projects for their homes. The center's staff will then conduct "solar access surveys" at the houses of those who apply. These on-site examinations will measure how much the sun is blocked by obstacles such as buildings and trees. They also will check the home's insulation and heat use, and finally will determine what project would best meet the brace's needs. Starting in June, the center will invite POSSIBLE PROJECTS, Webber said, are window box heaters that also can be used for growing seedlings or as solar wall-collectors. City and federal energy projects, he said, often have the "mystique of the expert" to community residents. They see the value of solar energy but feel overwhelmed by it. Once the staff has chosen the most suitable sites for models, the center will hold workshops to construct them. Weber said. In the workshops, professional car dealers the residents of the selected homes burn tires in neighborhood residents in builds the models. The amount of money a low-income resident could save on a solar project depends on variables such as the size of the house, the amount of sun. Webber said. "The antithesis of this, I guess, would be nuclear power," Webber said. "We provide a positive alternative to that." WEBBER SAID he had two goals for the project—the transfer of skills and the tightening of communities. The savings are computed as a 'pay-back rate,' the number of seasons it would take to pay for the project materials and labor. The savings are a 'pay-back rate' of one to five years, he said. The workshops, he said, could provide the skills that would give residents the confidence to truy their own projeets. The other desired result, he said, would be "the return gotten from things done together as a community." TONIGHT IS Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK Why Look Anywhere Else? Watermelon and White Esprit Romper. Clothes Encounter ~in step with your style Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa Wednesday, March 26 The Lubitsch Touch TO BE OR NOT TO BE sua films HEAVEN CAN WAIT Dir. Ernest Lubishik, with Jack Benny, Carole Lombard (in her last illumination) and Danielle Reineau, with Europe is the setting for this bilingual salute of star actors traveling across the globe. (1942) Thursday, March 27 LUNA Dirn. Erasm Lubitch, with Don Ameche, Gene Tierney. A very entertaining story of a recently deceased n'er-doewell who must justify to the world that he was sent to heaven. Plus: "Homebody," a short film by KU Alumus Steve Johnson. Dir. Bernardo Bertolucio, with Jill Baylury, Matthew Barry, David Fwynne. An American star open her career in the 1960s with her heroin-addicted teenaged ion. From the director of 1900 and ASTANGO IN PARIS. 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, in 35mmf $1.50 Friday & Saturday. March 27-28 THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE Dir. Liu Bunnel, with Fernando Rey, Carole Bouquet, Angela Molina. A man in his fifties falls badly in love with a woman she plays with, the woman, played by two different actresses, his affections with an artist, his delightful film by the director of L'AGE DOR and BELLE DE JOUR. Franebis frutescens. Midnight Movies ROCK 'N' ROLL HIGH SCHOOL Dil Amanik, with P.J. Soles. The Ramones, New Wave rockers the Ramones play a high school rock and roll band. In school officials; however, anarchy reigns. Lots of fun and loud music. Plus: a short prom film with Cheap Sunday, March 30 THE GODFATHER, PART II (1875) Dir. Francis Ford Coppola, with Alex Dekenon, Steve Albright, Daniel Kebenan, Tala Tisha, Lee Strasberg, John Cazale, Excellent continuation of the story of the Coral Reefs. Unless otherwise noted: all film will be shown at Woodfair Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R films are $1.00 and $1.50; start and end tickets $1.00, 7:30, 8:00, and midnight on Fri. & Sat., and at 2:00 on Sunday, tickets available at the UBA Office, Union 5th Level or refreshments allowed. Use Kansan Classified Just ask! DOMINO'S PIZZA Order any size pizza and sell two free trees of Coke! No coupon necessary. all you have to do is ask! *Copyright 1980. C216932-12 Save! Fax, free delivery 444 W. 23rd St. Telephone 841-749-6010 DOMINO'S PAZZA 610 Florida Telephone: (841)-8002 Custody: No of all phone names, calls, texts, taxes Wednesday, March 26, 1980 Leben fights student ticket hikes All things that go up don’t necessarily speak to the student. The sport is spearheading an effort to bring down the price of student season basketball tickets when the KU athletics advisory board meets. Leben a student member of the University of Washington, an advisory board, sent letters and a memo to various student and administrative officials this week criticized announcing ticket price changes. The athletic department announced in February that all basketball tickets would increase 50 cents per game next year. That season student ticket prices from $11.90 to $14.90 Leben sent the memo to Student Sense Athletic Seating Board members, the chairman and student members of the board, the athletic board, the athletic director, and several others. The memo said, "The current proposals of the KUAC do not fairly reflect past actions of the KUAC Board, equity to the student and the importance of student ticket buwers. "The unfairness is seen in two specific cases: the price increase on student basketball tickets and the price rise would rise 59 percent, while prices for all other categories would rise either 6 percent or 7 percent." "And the price increase for next year would mean even though students had finished their course, they would not East Stadium addition to Memorial Stadium, their ticket prices would not be higher." LEBEN ASKED Athletic Director Bob Marcum to meet with student members of the advisory board before the board's April 7 meeting to discuss the ticket increase. Marcum was out of town and unavailable for comment yesterday. Although student season basketball tickets were reduced this season to $15 to $11, Leben said that the drop reduced department revenues by only half-a-big portion of what it had been receiving each $2 from the ticket tickets revenue to pay off the stadium debt. He also said he hoped a meeting with Marcum could provide a solution to the department's financial problems as well as the removal of the old stadium surmise. Leben said he had received no reaction from administrators, but said, "students have indicated general agreement that the KUAC was not fair and should be changed." ONE STUDENT who has changed her mind about the necessity of the increase is Anne Levinson, chairman of the Student Senate Athletic Seating Board, which in February gave approval to the ticket increase. "No one like an increase. But from the information they the athletic department provided," Levinson said. "We told them at that time, with the information we had then, that we were more confident." But now, after studying the materials supplied by Leben, she said, "It's in a different light." Levinson said she would call a meeting of her four-member board, before the April 7 KUAC board meeting, to reconsider its support of the increase. ULTIMATELY, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes would increase the approve when he approves the fiscal 1981 athletic department budget. Med Center announces plan to phase out AMS By GREG SACKUVICH Staff Reports Staff Reporter The University of Kansas Medical Center plans to phase out American Management Services from its housekeeping department over a one-year period beginning April 17, Rodger supports of support services, said yesterday. Francis Jacobs, union president, said, "We won't turn it (the plan) down until we know more about it, but we're not satisfied." But the plan first must be approved by the Public Service Employees Union, which represents the Med Center states, and the state office of accounting. AMS has been accused of harassing the custodians at the Med Center. AMS had a housekeeping contract with KU on the Lawrence campus, but it was not renewed when it expired last November. At that time there also were 18 students, the custodians of alleged harassment. The plan to phase out AMS was announced on a Monday night meeting between the union and the Wyandotte County Legislative Committee, Jacobs Also discussed at the meeting was a proposal by the union to have the custodians naid bi-weekly. The union was first told by the Med Center that bi-weekly pay was not possible because the state accounting department said the more frequent pay day, Jacobs said. But Jacobs said he was told the biweekly pay period could have been implemented five months ago. Budget workshops to aid groups By VANCE HINER Staff Reporter A lack of minority participation in the Student Senate hurts the chances for increased funding of minority groups, accords with public opinion and the Senate Minority Affairs Committee. Brady, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said yesterday that many minority groups that have been accused of stealing money because they were not represented on senate committees or were ignorant of The workshops, sponsored by the Minority Affairs Committee, have already helped several groups with their budget proposal Brady said he was organizing workshops designed to help students prepare budget requests and increase their awareness of Senate activities and procedures. preparations for this year, according to Brady. GOOD BUDGET proposals are only part of the solution to the minority group funding that exists in their communities, and students on the budget committees who understand and identify with minority groups. "I'm not saying we have a bunch of prejudiced people in the Senate," Brady said. "Sometimes they're just not aware of minority problems." Greg Schneack, student body president, said he didn't think that minority groups were being ignored by the Senate. Because student participation has been poor throughout the student body, Schmaekse said, he didn't think minority groups were at fault for underperforming students' actions for Senate fundraising than other groups. According to Brady, inflation and the increased number of groups requesting money this year make it extremely implem entible for them to be organized and informed about the Senate. "Some groups will be cut to zero this year," he said. "Minorities have to fight for their funding because they are minorities. It's part of the democratic process." BRADY SAID minorities should have little problem getting representatives on committees. Getting freshmen involved with student politics is the key to improving minority participation in the future, he said. Brady is organizing a workshop scheduled for April 19 that is aimed at encouraging minority participation in student government. Drug labeling omits inactive ingredients By CINDY WHITCOME Staff Reporter Labels on the drugs are required to state only the amount of active ingredients, King, a Lawrence pharmacist, said. The absence of government regulations on inactive ingredients in drugs caused diffuse infections, and the Newton King, president of the State Pharmacist Association, told a senior minister. question about the differences between over-the-counter drugs. "Most of the active ingredient in an aspirin tablet, for example, could probably fit on the point of a pencil," he said. "Three-fourths of most vitamin tablets is inactive, 'King said. "That means that only 250 of 1,000 milligrams in each tablet is active." King used the example of the difference between Tynolen, a non-aspirin pain reliever, and aspirin to answer one woman's Most aspirins contain a pain-killing ingredient to reduce fever and an anti-inflammatory ingredient to help with arthritis. Aspirin also cannot contain the anti-inflammatory ingredient. KING SUGGESTED that the best way to insure that people are using the best type of medication is to consult pharmacists and to get to know them personally. There are also problems with taking prescription drugs, King said. "If the label says, 'take with liquids,' water should be used, 'King said,' Milk and fruit juice contain antibiotics that cause bad reactions with the drugs." people who took the National Medication Awareness Test at the luncheon in conjunction with King's presentation. Most are eating before eating meant "an emptier stomach." King said that if a label read, "take on an empty stomach" the best time to take the true would be one or two hours after eating. "There is an acid build-up in the stomach before eating," King said. "This is not a good time to take drugs." Learning the correct dosages and directions for taking medication can eliminate adverse reactions, such as nausea, King said. THIS WAS surprising to many of the King's presentation was the fourth part of a series of lectures called, "Prescriptions made by the Church." The book will be made at 12:30 p.m., April 4 and 7 at the Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th St. (the series, sponsored by the Council on Aging of North Carolina), and 1820 N. 19th St. Association is open to anyone older than 60. Two C bare by bare traps Open air styling Barefoot comfort. Get them at Arensberg's You'll wear them everywhere. Available in multi-color only Available in red & beige Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Massachusetts THE MOUSE THAT ROARED Fri, March 28 at 7 & 9:30 pm Sat, March 29 at 2, 7, & 9:30 pm DYCHE AUDITORIUM $1.25 and 75* for kids under 12 presented by KU Science Fiction & Fantasy Ass'n Partially funded by Student Senate Set, N --- Since you all enjoyed the 1/2 price jean sale last week, King of Jeans will throw another one this week—but instead of jeans we'll give you a... 1/2 Price Shirt or Top Sale Today through Sunday only It works the same way! Buy any men's or women's shirt or top, and get a 2nd shirt or top of equal or less value for only... It works the same way! 1/2 Price This sale includes sale items! So, you could buy TWO of our Kennington Short Sleeve Knits, which have been marked down to $13.99 (reg. $27) for $13.99+ $6.99=$20.98 Just think—$20.98 for TWO SHIRTS!! A SAVINGS OF $25! DON'T MISS THIS EXCELLENT CHANCE TO SAVE AT KING of Jeans 740 Massachusetts SALLE LEVI'S Lawrence's largest and most complete jean store UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the authors. March 26,1980 Clothes-mindedness If James Pickert, Kansas Board of Regents nominee from Emporia, his way, theatre groups at Regents schools will be forced to keep their birthday suits in their closets—or at least off campus stages. Pickert, who is awaiting final approval of his appointment from the full Senate of the Kansas Legislature, told the Senate Select Committee on Appointments earlier this month that he would favor a statewide ban on all nude productions, collegiate or non-collegiate. His response was in reply to a direct question passed to him by one of the lawmakers. He said one could inter that the lawmakers again have mortality-by-legislation on their minds. nevertheless, the issue is ludicrous dangerous. Nudity, or more precisely, the beauty of the human body, always has been a fundamental source of inspiration in the creative arts, whether it be incorporated in a play or in a piece of sculpture. Perhaps this pending proposal of a statewide ban also should include photographs and replicas of the Venus de Milie, Michelangelo's David and Duchamp's "Nude Descending a Staircase." Admittedly, the human body also has been exploited in endeavors that have no apparent redeeming value. Portography, including all perversions imaginable, has run ranchy and rampant for many years. But surely no one can be so close minded as to conderm ALL nudity as pornographic, distasteful or unnecessary. Pickert said that as a Regent he would have to consider each instance of nudity in stage productions on an individual basis, and yet he also said he favored a statewide ban. That is blatantly a bit of bare-faced double talk. He also is willing to accept theude modeling done in art classes based on models created by adverse public reaction to it and because "it must be an accepted practice." That is naked inconsistency. Pickert suggests that the general public is offended by nudity on the stage. The obvious, more reasonable alternative to a statewide ban solving that problem is for those persons who are not likely to attend one. They are certainly now to make that choice. No one will force them to go if they don't want to. But if a ban were implemented, that choice would be eliminated and those persons who wanted to see the play would be forced not to. Banning theatre productions just because they reveal more than usually meets the standards of censorship—a kind that could have serious ramifications. If a play is too hot for you to handle, Pickert, stay away from it. But don't support the stoking of legislative fires to Fahrenheit 451. Looking for fun kills thrill of spontaneity By SUZANNE BRITT JORDAN New York Times Special Features RALEIGH, N.C.—Fun is hard to have. Fun is a rare jewel. Somewhere along the line people got the modern idea that long was for there on the asking, that people deserved fun, that if you would turn into a salesperson, you would turn into a salesperson. alive) purposely. When pleasure got to be the main thing, the fun fief was sure to follow. Everything was supposed to be fun. If it wasn't fun, then by Jove, we were going to make it fun. "Was it fun?!" *runnily* the question that would be asked, questions like, what, *was it moral?* *was it kind?* *was it honest?* *Was it beneficial?* *Was it honest?* *Was it necessary?* *And why* ( favors) was it selfless? Just to make sure that everybody knew how much fun we were having, we put happy faces on flanking test papers, dirty refrigerator doors, refrigerator bathroom mirrors, Think of all the things that got the reputation of being fun. Family outings to be fun, education to be fun, be fun. Education was supposed to be fun. Work was supposed to be fun. Walt Disney was supposed to be fun. Church was supposed to be fun. Staying fit was supposed to be fun. IF A KID, looking at his very happy parents trailing up to that very happy Disney World, said, "This isn't no fun, ma', his ma's heart sank. She wondered where she was going." What fun family outings to Disney World would be, Golly see, what the matter? Fun got to be such a big thing that everybody started to look for more and more of it. You could say that was to step up the level of danger or licentiousness or alcohol or drug consumption so that you could be sure that, what, you would manage to have a little fun. Television commercials brought a lot of fun and loving-folks into the picture. The people in these commercials did lovely work, and the Polaroid snapshots, swishing beer, buying insurance, mopping the floor, bowl, taking pictures could have as much fun as those rough-and-ru ready guys around the locker room, flickering up their clothes and shaking champagne. The more commercial people watched, the more they wondered when the fur would start in their own lives. It was very scary. BIG OCCASIONS were supposed to be fun. Christmas, Thanksgiving and Easter were obviously supposed to be fun. Your wedding day was supposed to be fun. Your wedding night was supposed to be a whole lot of fun. Your honeymoon was supposed to be the best time of your life, going through every big event we ever celebrated, waiting for the fountain to start. It occurred to me, while I was sitting around waiting for the fun to start, that not much is, and that I should tell you just in case we worried about your fun capacity. I don't mean to put a dumper on things. I just mean we ought to treat fluenverly. It is a mystery. It cannot be caught like a virus. It cannot be trapped like an animal. You can use it, but the more those years of thinking fun was everywhere by refusing to come to our party. I don't want to blaspheme fun anymore. When fun comes in on little dancing feet, you probably won't be doing anything when you're doing your duty, your job, or when you work. It may even come on a Tuesday. I REMEMBER one day, long ago, on which I had an especially good time. Parm received her first library drugstore a Saturday morning to buy some candy. We were about 12 years old (fun ages). She got her Bite-O-Money. I got her a $100 reward. Chunky, and a small bag of M&Ms. We started back to her house. I was going to spend the night. We had the whole day to go shopping and see friends, but it was a long way to Pam's house but every time we got wavy Parm would put her hand over her eyes, scan the horizon like a sailor. Then she would stare at which point the two of us would laugh until we thought we could stay in there all day. Then we would say it again. You should have been there. It was the kind of day and friendship and occasion that made me deeply regretful that I had to grow up. It was fun It was fun. Suzanne Britt Jordan is a writer. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas Telephone Numbers Newroom 464-8418 Riverfront 464-8418 UU97540468 Published at the University of the Philippines Daily August through May and December and Thursday December 21, 2018 at 10:00 AM EST. All contributions to the publication are by mail addressed to UU97540468 by registered charity # RR3 for six months or # RR5 for a year in Guam and # HI for six months or # HI for a year in Hawaii. Contributions may be made to the University of the Philippines Daily at the following addresses: Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kaman, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, IA 56904. Managing Editor Dana Miller Editor James Anthony Fitts Editorial Editor Brenda Watson Business Manager Vincent Coultis Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins General Manager Rick Musser KU has its own version of slapstick The University of Kansas, the Kannao Board of Regents, and the Kansas State University Three Stooges. Moe (the Regents) hirs Curly (KU) on the head, while Larry (the Legislature) gives them both the old one-eyed brother. The Regents something out of an old slapstick comedy. In this comedy, KU serves as the pigeon who always gets the short end of the deal. The farce reaches its peak when KU officials attempt to get faculty salary increases. If you are a KU official, getting approval of faculty salaries from the Legislature is like taking a bore away from a Doberman pinscher with rabies. Although the Regents virtually agreed with KU officials this year concerning their agreement, it also increases the comedy taken on new platforms. So Steppen's latest bumble has been the Regents' approval of our new degree program and of our course strongly "and were urged to be" established as soon as possible." The other program was tabled, but probably will be passed soon. Curly, um, KU, requested the new programs and the Regents obliged. ESTABLISHING NEW degree programs sounds logical: an institution of higher COLUMNIST learning learns to expand its academa capacities. But the priorities of KU, the Regents, and the legislators are hopelessly mixed up. Only a month ago, a Regents request to raise faculty salaries $9.5 percent was cut from KU officials. KU officials, faculty salary increases were this University's highest priority. But KU officials helplessly watched as the department battled the proposed faculty salary increase. Now KU and the Regents want their museums and a laceur of science degree in engineering. Our faculty is totaled up to 186,957. A master of science engineering program, which later will come under approval, will cost an additional $2,200. faculty members to run these new degree programs. We will approve the programs. By adopting new degree programs and yet not adequately paying its faculty members, KU is cutting cost. These dollar figures represent only the numbers of students who will receive many other new programs will come up for approval in the near future. The University will need a lot of money to initiate and to build these programs. DESPITE SEVERAL yearly increases, the buying power of faculty members has increased by 10%. Therefore, approving these new degree programs is not a realistic measure at this time. However, the percentage per cent salary increases before undertaking expansion of the academic series. THE SALARY increases proposed by KU and the Regents, let alone the watered-down increases, will not offset inflation. Truth is, the higher paying jobs, many already have. Faculty who do stay will have the same salary as students' salaries. And dedication can go only so far. The Legislature, Regents, and KU are striving for academic excellence by considering legislation that would offer new degrees. This is to be commended. But their actions are coming at the expense faculty members. The Three Stooges must that faculty members establish the worth of an academic program, not vice versa. TWO PROGRAMS, a master of science degree in historical administration and If adequate salary increases continue to be ignored, faculty members will leave KU. And then even the Keystone Cups will not repair the damage done by the Three Stooges. Anderson alluring third party choice There comes a time in modern presidential campaigns when fringe candidates, political hacks and the media's campaign analysts start talking about "third party candidates." Usually this exercise in speculation comes about the Republican and Democratic frontrunners appear to have the nominations locked up. The analysts and commentators start chattering about the possibility of an alternative party to add some uncertainty to a political process that, by then, is a foregone conclusion. It's an easy way to get around this problem in special (primary) election reports worth watching, and accordingly, to make them more attractive to advertisers. Those political operatives about to find themselves out of a job encourage third party candidates. If a candidate will succumb to the rash notion that he can win it all outside the confines of the two major parties. For those political candidates could mean a political job until November. Geo Bartos KANSAS 80 brenton r. COLUMNIST schlender Thanks to our drawn out season of primaries in which political jousting in January determines the outcome of the conventions in July and August, third party candidates win by a clear margin in election year. In 1986 Eugene McCarthy split from the Democratic Party late in the campaign year, and in 1972 George Wallace had his American Independent Party rolling by early summer. 1976 was an exception, but Wallace's decisive sesquaw affairs all the way to the conventions. AND THIS YEAR we're already hearing rumblings that John Anderson might divorce himself from the Republican Party and run for all the marbles as an independent. Anderson himself stoutly denies such rumors, citing his activities as a leader of the Republicans in Congress, adding that it is too to be making that kind of decision anyway. ANDERSON IS A compelling candidate, but more importantly, he is a credible one. The term "firing candidate" doesn't fit him in the way that Mr. He draws his support from Republicans and Perhaps it IS time for Anderson to consider a third party candidacy, especially if he really believes he offers distinctive new solutions to our country's problems. Caterpillar will move exposure from the media, and it would enlist an otherwise dead campaign. Unfortunately, if we were to believe what the campaign analysts and television producers had said, Ronald Reagan already have the nominations in the bag. It reminds me of a Little League baseball rule that stops a ball from going through a 10-run lead after three innings. Democrats alike, and often for the same reasons. They are more tolerant of alayts, but to his supporters he is a palatable blend of seemingly incongruous ideologies glued together by his calm and unflappable nature. Reagan has built a constituency of extremists and disenchanted Republican whoops in the White House, and leadership. Carter draws his musky support from those who can't stomach Ted Kennedy and from the American voters' patriotism. Reagan's support is solid, but contested by minority party. White House in times of "crisis." In other words, ALTHOUGH THE NOMINATIONS are nearly sewn up, not under Reagan nor Carter has the broad and unashakable support that guarantees a win in November's general election. And the way voters are talking, the two between Carter and Reagan could history the most paltry voter turnout in history. Of course any third party candidacy is a chance for you to win, and I agree that Anderson is much more "electable" than he is "nominatable," but that doesn't translate into choice if he chooses to run. Another concern is where Anderson's votes would come from if he chose to run as a Republican. And the most important into Reagan's solid support. The votes would come from Carter's camp, setting up an electoral split that could do to the election of Obama. And Hubert Humphrey in 1968 that time we got Nixon, and who knows what we'd get this time. STILL, THE COMBINATION of 1890 and John Anderson is alluring. Voters are more disenchanted with political parties than ever before, as the primary system transforms traditional political horse trading and conventioneering into televised beauty contests. Here we are four months from the election, where the nominations are already decided. Anderson certainly is a distinctive kind of candidate who appeals to good judgment and common sense in a time of strident, combative discourse. Anderson's distinctive election in which voters can cast their ballots on the basis of that good judgment and common sense, rather than the individual's After all, we're electing a president, not a party. Profs belong in classes, not crises To the Editor: In response to all the discussion concerning Norman Forer and Clarence Dillingham's escapades in Iran, I think that KU professors have no right to get involved with their students in such a successful in only drawing media attention to themselves while distracting Americans from the truth that the United States must get tough with Iran. Forer and Dillingham are both experts on this issue and feathered as well for their actions. Their pussyfootin' around with the 'Iranians love for the American people' has only prolonged the hotels' imposition of private citizens they should let their elected representatives handle our foreign affairs. Forer and Dillingham deserve to lose their December salaries. I think that they were paid well in publicity, with their pictures adorning the front pages of paper magazines. They have been for several weeks. The University of Kansas should be ashamed of the action of these two and their selfish desire for making names for themselves at the expense of KU's or to recruit students and more importantly, at the expense of national security. A better activity for these two energetic professors would be to explain to the Iranians in this country that Americans see the hostages, and Jimmy Carter as well, as part of their duty to designate and elected representatives chosen by the people second. They could also explain how we value human life. The Iranians should see that we value the lives of more than all of the Iranians in the world. However, Americans should realize that something has to be done to re-establish America as a nation concerned about the future of our planet. Many solutions have been proposed and need to be implemented to convince the world that the United States is not a big stick in regard to international crime. David B. Jones Overland Park senior To the Editor: Probe of Iran crisis is only just solution This letter is in response to a plea made on behalf of the Graves family, whose relative is a bostage in Tehran, Iran, asking for an impartial investigation into the death of his son. is using the hostage problem for personal political purposes. In order that justice in the country be maintained from political taint in this sensitive political year, I propose that the following procedure should be taken: Congress should pass a resolution asking each justice of the Supreme Court to write to a university of their choice and ask them to send their written opinion on a commission to investigate every aspect of the Iranian hostage situation. The commission would have the power to subpoena all individuals and papers including those of the Secretary of State since 1900, etc., that could shed light on the subject. The commission alone would have the power to determine which session would be open or closed, and through the investigation would be In order to insure complete impartiality, Congress would pass a law prohibiting any member of the commission from contacting any member of the commission or their families for the purpose of influencing the work of the commission. A member of the commission would be imposed upon anyone so convicted. When the commission has written its report, it should specify an exact time and date when it would be released. The report should be released to the general public at the same time that it is made available to the public by the Secretary of State and the Congress, so that there would be no possibility of distorting the contents of the report or denial or self-seeking interpolation. Instead of the secrecy that has been employed by the Carter Administration, scholars have based on sound philosophical principles that were proposed by the Jewish philosopher, This method also agrees with the political principle proposed by Abraham Lincoln when he pointed out that when there is a threat to the nation it should be made by the whole nation and not by a small secretive group. This principle has been proven by the research of the United Nations concerning Korea, the Bay of Pigs, Vietnam, Nicaragua, and the Shah of Iran. This problem could be resolved if enough people would write to their congressmen and Joseph Pasnacky former senior student West Virginia University Morgantown, W. Va. 4 5 Few local lawyers advertising By JEFF KIOUS Staff Reporter Most Lawrence lawyers are not ad- marketing their services despite the fact that they can, according to James Salyer of the Douglas County Bar Association. The Kansas Supreme Court in February 1979 amended the Code of Professional Ethics to allow lawyers to advertise their services under a U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1977. But Kansas lawyers have not taken full advantage of the opportunity, according to Marcia Poell, public relations director for the Kansas Bar Association. "Most lawyers feel like it wouldn't pay off to advertise," she said, "or they won't advertise because they're not used to the idea." She said the code provided that Kansas lawyers could advertise in print, radio and television. Kansas is one of 30 states that allows lawyers to advertisement. IN PRINT advertising, for example, a lawyer may advertise 25 points such as fees. field of speciality, the law school he attended and which credit cards he accepts. Wednesday, March 26,1980 "Many lawyers feel that advertising might debase the profession," he said, "or that the advertising might get out of hand. In Lawrence, lawyers are reluctant to advertise because they are not sure how to market their services. Salyer said. "The lawyers may be afraid that advertising will lead to such things as discounts on divorces or neon signs." "Even though advertising has been allowed for more than a year," he said. "It's hard to get lawyers who have practiced 30 or 40 years to change their waws." Salver said many lawyers were "sitting back" to see whether other lawyers would advertise. Charles Stough, a Lawrence lawyer who has practiced law for 42 years, said that although he has no advertising other than a newsletter, he is now also a lawyer to lawyers who advertised their services. STOUGH SAID he thought that it was fine that lawyers advertised their fields of specialty but that he objected to advertising of things such as cut-rates or discounts. Another lawyer, Michael Nichols, said he favored lawyers advertising their specialties, but not their fees. "I don't think it is good the client that a 'i be advertised he'd, said," the advertised fee may be different than the real cost of the content comes in and the facts are determined." Lawyer David Berkowitz said that the advertising of fees could lead to such things as "price wars" or cut-rate sales. "It may be deceptive for a person to get a lawyer based on the fee alone," he said. "Because the advertised fee limits the client, the client will only get his pay for." Berkwitz said his business had increased during the last year because of a display advertisement that he placed in the yellow pages. "I've had such good success with the ad, that I might expand my advertising when I move into my new office," he said. Lack of time forces Salter to resign The Bendover coalition, which ran a candidate for student body president and vice president on an election platform on Thursday, reached a breakneck point this week. Unsuccessful Bendover presidential candidate Tim Salter, who was elected on Monday to serve as Chair of Auditing Committee last month, resigned this week. Salter said class and time constraints prevented him from voting. "Senate doesn't have any power, so it doesn't matter whether I do anything," Sailer said. "Stirring up trouble was fine, but that kind of energy and it didn't change anyone anyway." Salter, a teaching assistant in the department of geology, said he planned to attend regular Senate meetings until the end of the semester. Greg Schmacke, student body president, the university's resignation would not disrupt the operations of the executive committee. Committee, but it would have been advantageous for a graduate student to have an office in the school. "It ito bad Salter didn't stay with it," Schnacke said. "He had some good ideas. Encore Copy Corps 842-2001 "We deliver" BANKSY 3¹ copies (8½ x 11 regular) Now through April 5 We also do typing, editing and art work. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza "I don't think I would have to resign from Senate if I was elected because before anything became critical, Senate would be in shamples," Salter ioked. "No, I really don't know what I would have done." Salter was the only graduate student elected as a chairman in at least two years. He said he was unaware of the committee's role, but he ran for the committee chairmanship. He was busy and he hasn't been doing a lot anyway, so we have had everything under control. It is no big strain." "I'm very professionally oriented right now and Senate is so insignificant that if it has any effect on my studies I would have to give it up." Salter said. would have resigned if he was elected to the Senate presidency. A new committee chairman will be elected tomorrow before the Finance and Auditing unit hearing begins. Brent manager until a new acting chairman until a new one is elected. G&R Foreign Car Specialists 9MPORTS 545 N 3 G & R BODY SHOP has G & R BODY SHOP has changed its name to G & R IMPORTS and expanded to include mechanical repairs as well as top quality body work. So drive out and see us. 843-8222 843-8322 OPEN HOUSE Sat. March 29 1-5 pm Sun. March 30 1-5 pm meado Sun, March 30 10:50 pm Because we know that Meadowbrook living is enjoyable . . . because we know we have a unit designed for you and your lifestyle . . . because we'd like to have you living in Meadowbrook, we're having an OPEN HOUSE! See a studio, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom apartment. Located 3 blocks west of Iowa on 15th, North 1 block on crestline . . . Phone 842-4200 meadowbrook ATTENTION BLACK STUDENT UNION IS ACCEPTING NOMINATIONS FOR THE OFFICES OF Treasurer Recording Secretary Parliamentarian At the BSU office President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary located in B113 Kansas Union now through Thursday, March 27. For further information contact the BSU office at 864-3984. Tuition would pay for foreign study University of Kansas students selected to participate in an International Student Exchange Program will get a chance to travel internationally for no money if more than it costs to go to KU. The ISEP, developed and administered by Georgetown University under a grant from the National Science Foundation, operates on the basis of one-to-one student exchanges between participating institutions. Exchange students will pay KU tuition, fees and room and board (a residence hall contract) for the academic year. The same services will have been paid for by their counterpart at the foreign institution; the students will then exchange places. The only other cost to the student will be transportation and personal expenses for the year. Students who want to apply for the exchange program must have a 3.0 GPA and demonstrate a proficiency in the exchange country's language. University Daily Kansan Theatre to hold auditions; 3 summer plays planned Auditions for the Kansas Repertory Theatre's summer season will be held this weekend, Jack Wight, director of theatre and director of KRT, said last week. Meredith Wilson's "The Music Man" will be directed by Tom L. associate professor of theatre. The musical will use 10-20 Lawrence residents in roles, Wright said. George Feydeau's "Hotel Paradise" will be directed by John-Gronbock Tedesco, assistant professor of theatre. Wright will direct "LaAnn Hampton Lavery Olander," a segment of Preston Jones "The Trasiliy Trono" Auditions for actors of the repertory will be at 10:30 a.m. saturday in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Call-backs will be sent to the audition desk and said by 28 to 35 students would be selected. Community auditions for "The Music Man" will be at 12:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. Call-backs will start at 7 p.m. Persons who audition will be asked to do a cold reading, "Wright" and "Those Assumptions." Those who audition will also prepare song prepared and also be prepared to dance. An accompanist will be available at the audition. Rehearsals will start about June 3, Wright said. Performances will begin about July 10 and continue for three weeks. There also are 14 technical staff positions open, including a design technical assistant, construction manager, production stage manager, lighting and sound assistant, costume and make-up assistants, properties assistant, office assistant, assistants, accompanist and script librarian. Students selected for KRT can enroll for a minimum of eight credits in the summer session. Each member will be paid $250 to cover expenses, Wriits said. Applications for these positions are available in the University Theatre Office, 317 Murphy Hall. Slide into the Sun with Bass --- royal college shop eight thirty-seven massachusetts 843-4255 GRAD STUDENTS Why type all of your thesis drafts? Have Encore do it with word processing. We type in the handwritten rough draft and give you a perfect typed copy (including justified left and right margins, bold lettering special symbols, etc.) Plus, we store the original on disc, so when you need to make revisions, we only correct what needs to be changed. The machine then prints out the entire corrected thesis. Easy and cheap. (We can also communicate with the KU computer system.) We also feature copying, drafting (for figures and drafts) and binding. That's why we are the "One Stop Thesis Shop" Call us at 842-2001 for your typing odyssey. Ensure Copy Corps Lawrence since 1926 Kansas E Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza (just west of Kief's) 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 26.1980 Visiting prof favors creationism labels evolution as 'conjecture' By MARK PITTMAN Staff Reporter Man always has been man, according to creationist Gary Palmer, professor of biology at Christian Heritage College in San Diego. Palmer, speaking to about 50 persons last night in the Kansas Union, said there was no laboratory model for the evolutionist conception of the origin of the species. "There is no natural tendency for the development of life on earth," Palmer said. "Life on earth is the result of plan, purpose and special creation." Palmer said much of the doctrine of evolution was based on 'extrapolation and approximation' to a given community. On the other hand, he said, creationism is based on what we 'do know' from the past. Creationism maintains that a divine will is responsible for the creation of the world. Evolutionism maintains that the random nature resulted in the earth's formation. Evolution, Palmer said, does not account for the reaction amino acids and DNA, which are involved in Random combination of the two substances will never result in life as the evolutionists do. "Darwin himself was much more cautious than other evolutionists. A whole chapter in 'The Origin of Species' was devoted to problems with the theory." Palmer said. Palmer said this implied that both theories, evolution and creation, should be critically examined and taught in schools. "If the creationists win the battle, the doctrine of evolution will still be taught," Palmer said. "The real loss of the Scope is losing to crain views down people's threats." J. T. Scopes was a schoolteacher arrested in 1925 for teaching Charles Darwin's theory of evolution in Tennessee schools. Palmer is a member of the Institute for Creation Research, a group of 500 scientists who do research to support creationism. Goldnecker Optical 742 Massachusetts • 842-5208 blowing up the '70's ALL 1979 PRESCRIPTION EYEGLASS STYLES 30% off our regular low price Rehabilitation focus of KU conference About 180 rehabilitation counselors and staff will be attending a conference today at the university Center to discuss new methods and equipment available in rehabilitation. Shirley Howard, assistant director of continuing education at the Med Center, said, "The purpose is mostly for people who work with patients to learn what is available, what patients think of what is available and what is coming in in the Topics to be discussed today include new approaches for patients with severe spinal disorders, transportation options and living for severely disabled patients. the conference will continue through May, Howard and will participate in the first either the Rehabilitation Institute in Kansas City, Mo., or the deafness of rehabilitation with the Foundation. Discussions will be held Friday with a panel of doctors and rehabilitation counselors, and a panel of disabled patients. Senior Showing Experiment Art n nose attending the conference will receive 14.5 credit hours in continuing education. "30 Seconds to the Inch" Thursday - March 27. 8 PM 514 Admission Lawrence Art Center 9am - Vermont Retirements 30 Second the In Thursday - March 27, 9 PM SJM Admission Lawrence Art Center 9am - Vermont Retireeonly Vista Vista sta Vista Vista sta Vi Get a VistaKite & Cord for only 49¢! Spring is in the air and so are VistaKites... bright orange and flying high! A V only 49¢ with last. Hi-Filter Hite cord Celebrate .. with great food · great service · and a VistakeKite! Hi-Flier white cord OFFER IS GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST Vista RESTAURANTS Great Food Great Service Vista and you! 1527 W. 6th Providing security for presidential campaigns, the surveillance system suspends of television cop shows, but their arrivals mean that it's not a typical day for Capt. John Mullens of the KU Police Department. Police plan Anderson's security By JENNIFER ROBLEZ Staff Reporter "Something odd always happens," he said in a speech. He says "planning security for Republican presidential candidate Rep. John An- thony at 3 p.m. today in Hoch Abbeying." An increase in Anderson's popularity, both nationally and locally, prompted sponsors of his visit to change his talk from a lecture to a presentation to the more sacrosanct Hoch Auditorium. Mullens the police force would take a "low key" approach to Anderson's visit, despite a change in the candidate's view towards security. BEFORE THE Incident, Anderson publicly opposed government expenses created by providing candidates with security. After his campaign headquarters in Chicago was stormed by angry Puerto Ricans last month, Anderson, R-III, the need for Secure Service protection. Mullens said that Secret Service men would accompany Anderson to KU and that some had helped coordinate security for his visit. Secret Service men from Kansas City, Mo., and Wichita are expected to aid Anderson's security team. "What we try to do is set up a proper security and help the VIP meet his deadlines with a minimum of fanfare," Mullens said. The Lawrence Police Department, under the direction of Ron Olin, assistant chief of police, will direct traffic away from the office in connection with travel to Lawrence from Topeka. Kansas Highway Patrol will follow Anderson's group to Lawrence from Topeka after a fund-raising lunch for him there. Mullens said Anderson would be at KU for a little over an hour. IN ADDITION to security protection, Mullens said Anderson would be surrounded by an assortment of professional public relations agents and aides. But regardless of all the planning, Mullens said, past experience proved that unexpected happenings could occur. "Probably the biggest oddity when former President Ford came in 1978 was that it went perfectly." Mullens joked. AOPi members await house plans "The board did talk about it and did make Lewis said that at a meeting of the AOPI executive board last week in Nashville, Teen, a number of house plans for new living quarters were considered. a number of plans. Our formal announcement will be delayed until we make a general announcement (to members and officials)," she said. Lewis said members and officials of the KU colony would meet with Joan McCollum, international director of AOPI, who would address the situation with the ceremonies, and discuss the plans. House construction is scheduled to begin this fall, said Lewis, and will be completed by fall 1881. Linda Helm Presenting Corn's Studio of Beauty Linda Specializes in Haircuts for both Men & Women Specials cut, shampoo, blow dry Reg. $15^00 NOW $9^00 We carry ®REDKEN* hair and skin products manicure Reg. $5^50 NOW $3^50 9th & Vermont Call Linda for an appointment 843-4666 Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri, Sat 8-5 15 faculty members elected to positions Thirteen new members of the Faculty Council and two new members of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board have been elected. the KUAC board members, Evelyn Swartz, professor of education, and Gerhard Zuther, professor of English, will take office Julv 1. The 13 new Council members will begin serving their terms when the 13 outgoing members' terms expire May 19. They will serve on the Council until 1983. The Council election certifying committee said 418 members of the Faculty Senate cast valid ballots in the election. The new members of Faculty Council are Ernest Angin, professor of geology; Arthur Briphel, professor of electrical engineering; Ellen Reid Gold, professor of English; Ellen Reid Gold, assistant professor of speech and drama; Lais Greene, associate professor of design engineering; Gerald Mikkelsen, associate professor of Soviet and East European studies; Felix Moos, professor of anthropology; Jaroslav Kovac, professor of geography; James Rahston, professor of ensembles; Jon Roskam, Deane E. Ackers distinguished professor of aerospace engineering; James Worthington, professor of law; and Joanne Wryne, professor of occupational therapy. Vanessa Redgrave's critically acclaimed "THE PALESTINEAN" The movie that caused an uproar at the Academy Awards [Image of a child with dark hair, looking slightly away from the camera.] SHOWING FRIDAY, MARCH 28th HOCH AUDITORIUM 7:30 P.M. Muslim Students Association = Kansas Univers $1.00 Donation at the door (Children under 7 not allowed) Babysitting provided University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 26,1980 7 International officials ponder energy issues OPEC's unity questioned By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter Despite its image as an oil cartel, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is not always the well-oiled machine it was intended to be. an international oil specialist said yesterday. Yet influence in world affairs is undeniably heavy. Reviewing OPEC's history and possible future at an energy forum in Nichols Hall, Charles Heller, a U.N. petroleum company executive, said that "the organization requires unreal manual cooperation. "In the past 10 years, OPEC power has grown beyond anyone's expectations," Heller said. "We'll have to have the leadership to perhaps arrive at a compact energy system that gets stabilization of energy supplies for both countries and not developed countries." HELLER SAID that OPEC was not united in its demands. The Arab oil embargo of 1974, when Nigeria and Venezuela continued to supply oil to the United States and other countries affected by it. "The Arab baitions are not all one entity," he said. "They are all peoples of different backgrounds, although they are all Islamic." Heller, who negotiated for Trinidad and Tobago when it tried to join OPEC in the early 1970s, said OPEC was formed in September, 1980, when Venezuela and several countries banded together and formed a petroleum cooperative organization. Heller said the fact that several non-Arab nations were members of OPEC was one factor that lent them from acting as one. HE SAID their initial declaration demanded that the members formulate a system that would ensure stabilization of oil prices and regulation of production. At a time when some wanted the price of oil to be lower, the group was not taken very seriously, he said. "It wasn't even reported in the New York Times until two weeks afterwards," he said. "Now, when OPEC talks about getting together, people start going frantic two weeks before the meeting." OPEC's more recent actions can be seen in a 1968 resolution that required every nation to own its own natural resources. Part of that resolution, he said, paved the way for OPEC to reduce oil production. Heller said that 1958 was a decisive year for OPEC, when country members began revising their existing agreements with the United States, and group flexing its muscles was a 1970 Lilyhawk action taken in retaliation for British withdrawal from part of the Middle East. HELLER SAI OPCE roc to its current power during a period of "famine" for oil. For the last 80 years, he said, the world has seen "a wave of famine and famine" cycle in terms of oil supplies. "There was the Oklahoma feast at the turn of the century," he said, "when they had so much oil they didn't know what to do about it. The first world war brought a famine but in the 1900s the feast came. It is not surprising with the feast again around 1800." If that trend continued, he said, the "famine" would be ending now with the world again headed toward a period of more plentiful oil sunlilies. "The question is, is another feast about due?" he said. "Or is the cycle coincidental, making a future feast dependent upon an earlier discovery of hydrocarbon deposits?" Heller said he preferred not to speculate about the value of $30 million imposed to tell how much of the current price of oil, between $30 to $40 a barrel, was due to inflation or OPEC actions spurred by it. An ominous trend, however, is indicated by the way in which many oil producing countries have increased capacities, which would give OPEC nations even greater control over the manufacture of world oil. By 1990, he said, the oil industry may have no need for outside refineries. Wedding Reception? 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ALTHOUGH THE August U.N. meeting will not be the first time an international energy power has been attempted, it has proceeded in making actual agreements, he said. [Image of a man speaking] oil dependence, Baum said, has been given to industrial countries, yet many of them lack the technology and energy their energy from oil. The majority of third-world countries, however, rely on oil for up to 70% of their electricity. Call Army Reserve Opportunities 843-0485 Meet Today's Army Reserve. "The process should lead to a global acceptance of the myth and help us assume exactly where we stand." Baum said. "It should help distinguish between the myth and the reality of the world." energy emergency, both in this country and the entire world." "Bear in mind the energy consumption in developing countries is still relatively low," he said. "But its growth in recent years has exceeded that of the industrial countries." The United Nations has sent teams of specialists into countries that have requested help in exploring their own natural resources, he said. The conference will attempt to identify energy sources that would be feasible within the next five or 10 years as well as those that could be developed by the year 2000, he said. In the meantime, the United Nations will continue to work on less visible but still significant issues, and the UN nations solve their energy problems, he said. The developing countries in particular are at the forefront of this effort. By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter FREE After hearing March 28 — 7:30 p.m. — 3195 Wescoe Rosabeth Moss Kanter "Power and Powerlessness in Organizations" Come listen to presentations and information regarding the participation of women in the workforce WOMEN AT WORK Conference Room, Satellite Union University of Kansas, Lawrence KS Saturday, March 29 10:30 a.m. - 7:30 p.m. S. Amberthi Occupational Segregation J. Badertechnik, Labor Force Participation M. Grierson, Career Development for Young Competent Learners, Center powered by Skill Life Req. Woman Career Center, Women's Resp. Office UF, University, Counseling Center Career Resources Center FREE Mounting energy costs and shrinking supplies will soon begin to have an effect upon the world's food production, he said. The country is developing the countries hardest. Speaking at a Kansas Geological Survey energy forum in Nichols Hall, Baum said the United States was only one nation involved in a revolution of the world energy "The problem of the '80s is twofold- energy and food. If we are responsible people, we must face these two simultaneously," he said. A U.N. conference to be held later this year is expected to be the first step in a unified world effort to develop a energy strategy, according to a U.N. energy U.N. world energy conference planned "There won't be any immediate results," Baum said, "but it should give us a realistic assessment of new and renewable sources of energy." Vladimir Baum Vladimir Baum, director of the United National Center for Natural Resources and Climate Change, will present August special session of the General Assembly would concentrate on work done by the agency. "We're not facing an energy crisis anymore," he said. "The problem has telescoped and now we are facing a real MUCH OF the attention to the problem of End Of Month SALE! Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.(Mar. 27-29) Spring- Spring- Dresses - Jr. Sportswear - Misses Sportswear Reduced 30% 835 Mass. 843-4833 Lawrence, Kansas Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING sua films Lawrence Premiere! "Bertolucci's 'LUNA' has a wonderful and unique sensory richness. 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Both the film and its star, Jill Clayburgh, are perfect." —Frank Rich, Time Magazine JILL CLAYBURGH Luna A Film by Bertie Bernardo (Bernard) La Lamenta Laurea - Renato Solvatore and with Tomas Milani Verrine Laurea - Renato Solvatore and with Tomas Milani Screenplay by George Maille - Director of Photography Vittorio Vitreano (2018) English Adaptation by George Maille - Director of Photography Vittorio Vitreano (2018) Produced by Bernard Bernardo (Bernard) Directed by Bertie Bernardo (Bernard) Thursday, March 27 8:00 pm $1.50 HOCH AUDITORIUM —One Showing Only— THE NEW YORKER ORIGIO ITALIAN PIZZA $2.00 OFF Any Large or Medium Pizza Wed-Sun, March 26-30 No coupons accepted with offer Enjoy Coke The University of Kansas Office of Minority Affairs/ MECHA Presents Jerry Apodaca Former Governor of New Mexico Outlook for the '80s A Hispanic Perspective 1973 7:30 p.m., Friday, March 28, 1980 Forum Room, Kansas Union Free Admission Sponsored in Conjunction with the Statewide MECHA Conference/ March 28-29/ Kansas Union / The University of Kansas. Wednesday, March 26, 1980 University Daily Kansan 7 International officials ponder energy issues OPEC's unity questioned By DON MUNDAY Staff Renorter Despite its image as an oil cartel, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is not always the well-oiled machine it was intended to be. an international oil specialist said yesterday. Yesterday in world affairs is undeniably heavy. Reviewing OPEC's history and possible future at an energy forum in Nichols Hall, Charles Heller, a U.N. petroleum conference participant, said the organization requires unusual international cooperation. "In the past 10 years, OPEC power has grown beyond anyone's expectations," Heller said. "We'll have to have the leadership to perhaps arrive at a compact energy system that will stabilize of energy supplies for both developed and non-developed countries." HELLER SAID that OPEC was not united by many of the countries in the Arab embassy in 1972-4a, when Niger Venezuela continued to supply oil to the United States and other countries affected "The Arab baitions are not all one entity," he said. "They are all peoples of different backgrounds, although they are all Islamic." Heller said the fact that several non-Arab nations were members of OPEC was one factor that kept them from acting as one. Heller, who negotiated for Trinidad and Tobago when it tried to join OPEC in the early 1970s, said OPEC was formed in September, 1980, when Venezuela and seven countries banded together and formed a petroleum cooperative organization. HE SAID their initial declaration demanded that the members formulate a system that would ensure stabilization of oil prices and regulation of production. At a meeting of oil lowered to $1, the new group was not taken very seriously, he said. "It wasn't even reported in the New York Times until two weeks afterwards," he said. "Now, when OPEC talks afterwards." together, people start going frantic two weeks before the meeting." OPEC's more recent actions can be seen as a response that recognized its nation's sovereignty over its own natural resources. Part of that resolution, he said, paved the way for OPEC to expand production. Heller said that 1968 was a decisive year for OPEC, when member countries began reviving their existing agreements with the US and Russia, and group flexing its muscles was a 1970 Libyan action taken in retaliation for British withdrawal from parts of the Middle East, HELLER SAID OPEC rose to its current power during a period of "famine" for oil. For the last 80 years, he said, the world has been deprived of oil and "famine" cycle in terms of oil supplies. "There was the Oklahoma feast at the turn of the century," he said, "when they had so much oil they didn't know what to do about it. The first world war brought a change in the climate of America. It turned to famine during the war with the feast coming again around 1860." If that trend continued, he said, the "famine" would be ending now with the world again headed toward a period of more plentiful oil supplies. "The question is, is another feast about due?" he said. "Or is the cycle coincidental, making a future feast dependent upon an existing discovery of hydrocarbon deposits?" Heller said he preferred not to speculate about the price of the current insurability impossible to tell how much of the current price of oil, between $30 to $40 a barrel, was due to inflation or OPEC spurred by prices. An ominous trend, however, is indicated by the way in which many oil producing countries are expanding their capacities, which would give OPEC nations even greater control over the manufacture of world oil. By 1990, he said, the oil supply could no longer need for outside refineries. Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Teen Known 1307 Mass. 843-1151 DO'S DELUXE BOOTS MAYA EMAIL: 2294 Ignacio González ALTHOUGH THE August U.N. meeting will not be the first time an international energy movement has been attempted, it could prove successful in making actual agreements, he said. Get up to $2,000 for college. Many Army Reserve units are offering a program that allows students to earn an education or e-learning, when you join the Roseville you may receive money for tuition and other educational benefits. You can also concentrate on getting an education and can concentrate on getting an education and The conference will attempt to identify energy sources that would be feasible within the next five or 10 years as well as those to be developed by the year 2000, be paid. "The process should lead to a global warming in 1988 in Nairobi, Kenya and will help Baum said. "It should help distinguish between the myth and the reality of climate change." In the meantime, the United Nations will still important programs for helping nations solve their energy problems, he said. The developing countries in particular oil dependence, Baum said, has been given to industrial countries, yet many of them have not benefited from their energy from oil. The majority of third world countries, however, rely on oil for up to 70 percent of their GDP. "Bear in mind the energy consumption in developing countries is still relatively low," he said. "But its growth in recent years has exceeded that of the industrial countries." And as a result, you learn a skill and start a career. We also help students with your local unit or 16 hours a month plus two weeks of course work to intern your studies. And the pay will help with your find out more about the Educational Assistance program. The United Nations has sent teams of specialists into countries that have requested help in exploring their own natural resources, he said. Mounting energy costs and shrinking supplies will soon begin to have an effect upon the world's food production, he said, and will hurt the developing countries the hardest. energy emergency, both in this country and the entire world." Call Army Reserve Opportunities 843-0485 Meet Today's Army Reserve. Speaking at a Kansas Geological Survey energy forum in Nichols Hall, Baum said the United States was only one nation in which there is a revolution of the world energy situation. "The problem of the '80s is twofold—energy and food. If we are responsible people, we must face these two simultaneously," he said. By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter FREE After hearing March 28 — 7:30 p.m. — 9:19 Wescoe Rosabeth Moss Kanter "Power and Powerlessness in Organizations" Come listen to presentations and innovation regarding the participation of women in the workforce WOMEN AT WORK Conference Room, Satellite Ultran, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS Saturday, March 29 10:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. 5. Adrienne (Occupational Segregation) J. Bendethscher, Lapo Police Foundation General Electric, Caterpillar Family Solutions General Electric, Emily Yates Women's Resource Center, Caterpillar Family Solutions General Electric, University Counseling Center and University, Coaching Center Caterpillar Center FREE "There won't be any immediate results." Baum said, "but it should give us a realistic assessment of new and renewable sources of energy." Vladimir Baum A U.N. conference to be held later this year is expected to be the first step in a unified world effort to develop a global strategy, according to a U.N. energy expert. U.N. world energy conference planned Vladimir Baum, director of the United States Air Force Resources and Transport, said here yesterday Augusl special session of the General Assembly would concentrate on work done in the program. "We're not facing an energy crisis anymore," he said. "The problem has telescoped and now we are facing a real MUCH OF the attention to the problem of End Of Month SALE! Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.(Mar. 27-29) Spring- • Dresses - Jr. Sportswear - Misses Sportswear Reduced 30% 835 Mass. 843-4833 Lawrence, Kansas Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING sua films Lawrence Premiere! "Bertolucelli's 'LUNA' has a wonderful and unique sensory richness. Jill Clayburg has never been as impressive...seductive, compassionate and compulsive." — Jack Kroil, Newweek Magazine "A lucid and uninhibited journey to the outer limits of human behavior, 'LUNA's' images are so hypnotic, erotic and beautifully shot. By sheer cinematic force, Bertoluci seduces us. Both the film and its star, Jill Clayburgh, are perfect."—Frank Rich, Time Magazine JILL CLAYBURGH Luna A Film by Bertelracer Vittozac() Limited Edition Vermeer Lazer - Remo Subarti and with Toni Milan Screenplay by Michele Bertolini English Adaptation by George Mallau - Director of Photographs Vittozacario () Produced by George Mallau - Director of Photographs Vittozacario () R INTERNATIONAL EDITION Directed by Bertelracer Vittozac() Thursday, March 27 8:00 pm $1.50 HOCH AUDITORIUM —One Showing Only— THE NEW YORKER ORIGINAL ITALIAN PIZZA $2.00 OFF Any Large or Medium Pizza Wed-Sun, March 26-30 No coupons accepted with offer Enjoy Coke The University of Kansas Office of Minority Affairs/ MECHA Presents Jerry Apodaca Former Governor of New Mexico MICHAEL FLEETS Outlook for the '80s A Hispanic Perspective 7:30 p.m., Friday, March 28,1980 Forum Room, Kansas Union Free Admission Sponsored in Conjunction with the Statewide MECHA Conference/ March 28-29 / Kansas Union / The University of Kansas. 8 Wednesday, March 26, 1980 University Daily Kansan Handicapped gain independence with resource center's support By BENJAMIN JONES Staff Reporter Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are being made easier for handicapped persons this year by the newly established Kentucky Living Resource Center, $89 Kentucky S The center, which opened last September, helps the handicapped in Douglas County by providing a variety of services, and meet a variety of other needs, according to M McCoys, a community worker. McCoy said the center served physically and developmentally handicapped adults from 18 to 60 years old. She said that when people were not in their homes or their friends, it would set up appointments to visit the handicapped persons in their homes, if they could not do so. in institutions, such as nursing homes, leave the facilities and lead more independent lives. Lenore F. Talafera, director of the resource center, said the center's primary function was to prevent premature institutionalization, or to help people already "We're talking about day-to-day coping," she said. TALIAFEROA SAID that the center served all of Douglas County, but that many handicapped people were not aware of the service because it was so new. The center is called "The Bottom Court," sort of a *project* of its parent state agency- Vocational Rehabilitation. Mccoy said a rural model of the center would open soon in Hays. The Lawrence center is one of the few in the Midwest, and it has provided federal government, supplemented by a $80,000 grant from the state. She said the federal dollars came from Rehabilitation Services Administration, a federal agency independent living centers across the country. President Carter recently announced that federal matching funds would be sliced by 75 percent, but McCoy said the budget decrease would not cut into programs for the handicapped. McCOY SAID the center would get more business when it had become more established in the community by word-of-mouth. She said the center's efforts to reach the handicapped were hindered by the lack of care of handicapped persons in Douglas County. the center must rely on census figures, she said, but added that these were vague. McCoy said about 10 percent of the population in some way; 40 percent of these severely. Tailferrair that because handicapped persons 'haven't been identified in a case of abuse, they have these people. These handicapped people referred to the center were eager to hear about services the center could offer to them, but had not been offered to them in the past. Talferaro the center was taking interviews to establish a pool of attendants for handicapped persons. She said those students were all able to find care students or friends of the handicapped. She said that although KU provided a bus service to take handicapped students to and from the center, the bus station center hoped to start a bus service to other places handicapped people needed to go. Applicants should have a knowledge of campus and state issues. Lobbying experience would be helpful. TOPEKA—"You haven't had a shine on these since the snow," Robert Foster told the senator settling onto the Kansas Capitol shoesthe stand. By SCOTT C. FAUST Staff Reporter The Campus Director, paid by ASK, is responsible for organizing and coordinating all lobbying activities at KU. The Associated Students of Kansas Applications and more information about ASK are available at the Student Senate Office, 105B in the Kansas Union. Shoeshine adds polish to Statehouse Students Working for Students Only students with an interest in politics and with organizational and leadership abilities need apply. Foster, 76, who has manned the stand for the last nine legislative sessions, was not born with an eye for such shem. detail He acquires it in a hell-bent-for-survival life. Lathering the black oxfords with hands worn hard by decades of labor, Foster said he had to do his 75-cent shirts "as good as I can as fast as I can." Each morning, as he has since retiring at Kansas Supreme Court junior in 1970, Mr. Baldwin and his staff, the Statehouse, sets up his polish-stained, three-seat stand and waits for passing On a good day, he thines 15 to 20 pairs to supplement his Social Security, food stamps and Medicare. Return applications to the Senate by 5p.m. Monday, Mar. 31. The grandson of a slave and the son of a Bobby, Miss. sharecropper who had to give a bile of cotton to "the man" for every shirt he wore. The boy he shinned his first pair of shoes as a kid. The Associated Students of Kansas, the statewide student lobby organization, has an opening for CAMPUS DIRECTOR at KU. "That's the way it satisfies the customers," he said. Satisfying the customer has been Foster's concern for much of his life. "I used to have a little old box," he said. "I put it on the street and men would put FOR LEADERS ONLY "There were a lot of towns in the South where you could set up a shine stand anywhere." one foot on at a time. A shine was a nickel a shoe. ask EXPERIENCE SHOWS in Foster's careful blacking of polish. When Foster was six and living in Arkansas, his parents left him to a white family who owned a grocery store. He never lived with his parents again. The family did a shop. He went to a black school until the fifth grade. Doing odd jobs for the family took precedence over education. The family didn't adopt him. In his early teens, Foster left the white family and worked in Arkansas and Louisiana saw mills. At the various hotels, Foster's jobs included dishwashing, waiting on elderly live-ins, bellhopping, and of course, shining shoes. When lumber work was hard to find and hunger touched him, Foster went to railroad depot hotels and offered his labor for bed and board. Foster worked in hotels all over the country. The Hotel Noble in Jonesboro, Ark., the Hotel Zimbo in Rochester, Minn.—he knows them all. Free to wander by freight train when unemployed, Foster headed to New Mexico in 1828 and was put off the train in 1830. "200 miles from any colored people." He went back to work at Missouri Pacific, working on the tracks in the summer and in the shops during the winter, until 1969. HE SAID white children playing along the tracks had never seen a black man before, and they tried to rub the black off him. "They thought I was some kind of varmint," Foster said. Railroading was Foster's next calling, and in 1930, he finished laying the Missouri Pacific's line from Poplar Bluff, Mo., to Tarkaardan, Texas. Black Tuesday's effects soon reached the railroads, and the Missouri Pacific laid Foster off. IN KANSAS CITY, he slept in boxcars and worked all day breaking rock for a bowl of soup in one of President Hoover's "Helping Hand" programs. FDR's New Deal put Foster in a Works Progress Administration job building Kansas bridges and reservoirs. "Because there wasn't no union when I first started," Foster said, most of his long years with the railroad did not count. "Since I was born, I receives no retirement pay from the company." But Foster said he did not get a bad deal from life. "I had to take what I get all my life. You got to make the best you can out of life, and that's what I've been doing." lemon tree eleven west ninth sandwich, burger and yogurt shop featuring Famous Submarine Sandwiches Buy a full size submarine sandwich, Get a yogurt cone-FREE!! Offer good: Wed.-Sun. March 26-30 Kinko's Kinko' For Your Theses and Dissertations 25% Cotton paper We collate at no charge Hours 8-8 Mon-Thurs 10-5 Sat 8-6 Fri 12-5 Sun 904 Vermont 843-8019 GARB-AGE GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE! All stock 50% to 75% off! Many small sizes left in blue jeans. Monday-Saturday 10-6 840 Mass. Thursday 10-9 842-8831 Wednesday, March 26, 1980 9 Downtown mall controversy stirs citizen's group to distrust city By LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter University Daily Kansan Staff Reporter "Your distrust in your local government is so evident that I am offended." Those words, voiced by City Commissioner Ed Carter at last night's commission meeting, exemplified a widening gap between housing downtown development in Lawrence. On the other side are citizens who resent what they consider unnecessary secrecy and lack of public participation. On one side are those, such as Carter, who feel that the on-giving negotiations between mail planners and private citizens are a necessary first step in the development "I don't think we're really that far apart," Mavark Baryck Clark said. But the discussion belied his words. CARTER'S **REMAKES** were pointed at the office where they had given the commissioners a set of standards for downtown planning. The standards stressed openness and public access. CBD also had expressed support for a bill in the Kansas Legislature that would allow joint use of tax increment financing and bond revenue bonds for downtown development The package of financing sources would encourage commercial developers, and it is strongly supported by Carter, Clark and other city officials. Under state law, tax increment bonds, which are repaid through property taxes, can be used for downtown development. The laws also require that such as Lawrence to also use revenue bonds. But CBD had qualified its support by insisting that the bill have "safeguards" to guarantee public participation. "The procedures used thus far in planning in Lawrence have had something of a destabilizing effect," Barbara Waggoner, a member of CBD, said. WAGGONER SAID she feared the bill could give mall planters a "weapon for random violence" through secret meetings of non-elected groups. Carter's emotional response to Waggoner was echoed by Clark, who promised that "the hoops the city must jump through to get tax increment financing are numerous." Clark insisted there would be "plenty of room" for public input. Carter once appeared to lose his patience, saying, "For you all to continue to fight this bill is stund." Commissioner Don Binns agreed, suggesting that local citizens groups did not trust the commission. "I think there's an underlying assumption on the part of many people in town that we're out to do them in," Binns said. Although no resolution came from the discussion, the commission agreed to study the CBD standards. EMOTIONS ALSO were unleashed in a last-minute discussion about the process of selecting the city's mayor. The subject was raised by Clark, who said he had been interested in years trying to bring more continuity to the office of manager with the commission and the city manager. The current process is traditional but informal. Each year the office of mayor rotates among the commissioners who serve and the highest number of votes elected. "I see this as fine-tuning the present system." Clark said. If that tradition was followed, Clark would be succeeded by Carter, Binns and then Commissioner Marci Francisco. But in the process suggested by Clark, the commissioners would elect the mayor from their ranks and he would serve a two-year term. AND IF the process was initiated next year, as Clark desires, it is possible that It was that possibility that drew fire from a group of Lawrence residents, who said the move was a threat to Francisco and to their right to have her as their mayor. Binns or Francisco would not get a term as mayor. They insisted it was much more than fine-tuning. "A lot of people will regard it as a breach of faith if you do it before 1983," he said. Hair Benders & Co. "I feel that what's happening here is contrary to any spirit of fair play," Tim Miller, KU lecture in religious studies, said. water base cellophane haircolor That would be the year Francisco would serve her term under the present system. soft permits make-up 1919 W. 24th 842-9641 Offering hair care for men and women including: conditioning manageable haircuts Francisco countered Clark's call for a vote on the bill. The commission achieved if the commissioners abided by their decisions and if meetings involving the commission or private citizens involved in the bill were held. eyebrow arching and waxing IN OTHER business, the commissioners granted a license for the operation of a wheelchair taxi service. The transportation for the elderly and handicapped. The service would be available to those in need. The service, to be run by Wray Thompson, owner of the local Yellow Cab company, was supported by the Council on Aging, the Human Resources Commission. monthly video tapes on new styles highlighting frosting products by Redken & Sebastian Free consultation on any of the above. DRAFT AGE? braiding ALL WOMEN (AND SOME MEN) CAN REFUSE THE DRAFT "BELGIQUE EXEMPTION" Call today for an appointment. Don't be fooled by the government, the left-wing, and the news media's attempt to make it seem only unimportant to want to trick Patricia citizens into supporting the draft and the next "planned war," just as they tricked Viola into supporting the infamous Viktor Trojan War. American casualties and unknown tens of thousands of drug-destroyed boys. (Some so-called "anti-campaigners" use Patriots in support of phony war in Vietnam. Now they are getting you all angry and upset and ready to "those terrible耻辱." Watch them.) The non-Christians who rule America have killed or ruined millions of our sons with the false claim they are "protecting America." Will they run million of our daughters with gunfire in an integrated police mass mural? Bible Law excludes ALL women, engaged or newly-married men, and some others. Find out what Christian Patriots really should do about the Bible on their free copy of MIBLE LAW ON MILITARY DRAFT AND WARFARE. Pastor Sheldon Enemy AMERICA'S PROMIE P.O. BOX 5344 PHOENIX AIRBORN # 8010 Local address: Local address: R.A. Box 3522 Lawrence, Ks. 66044 THESIS BINDING — XEROX COPYING LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE 512 EAST 9th St. at NEW JERSEY THE PLACE YOUR GRANDFATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Pyroxylin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry. Old World Quality Handwork SPECIAL SERVICES AVAILABLE - pockets for maps or engineering drawings - built-up layers to allow for thickness of photographs - processing of mail orders, delivery to Post Office, no charge CHOICE OF COLORS: Black - Maroon - Navy Blue GOLD FOIL STAMPING ON COVER AND SPINE OF BOOK FAST DELIVERY OF FINISHED WORK, 4 DAYS OR LESS GUARANTEED SPECIAL SERVICES ANNUAL $15.00 - hand sewn binding, with sufficient lead time AND NOW! XEROX COPYING SERVICE! - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge We offer special "combination discount" if we make the Xerox copies for you. Yes, that's right, a lower total cost if we do the Xerox copies for you. Visit our modern plant at 512 East 9th and see samples of our work. All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 House committee passes mall bond bill TOPEKA-A a controversial bill that could pave the way for the financing of a proposed downtown Lawrence shopping center in a stage in the Kansas Legislature yesterday. The House Local Government Committee voted 12-4 to recommend a slightly amended version of the bill that mall developers must attract a developer for the project. The proposal was passed by the Kansas Senate, 38-2 last week and must next be considered by the full House. The bill, sponsored by State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Dawrence, would allow Kansas municipalities to issue industrial revenue bonds to support downtown redevelopment projects. Under state law, only tax increment bonds—which are repaid through property taxes—can be used for downtown redevelopment. There was little discussion on the proposal or on the testimony given during Monday's hearing on the bill. Only the amendment was talked about at length. THE AMENDMENT would place restrictions on cities and counties issuing industrial revenue bonds on projects more than three miles outside their taxing areas. Under the proposal, a city or county would have veto power over an outside governing unit's plans to issue industrial revenue bonds in the local taxing area. "We're not surprised it was amended," Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager, said. "We're just happy it moved out of committee." State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, was one of four persons who voted against the proposal. "We never did discuss the proposal or its possible effects," she said. "When something is moved through that fast, they get stuck." They just greased it right through. The amendment approved yesterday by committee is expected to slow the bill's progress. Mall proponents, however, were not directly affected would not directly affect the mall project. About three weeks remain in the 1980 session. Because of the amendment, the proposal will have to go to a conference committee if approved by the full House before being sent to the governor. WHEN THE House and Senate differ on recommendations, a conference committee made up of House and Senate Many representatives have been opposed to cities using IRBs outside their city limits," he said. Ernie Moser, secretary of the Kansas League of Municipalities, said he thought the amendment might even help the bill's chances in the House. Committee members spent more than 40 minutes debating the amendment, proposed by State Rep. Larry Erne, D-COffeville. But proponents said the change probably would not prevent the bill from reaching Gov. John Carlin's dek this year. members is responsible for ironing out the differences. The chairman of the House Local Government committee, Victor Kearns, R-Merrigan, said however that he thought the meeting should be by the House or in conference committees. K K SWEEPSTAKES RULES All Sweesets entails must be at least 18 years old. The Sweesets may be entered by many times but must be entered one day per Sweeset. Sweesets can be submitted one day from any Auditone's sweepman products 6 Contest starts March 1st and ends April 12th or until SONY LAS VEGAS SWEEPSTAKES 17 in many matches, the customer may return it to a salesman for a lucky Sweepskates Coupon Book full of exciting discounts on all types of electronic products. 10 all prizes will be April 12th or un- 11 all prizes have been awarded 12 no purchase is necessary. All prizes 5. The card must match exactly the cut, style, color and corner to win 6. it match exists the price will be waived and that entry automatically entered in the Las Vegas Seewestskis Grand Price Drawing-your choice of car with or without Gift V14 49 Ski with Sony SS15 Skis *Not only sweepstakes prizes will be displayed throughout the store, if the playing card corner on the prize matches the playing card entry, the prize is yours!* NO PURCHASE NECESSARY— ENTER TODAY! SONY HST-49 Receiver With Cassette VGA 15.4 WIN A SONY TV, STEREO, RADIO, TAPE RECORDER AND 246 SONY PRIZES!! J J SONY SS-512 Speakers UNIT Reg. $569.95 $440 Las Vegas Sale Price B LNX 80 SONY 80 SONY LNX-90 CASSETTES Buy Two Save...25% AUDIOTRONICS 1928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN No matter what sport you enjoy... Rag Tag has the shirt for you! KANSAS HYHAWKS Tee shirts, baseball shirts, shimmel football, coaches, etc. We're printing specialists! - No order too big or too small - Best prices in town - One week delivery on all screen printing - Hot press printing while you wait_ Check our prices and compare! Raq Tag 842-1059 1144 Indiana --- 10 Wednesday, March 26.1980 University Daily Kansan WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 22nd ANNUAL DOG SALE! OUR DOORS OPEN AT 8:00 A.M. SHARP MARCH 21st & 22nd. HUGE SAVINGS ON NEW & USED CAMERAS, ACCESSORIES, DEMONSTRATORS, TRADE-INS and DISCONTINUED ITEMS. BRING CASH, MASTER CHARGE or VISA. BUT HURRY TO WOLFEIS CAMERA FOR THE MOST DYNAMIC SALE EVER. "Sale In Progress" FINANCING AVAILABLE Toy Story 10 LENS CAMERA | | ITMAN | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Chiense S16 8.7 | 295.0 | 199.0 | | Chiense S16 17 (A winder) 8.7 | 295.0 | 199.0 | | Vintage 2001 2.8 | 379.5 | 160.0 | | Vintage 2001 2.9 | 379.5 | 160.0 | | Macchi MCW0001.3 | 399.5 | 160.0 | | Vintage 2001 2.4 | 399.5 | 160.0 | | Vintage 2001 2.5 | 395.0 | 139.0 | | Vintage 2001 5.6 | 395.0 | 139.0 | | Vintage 2001 5.7 | 395.0 | 139.0 | | Vintage 2001 5.8 | 379.5 | 160.0 | | Vintage 2001 5.9 | 379.5 | 160.0 | | Vintage 2001 6.4 | 399.5 | 160.0 | | Emmanuel I14 Murao | 395.0 | 160.0 | | Emmanuel I14 Murao | 395.0 | 160.0 | | Emmanuel I14 Murao | 499.0 | 279.0 | | Emmanuel I14 Murao | 499.0 | 279.0 | | Olympus OM1 R8 | 455.0 | 239.0 | | Nikon F300 R8 | 429.0 | 239.0 | | Nikon F300 R8 | 455.0 | 239.0 | | Pentax K9 | 459.0 | 239.0 | | Apache Powers tw w/Takumar I.8 | 224.5 | 70.0 | | Apache Powers tw w/Fujian I.8 | 224.5 | 70.0 | | Apache Powers I14 Ww/Fujian I.8 (used) | 289.5 | 109 (used) 349.95 129.00 Rolifeux X.53,58 w Plamart I 1 (B) 249,50 | 249,50 | Hammond Prahikin I (2) used | 199,99 | 199,99 | Prahikin w Dombasson II 2 (B) used | 199,99 | 39,99 | ZOOM SLR LENS =30 100 to 200m l 15.6 one touch zoom lens, meter coupler, available for screwmount, Minolta, Canon, Olympus, Pentax K NQT A MISPRINT $9999 LESS THAN $100 Only 35 MM RANGEFINDER CAMERA ] (used) 184.99 100.99 | | RETAIL | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Canon E35 III | 195.00 | 169.00 | | Vibration 35II | 195.00 | 80.00 | | Olympus 35K | 114.60 | 80.00 | | Vibration 35II | 114.60 | 80.00 | | Vibration 35II | 114.60 | 80.00 | | Nikon Z90 with 35mm (des) | 685.00 | 390.00 | | Nikon Z90 with 35mm (des) | 685.00 | 390.00 | | Nikon Z90 with 35mm (des) | 685.00 | 390.00 | | Bally Z90 | 295.00 | 189.00 | | Bally Z90 | 295.00 | 189.00 | | Vibration 35II | 300.00 | 189.00 | | Vibration 35II | 300.00 | 189.00 | | Monochrom A5 (used) | 99.95 | 20.00 | | Monochrom A5 (used) | 99.95 | 20.00 | | Canon E35III | 109.50 | 38.00 | | Canon E35III | 109.50 | 38.00 | | Toshiba E35 (used) | 169.95 | 74.00 | | Toshiba E35 (used) | 169.95 | 74.00 | | Vibration 35II | 195.00 | 69.00 | | Vibration 35II | 195.00 | 69.00 | | Chassis E5 (used) | 99.95 | 49.00 | | Chassis E5 (used) | 99.95 | 49.00 | | Bally Z90 with 3.5k (used) | 195.00 | 69.00 | | Bally Z90 with 3.5k (used) | 195.00 | 69.00 | COLOR PRINT FILM Five negative film freshade ASA 100. Process in regular Kodak chemistry 35mm 36 exposure. Compare at $39.39 Only Sale $159 + CANON | BATTERY | RETAIL | SALE | | :--- | :--- | ---: | | 2mm X 2B V Riveter | 715.00 | 99.00 | | 2mm X 2P Premier | 715.00 | 99.00 | | 15mm X 2B V Riveter | 175.00 | 99.00 | | 15mm X 2P Premier | 175.00 | 99.00 | | 13mm X 1B Crimson | 790.00 | 99.00 | | 13mm X 1P Crimson | 790.00 | 99.00 | | 15mm X 2B V Riveter | 895.00 | 99.00 | | 15mm X 2P Premier | 895.00 | 99.00 | | 35-10mm X 2Sulger Moto | 389.50 | 109.00 | | 35-10mm X 2P Sulger Moto | 389.50 | 109.00 | | 35-10mm X 2Sulger Moto | 389.50 | 109.00 | | 65-10mm X 4Sulger Moto | 364.95 | 109.00 | | 65-10mm X 4Sulger Moto | 364.95 | 109.00 | | 65-10mm X 4Sulger Moto | 364.95 | 109.00 | | 55-10mm X 4Sulger Moto | 269.50 | 109.00 | | 55-10mm X 4Sulger Moto | 269.50 | 109.00 | | 60-10mm X 4Sulger Moto | 345.00 | 109.00 | | 60-10mm X 4Sulger Moto | 345.00 | 109.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 30.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 30.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 30.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 30.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 19.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 19.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 19.00 | | 30-2X 3Combe (used) | 159.99 | 19.00 | | OUTDATE FILM Misc. collection of color and black, and white film. Everything from 110 to 4 X S. 1/2 price or less SCREW MOUNT LENSES (FIT PENTAX, MAMIYA, FUJICA) MIRN | RATE | W/MONTH | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 28.40mm ProMaster | 389.50 | 170.00 | | 30.60mm ProMaster | 389.50 | 170.00 | | 18mm Sigma | 639.00 | 149.00 | | 18mm Sigma | 639.00 | 149.00 | | 18mm Olympos | 169.00 | 179.00 | | 20 UNIV MOUNT LENSES MIN # SALE 10mm 2 Bignon (signal) 295.00 10mm 3 Bignon (signal) 249.99 15mm 2 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 2 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 2 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 2 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 2 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 4 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 4 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 4 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 4 Bignon (signal) 129.95 15mm 4 Bignon (signal) 129.95 2X TELECONVERTERS Bring picture twice as close when you use with your lens. Available for travel or home use. Mixed new and used. Example 2 for Canon F8B — **199** Reg $25 99 to $89 99 Sale **199** to **1299** in LENSE SALE 16mm F2 II Sigma Fisheye 255.00 169.99 17mm F2 II Sigma Fisheye 255.00 179.99 18mm F2 II Sigma Fisheye 255.00 195.99 20mm F2 II Sigma Fisheye 255.00 205.99 20mm F2 II Sigma Fisheye 255.00 219.99 30mm F2 II Sigma Fisheye 181.00 199.99 135mm F2.8 II Prism Eye 181.00 199.99 135mm F2.8 II Prism Eye 181.00 199.99 200mm F2.8 II VISor 189.00 199.99 200mm F2.8 II VISor 189.00 199.99 200mm F2.8 II VISor 301.95 199.99 30mm F2.8 II VISor 301.95 199.99 50mm F2.8 II VISor 285.00 279.99 50mm F2.8 II VISor 285.00 279.99 35-100mm F2.8II Macro Zeam 487.00 473.00 35-100mm F2.8II Macro Zeam 487.00 473.00 75-250mm f2.8 II Vizor Macro Zeam 219.99 80-200mm f2.8 II Vizor Macro Zeam 219.99 80-200mm f2.8 II Macro Vizor Zeam 219.99 75-200mm f2.8 II Macro More Zeam 219.99 339.95 139.99 24mm 2.8 Vibrator (used) 239.99 99.99 RIGHT RIGHT ANGLE FINDERS Great for copy work, law angle photos for Canon, Minolta, Pentax, Konica Reg. $29.99 Sale $999 LENSES FOR KONICA | MONTH | MONTH | MONTH | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 2mm F2.8 Visor | 218.00 | 79.00 | 59.00 | | 2mm F4.0 Fisheye | 218.00 | 80.00 | 59.00 | | 2mm F5.6 Fisheye | 189.50 | 80.00 | 59.00 | | 2mm F10 Fisheye | 189.50 | 80.00 | 59.00 | | 35mm F1.8 Wide lens | 395.00 | 80.00 | 59.00 | | 35mm F2.8 Wide lens | 395.00 | 80.00 | 59.00 | | 35mm F4.0 Wide lens | 195.00 | 24.00 | 99.00 | | 35mm F5.6 Wide lens | 121.00 | 39.00 | 99.00 | | 20mm F2.8 Backwall | 112.00 | 39.00 | 99.00 | | 15mm F2.8 VISOR Micro | 345.00 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 135mm F2.8 VISOR Close Focus | 159.00 | 19.00 | 99.00 | | 135mm F2.8 VISOR Close Focus | 159.00 | 19.00 | 99.00 | | 100mm F1.5 BACKWALL | 162.50 | 15.00 | 99.00 | | 100mm F1.5 BACKWALL | 162.50 | 15.00 | 99.00 | | 70-115mm F1.8 VISOR Macro | 399.93 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 70-115mm F1.8 VISOR Macro | 399.93 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 80-200mm F1.8 VISOR Macro | 299.50 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 80-200mm F1.8 VISOR Macro | 299.50 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 80-200mm H4 H5a Quadra Eyezer | 249.50 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 75-200mm Solarger | 395.00 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 75-200mm Solarger | 395.00 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 75-200mm Solarger | 395.00 | 159.00 | 99.00 | | 75-200mm Assessar Macro | 498.00 | 219.00 | 99.00 | | 100-200mm Assessar Macro | 498.00 | 219.00 | 99.00 | | 100-200mm Assessar Macro | 498.00 | 219.00 | 99.00 | | 50mm F2.8 Neusen (used) | 269.99 | 79.00 | 59.00 | | 50mm F2.8 Neusen (used) | 269.99 | 79.00 | 59.00 | | 50mm F2.8 Neusen (used) | 269.99 | 79.00 | 59.00 | | 200mm F1.5 BACKWALL (used) | 169.95 | 59.00 | 59.00 | | 200mm F1.5 BACKWALL (used) | 169.95 | 59.00 | 59.00 | PROJECTOR SCREENS Unboxed adds and ends of disk models 4050, 4500 & 70* sizes. Reg. $19.95 to $69.95 Sales *$19.95* to *$29.95* 20-60mm 3.5 Preferential Coom (used) ... 399.95 ... 1,99.99 LENSES FOR FUJICA (AZ, 705) RETAIL SALE 16mm ZM II Fujinon Fujinon 489.50 189.50 12mm ZM II Fujinon 325.00 189.50 12mm ZM II Fujinon 250.00 189.50 15mm ZM II Fujinon 185.00 189.50 15mm ZM II Fujinon 165.00 189.50 15mm ZM II Acamate 165.00 70.00 15mm ZM II Alumax 150.00 70.00 15mm ZM II Alumax 150.00 70.00 75.20mm Acamate Macro 499.50 189.50 75.20mm Acamate Macro 499.50 219.00 100-300mm Macro 499.50 219.00 Fresh date: Aug 2010 ASA in re-loadable cassette 135-36 5 1 39 Req. $2.50 Sale BLACK AND WHITE FILM ull LENSES F MINOL PROG 80.00 SALE 17mm 12.5 Vinter 17mm 18.8 Kuschin 28mm 19 Vinter 28mm 19 Vinter 28mm 19 Vinter 28mm 19 Vinter 28mm 19 Vinter 55mm 8.9 Vinter 55mm 8.9 Vinter 55mm 8.9 Vinter 135mm 12.5 Kuschin 135mm 12.5 Kuschin 135mm 12.5 Kuschin 135mm 12.5 Kuschin 12.5 Vinter Moons 12.5 Vinter Moons 12.5 Vinter Moons 299.95 149.90 18.90 18.90 179.00 179.00 4.90 4.90 121.80 211.00 363.40 171.50 171.50 197.00 197.00 149.90 PROGRAM ITEMS 17m 13.5 Vivitar 21m 18.5 Bulbizer Zoom 21m 18.5 Vivitar 21m 19.5 Vivitar 25m 20.5 Vivitar 35m 20.5 Vivitar 35m 20.5 Vivitar 90m 22.5 Vivitar 115m 18.5 Vivitar 13 HOUCHSTER STYLE really suggest your use a fire for sharp pixie with the zoom. Built in bullet closes. the items $99 44 99% Sale S E LENSES FOR NIKC NEW 28mm f1.9 Visor 1650 1999 28mm f2.0 Visor 1650 1999 28mm f3.2 Visor 1650 1999 28mm f4.0 Nokkei 321 2799 28mm f4.0 Nokkei 321 2799 28mm f5.6 Nokkei 1650 1999 28mm f9 Macro II 3450 1699 100mm f3.5 Macro II 1450 1999 125mm f3.5 Macro II 1450 1999 155mm f3.5 Macro II 4180 2000 155mm f4 Macro II 4180 2000 200mm f4 Macro II 1750 1999 200mm f5 Macro II 1750 1999 200mm f6 Macro II 2299 1999 55mm f1.4 Macro Pro 1999 55mm f1.4 Macro Pro 1999 999 1999 1999 HOTTIE NEW SALE 28mm T1 Vior (use) 28mm T2 Vior (use) 28mm T3 Vior (use) 29mm T3 NiKar (use) 29mm T3 NiKar (use) 90mm F2.8 Macro Vior (use) 90mm F2.8 Macro Vior (use) 135mm f2.8 Macro Vior (use) 135mm f2.8 Macro Vior (use) 24mm F2.8 Macro Vior (use) 24mm F2.8 Macro Vior (use) 65 Japos Bushmaster 51-105mm F2.8 Macro Vior 70-125mm F2.8 Macro Vior 85-250mm F2.8 Macro Vario 80mm F2.5 Macro Vario 80mm F2.5 Macro Vario 71-150mm F2.8 Macro Vario 24mm F2.8 Vior (used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 24mm F2.8 Vior (M2 lens used) 259.99 149.99 14 | | MONTH | YEAR | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | GDA 1400 A1 | 169.91 | 8.00 | | GDA 1400 A1 | 169.91 | 8.00 | | GDA 1400 A1 | 169.91 | 8.00 | | GDA 1400 A1 | 169.91 | 8.00 | | Purchase Plan | 205.30 | 1.00 | | Purchase Plan | 205.30 | 1.00 | | Purchase Plan | 205.30 | 1.00 | | GDA 1400 I1 | 169.91 | 8.00 | | GDA 1400 I1 | 169.91 | 8.00 | | GDA 1400 I1 | 169.91 | 8.00 | JUNK & STUFF SLIDE PROJECTORS 299. 99 39.99 Come browse, ruminate and dig through all kinds of photographic gems. Camera supplies, cases, accessories, darkroom kit. Cheap. 29' and Up LENSES FOR PENTAX BAYONET | BETAL | SALE | | :--- | :--- | | 1mm BF Z Stigma Abyssae | 350.00 | 90 | | 1mm BF Z Stigma Rim | 350.00 | 90 | | 2mm BF Z Stigma Pointer | 199.50 | 90 | | 2mm BF Z Stigma Visitor | 199.50 | 90 | | 3mm BF Z Promaster | 174.95 | 90 | | 3mm BF Z Promaster | 99.50 | 90 | | 0mm BF Z Promaster | 365.00 | 90 | | 0mm BF Z Promaster | 365.00 | 90 | | 15mm BF Z Promaster | 109.95 | 90 | | 15mm BF Z Promaster | 109.95 | 90 | | 15mm BF Z Promaster | 150.00 | 90 | | 35-10mm BV Zoom Zeam Viewer | 454.00 | 90 | | 35-10mm BV Zoom Zeam Viewer | 454.00 | 90 | | 80-20mm BV Zoom Zeam Viewer | 299.95 | 90 | | 80-20mm BV Zoom Zeam Viewer | 299.95 | 90 | | 80-20mm BV Zoom Zeam Viewer | 264.00 | 90 | | 75-20mm BZ Awesome Zoom Zeam | 489.00 | 210 | ADAPTER LENSES NEW SOLID SALE 600mm IS Series 1 Vistor TX 740mm IS Series 2 Vistor TX - w adapter 850mm IS Series 3 Vistor TR 1140mm T2.5 Vistor TX 1140mm T3.5 Vistor TX 920mm M5 IS Series 1 Vistor TX 920mm M5 IS Series 2 Vistor TX 930mm TX 1000mm TX 1000mm TX 500mm TX 470mm TX ADAPTER COUNT LENSES SALE 600mm F8 IS Series 1 Vivitar 600mm F8 IS Series TX w radiator 125mm F2.8 IS Series TX 135mm F2.8 IS Series Vivitar 200mm F4.5 IS Series 90-350mm F4.5 IS Series 90-350mm TX 100-350mm F4.5 IS Series 100-350mm TX 500mm F4.5 IS Series 500mm F4.5 IS Series ADAPTER COUNT LENSES Nikon EX DX Nikon EX DX (used) 135mm F3.5 VR (used) 135mm F3.5 VR (used) 135mm F3.5 VR (used) 200mm F4.5 VR (used) 200mm F4.5 VR (used) 300mm F3.5 VR (used) VIVAR 220mm LR BODY 35mm camera, Built-in Ules all screw mount lenses. factory retail $229.95 Sales 1 | RITAL | TITLE | SAMPLE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 40 mm 16.5 pores (seed) | 1950.0 | 9.90 | | (seed) | | | | 135 mm 3.5 pores (seed) | 39 | 9.90 | | (seed) | | | | 200 mm 8.5 pores (seed) | 1695 | 70.49 | | (seed) | | | | 200 mm 8.5 pores (seed) | 1695 | 70.49 | | (seed) | | VUITAR 22" ROBY BODY 35mm camera, Built-in 镜头, crew mount lenses. Office retail $229.95 Sales 11 LASER FORMAT LATEFORMAT MERAS NEW MKW $15,000 Omega Water Pro 2.8 $360.00 MkW Water Pro 8.2-8. $360.00 Fuji Ef1 Water Pro 75mm. $499.00 Fuji Vario 90/1.8A Accuracy $999.00 Fuji Vario 75/1.8A Accuracy $999.00 Wirer or Zenator 2.8 $299.00 A (used) 139.55 100.00 Radialite® air / Optogen® water 129.99 100.00 Tacitone 835 (used) 100.55 100.00 Bronze 322 100.55 100.00 Amini Pena 6x7 35 Macro (342) LARGE FORMAT LENSES 50mm 3.5 Mamiya Sensor Press used (sued) 190mm 4.5 Mamiya Sensor used (sued) 180mm 5.5 Mamiya Rani Konig used (sued) 160mm 5.5 Mamiya Sensor Fai used (sued) 160mm 5.5 Mamiya Sensor Fai used (sued) 160mm 5.5 Dianage Fai used (sued) 30mm 3.5 Dianage Fai used (sued) 16mm 4 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 30mm 3.5 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 20mm 3.5 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 20mm 3.5 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 20mm 3.5 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 20mm 3.5 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 20mm 3.5 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 20mm 3.5 Diagonale Fai used (sued) 400mm TELEPHOTO Perfect for sports and nature photos. Complete with case and hood. (Requires camera adapter, not in case.) Ref $89 99 *69*¹⁹ POCKET CAMERAS O BETAFIT SALE Packard 1100 Mirage Kit Premier W1100 Kit Vacuum Kit Vector 400 16.99 24.99 Vector 500 16.99 24.99 Supra 320 Series II Chase North II Kit Beko Nissan II Kit Beko Nissan II Kit Edwards Tetra Line 1 36.45 29.99 Edwards Tetra Line 2 36.45 29.99 Edwards Direx 1 19.78 15.90 Edwards Direx 2 19.78 15.90 Edwards Tetra 1 19.78 15.90 Edwards Tetra 2 19.78 15.90 WIDE NECK STRAPS (Special Group — entire stock not included). Value to $6.95 Sale $2.99 LENSES FOR YASHICA ITALIA SALE 18mm O D LASER 195.00 18mm O TYSL 139.50 20mm O D LASER 149.50 15mm O TYSL 139.50 15mm O TYSL 139.50 75 mm LASER 295.00 75 mm LASER 295.00 POLAROID INSTANT PICTURE CAMERAS NEW U FIX IT | | RETAIL | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kodak intermarble 920 (used) | 187.50 | 149.00 | | Kodak biromatic B149 (used) | 189.50 | 149.00 | | Kodak biromatic B194 (used) | 189.50 | 149.00 | | Vivitar F423 (used) | 189.50 | 149.00 | | Vivitar V400 (used) | 36.50 | 16.95 | | Vivitar V450 (used) | 36.50 | 16.95 | | Paladin Solar Printer M | 190.00 | 69.00 | | Paladin Solar Printer N | 190.00 | 69.00 | | Paladin Solar Printer XM | 190.00 | 69.00 | | Paladin Solar Printer XM II | 11.50 | 20.00 | | Paladin Solar Printer XM III | 11.50 | 20.00 | As usual we have a collection of 35M slim LRR cameras, instantiats, lenses, projectors and such at museums like the one that makes a camera look (or not) Buy an SLR for only ... $5^{00} ELECTRIC FLASH SALA | RITUAL | BITAIRE | SALE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Hainesim 350 | 69.95 | 29.90 | | Vendor 150 | 127.50 | 39.90 | | Vendor 4000 | 89.95 | 34.90 | | Hainesim 450 | 89.95 | 34.90 | | Monster 150 | 50.00 | 29.90 | | Vendor 550 | 29.95 | 19.90 | | Vendor 150 | 127.50 | 39.90 | | Nilk 150 | 169.95 | 39.90 | | Nilk 250 | 169.95 | 39.90 | | Popular 800 Auto | 169.95 | 39.90 | | Popular 800 Auto | 169.95 | 39.90 | | Vendor 150 | 127.50 | 39.90 | | Vendor 150 | 127.50 | 39.90 | Vendor 150 69.95 29.90 Vendor 4000 89.95 34.90 Monster 150 50.00 29.90 Vendor 550 29.95 19.90 Vendor 150 127.50 39.90 Nilk 150 169.95 39.90 Nilk 250 169.95 39.90 Popular 800 Auto 169.95 39.90 Popular 800 Auto 169.95 39.90 SALE BITAG Namines 350 Vivendi 694 Pro 4000 Namines 692 Matsui 890 Vivendi 350 Pro 4000 Matsui 890 Vivendi 350 Pro 4000 Matsui 890 Vivendi 350 Pro 4000 Matsui 890 Vivendi 350 Pro 4000 Matsui 890 Vivendi 350 Pro 4000 Matsui 890 Vivendi 350 Pro 4000 Matsui 890 OIVITRIX ELECTRONIC FLASH Canada hot shoe model slides onto themer for easy operation. $4.99 20 only. Ba table hot terra for 20 only TIP ROUTE MOVIE CAMERAS ITAR SALE GAB 821 Zound Sound B224 Band B127 Ritwell 1277 Sound B300 Sound Bed B124 Ritwell 672H1 Bed B124 Ritwell 672H1 GAS 100A GAS 100A GAS 100A Chance AMQM4 Sound 599.00 Chance AMQM4 Sound 599.00 Chance 0703 125 (used) 450.00 Chance 0703 125 (used) Chance 804 405 Sound 159.90 Chance 804 405 Sound Chance 1723 125 (used) 199.90 Chance 1723 125 (used) Chance Pacific 1723 182.50 CHR 825.00 Sensation 375 (used) Sensation 375 (used) 329.00 Sensation 375 (used) Sensation 223 (used) 199.50 Sensation 223 (used) Sensation 223 (used) 199.50 Sensation 223 (used) Sensation 223 (used) 7 FILTERS Large selection of screw-in and series size filters. Includes some special effects. Lots of larger sizes. Reg $6.50 to $23 00 Sale 99' to '7'' MOVIE PROJECTORS | | Mkt/AU | Sale | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Bell & Burlington 1724 K2 Bused | 189.00 | 6.00 | | Bell & Burlington 125C | 138.00 | 6.00 | | Bell & Burlington 125C | 138.00 | 6.00 | | GAL 2380 D Bust | 139.90 | 6.00 | | GAL 2380 D Bust | 139.90 | 6.00 | | Lunger R 890 C | 119.00 | 6.00 | | Lunger R 890 C | 119.00 | 6.00 | | GAL 1944 D Bust | 179.95 | 17.00 | | GAL 1944 D Bust | 179.95 | 17.00 | | Lunger R 890 C (dominion) | 179.95 | 17.00 | | Lunger R 890 C (dominion) | 179.95 | 17.00 | | Bell & Burlington MK 40 Bust | 129.95 | 17.00 | | Bell & Burlington MK 40 Bust | 129.95 | 17.00 | | Chienen 1200 | 850.00 | 8.00 | | Chienen 1200 | 850.00 | 8.00 | | Ilma R 3170 Bust | 169.95 | 9.00 | | Ilma R 3170 Bust | 169.95 | 9.00 | | Argus Hemlocks 418 (cush) | 89.00 | 8.00 | | Argus Hemlocks 418 (cush) | 89.00 | 8.00 | | Kimberlees Mendocino 475 (cush) | 174.00 | 8.00 | (used) 189.95 199.90 Word A03 Duo B (used) 76.99 39.90 Word Daxia Duplex 2000 H (demo) 219.99 129.90 PHOTO LIGHTING | BETAIL | SALE | | :--- | :--- | | Smith Vector Q100 | 51.95 | | Smith Vector A62 | 31.95 | | 77 Series A62 | 49.45 | | 77 Series A52 (essential) | 17.95 | | Colorant Best A52 | 41.75 | | Colorant Max Pre | 109.50 | | Lowbrow Editions 100 (Eamis) | 59.90 | | Lowbrow Editions 100 (Eamis) | 149.00 | TRIPODS BITARIS | SALE Kaldarman Tabi Top | 39.09 | Pro 2351 | 39.09 | Pro 2406 | 39.09 | Vibian Style Troped | 39.09 | Vibian V3 | 39.09 | Vibian V32 | 39.09 | Kadarman II | 39.09 | BISRA 334 Ahead | 39.09 | TPC Ace 334 | 39.09 | P40 1600 Ahead | 69.90 | P40 1600 | 69.90 | Bison 8200 Troped | 124.95 | Uniboard Managed | 69.90 | Intra Troped | 24.00 | Stock price | | price 10 LIGHT METERS | | BITDAI | SALE | | :--- | :--- | ---: | | Mintimate Auto Meter | 158.90 | 7.60 | | Mintec Auto Meter | 158.90 | 7.60 | | Limo Pro SKC | 249.99 | 16.00 | | Limo Pro SKC | 199.99 | 7.00 | | Lipop Pro SKC | 179.99 | 10.00 | | Lipop Pro SKC | 199.99 | 7.00 | | Sakura XL | 260.00 | 16.00 | | Sakura XL | 260.00 | 16.00 | | Western Euromechanic | 77.50 | 40.00 | | Western Euromechanic | 77.50 | 40.00 | | German Toyota Motor | 77.50 | 40.00 | | Sahara P1 | 199.99 | 14.00 | | Orlandi Toyota | 199.99 | 14.00 | | Orlandi Toyota | 199.99 | 14.00 | Made to fit Kodak Carousel ROUND SLIDE TRAYS 80 slide ... $2^7.5 140 slide ... $4^2.5 SCREENS BINMENU 08:40 Quincy 08:50 Bennett (edited) 08:50 Mega Wall Screen 08:50 Video & Audio 7:21 Videotape 14:10 DVD & Video 16:30 CAMERA CASES P BAT Gear Movie Case 89144 SALE G42 Satellite Internet Case 94954 SALE Iridium Instant Camera Case 94954 SALE Pro I11 370X Case 95995 12.00 Pro I11 370X Case 95995 12.00 IMS Diamond B Case 95995 12.00 Ferrari 430 Pleasure Car 65500 30.00 Toyota Traveg Car 65500 30.00 Ingenator Car Bag 65500 30.00 Ingenator Car Bag 65500 30.00 Aluminum Car Case 79550 19.00 Aluminum Car Case 79550 19.00 ENLARGERS IF NEW **MICROSCOPE** | | A1515B | | :--- | ---: | | Virtual Wetty | 10/90 | 10/90 | 10/90 | | Virtual Wetty w. headband | 445.60 | 445.60 | 445.60 | | Virtual Wetty w. headband w. mmipro | 120.80 | 120.80 | 120.80 | | Omega G67 Diffuser w. 10mm | 164.93 | 164.93 | 164.93 | | Omega G67 Diffuser w. 20mm | 174.93 | 174.93 | 174.93 | | Omega B00 B10 Diffuser | 129.45 | 129.45 | 129.45 | | Omega B00 B10 Diffuser w. mmipro | 129.45 | 129.45 | 129.45 | | Magnetic Open Hood | 309.53 | 309.53 | 309.53 | | Magnetic Open Hood w. headband | 309.53 | 309.53 | 309.53 | | Univision Head | 181.200 | 181.200 | 181.200 | DARKROOM AIDS ANNOVA Radio Ad, 98% RATIOS AnnoVA Digital Telecom Communicator 69% RATIOS Acoustic Way Level 99% RATIOS Acoustic Noise Level 99% RATIOS Akim 1 (no box) 114% RATIOS Akim 2 (no box) 114% RATIOS Akim 250 Square Inch 160% RATIOS Aquaford Pro Printer 165% RATIOS Aquaford Pro Printer 165% RATIOS Aquifont Pro Printer (no box) 165% RATIOS Aquifont Pro Printer (no box) 165% RATIOS All Balleroy Color Drum 34% RATIOS All Balleroy Color Drum 34% RATIOS 100 Stainless Steel Bathroom Sinks 12.99% RATIOS 100 Stainless Steel Bathroom Sinks 12.99% RATIOS Albion Cable 119% RATIOS Albion Cable 119% RATIOS Darco Paper Cutter (downdown) 17.99% RATIOS Darco Paper Cutter (downdown) 17.99% RATIOS 110 I50 Moving Pressure Sensor 235.00% RATIOS 110 I50 Moving Pressure Sensor 235.00% RATIOS Darco BC Printed Drum 99% RATIOS Darco BC Printed Drum 99% RATIOS Darco BC Printed Drum 99% RATIOS Darco BC Printed Drum 99% RATIOS Paterson Kettle Timer 18% RATIOS Paterson Kettle Timer 18% RATIOS Paterson Kettle Timer 18% RATIOS Paterson Kettle Timer 18% RATIOS Paterson Kettle Timer 18% RATIOS 120 Foilers 11.99% RATIOS 120 Foilers 11.99% RATIOS Paterson CG Monitor 14.95% RATIOS Paterson CG Monitor 14.95% RATIOS UniLoader Shuttle Machine 79% RATIOS UniLoader Shuttle Machine 79% RATIOS Darco 2 Beam Tool 6.99% RATIOS Darco 2 Beam Tool 6.99% RATIOS Darco 2 Beam Tool 6.99% RATIOS Bedroom 120 Box 7.95% RATIOS Bedroom 120 Box 7.95% RATIOS Samsung Washer 1.99% RATIOS Samsung Washer 1.99% RATIOS WOLF Wolfe's camera shop, inc. 635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386 Topeka, Kansas 66603 Wednesday, March 26, 1980 Budget. From page one "It was like they had asked for equipment money so that Mr. Choon Lee wouldn't have to buy it for his school." "Hollaway said." All of the six committee members present did not want to fund the club, Holloway said. OTHER ORGANIZATIONS and their officers: Frisbie Club, $81.10; Fencing Club, $41.19; Field Hockey Club, $81; Rugby Club, $172; Cricket Club, $89.90 and the other officers. At the Cultural Affairs Committee hearing, KU Bands asked for $29.813. Robert E. Foster, director of bands, said $18,500 of funds will be available to travel a lot more equipment and equipment. Other clubs funding from the Cultural Affairs Committee last night were the Iranian Student Organization, $1,200; the University of Texas at Austin Student Organization, $1,645; KUF Dance Club, $465; International Club, $365; and the University Dance Company, $1,492. The Senate Finance and Auditing Committee approved a funding philosophy to enhance the role of the senate in philosophy included a statement aimed at restricting Senate-funded organizations "There is nothing in the rules and regulations that says organizations can't take political stands, there has just been an agreement," Brend Abbott, Senate treasurer, said. The philosophy said no Senate-funded organization "shall support, endorse or oppose any political philosophy or highly controversial issue." "Some clubs have a political bent and if you say they can engage in politics, a lot of their meetings will be political," Matt Davis, student body vice president, said. More times has to be black and white. It is general that it is going to be really easy to hedge." THE GUIDELINES exempt line item allocation organizations such as the Kansan on its editorial page and the Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobby group. Those exceptions were justified on the grounds that political statements were implicit in the operation of both --organizations, and they were widely accepted by Senate. A line item allocation organization is considered important enough to be structured into the Senate budget and is not easily cut in budget hearings. Davis said in the past, the Iranian Student Association had held demonstrations and justified its actions because it found the government's response to the event expenses such as flares. THE FINANCE and Auditing funding philosophy also specified that all posters, advertisements, newsletters and other materials written in English or translated into English. "The meetings must be open and I contend they can't be open if students can't read what they're announcing," Abbott said. Abbott said the statement was intended to open up all organizations, including international clubs; to the student body. BRAID JAY, Academic Affairs Committee chairman, said developing a consistent budget philosophy was difficult from year to year. He encouraged in turn student senators participating. "I don't want to be dominant to the point of being outrageous, but I try to be as persuasive as possible to keep the committee consistent." Jay said. The organizations requesting funds were: Student Occupational Therapy, $831; Minority Business Student Council, $140; Association for the Learning of Biology, $32; Association, $330; Biology Club, $58; Engineering Student Council, $210; KU German Club, $340; KU Advertising Club, $179; KU Forestes, $152; School of Engineering, $143; Board Advisory, $40; Chancery Club, $292. The Academic Affairs Committee considered requests from 10 organizations and made preliminary cuts on three budgets. The committee gave preliminary approval to the chancery and foreseeing budgets. The committee also made were in the Student Occupational Therapy Program, which includes training in the Pharmaceutical Association budget. Dilective nails will continue below. This story was written by Susan Schoenmaker, Cindi Carrie and Kathy Kae, staff reporters. Assembly... From page one T. P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and a sponsor of the proposal, said he was happy the Assembly was going to vote on new degree requirements. "I think any program in the University should promote the acquisition of certain basic skills, such as writing, reasoning, computation, communication and human understanding. That is what we do." MCNALL SAID the move could be detrimental to off-campus students who often are older and who would find it hard to go back and pick up the requirements. But Scott McNail, professor of sociology, said he saw the measure as "an erosion of the flexibility of the BGS." "We have to remember we have a large community to serve," McNall said, "not just graduating high school students." The proposed degree requirements will be delivered as soon as they can be printed by the University Printing Service, according to Teri Carswell, a secretary at the printing service. Tennis Shoe Disco Skate in men's and women's sizes while quantities last. $38.88 at K-Mart Sporting Goods 3106 Iowa TODAY: There will be a KU OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY Council on Education at the Kansas Union all day. The council will hold conferences and holding registration for their art classes from 9 a.m. until 8 p.m. at the center, Ninth and Vermont streets. The LEO FLEISHER holdings in Southwest Park, 1:30 p.m. in Swarthout Residential Hall. THE WEDNESDAY FORUM will present Norman Miller of the American Universities Field Staff at 11 a.m. at the BEM Center. The Miller will speak at the EAST Africa" at the spring Area Studies luncheon Seminar in Alcove F of the Union at 12:30 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIATE for the UNiversity College East public free lecture in Hoch Auditorium at the KU CREW team will front in front of 205 Robinson at 3. The CENTER FOR LECTURES: "Influences, Similarities and Differences of American Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie School with Eastern Art and Architecture, by JOHN HOFFMAN"; "Comparison of the Confucian Image of the Good Man with Grace-Roman Concept of the Good Man, by Nancy Hazelwood, by JANE LEAVEN"; and 3:30 in the Jawkah Room of the Union. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus TONIGHT: The KU INTERNATIONAL CLUB will hold a pot课饮 at 6:30 and he will bear Dumasasan S. Kumalo at 8 as part of South Africa Night at the Ecumenical Center for Religious Studies. We will give a Carillon Recital at 7. MINORITY AFFAIRS will show two films, "Simplemenite J" and "Double Day," at 7 in 4025 Wesley Hall as part of Latin American Film Week. We will have the Pine Room of the Union at 7. THEHEARTLAND UNITY CHOIR will hold 3-N.Y. Erotic Film Festival 1-5-PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Hero At Large Starring John Ritter Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 Coal Miner's Daughter Staring Sissy Spacek Eve, 7:15 and 9:30 17-Divine in: PINK FLAMINGOS & FEMALE TROUBLES 2. Little Darlings Starling Tatum O'Neal and Kra Eve, 7:45 and 9:50 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 28 ⇌ JOHN MAYALL & Used Parts 29-999 & the Dickies Granada Downtown 843-5788 3. Kramer vs. Kramer Starling Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Evie. 7:30 and 9:40 - Advance tickets available at Kiefs, Better Dava & the 7th Soul Club. THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES 1. Chapter Two Starring Merah Mason and Eve. 7:15 and 9:45 1. All That Jazz Starting Roy Schreider Eve. 7:30 and 9:40 Coming Soon Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 2. Little Miss Marker Saring Walter Mattheu and Julie Andrew. Eve, 7:20 and 9:30 MARCO SCHULZ 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 27-Debbie Harry in UNMADE BEDS & THE FOREIGNER "I've been through it all, and proved that I'm equal to anybody you'd care to mention." - Mr. Pop rehearsal in Danfort Chapel at 7. The DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES in ANTHROPOLOGY will bear Rosale Waxla speak on 'Terror and Resistance Work in a War' II in the Council Room of the Union. The DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH will present Barbara Kiefa Walskens, brown University professor, speaking on 'Milton's War' II in the Council Room of the Union. The KU CHORALE will give a Spring Concert at 8 in Swallow Recital Hall. There will be a BLACK POETRY READING in the Forum Room of the Union Tonight Only IGGY POP The Janet Jameson Band With Band Opera House Productions presents TOMORROW: There will be a ROTARY DISTRICT CONFERENCE all day in the union with the GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP at 10:30 AM. The union is the KU BLUE RIBBON COMMITTEE ON FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION will hold an open forum at 3 on Monday and the KU CREW team will meet in front of room 205 Robinson at 3. PI ALPHA THEETA, historyary society, will hold initiation of the KU CREW team at 4 in the Union. THE ECONOMICS CLUB will meet at 4 in the Sunflower Room of the Union. There will be an AURH GENERAL XMETAL MAY meeting at in the Council Room of the Union. Top "SupaMumu" as part of LATIN AMERICAN WEEX at 7:30 in the Jawhayk Club will meet at 7:30 in Porter C Club will meet at 7:30 in Porter C of the Union. THE KU COLLEGUM MUSICI Dan Politiksoe and Stewart Carter, directors, will perform "Music to Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art." Featuring Janet Jameson former lead vocalist for Cole Tuckey Doors open at 8 Plenty of Good Tickets available at the door. Show starts at 9 Where else but the . . Lawrence Opera House Call for concert info 842-6330 TOMORROW Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK TONIGHT IS UNIVERSITY OF MADRID Encore Copy Corps 842-2001 "We deliver" 99¢/page Typing (pica) ($1.10 elite) "One Stop Thesis Shop" 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza University Daily Kansan MASS. STREET DELI OIL MASSACHUSETTS HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL $1.50 reg. $2.00 Wed. thru Sun., March 26 to 30 Enjoy Coke No coupons accepted with offer A career in law without law school. As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at the Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of the Institute's training the institute's unique Placement Service will find your job and assist you in finding a 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. The Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we placed over 3,000 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide. If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking for an above average career, contact your Placement Officer. We will visit your campus on: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23 The Institute for Paralegal Training Haus der Klasse 235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 2014. 10.29 Approved by the American Bar Association. FOR ONE WEEK ONLY!! WED., MARCH MARCH 26 THROUGH WED., APRIL 2 MISTER GUY OF LAWRENCE ANNOUNCES A SPRING SUIT SALE!! A Huge Selection of New Spring Suits Perfect for: a. Interviews b. Spring Parties c. That New Career that Starts in June d. Any Occasion that Requires a Traditional Suit in Naturally Blended Fabrics SALE SUITS INCLUDE SOLIDS, PINSTRIPES AND CHALK STRIPES All vested in navies - greys - ink blues- British tan All the classic business and dress suits with the famous Mister Guy fit. Alterations are free!! Hours: Thurs: Mon, Tues, 10-6 Wed, Fri, Sat Thurs 10-9 Sun 1-5 MISTER GUEY 920 Massachusetts 842-2700 12 Wednesday. March 26. 1980 University Daily Kansan Swim hopes high at NCAA meet By CHICK HOWLAND Sports Writer Out of the hundreds of top amateur NCAA swimming and diving championships at Harvard University in Cambridge, only five will be representing Kansas. Although KU's chance of bringing home a team title with five qualifiers is remote, the dream of KU swimming coach Spain Stupar in the scoring column may finally come true. "WE'VE GOT some real good shots," Spahn said. "Every one of our entries has got a chance to score. Based on last year's times, we should score some points. "It is probably the toughest meet in the world outside of the Olympic trials. It's so hard to get there, and it's hard to place." Only the top 12 finishers in each event earn points for their team and are subsequently named All-America swimmers. Spain will spin most of his hopes on Steve Graves, who has made the trip to the NCAA meet every year he has been at KU. A junior, Graves has qualified in three individual events—the 20-yard individual and the 100- and 200-yard breast-stroke. ACCORDING TO Spahn, Graves has a good chance of scoring in either breast-stroke event. "If he swims the same times that he did in the Big Eight, it should place him." Spahn said. "This year's time would have placed him in last year's NCAA." In addition to competing in three individual events, Graves will join Jim Sauer, Brent Barnes and Gardner Wright in the 400-valed medley relay. Wright, who is the Big Eight champion in the 200-vard backstroke, is substituting for Rick Jenkins on the relay team, Jenkins, Kevin Patterson, and Jordan Williams at KU's 400-yard mule team that placed 26th at last year's NCAA meet, was unable to swim this season because of a should. ANOTHER KU qualifier who is hoping to have a few seconds off his times is Chuck Nieman, who will speak at conference meet in the 100 breathstroke with a 7:42 time. Neumann and Wright both are Spahn said the relay team would have to shave about two seconds off last year's 3:22.70 time to place. "I want to become the first freshman All-American at KU." Wright said. "It's hard to find freshman All-Americans. I hope I don't choke. Although the odds are long that the pair can turn in performances that will place them in the top 12 of their particular events, the fact that they were capable of answering the challenge "I'll be swimming against the best in the nation, the best in the world. It would be nice if both of us made it." "Neumann is the same as Wright. It's hard to knock off a second, but if everything goes right, he certainly has a chance." "THEY'RE PRETTY tough kids, very competitive," Spaun said. "They look forward to meets like this. I think they will do very well." "Wright has a very good chance in the 200- year breaststroke. He's within a half second of what it took last year." According to Spain, Florida is the muese a favorite to capture the team scoring title. A strong challenge should come from last year's champions, California-Berkley. Preliminary rounds start tomorrow. The meet concludes Saturday. PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Portland stymed Kansas City's defense late in the game and went ahead on a jumper by Ray Bates to take a 106-102 NBA victory last Kings drop to two back with loss The loss dropped Kansas City, which has qualified for the playoffs, two games between Milwaukee in the Midwest Division. Milwaukee beat Chicago 112-111 yesterday. KANSAS CITY scored 11 straight points, Porter to do mattress ads six by Oksis Birdsong, to take a 109-198 lead with 3:14 to go. But the Kings scored no more field goals. The Kings got no points at all in the final 2:38. KANSAS CITY, Mo. OAP)--All-Star Kansas City Royals catcher Darr尔 Portrell, reportedly undergoing treatment for alcoholism, will still represent the Sealy Mattress Co. in regional advertisement, a company spokesman said yesterday. Bates' jumper put Portland ahead 103-102, then the Bizzars hit a free throw from Dave Foster. The Cavaliers rebounded a field goal attempt by Scott Wedman of Kansas City with four seconds left. The agreement was reached just two days before he reported to the club's spring training camp in Fort Myers, Fla. Gale said. Porter will be paid in undisclosed amount to the commercials. One already made to two or three mules. The schedule is to make two or three mules. Porter left the camp March 14, and Royals moved to Oklahoma. They received medical treatment for a conditional problem. Porter's father, Ray Porter, later disclosed that his son had entered an abusive relationship. illustrations cartoons artwork logos creative illustrations phone—841-7650 Bates, whose sensational late-game heroics helped Portland, to three recent victories, scored eight points. But Kansas City coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said of Bates, "He must have left his Krypton at home tonight. He sure wasn't a Superman. 5c BEER at MY BROTHER'S MOUSTACHE 5c BEER 5c BEER RESTAURANT 10th & Mass. "If I think there was a superman out there tonight, it was Twardik. When he's healthy and playing well, Portland is a very good basketball team." **TWARDZIK SCORED** 11 points, had seven assists and held Kansas City's Phil Ford to only one field goal in 19 minutes. As many nickel beers as you can drink when you buy a sandwich. Yesterday's scheduled double-header between KU and Washburn was postponed because of muddy field conditions. The Kings, who have not won in Portland since 1974, play Golden State tonight and Offer good through March & April. then face Milwaukee Friday in St. Louis. The regular season concludes Sunday. Calvin Natt led Portland scoring with 24 points. Birdsong led all scorers with 27 and Wedman contributed 23. Double-header today The game is rescheduled for this afternoon at 1:30 at Quigley Field barring any adverse weather. Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS Part Size 1208 East 12th 841-2900 A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD The Kansas University School of Architecture and Urban Design is pleased to announce an Exhibition of Student Projects schedules to be on display in the fall 2015 semester. Students as well as past student work (the earliest daring circa 1925) will represent the high design excellence stressed within the School. Presentation drawings and scale models will be integrated in the show to illustrate the *best* of the School's pedagogic productions. EXHIBIT The Intercollegiate Association for Women Students Annual Convention March 26-30 Day 3 March 26, Wednesday Paddy Murphy Escapes Local Sheep Nervous The Men of SAE were pleased to report that brother Paddy Murphy, known drunk and sheep bother, had finally reunited from St. Patrick's Day festivities in K.C. a day late and a dollar's worth of brain ect short. At the same time, a fraternity spokesman apologized for his escape from the House only 8 hours after his return. Fraternity Vice President Locurk Chonkaki commented, "We're really sorry! After he got back from K.C. we tried to keep him locked in the attic, bravely seated with Mad Dog 20-20, just as we usually do. However, an inattentive pledge must have left the door open after taunting him. When asked for a description, Clonkaki replied, "What are you doing, writing a book? He continued by saying, 'He got one eye green, one eye blue, and both eyes bloodshot. If you could ever get him to stand up long enough, he'd be about 6 tall.' Paddy was wearing a Shiner's hat, hip wadders, and a coordinated black blazer. When asked what seams had been taken with regard to Murphy, Clonkaki replied, "We haven't counted them, but I don't think he took any." Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Paddy Murphy are encouraged to call the Chapter House. No reward is offered Downtown Towers Holiday Inn Kansas City, KS Day 3 March 26, Wednesday For more information call The Women's Resource Center 864-3552 Partially funded by Student Senate Kenneth Cole Gloria's Glorious Savings Try the classic five-pocket western jean in white and indigo, 20% off this weekend only on the porch. Silgeria 821 Mass. 642-5309 Ruggers lose to KC The KU Rugby Club ran hot and cold in the first round of national tournaments in Kansas City over the weekend. KU won its Saturday contest, defeating the Des Moines Rugby Club, 14-13, but fell to the Kansas City Rush Sunday. 46,6 KU's Rick Bess scored two penalty kicks, each worth three points, to lead the captain. Captain Steve Meredith and teammate Rikent Rentro each added a try, worth nine points. The Blues go into the second round of national competition against the St. Louis Rugby Football Club next week. Oread bikers dominate races The Mount Oread Bicycle Club racing team demonstrated its strength at two races events last weekend. On Saturday, the team meet near Vinland for a 19-team训练赛. David Conard, coach of the visiting team, teams members with a time of 57:08. Paul Biskop of Kennesa City, Mo., was second and third in the group. On Sunday, the team traveled to Missouri City, Mo, for a 28-mile event sponsored by the Kansas City Bicycle Club. Out of the top five places, the Mount Oread club took four. IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MASS. 8:30-8:00 M-S Thur. ill 8:30 p.m. Hair Designing Foaith Forecasting Make-Up & Skin Care Information Hair And Skin Analysis Hair Care Tips Heat-Styling Lessons Long Hair Designs If your group of 10 or more would like to have Headmasters' staff provide a program covering one or more of the above topics, just give us a call. (ask for Paula) We are happy to provide these programs free of charge and hope you will learn something useful while we all have a little fuel VOLKSWAN headmasters 809 Vermont 843-8808 VOTE AURH GENERAL ELECTIONS President Secretary Vice President Treasurer Voting boxes in each hall during dinner on Tues., March 25th and Wed., March 26th. Residents must show Hall ID to vote. Offer good 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mon.-Fri. till March 28 Salad Bar Special $1.95 reg. price $2.25 NEW YORKER 1021 Mass. MATH-SCIENCE Ask a Peace Corps volunteer why she teaches math and general science to high school students in Liberna, West Africa. Ask another volunteer why he treats biology and physics in the Pacific Islands. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, travel, learn a new language or experience another culture. Ask them: PEACE CORPS SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARRUTH-O'LEAPY BEFORE APRIL 2, 1980. Wednesday, March 26.1980 13 843-2931 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 Alphareth 2340 Alabama aransas, Kansas 66044 --ket delivered with each telegram Where economy comes first - Free pick-up and delivery University Daily Kansan Mazdaas Pintos Cullas Trucks A PHOTO "Where Cards & Gifts Abound" We're hopping into Easter with a huge selection of stuffed animals, cards, baskets, & party supplies. ZERCHER 919 IOWA 1107 MASS SEND YOUR HONEY A SINGING BUNNY!! ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS 842-8741 With customer service call number Baa !! The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES mine two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.25 $2.25 to run Monday Thursday 4 p.m. Tuesday Friday 4 p.m. Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday Wednesday 4 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect inceptions. 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 Karenian Business at 843-658. ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Watch for truck parked at 9th and Illinois, 10th streets, where the front door of The Inn-to-the-Wall. Sell fresh fruits and peanuts in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry peanuts are available, topham, and teumom. Every Sunday. Also selling wood- burning logs. Rosanna's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bell, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 Nassau, Bahamat) Departing Wichita, May 24 & 31 Rates starting at $49.75 per week. Entrance free off golf course and the turbine in Playboy Cove at Wichita Beach. Survival tip: Sat Aug- 24th. Ks 6270 (316) 802-435-436. The Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor in Education (OVCE) will be involved in Districion Hearing Board for three years. The OVCE is to hear complaints of aligned districts of the Board to be hear complaints of aligned districts of the Board to be heard complaints of aligned districts of the Board to be heard recommendations to the Execs.成员 Members of this board come from all schools, colleges, students, faculty, administration, and classified institutions. The OVCE is to hear complaints of aligned districts of the Executive Vice Chancellor in Education (OVCE) will be involved in Districion Hearing Board for three years. The OVCE is to hear Applications are now being taken for 1881 Rock Chalk Revive Producer and Business Manager. Furnaces are available at the K.U.Y. office, room 46, West 7th Street, to return a lunch on moon on Wednesday, April 9th A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf J. HOOD BOOKSELLER. Scholarly; literary. Masters degree. Education, trade and trade good paperback books. science fiction, classic fiction, and scholarly titles available on 81-444-3600, 81-444-3601, everyday except Monday 5-26 FOR RENT Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. Iff Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities phone: 843-8579 or 843-8185. Reasonably priced. Call 843-8579 or 843-8185. New 2 bed househouse A C D WB Appliances table 1 bed from the Union. Call #814 9579 Jayhawk West Apts. Now Renting: 1 & 2 bed- room furnished and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment call 842-444 or see at a24 Fronter Road. Next door to Rustell's East. **tf** NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8539 any time of the day. Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, $921.92$ m²; Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. It allows and/or lower floors $728 \text{ sq. ft.}$ or $800 \text{ sq. ft.}$ Contact $834-2024$ or $843-0377$. COOPERATIVE living an established student cooperative lived within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 892-9612. HANOVER PLACH NOW LEASING new and contemporary townhouses are the new highlight of the neighborhood. Shopping at 3266 North Fifth Street and downstairs at $39 per month. Tours from 10am to 4pm with all appliances in stock. Private private tours vary. Call 845-745-8121 or your private phone. Call 845-745-8121 or your private phone. Call 845-745-8121 or your private phone. Call 845-745-8121 or your private phone. Call 845-745-8121 or your private phone. Call 845-745-8121 or your private phone. Call 845-745-8121 or your private phone. Call 845-745-8121 or your private CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall and summer. Apply now. Call 842-2583 at 6:00 p.m. Apts. and rooms for rent. Near University and no pets. Phone 841-3500. TF Available for summer. Terrible 4-5 bdm, town house right next to pool and tennis court. two full baths, fully equipped kitchen, carpeted, big base, Reasonable. 814-4623. 3-31 Apartment 1 bldk. from Union. 2 bedrooms, $235. moo plus utilities. Contact Steve Rhudy 841-4075 -- 843-3114 3-28 Lease Now For Fall At Special Rate! On can- pause. 2 bdm apartments, with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawker Towers Apartmentes 10 W. 15th. W-843-4993. 2 Bedroom unfurnished apt. (Mark 1 Apt. 1053 Miss.) for summer sublease, also available for 1054 stay in Aug. Laundry, A/C, DW, balcony. Call 814-2842. 3-26 Mark & 1 & ii. ON NEW RENTING FOR SUMMER Mark & 1 & ii. 2 bedroom apts. 7 walk, to petting balloons, off street parking, dbh parking, for info. 842-803 at 1051 Mistlewood for info. 842-803 at 1051 Mistlewood ARE YOU PED UP WITH THE HIGH COST OF BANKS AND UTILITIES? Well, a family friend and former friend of ours attended Edward Homes have come 2 bedroom openings at the Bancorp in New York. Edward Homes have come shopping, paths, and schools. Call 817-264-5900 for Bancorp K817 to see how they can help. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579 ff Spacusta, two-bedroom, AVALON apt. available for June & July at a cost of $700/mi; all utilities included; 2-bedroom available. Air conditioner and & open-air balcony available. Contact 842-1536 anytime. Interview 3-28 2-year-old twin 2-story house. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Guest room. Family room, dining room, kitchen with all furniture. School district. 1 year and South School district. $45/month. Tailored for on or after April 1. Lease required. #84-3072. SUMMER APT. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, a.c., dishwasher, new carpet, on bus route, x-large living area. Call 842-6423. 3-28 Staying in Lawrence this summer? Sublease wi- option for next year. One bedroom, furnished apartment on bus route. 841-749-600. 3-27 Must mubilease 1 bedroom apt. AC, water paid. Must mubilease 1 laundry room. AC, water paid. Keep trying Summer sublease: one-bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus. Furnished, new with private parking. $82-1119. WHY WAIT UNTIL LATER TO MAKE YOUR SCHOOL CAREER RIGHT? A third-bedroom a.i. room, row 1. Washing during campus air-conditioned, fairly new apartment with large windows and balcony, off wall street parking B4-7648 from university campus. 2 bedroom, living-dining area, kitchen, bath + dressing room. 2-4 person - Meadowbrook Apts Call 843-1989 or (816) 331-518. 3-28 Must subsulta 3 bedroom furnished A/C and $450 per month $600 for 4 rooms Trailridge. 841-0052 or 843-7233. 3-28 Large, excellent 3 bedroom house. Fireplace, large yard, 2 sleeping porches. $2650 a month plus utilities. A very nice house. Jeff Morrow. 843-3600 4-1 Summer sublease. 2 Br. Trailridge Townhouse 200 yards, from pool, tennis, call 842-1447 for info. Must sublet. 2 bdmr furnished apt. Next to stadium. Rent $255. Will sublet for $209. 841- 3-28 4250. On campus 2 b apartments furnished or unfurnished, all utilities paid. Jayhawker Towers Apartments. 1603 W. 150h. 1496-3-28 3-4 bdm. house, 2 baths on residential location 1-3 bedrooms, 1-bathroom. Eavens. Lunches 841-8454 3-31 Summer suavee: Furnished studio apt, air-conditioning, natio, close to swimming pool & tennis courts. Call 841-6079. 3-28 Sublease now. Meadowbrook studio. Furnished and water paid. $196 mo. Call 814-1495. 4-1 Room-large, unfurnished, private frig. and Room-large, unfurnished, private frig. and Mass. 853-4178, 843-4178, 4-1 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTO-MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-960-3900, 900 W. th. tf Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make these changes to the book. (Use them to use them—1). As study guide, 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. New book for Town crier, Mall Bookstore and Oread Book Store of Town crier, Mall Bookstore and Oread Book WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 843-1380, TSF New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat, bed pillows, mattresses. Bathroom Furniture. 1209 New York St. 84-3222. Leftover. Furniture. 1209 New York St. 84-3222. Leftover. SunSpeed—Sun glasses are our specialty. Nonprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. ¶ Cassette Deck—Sharp RT-1185 with Automatic Shratch System. Best offer over $115 takes. Call 843-1775. 3-26 Top quality PA excellent for rock band or in- strumental music. Bundle $1000 864-257-2 after 6:00. Ask for KKK. (www.kkkk.com) Brand spanking new 1980'; Datum 210=$4,279 + daxed delivery. Call 842-0444 ask for Bob Smith at Tony's Datum. 5-5 ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor from $59.95. Ricks Bike Shop 103 Vermont. 841-6624. 10 Speed for sale. Motobecane Mirage in excellent condition. Copper metallic with Sawdust Derailers. $110. 841-7168. 3-28 1968 Olds 88. Luxury Sadan. Dependable for small budget. Call 842-300-80 or 841-777, anytime FOUND Small Mobile Home—near Sanctuary, needs owner after old one graduates this May. Evenings 843-6256 4-1 Ampifier, mantzs, 75 watts per channel, excellent condition. Please call 812-4352 after 5. 3-28 1973 Camaro L4 350, auto, pu. pb. Good condition. Must sell! 846-787-8161. Mike. dc28 Cockatiel—tame pair for sale. May be used for breeding. Bird eagle included. **824-925-369** 3-29 For sale: 19" color TV, RCA-XL100. 3 years old. Call: 804. Call 785-7851. 3-28 dition. Only $125. Call Mike at 841-7074. 3-28 Honda 50 (mod): like new, has hatchs, but Saturday night, 3-22 on tennis court by Wakimin Hospital; tennis racket cover. Call Dreux at 864-5747. 3-28 Found—prescription sunglasses. Found in front of Union Saturday night: Call & identity, 841-0088. Keep trying. 3-28 Olivetti Underwood Editor II electric typewriter. Excellent shape, must sell. Cuilt 842-5480. 3-26 1975 Honda CB750F Super Sport. Good shape, ready for spring. 842-2927 for more info. 3-26 Cheap 1979 Grand Prix. White with red top and interior. 16,500 miles. Fully automatic. 842-7303. Senior class key. To claim call Linda at 864-2205. Mens gloves - 4th floor Wescoe 4:00 p.m. Mm. Call & identify, 841-6023. 3:28 Found: One auto tool kit near Spooner. Call George, 843-8153, describe car and contents. 3-28 Friday Plus Marksville female terminal with collar-like marking. In Malia area Call 843-6900, 3:28 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDERS/ORDER-LEVEL WILL you share your work experience with our OSP® consumer organization, Kami Fori Implementer, and input on nursing home conditions and care. We will also have contact information and case call experience to be confident in providing care. Kami Fori KINN, 927; Mass St. NW, Now taking applications for floor/door and walt- tering, at 8:30 a.m. p.m. for Shelter, if W. 7th after 8:30 p.m. a.k.a. for Shelter. CRUISERSHIPS/SAILING EXPEDITIONS/:SALLING GAMES A NOS. Experience good day Pay summer and fall salary. Apply to CRUISERSHIPS. APPLICATION INFO/REFERRALS: to 80580 BOX 6019, Sacramento 80580 Position open-residential facility for development of IT infrastructure and services of a residential manager. Degree in human services area is required. Resume should include experience with MCRS, Box 86, McFerren Park, EOE. KOE. COMPUTER SERVICES AGENCY needs Krupp PUC software 192.168.0.4 data using digital telephone numbers 192.168.0.582. operation of machine unit record equip, some equipment, and other office Office. Adm. Center, 2017 La. 842-622-8000. Summer Print Pain. Approv. 12 positions available. Minimum age 18. Personnel will begin work May 27. Approv. at Personnel Office, Adm. Center, 2017 La. 442-622 EOE 3-27 Position open—small community facility serving the developmentally dis瓣 is seeking the full-time services of a licensed social worker. Require bachelor's degree or equivalent to MCSB, UGPA 3.27 Kansas, EOA. KANAS APPLIED BEMOTE SENSING PRO- GRAM. In the classroom, room temperature is maintained at 20° C. and humidity is maintained at 80%. Photography is performed by room mounted flash photography, room mounted imaging of field conditions, and room mounted image analysis of form avaliable on Room 223. National Hall, Nassau County, NY 11764. Families with well-adjusted adolescent boys to participate in brief research. Family members will be paid for their participation. For more information call Brian or Patricia at 863-428-3472 Part-time cashiers for evening shifts and weekends. Also need one person for noon hours. Apply in person. Henry's Restaurant, 6th and Missouri, 3-26 NORWEST KANSAS AREA HEALTH SERVICES ABAIC THEOREM - The University of Kansas in KAUCHER ABEI PROGRAM - The Health Education Center (ABEC) located in the heart of the city provides an opportunity for administering programs, personnel and resources a multi-county region in northwest Kansas to work closely with health care professionals at the University of Central ABEI Program at the University of Kansas to provide educational outreach programs in that area. Educational outreach programs in that area include education, health care or health education promotion, education and health inform DAY CARE STAFF need for before-stay and after-stay training to support Agilitasist们 have experience working with DAY CARE staff. The training will be delivered by Lawrence Day Program Management, to the Department of Women's Opportunities employed men and women who have experienced day care training. PART TIME -15 to 20 hrs. wk in the e-well for training and opportunity for the student who requires additional time to complete training or during those who will continue to work in the e-well. Call 842-5630 for additional formation. OVERSEAS JOB - SUMMER year-round, Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fed. $250, monthly, expenses paid, tightening. Free information, express K-&-K, Car- &-A, Mar- Cor, Ma. 92635 THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER is located at 185 W. 30th St., and the pool of appllitions positions start April 19, 2018, and a pool of applicants starts May 6, 2018 in 185 South Hall. Residency in 9:00 p.m. March 31 to April 7, 2018, for an opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. Please contact the University Information Center. Employer #185-3007. INSTRUCTORS-Human. Relations Instructors need pt/full time. Conduct seminars. Trag, program in KANSAS CITY, April 25-27. Call timed Time Fulll (2) 830-329-9008 X 326. 2-38 ACTING COORDINATOR. UNIVERSITY INFORMATION MANAGER, starting May 1, 2018, and ending December 17, 2018. Coordinate the implementation of a no later than June 30, 2018. Responsible for the management of university information, referral, andLawrence community, including the community and Lawrence community, including the Community University community, community and c Bureau of Child Research, Achievement Place has two locations. Salary ranges from $235-$465 position available. Salaries range from $235-$465 position available. Areas are to conduct telephone interviews with children and their parents. Children must have private phone access. Must have personal skills essential Application deadline is October 10. Opportunity offered. Contact Mollie Jolly, 1-800-769-1111. Computer Programmer. Grad student only, to be admitted for an advanced statistical method. At least 8 hours in writing education, portable Fortran, and some computer skills are required. Should be able to communicate in it is 50 to 75 percent, with salary and hours determined by Calf. Prof. Whitley, #413, 413, 4/30. sales Help. Use your own hours. Part-time now and during the summer. 941-8245-6-11 The KU-LY is a student organization dedicated to the academic and other social concerns of the day. We are a community of students, faculty, and staff. We celebrate our academic year. This position begins August 1 at the school year end. This position will consist of two roles: Potential mentor of students with potential communication and training Qualifications. Strong communication and training skills, fund-raising, program planning ability, knowledge of the curriculum and current social issues agencies, with current social issues agencies, with current social issues agencies, with reference to Tracryll School, KU-Ly KU-Roissi 6454, Job Desertations are available at 1180 N. 72nd St., Roissi 6454. Affirmative Action.Equal Opportunity. Work. Manager or plantist needed for 12 piece Jazz amps group. Call 864-1007 or 6. Open for bookings inquiries. MISCELLANEOUS ... BACKGAMMON - secrets for successful play, Opening movies, game * *脑袋,背奔魔弓数学。Mentis $2.05 * * guaranteed * TAYLOR SLTD * R18Ramun, Rex 1298, Doodle City, Ks. K6N47 NOTICE KENNEDY FOR PRESIDENT For information TO VOLUNTEER Call; 841-8872 Paid for by. Kennedy For President Committee. Community TODAY. Almost everything you always wanted to know about Frisee, but were afraid to ask. 4:30 p.m. 205 Robinson. 3-26 Tuesday. April 1st 5:30 P.M. Kansas room, Kansas Union Admission: Students $6 In Advance General Adm. $9 In Advance $10 at the door Call or come by Hillel by March 27 864-3948 PERSONAL VOYAGERS—Fellowship—Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd, Sunday, 9:30 a.m., 843-4171. If Can’t afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortion up to 17 pregnancy. Tregaining treatment. Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment in any of our clinics. 4030 N. Island Park, OR 9810. ST Overland, Park, KS The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cold beer, pool, pinhole and unique lubricants. Color TV and stereo for the Hawks are away. You can watch the Hawks on Harbour Lite 103.4 Mass. A first-class dive. GAY COUNSELING REFERRALS through Head- quarters. 814-2345 and KU info. 864-3506. . . . . . PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843-4-10 4821 Headquarters is a community of people willing want to talk, call or drop by. We can help with everything from planning to coordinating intervention, relationship problems, other personal needs, and finding a place to be in contact with others who might be able to help you. Our team will never serve under the supervision of Headquarters for funding or support unless United Fund, Dg. Co., and privates万象 Last chance to skil! Still a few spots open on SUA's skil trip. Call 864-3477. TENNIS PLAYERS: Spring and warm weather players. Call Calvin DW48-1628; Member Professional Stingers Asse and stinger K.V. Variety. Very reasonable load on good grips 4-5. ATTENTION BEER EXPERTS, your participation is m=d for research project. Beer consumption is involved. Call Mark at 841-6389 if you interested. 3-26 Celebrate EASTER with AMPA singing telegrams. Bakels deliver daily. 842-8741. 4-4 LORINE-Rare. Your prize it took you months to collect a tacque and reflect. Turtles, eggs, shells — all you can see are you'd like, again we will go not the Smokeblower that time. Drop a line and let me know. Looking for people to lend each other moral support on Scaraldale Medical Diet. Lynda-841-0742 3-28 Girls 1 need data for a formal 4.12 Call Jim at 843-0743 5-28 Returning to a residence hall next year? Let your voice be heard! Vote in the AURI electives-Tuesday, March 25 and Wednesday, March 26. 3-26 Puppies—free; half German shepherd, half labrador. Ten to choose from. Call Dave at 833-3583 3-27 ADOPT AN ATLETHA - Help keep a student in school and support KU athletics. I'm looking for a house coupe or apt, to house it or sit rent cheap. I have a track athlete built, registered only. 814-723-3977. 3-27 Want to spend the 1st night of Passover-Monday. March 31 at a Family Seder? Call Hillel at 3-27 3-348. To the $25.00 date person: I love you. 3-26 Alba Fhi—Despite scorekeepers two point “mistake” that kept you out of OT, with courage and character you left in peace. You’re the true champs. 3-28 mar.28 mar.28 YACHT PARTY Kappa Sigma Q. What is bisexuality? Opening for on- or two teaching assistant positions and the fall semester 1988. Contact: Ken Hoyle, Asian Languages & Cultures; 2185 Wessex; Willem A. An equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Enrollment. This Information Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. 9.27 PLANNING AN AFFAIR? anyway is the capacity to be attracted. In a school, you must be instructed to be hostile, according to studies by Kinney (2013), and to be unpredictable, so people who openly acknowledge their hostility may pay and not give up. It is unfortunate that students with disabilities are not able to pay and not give up. Lease your tuxedo from us— BEST PRICES IN TOWN!! Rag Tag 842-1059 Dice Sharing Party); Sunday, March 30th, 7-9 p.m. at Wheels of Fun, 3219 East. All welcome, admission FREE. Sponsored by Gay Services of Kanaa. 3-28 Applications are now being taken for 1981 Book Chalk Revue Producer and Business Manager. Chalk Revue is at the K-U Y offices; room 101-B in the Union on Wednesday to return a room, Wed. April 9th. Anyone who can offer information concerning summer jobs in Lake Tahoe (you've been three or are planning on going) call Terri. 842-6750 after 9 p.m. 4-1 I have a small quantity of the Summer Olympics Stamps including airmail that were recalled by the Postmaster General. Group of 6 stamps $10.00. 3-28 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: MATH: 000-102 to call STATISTICS 5753. MATH 115-702 to call STATISTICS (all calls) 5438. MATH 943-908. CIS: 100-640 to call 6400. MATH 943-908. CIS: 100-640 to call 6400. MATH 943-908. CIS: 100-640 to call 6400. MATH 943-908. ENGLISH AND SPANISH MATH 843-707-707 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the house: Hour of Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday. 9 AM to 1 PM on Tuesday at 838 Mass. Massage Therapy, or women at the Secredity Shop in the Marketplace (8th & New Hamp- shire) call for appt. 841-3629 or 841-7528. *FREE* Professional Wedding Photography specializing in wedding photography & enlargements from $600 to (913) 384-5769 2-26 Raffa's Auto Repair, Foreign & Domestic vehicles. On the spot service: Free estimates 841-3058 Tir of diving付费成本 for good quality clothing and alterations? Excellent seamless璧 will see for men or women. Reasonable prices.裤 418-866-2944 4 to 38 end. IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES. Professional Tutoring: Math 000-115. 8642-3735. 3-28 TYPING MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3287. Experienced typist—theses, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectric Barb. After 5 m. 842-2310. tf Accurate, experienced typist IBM correcting Siticistic Cause, 842-7242. tfu Experimented Typist-term paper, thesis, mice, mats. Spelled out by 843-9504, Mrs. Wright. I can handle good typing. Reggie. 842-416. Typing/Editor, IBM Pica/IPeA. Quality work, reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome. editing/layout. Call Joan 842-917. TF Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selectric. Quality work. References available. Sandy, ifen & weekends. 748-9818. DISCOUNT TYPING: 841-4980. Rports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing. Self-correcting selectic. Call Ellen Jeannain. 841-2172. 5-5 Experienced Typed—manuscripts, papers, theses Scientific and technical experience. IBM Correcting Selectric. 841-4228. tt Word processing exclusively at Encore-Corp. Corps. 842-2001, 25th and Iowa 4-5 I'm your type for thesis, dissertations, tier papers, e. Jo Ann 864-3819 or after $100 $250. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal form- graphics, edits, self-correct Sectric. Call E 514 or Jeannain, 841-2172. I'm your type . . . for thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Jo Ann 864-3819 or after 5:00 at 843- 8055. Excellent Experienced Typist: Will do any form of typing. Phone 842-3203. 4-9 Encore is Tip Top at Typing! 842-2001 WANTED Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, $100, 1/2 utilities, private room, washer, dryer, dish- washer, N42-N598 4-13 WANTED TO RENT Journal student students JUNE to $11 per month. JUNE 1 to $11 December. Military officers and wifes have 2 children but no pets. Require plenty of room for a primary elementary school. 3-27 1-682-4722 PSYCHIATICS AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICES WORKED FOR WANTED STATE Hospital (San Diego) 1212 W. 60th, KS Phone: (1) 423-280-8300; (2) 5 Female roomate for spacious townhouse living, quiet neighborhood, Fireplace, garage. Nom-sucker 810 plus 1.3 utilities. 842-4696. keep trying. 3-27 I am looking for a student married couple to join me this summer home on a lake. Champagne, NV is the perfect place to get married. My two weekies for couple. Provided: Your own private tennis facility. For children, mountain climbing unit for swimming, trees, mountain climbing unit for swimming. To give name of local person who can provide me with a date. Write 1000. Occupant 1000 Driving License. Write 1000. Occupant 1000 Driving License. M: rommate wanted immediately to share a spacious two-bedroom apartment with one other mail (through the month of May $215 plus the cost) by call $43.18 for Larry for $49.00. 3-28 ATTENTION BEER EXPERTS. Your participation is needed for research project. Beer consumption is involved. Call Mark at 811-6389 if you're interested. 3-26 Two Greek conservative females looking for a third to share summer house 112 plus utilities included. Ask for: Julie Gibbons 833-2910 or Chris Meader. Feminine roommate: wanted, summer only, own bathroom and bath, pool, duty lights,屋外 Valley apartments. Call Debbie or Holly by April 3rd at 841-3141 4-1 Y KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 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 coupon. Call Hall. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES Monday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm Friday ... Saturday 5 pm CLASSIFIED HEADING; Write ad here:___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ additional ver RATES: CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $; 3 times $2.75 .04 DATES TO RUN: 4 times $3.00 .05 5 times $3.25 06 NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD 14 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 26.1980 ( ) Owens bucks recent college trend by staying here Did Ted Owens do the right thing by staying at the University of Kansas? But right or wrong, he bucked a national colleague trend. Top head coaches around the nation are moving to other places. Bill Foster of Duke, who just two years ago lost to Kentucky in the finals has moved on to Kentucky. He earned a national title with North Carolina and nominated for a national title with David Thompson and Tom Burleson, has moved on to Florida. And now Johnny Orr of Michigan, who in 1998 lost in Indiana in the NCA4 finals has moved on to Texas. OFF ON A TANGENT gene myers IOWA STATE, FLORIDA and South Carolina are fine schools, preference of Michigan, North Carolina State and Duke. But the Oklahoma and Iowa States of America are ready to dish out the bucks to enter the big time. They want to on to the band. wagon of collegiate basketball. The have-nots want to purchase fame. Iowa State, for example, gave Aryr a $45,000 starting salary, plus extras. Michigan said him $33,665. Orr, Foster and Sloan all are victims of overwhelming success. That means pressure from administrators, alumni, students and fans. They'll be expected to produce, and produce big, at their new homes, but there will be a grace period. At Iowa State, Orr will have a bisonymon of losses, just as Owens would have had at Oklahoma. But Orr and Owens have other injuries. ORR is $2. Owens will be 50. Orr spent 12 years as head coach at Michigan. Owens has been 16 years as head coach at Kansas. Owens took his team to the Final Four once in the '70s. Owens took his team to the Final Four once in the '80s. Owens took his coach-of-the-year twice. Owens was named Coach-of-the-Year once. Orr had only two losing seasons. Owens has had only two losing seasons. Orr was once under heavy pressure to resign, only to escape. Owens was once under heavy pressure to resign, only to escape. Orr was under pressure again. Owens is under pressure again. But Orr left. Owens stayed. "IT'S THE TOUGHEST IDEA I've ever made," Orr said yesterday. "I love Ann Arbor and I love Michigan and I hate to leave. But I feel this is a new challenge and it's a great opportunity. I want to see if I can build Iowa State's program." What did she do? Why did Orr leave? MEWHANLE, IN Ames, Iowa, IOW will be loved, for a while. The program has been in confusion since Lynn Nance resigned in January. Since then, assistant coaches Reggie Warford and Rick Samuels have handled the team. "I have developed a deep love for KU over the last 20 years," Owens said in a prepared statement Sunday. "I look forward to the challenge of next year, returning our team to the level of excellence required by the league and during the time of the great coaches who preceded me." The Iowa State athletic officials could have hired a third co-captain to act as the trebleheader in decisions. But the fans wanted him, and he was not. He played for zyeksei, who has since moved on to Duke, the Texas Tech coach, Gerald Meyers, who has been listed among Oklahoma's candidates. And he was a star in Duke's squad. "I won't be able to do much recruiting this year." Orr said. "But I'm going to be out there trying to get the best athletes I can find— big or small. "I want to see the arena filled and I want others to dread me at Ames. To do that, I'm going to upgrade the schedule. Iowa State is one of our biggest rivals." MAYBE. AND if Iowa State doesn't improve, no one will be afraid of the Cyclones. With the addition of Orr and when Oklahoma finally selects a new coach, the Big Eight will have three coaches who have spent two years in Oklahoma. Oklahoma State's Paul Harnes is entering his second season, which he has earned in Kansas State's Jack Hartman N. 11, Missouri's Norm Stewart N. 14 and Kansas' Owens N. 17. Nebraska's Joe Cipriano enters N. 18. Texas' Jake Evans, thought to be cancer Moe Iba, his top assistant, took over. "There isn't a better job in America and that what I wanted." "Or said. There is no coach in the country with better than job" "in America." Whether that's Orcs just spouting forth a lot of hot air or not, the Cyclones 'fans must love it. Orr leaves Michigan for rebuilding job at ISU KU's fans will want the same talk if the Jayhawks don't go the NCAA way next year. AMES, Iowa(AP) - After 12 seasons with the Iowa Hawkeyes, coach John O'Neill decided it was time for a change. so he left the Big Ten pressure cooker in Ann Arbor to come to the Iowa Hawkeyes. The decision came after several weeks of speculation and searching by the 17-member committee. Orr wasn't even a starter, but he did play in McCullough during the NCAA basketball Orr, 32, was named the new head coach at Michigan. The team was made by Athletic Coach Loe McCallough after the Iowa State Athletic Council unanimously welcomed Orr to the program. From the Kansan's wire services The National Association of Basketball Coaches of the United States gave Iba, son of the famous former Oklahoma State head coach Henry Iba, that honor during a banquet today. Iba took over the reins of the Nebraska program last November when head coach Joe Cjirciura became ill. INDIANAPOLIS--When the 1979-80 basketball season started, Moe Iba was in chief. The team had ended and Iba has is still an assistant, but he also a key Division C coach of the Year. Iba coached the entire season and took the Cornhuskers, a team picked to go nowhere, to the National Invitational Tournament. tournament in Indianapolis over the weekend. THE JOB WAS reportedly offered to three other applicants, but all three turned it down. Former Army coach Mike Kr- zyzewski accepted a similar post with Duke. Gerald Myers opted to stay at Texas Tech and Bob Wellington will return at Mississippi. "There isn't a better job in America and that's what I wanted," Orr said. "There is no coach in the country with a better job than Johnny Orr has at Iowa State. Preaching enthusiasm and a positive attitude, Orr told a full house at ISU's Fisher Theater that he won't make any promises. But he said he didn't see any others' roles as players all program couldn't make it to the season tournament during his tenure. "I'm really excited to be here. I'm going to do everything possible within the rules to make the Cyclones champions." ORC CALLED himself "one of the best paid coaches in the country" after signing with a new team in New York and extra's. "Included in the fringe benefits will have his own television show and "some people Cerone's blast lifts Yankees over KC FORT MYERS, Fla.-Rick Cerone blasted the grand slam game run to rally the New York Yankees to an 8-7 win over yesterday over the Kansas City Royals. Cerone connected for the slam off Rich Gale, the Royal's starter, in the fourth inning. Lou Pinella opened the inning with a single. Jim Spencer then reached base on an error by rightlefthand Clint Hinkle and Gale walked Eric Soderholm lead the team. Cerone his former erased a 34-10 lead and made the score 38 Yankees. GALE, WHO picked up the loss, but not yielded a run in three previous starts. The Yanks battered him for five runs, four of them earned, on five hits. Bob Watson led off the New York fifth inning with a home run off Renie Martin, who gave up another pair of runs in the sixth. But the Royals came back in their half of the sixth on a two-run home by Pete LaCock. His homer came after Hall and he also hit a RBI. His Rich Gessau to narrow the gap to 8-5. Gas Worries? Ride A Raleigh Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH-PUCH-AUSTRO-DAIMLER CENTURION RICK'S BIKE SHOP We Service All Bikes 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence, RS 56041 sua films Double Feature A Lubitsch LOVE-TONIC... ERNST LUBITSCHS "HEAVEN Can Wait" with Gene TIERNEY • Don AMECHE Charles COBURN • MARJORIE MAIN LAIRD CREGAR • SPRING BYINGTON ALLYN JOSLYN • EUGENE PALLETTE It's So Funny! LUBITSCH TOUCH! -PLUS- Lubitsch's "TO BE OR NOT TO BE" Starring Jack Benny and Carole Lombard Tonight, March 26 7:30 pm $1.00 (in her last film) Woodruff Auditorium —No refreshments allowed— ASK THEM WHY SK THEM WH Ask Peace Corps volunteers why they travel to Africa, Asia and Latin America to work with farmers, teachers, and trades people. Ask VISTA volunteers why they work for a year organizing people in their American neighborhoods. Ask them why they want to travel help people, see new places and meet different people. Ask someone who's been there. SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARPATH-0 *LEARY* BEFORE APRIL 2, 1980. PEACE CORPS VISTA Anti-Inflation Sale We're marking all of our remaining Winter fashions down to low, low prices - also some exciting new Spring fashions at great reductions. - Jeans - Pants - Blouses Up to 75% - Sweaters Off Reg. to $29 $8 Reg. to $34 $6 Reg. to $30 $6 - Skirts Reg. to $30 $6 Reg. to $34 $6 Selected New Spring Items Up to 1/2 Off Entire Stock Not Included-All Sales Final Thursday, Friday, Saturday the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Open Thursdays 'til 9:00 --pen&,inc. art supplies 623 vermont 841-1777 open 9:5:30 Mon-Sat OPEN Serving Our Sub Sandwiches on Fresh Baked Bread Is Note (Bigger) The Crossing (Former Calfish) Vegetarian MENU OPEN FOR LUNCH Ham & Cheese Bar & Kitchen Italian Heagie Whale $ 95 Renal R. Vegetarian Sauage & Kraut W. L. Brown, R. W. Hutchison American Italian 11-12 midnight Turkey Meatball Anote $2.85 Brest Beef Hall $1.50 BLT Coors on Tap Pepsi, Pepsi Lite, Sprite. Lite, Coors, Coors Lite, Lowenbrau, Lowenbrau Park. Bottled Beer: Bud, Michelok, Miller, Miller Lite, Nat. --pen&,inc. art supplies 623 vermont 841-1777 open 9:5:30 Mon-Sat featuring Artist brushes for every medium - red, sable, nylon, bristle, sabeline • rounds, flats, brights • bamboo brushes, stencil brushes - steel brushes, lettering brushes BASIC NURSE VISA sua films Special Presentation! HOMEBODY A new short film directed by KU alumnus Steve Johnson and starring KU alumni Roger Nolan and Duane LaDage. Original music by Mark Hart, former pianist for Justice. "Homebody" was the only student film from USC to be accepted for showing at FILMEX, a prestigious film festival held annually in Los Angeles. We will show "Homebody' before the following regularly scheduled SUA Films: Wednesday, March 26— Ernst Lubitsch Double Feature 1 1. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, March 27, 1980 Vol. 90, No.117 Senate OKs court representation By SUSAN SCHOENMAKER Staff Renorter Student Legal Services' goal of providing KU students court representation is faced with one more hurdle after gaining Senate approval last night. The Senate voted overwhelmingly in favor of court representation, and accepted the Court's decision to administer its request to provide a user's fex and exclude court representation in its decision. Legal Services must now go back to the University administration for final approval before it can establish a court representation program. Steve Leben, Legal Services Board chairman, said he expected the bill to receive administration approval quickly. If the delay is scheduled to begin before the semester begins, Senate debate was briefly hung up on the question of a $1$ user's fee. The user's fee was set by the Legal Services Board at the administration's request. "You are getting a real deal and I hate to see Legal Services tossed around and taken off of our hands because of the user's wrongdoing," said president, said. "For Student Senate to jeopardize going to court over this matter is insane. Leben said the administration had not dictated the amount of the user's fee, and that defacing a user's fee would only permit the administration to impose its own. "We felt it was irresponsible of us not to let the program go forward because of what was a minor issue." Leben said. He said the administration had earlier suggested the possibility of establishing an hourly rate for court representation. "You can imagine students not too excited about getting into open-ended fee payments." Leben said. In addition to a user's fee, students using court representation services would be required to pay a $35 filing fee. An amendment to wave the $15 user fee for those who could not have their applications be difficult to enforce. The hottest debate centered on a resolution to develop a consistent budgeting philosophy. The resolution passed but the Senate struck out a provision that said colleges should accept student-identified "support, endorse or oppose" political philosophies or highly controversial issues. "If you have a highly controversial issue do you just sweep it under the rug?" Steve Cormier, holder, oversee senator, said. "Why See SENATE page nine McCollum to discuss unused TVs, videos By TOM TEDESCHI and ROBERT J. SCHAAD Staff Reporter The McColum Hall senate has formed a committee to investigate possible uses for $18,000 worth of television and video equipment owned by the KU housing department. The equipment has been sitting in storage at McColum for the past six years. The equipment—including a $5,000 Shibadan zoom color television camera, an $1,000 Sony video camera with field pack and several television monitors—was used to make McColum the University's residential communications center. J. J. Wilson, director of housing, devised the plan in the fall of 1973. The $80,000 budget was sufficient as well as computer terminals, a keypunch machine, darkrooms and a drafting-layout THE PROJECT was dropped after one semester of operation when the McColum senate unanimously voted to discontinue funding for the center because of a lack of resident interest. Funds for operating the center were held by a third party on charge to McColum residents' contracts. Originally situated on the west wing of the hall's second floor, the center has since been converted back into living space, except for a darkroom and a computer terminal room. Mike Munjak, chairman of the McCollim hall improvement committee, said he doubted the equipment had any real use for the housing department. "I GUESS IT'S like a dead horse on his (Wilson)'s hands, because he can't do anything with it." Munak said yesterday. I think they just didn't know what to do with the equipment, so I circled circuit TV equipment is beyond me. So sure they knew the equipment was there, but what they would do with it is another question. According to Wilson, a video tape recorder and a television monitor are being used in Numeraker Center. The rest of the enunit remains in storage, he said. "I would not be averse to some kind of utilization of the equipment, and I would be encouraged to hear thoughts on how it can be used." he said. ACCORDING TO Ion Pericval, chairman of the McCollum Hall hall, this was the purpose of the committee—to determine how the equipment could be used. Typhoid fever basis of lawsuit against Kansas By JEFF KIOUS Staff Reporter equipment issue came to the attention See EQUIPMENT page 10 A KU student is among many people who have filed suits against the state of Kansas under a new Tort Claims Act that has been proposed by governments immunity from prosecution. The student, Haymond Sieradan, asked us using the state for more than $10,000. In a study of Sieradan claimed that negligent laboratory methods caused him to contract typhoid fever. Siradan claimed that the tphoid fever, from the bacteria Salmonella typha, caused him to experience several complications, including pneumonia. HE WAS TREATED at Irving-Crouse Hospital in Syracuse, N.Y., his attorney said. The attorney, Jerry Donnelly of Lawrence, said yesterday that "Raymond has effected a good recovery." Sieradan's lawsuit is one of 18 that have filed since the Act went into effect July 1. His case was filed in Douglas County District Court. Testimony from instructors and students in Sieradan's summer-school program will be taken in late April, according to Dandelpy. "I couldn't do much preliminary investigation (prior to the lawsuit) because from taking to the KU instructors and students in his class," he said. "We will obtain sworn testimony from them during the trial, then we'll determine the acts of negligence." DONNELLY SAID he won't sure whether the case would go as far as a jury trial. A pre-trial hearing will be scheduled for this summer, he said. An official at the Kansas attorney general's office said that a person who could prove negligence on the part of a state agent accused of causing injury 'I could collect up to $100,000 in damages.' Deputy Attorney General Bruce Miller, who is handling the Sieradan case, was unavailable for comment. Sieradan also was unavailable for comment. The official, Bob Fillmore, assistant attorney general, said there were certain exceptions to the state's liability. Filmore said part of the reason that the Kansas Legislature adopted the Act was the enactment of similar laws in other states, like Alabama, and by the federal government. One exception, according to Fillmore, is when a law officer, enforcing a statute, fails to arrest an accused person in someone in the course of his duties. The injured person may file a lawsuit against the court or another party. "The Legislature passed the Act last April in the best interest of the people," he said. "It gives greater protection for state employees." THE FIRST CEREMONY AT THE HOTELS BEFORE THE ACT was adopted, Fillmore said, a state agent or employee might be liable for a negligent act. Now the state has deferred in action. See LAWSUIT page eight Illinois Congressman and presidential candidate John Anderson visited the KU engagements in Topeka and Kansas City. After speaking to a packed crowd in campus yesterday during a hectic day's schedule that also included speaking Hech Auditorium, Andekan greeted students outside. PETER B. SCHMIDT Photos by Dave Kraus. Prior to his speech in Hoch (above), Anderson was greeted upon his arrival by campaign workers from Lawrenz and the University to right are Howard Marchbank, 1603s West 18th, Kerr Scott, public directer of the law firm Lawrence, Era Stahl, Junction City third-year law student, and Leslie story page three ANDERSON FOR PRESIDENT ANDERSON BY PRESIDENT ANDERSON ANDERSON Financial problems bedevil Garden of Eden RvGREG SACKUVICH Staff Reporter Cement sculptures of Biblical and American history characters are in the Garden. In a pyramid-shaped mausoleum, LUCAS-The Garden of Eden needs $16,000 to keep from going to hell. The Garden is the creation of Samuel Perry Dinsmoor, a Civil War veteran, schoolteacher, artist and eccentric. This Garden of Eden isn't between the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers, but in between them lies the ancient Russell. It is the only place in the world where a man can be born on the homelands beforeaba and see the Garden of Eden. one can view the remains of Dinsmoor, who died in 1932. In the last few years, vandals have inflicted minor damage, including knocking feathers off an Indian's bonnet and the tails of a cowboy; they also harm to Wainne Naele, owner of the Garden. But before the damage worsens, Nanele would like to repair the sculptures. Don Hollet, an artist, said that about $16,000 was needed for pay repairs. THE SCULPTURES STAND up to 40 feet high and have withstood the nature elements since Dissinsoon began to erect his sculpture. The sculptures haven't survived vandals. The National Foundation of Historic Sighs offered to pay for the repairs, Naegle said, but Kansas law prohibits federal government using used to repair privately owned property. If the bill is passed, Naegle said, he would be willing to obtain a loan to pay for the other half of the repairs. But a bill now before the Kansas Legislature would allow the state to pay half the cost of repairs for privately owned historical sites. THE $8,000 INVESTMENT would be more than the cost of the entire Garden when Neagle and Rex Duvet, Lucas banker, bought it in 1967. Naele said Many of the original furnishings were lost after Dinsmoor died, but people around the area began returning them to help in the renovation project, he said. Naeleg and Dwue bought the Garden from Manfield. Dishmoor's son-in-law Hannelie converted a house on the property into three apartments. At the same time he also closed the garden. Naneile and Duwe began the process of restoring the Garden to its original state. A plasterer, Dan Naneile, said, but the house needed a new roof and plastering, and the floors had to be sanded. "A lot of people in the community wanted to see the place renovated. "Naele said. 'They may not have understood the art, or may have thought it was old, but they felt it was an important part of the town." WOLBERT TOOK an interest in the sculpture, and talked with Dinsmore about his art work. He kept a file on the Garden of the Garden and stored it in the Garden and Dinsmore than anyone else. Jacob Woldert was a carpenter who worked on the house and now lives across the street from the Garden. He is retired and works part time as a guide there. Dinsmoor moved to Lucas in 1903 and in 1907 finished building his "rock log cabin house" *Wolbert said.* The house appears as obber said. The house appears as See EDEN nage nine Staff Reporter Ovations greet John Anderson on KU campus By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter The last two weeks have been some of the worst for Rep. John B. Anderson since the Republican presidential candidate became something of a cult figure. Last week he was humiliated in his home state by GOP frontrunner Ronald Reagan. Anderson received just 37 percent of the vote. And then Tuesday the Illinois congressman finished third in primary and caucus races in New York and Connecticut. "You can't tell us sentenced." "I, FOR ONE, have not conceded the Republican nomination to Ronald Reagan," he said. During an hour-long visit to Lawrence, Anderson's recent failures were not noticeable. Anderson, indirectly chastising Reagan for failing to make specific proposals in his campaign, called for a "new politics." Nearly 4,000 people, hundreds of them were there early in the morning. Anderson's afternoon speech. He was interrupted almost three dozen times by applause and received three standing ovations. "The people need to know how a candidate stands before he is elected, instead of just saying, 'Trust me, I don't know very much about this, but trust me. Conflict." "There has to be a willingness to take the difficult positions on controversial issues," he told the predominantly student audience. "Candidates can't take the position of telling people just what they need to hear. They have to tell them what they need to know." ANDERSON'S SPEECH came during a brief camp sweep through Kansas that included steps in Topeka and Kansas City Kansas' first presidential primary is Tuesday. There has been considerable speculation that Anderson might run as an independent if he does not get the Republican nomination. "I think we have to take off our blinders in our approach to the electoral process," he said. "We need a Democratic, Independent and Republicans who will march together in pursuit of the next president." He sidestepped one question from the audience on that issue, but repeatedly urged what he called a "new coalition of voters." ANDERSON'S HALF-HOUR speech, "The teacher, the fellow student," or the "fellow students," included criticisms of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's gasoline rationing plan, the MX missile program and the invasion of Iraq. "This country has lost a lot of its respect, its prestige around the world," he said. "Others have talked about this, but they haven't talked in terms of fixing our military muscles. "I think that ignores our domestic problems. We ought not to forget that 25,000 people are below the mythical poverty jine—which isn't 'mythical for them.' Anderson also criticized proposals for large budget cuts and explained his reasoning for urging a 90-cent-a-gallon gas that he insists would cut consumption. "We're consuming some 75 to nine million barrels a day of imported oil," he said. "Because of this, our foreign policy is moving away from the 30 countries with 95 these 50 countries being held in Iran." ANDERSON, THE SECOND major Republican candidate to visit Kansas, will spend 20 minutes answering questions on the border with Mexico and the federal bureaucracy to the Middle East. He got his biggest applause, however, for his response to a question about his stance, as a Christian, on abortion. "This is not a question of whether you are for or against abortion, it's a question of the individual's right to choose," he said. He also said that the individual should make that decision for the individual." Anderson also criticized the continued growth of the federal bureaucracy. "I think we have to cut back," he said. "I have a friend in the department of doctors who told me that they have 1,500 employees and they talk out the door and nobody would know." 2 Thursday, March 27.1980 University Daily Kansan VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Ford still open to nomination I have a resentment Geran R. Ford firmed anew with the possibility of another trial in Washington, while the campaigning Republican candidates returned to the buildings yesterday. Ford had been relatively silent since announcing on March 15 that he would not enter the GOP race. But Ford told reporters inincinnati he would be open to working with them if they wanted him. Ford said he would accept the "responsibility" of heading the GOP ticket if Ronald Reagan failed to win the nomination on the first ballot at the Republican convention. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has scheduled a weekend campaign trip to Kansas just before Tuesday's primary. Less than two weeks ago Ford said *we* would not seek the presidential nomination, saying sure such an effect would only divide the Republican Party at a time. Local campaign officials said that his itinerary was not definite, but that he was expected to arrive in Kansas City, Mo., late Friday and spend most of Saturday in the area. He is also planning to fly to Wichita for a brief visit Saturday afternoon and then return to Kansas City. Under party rules, Democratic candidates must receive at least 15 percent of the vote to win any commitments among the delegates to be chosen at district nominating conventions. In next week's primaries, Wisconsin will choose 75 Democratic delegates and Kansas 37. On the GOP side, 34 delegates are at stake in Wisconsin and 32 in DeBakeu to overate on shah American surgeon DeBakey flew to Cairo yesterday to "fulfill his commitment" to the deposed Shah of Iran, who reportedly speedspeedly In Tehran, Iranian revolutionary leaders escalated their threats to put U.S. Embassy hostages on trial if Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi is not to Iran. Ayatollah Mohammad Behesht, first secretary of the Revolutionary Council, said the majority of the council supported such trials. Beshilt said the crisis over the 50 American hostages, held captive in Tehran for 144 days, has been "useful" in demonstrating Iran's independence and its ability to respond to crises. The 15 Egyptian doctors attending the shah at Cairo's Maadi military hospital have not issued any public report on his condition, but Cairo newspapers said tests had determined he has cancer of the spleen. An operation is expected within a week. Reagan parity stand criticized TOPEKA-GOP presidential contender Bush chastised Ronald Rogan in a news release for his recent remark that he was not fully fumilier. He said the president had been "involved in the conflict." When Reagan was asked whether he would support full parity for farm products at his speech last Sunday in Wichita, he said, "I have to confess to you that I am not as familiar with some things as that, but I would seek the advice of farm leaders like my former farmer director." Reagan later confessed at a news conference that he was more familiar with the concept than he had admitted, adding 100 percent parity "might be necessary." Bush said, 'Any president clearly has to have confidence in his advisers, but he also has to understand the bottom line of his own policies and know the issues which concern our farmers. Jimmy Carter is an example of what happens to the economy when an inexperienced president takes office.' Parmers deserve fair market value for their products, Bush said. To achieve that, he said he would work to control inflation, reduce government regulations, and strengthen the economy. Nuclear waste site bill delayed TOPEKA—A Senate committee yesterday delayed action on a bill that would delineate veto power over radioactive waste disposal sites. Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Praatt, moved to request William Hambleton, director of the Kansas Satellite Survey, to explain a section of the measure regarding tests "to determine the suitability of geological structures" for disposal of radioactive wastes. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee has conducted more than a week of hearings on the House-approved bill drafted after Rickano Corp. applied for a storage facility from the Department of Health and Environment. The facility will have low-level radioactive waste disposal site in abandoned salt ruins near Lycoming. Low-level nuclear waste includes some research material. It generates little heat and breaks down in relatively harmless material after a few years. High-level waste is hot in temperature and radioactivity, giving off dangerously high levels of radioactive particles. OK doubtful for Amtrak route TOPEKA - The Amtrak board, meeting in Washington, voted yesterday to drive a route from Oklahoma City to Newton, if Oklahoma and Kansas help But reaction in Kansas was far from optimistic. The proposal requires Kansas and Oklahoma to contribute an increasing amount of funds to the operation of the train each year. The first year the two states would be required to finance 20 percent of the cost of operating the route, 35 percent the second year and 50 percent the third year. The route is part of the old Lone Star route between Chicago and Houston terminated last October. It would connect with the Southwest Limited in Minnesota. Kansas Transportation Secretary John Kemp will the only way Kansas could participate would be if voters approved an internal improvements constitutional amendment now in the state Legislature. The amendment would constitute 5 prohibition against public funding of internal improvements. Controversial fire chief retires KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City Fire Chief John Wasson's 37-year climb to the top of the line of tumultuous fire-fighting force ended yesterday when he began to make a return. Speculation about his impending retirement surfaced Monday in the wake of a six-day strike by Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters. The strike ended Saturday when the City Council agreed to reinstate 24 firefighters who had been fired for participating in a work slowdown last December. Waaas would not comment about the influence of the strike on his decision to leave the department. He said he thought this was a good time to retire. Waas, who worked in virtually every position in the fire department since joining in 1942, said he was eligible to retire 12 years ago and had considered relocating to New York. Since becoming fire chief in 1969, Wauas has angered union colleagues with his alliance with City Manager Robert Kipp over department operation. Primaru increases registration However, because old voter rolls were purged of names of dead people and non-voters in all of the state's 100 counties since last year, the total number of registered voters is much lower. TOPEKA—Nearly 90,000 Kansasans have registered to vote in the state's first presidential primary election next Tuesday than were registered to vote The influx of new voters has mainly benefited the Democrats, the new figures indicated. A year ago, voters in Kansas were 35 percent registered Republican, 25 percent registered Democrat and 40 percent unaffiliated. The new figures indicate that 4.4 percent represented, 27.3 percent Democrat and 38.3 percent unaffiliated. The figures indicated Riley County had the greatest registration increase, up 19 percent, while Douglas County was next, up 12 percent. Weather ... Today will be cloud with occasional showers and thunderstorms, according to the National Weather Service in Topanga. The high will be in the low 90s with a chance of rain. There is an 80 percent chance of rain tonight. Lows will be in the upper 30s to mid-40s. The rain will end Friday, but it will be cloudy and cold. The highs will be in the mid-to-40s. Council to hear parking proposals By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter Shorter time limits for payment of parking lines and increased parking permit fees. The Parking and Traffic Board's annual report, which will be presented to the University The changes in time limits for payment of parking fines would require fines to be paid within 24 hours, the appeals appaled. Fines paid after seven days would be increased in varying amounts according to law. Parking fines currently may be paid within 14 days without an increase. Appeal of violations also would be changed from 14 to seven days. Under certain circumstances, however, appeals could be made up to the 14th day if the amount of the ticket was posted as bond. The ticket may be refunded if the appeal was granted. THE PROPOSED CHANGE would affect all types of University parking violations. The proposed changes are being reviewed by the University General Counsel and the Review of Statutes in Tepoku. They will be reviewed by the University Legal Regents for final approval at a later date. THE REPORT SAID that receipts from fines, parking meters, parking at events, and other sources probably would not influence the price of gasoline due to higher gasoline prices. It recommended the higher permit cost to offset the loss of revenue and expected increases in The price of parking permits will increase up to 24 percent for 1981,82, if the proposed fee schedule presented in the report is accepted. If approved by the Regents, the changes will become effective in the fall of 1881. Most fees would increase about 10 percent, the report said. However, the fee for蓝 permits, which carry greater parking privileges, would increase 24 percent. The report also said the new computerized billing system begin this year by the Traffic and Parking office resulted in a marked increase in fine collections over 1979-80. However, in response to the "surprise number" of faculty and staff who had unpaid parking fees, the report said the board was considering a proposal that would allow faculty and staff members with unpaid fines to obtain permits or precharges (for 1980-4). University's videobased policy prepared by the University Senate Human Relations committee and revised and approved by the University Senate executive committee. THE COUNCIL WILL also discuss the final report and recommend on the The report, submitted to SenEx on Feb. 20, and approved on March 21, recommended the discontinuation of videoaping by invited speakers and demonstrators. However, the report also recognized the legal right of parents to attend events, and event, and that videotaping should be considered only "in those cases in which there is the potential for violence" (O'Reilly, 2015). If videtaping is recommended by the committee, the report said, discretion should be used. The report recommended that a committee made up of the executive vice chancellor, the chairman of SenEx, the University General Counsel, the chief of KU police and the student body president. He is also responsible for any precautionary pressures to be taken. It recommended that the taping not be used for intelligence purposes, tapes should not be used for training purposes, any patting should be done in a non-secretive manner and have the ability of viewing the tape, and a record should be kept of all videotape. QUICK STOP PHOTO SHOP This record would include a description of the event taped and the contents of the tape. H MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 W. 23rd 841-2778 THE MOUSE THAT ROARED Fri, March 28 at 7 & 9:30 pm Sat, March 29 at 2, 7, & 9:30 pm DYCHE AUDITORIUM $1.25 and 75 for kids under 12 presented by KU Science Fiction & Fantasy Ass'n Partially funded by Student Senate BARBECUE BARBECUE 'S NOW AT VIRGINIA INN We now serve J We now serve BREAKFAST Hot, fast and delicious! TRY IT! 6:30 to 10 a.m. — Tues.-Sun. "It's in the sauce" BBQ BBQ Lunch Buffet 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Tues.-Sun. 2907 W 6th,841-3402 642 Mass., 841-7818 2 Locations: Open 11-10 Tues.-Sat. Sunday 12-8 Open 11-7 Tues.-Sat. sua films Thursday, March 27 LUNA Dir. Benarrobo Betoluciu, with Jill Clirybaugh, Mathew Barry, Biff Clyburn, and Kate Giles to give develop a sexual relationship with her heroin-addicted teenaged girl in 1980 and LAST TANGO ON PARISE. 8:00 p.m. Hoe Auditorium, in 15mm 8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, in 35mm! $1.50 Friday & Saturday, March 27-28 THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE (1977) Dir. Luis Bunnel, with Fernando Rey, Carole Boulet, Angelina Molina. A woman played by a woman hall hits its woman, played by two different actresses, spurs his affections with an unbelievable delightful film by the director of L'AGE DOR and BELEE DE JOUR. Francissible twisters. Midnight Night ROCK 'N' ROLL HIGH SCHOOL (1976) Dir. Alan Attkus, with P.J. Soles, the Ramones. New Wave rockers the Ramones play a high school rock and roll band that performs in school officials; however, anarchy reigns. Lots of fun and loud music. A short prom kit with Cheap Trick Sunday, March 30 THE GODFATHER, PART II Dir. Francis Ford Coppa, with Hillary Rodham Dell, Robert Durall, Diane Keaton, Danish Strasberg, John Cazale, Excellent continuation of the story of the Co Monday, March 31 Bergman: MONIKA (1982) Dir. ingr. Bergman. One of Bergman's earliest and is an erotic story of a young girl coming to age. Age, swedishsubtitles. Unless otherwise noted; all tickets will be displayed at Woodburn Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R bills are $1.00 each and T-shirts are $2.50 and $1.50 start at 7:00, 7:30 and 8:00, and midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday; tickets available at the OU Student Center 6th Level. The UAJ Refund Code .47474747 No smoking or refresumes allowed. AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION MEETING NOTICE The 3rd Annual General Meeting of the African Students Association is scheduled for 6 p.m. Saturday, March 29th,1980 at the Council Room, Kansas Union. Agenda 1. ) Minutes of last meeting. 4. ) Finance. 2. ) President's speech. 5. ) Miscellaneous. 3. ) Probe Panel Report. Please attend, African Students, with your great ideas. Paid for by KU International Club. Thanks. Apollo Dimbo General Secretary, ASA University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 27, 1980 3 Anderson visit nets crowds, applause, vote pledges By SCOTT C. FAUST Staff Renorter At a steady growing rally at the Wagon Wheel Cafe yesterday afternoon after her candidate's efficient reception, Mary Lou Williams attended an annual Kansas campaign coordinator, was cescial. "I'm just thrilled," Humphrey said, beer in hand. "I thought it was a wonderful speech, didn't you?" She said she told Anderson just before they went on stage at Hoch Auditorium, "Listen, these kids in Kansas are really for you. Anderson, who has been compared to Eugene McCarthy and George McGovern in igniting campus enthusiasm, was not disfigured. "It's going to be a very supportive audience." THE REPUBLICAN Illinois Congressman's audience began its procession down Jayhawk Boulevard about an hour before the speech. By the start of the speech, nearly 4,000 KU students and others had performed in line, seated the Some would not be able to tell friends they saw Anderson," only that they heard him, because many were unable to see the lectern. But they listened and responded to Anderson's stands against sacrificing American lives for Persian Gulf oil and for individual choice on abortion. The crowd included Anderson devotees—Anderson for President buttons adorned many a shirt—but the curious also attended. Robert Francis, Wichita senior, said, "I figured that since he was coming, I might as well see him." Gary Carafal, Westmont, Ill., junior, said before the speech that he had supported Anderson since his "60 Minutes" appearance last month. "I like his views on abortion and the draft," Karafiat said. "He's smart. He's got more brains than any other candidate." TINA WATKINS, Moline, Ill., junior, compared Anderson to President Woodrow Wilson. "He's kind of philosophical — I like that," she said. "I think we need someone in there who thinks a little bit instead of just being told what to do." She said she was trying to base her "From what I've read," she said, "he's the best, definitely." presidential choice on the issues, not on candidates' popularity. At one point in his speech a somewhat annoyed Anderson stopped midstream to quicken a heckler who wanted to know how he would vote on a particular issue. "And there will be a question period after the speech," Anderson said, with the crowd cheering him. AT ANOTHER POINT in his address, Anderson said he would consider both men and women when choosing a running mate of the governor of loudest roars of the anglers of the area. ABOUT 20 of these hard-core Anderson supporters greeted him when his chartered turboprop landed at Topeka's Billard airport around 11:30 a.m. She said the approximately 200 KU student Anderson volunteers would be going door-to-door and phoning voters before the election. She said she was sending voting to polling places on election day. After the speech, as Anderson shook scores of hands on the way to the waiting motorcade. KU Andersson co-ordinator had asked that he be allowed she had not expected the overflow crowd. Shivering on the tarmac, the group held signs above their heads and shouted "All the way with JJA," as the smiling Anderson, tightly in the wind, stepped down the ramp. "Thank you for coming out," Anderson told the group. "Now you all get back inside where it's warm." Anderson's day in Kansas began with a luncheon and press conference at the downtown Topeka Ramada Inn. From Lawrence, he went to Kansas City for a travel trip to Cedar Creek Center and a rally at Shawnee Mission West High School in Overland Park. IN HIS LUNCHEN speech, Anderson said he wanted to turn from criticism of "a totally unacceptable Jimmy Carter" to "a more respectful and fairer differences between himself and Ronald Reagan. In contrast to Sten. Edward Kennedy's in arrival to Topka last month, when well-wishers got no more than a quick wave from the hotel, he has had a chance to shake his hand and chit chat. dependence on foreign oil instead of shoring up the unsound position into which that dependence has led us." Anderson said that he thought Reagan's proposed one-third tax cuts would boost inflation, that reducing government fraud was a bad idea, and that America "should get rid of its At the press conference, Anderson refused to belittle the importance of the Kansas primary to his candidacy. However, he said the April 1 Wisconsin primary "offers a somewhat more unique opportunity to address these issues" of complete party cross over, but that one of Kansas voters were independents so much that they lost. As in previous interviews, Anderson refused to commit himself to a third party candidacy if he did not win the Republican nomination. Anderson said voters were "profoundly unhappy about the lack of choice" a Reagan-Carter race would present. Tonight Only Blondie's Debbie Harry in Two Amos Poe films Unmade Beds and The Foreigner "We love you." one supporter said. Doors open at 8 Film rolls at 9 But come down early for $1.50 pitches and $1.25 hiballs from 8-9 pm "If they want a choice," he said, "I'm here, available as that choice." ★ Coming Soon ★ In Concert 29-999 & The Dickies Friday Night W. ROBERT ZORN R_KY,102 Air Guitar 3—New York Erotic Film Festival 4.5—PAT S BLUE RIDDIM BAND w iROBERTZOH PARKER 9-12—Opera House Fund Ranner featuring many bands including, PBR, HPCCD ARTS. (c) 17 — "An exercise in poet taste" PINK FLAMINGO X FEMALE TROUBLES 18 — THE SECRET'S 19 - ASLEEP A7 THE WHEEL w/ RIVERPOCK 23—LONNIE BROOKS BLUES BAND John Mayall with Lawrence's own USED PARTS Today is your last chance to buy advance tickets! but the ... Tawrence Opera house THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA $2.00 OFF Any Large or Medium Pizza Wed-Sun, March 26-30 No coupons accepted with offer From Coke Sweetbread FOR LEADERS ONLY The Associated Students of Kansas, the statewide student lobby organization, has an opening for CAMPUS DIRECTOR at KU. Only students with an interest in politics and with organizational and leadership abilities need apply. The Campus Director, paid by ASK, is responsible for organizing and coordinating all lobbying activities at KU. Applicants should have a knowledge of campus and state issues Lobby experience would be helpful. Applications and more information about ASK are available at the Student Senate Office, 105B in the Kansas Union. Return applications to the Senate Office by 5p.m. Monday, Mar. 31. The Associated Students of Kansas ask ask Students Working for Students Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358 SUA Special Events Contemporary, JAM, and New West present CLEARANCE ROADS UTOPIA -with- Todd Rundgren Roger Powell Kasim Sulton John Wilcox This Saturday Hoch Auditorium University of Kansas 8:00 p.m. Tickets: $8.50 and $7.50 Available at SUR Box Office, Kief's and all Capital outlets. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editors. March 27.1980 Owens proved worth Johnny Orr has been hired as the basketball coach at Iowa State University. He is coming from a successful career at the University of Michigan, where he coached the Wolverines to 248 victories against 146 defeats, four straight NCAA tournaments and one national intlational tournament. He will be a formidable opponent for the Jayhawks in the years to come. KU could have been dealing with another formidable coaching opponent if things had turned out differently last weekend. One of the other Big Eight universities was reportedly seeking the services of a coach who had led his teams to eight national post-season tournaments, six conference championships and 296 victories against 144 defeats. Quite a record for 16 years. But that coach, Ted Owens, decided to stay at KU for at least another season, thus sparing Jayhawk fans the risk of being injured. The nation's winningest coaches. It is surprising that Owens decided to stay. It would seem that he would have accepted an offer from the University of Oklahoma, even if it had not been his alma mater. The situation here was not very friendly, with students, alumni and players indicating that they would be pleased if there were a different Kansas basketball coach next season. An offer from Oklahoma would have made it easy for everyone to get that new coach. Owens could save face by making a triumphant return to the land of the Sooners, Bob Marcus, KU athletic director, would be able to please the fans who have been loudly crying for Owens' sculp without having to pay off the remaining two years on Owens' contract, and KU fans would have a new coach who would keep them quiet for at least a year or two. But Owens decided to stay at KU. Maybe the offer from Oklahoma didn't come. After all, the main pressure down there came from a booster team and an athletic department. Or maybe the came and it wasn't good enough. Or maybe Owens decided to stay here and prove his worth to the fans, again, instead of taking the easy way out. No matter how it happened, KU probably will benefit. For one thing, Owens has shown over the last 16 years that he does know how to coach. This season proved nothing. With the changes in college basketball during the last few years, all traditionally strong teams are not having it so easy. And the other teams in the Big Eight are tougher than they used to be. At home, Owens has to deal with personnel problems on the team. Last year, after a lot of fan and media pressure, he went to Wichita and recruited Ricky Ross, the "Whitcha phenom." But the phenom turned into a spool washout as a freshman. And Danny Reed, a former America candidate, had a disappointing season. There were others who didn't play up to expectations. But these things will pass. KU is better off with Owens that it would be with just about any other coach in the country. Owens probably would be more accepted if he were a more charismatic or legendary leader, like Phog Allen, Adolph Rupp or John Wooden. But he is not. He is a private pressurees coach with the media pressures coaches at a major college basketball team. But he has proved in the past that he can handle the coaching pressures. The disappointments of the past season have not shown otherwise. Berman not helping small Kansas colleges Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, in an interview I read some time ago, noted that he derigated and found the experience especially valuable because of the ease with which he could participate in a wide variety of activities. He said he greatly facilitate one's choice of profession. One must wonder if Berman is prejudiced against small Kansas colleges because of their connections with various religious organizations. Many students, he can rest easy in most cases. To the Editor: If the reporting in the March 19 Kansas of State Sen. Arnold Burrow's comments about the approaching death of small colleges in Kansas is correct, one must wonder about the reason for his increasingly shrill vendetta against these schools and the need to defend them, all of whom are deserving of more rational treatment by an educated person. For example, at Baker University no one can go beyond the sophomore year without reading large amounts of the writings of the late William H. Paul, St. Paul, Ovid, Voltaire, Rousseau, Karl In the past Berman has professed great interest in the welfare of individuals (such as his children) and he seems concerned only with helping state-supported institutions, in particular KI to maintain and increase their high standards. He is a small, independent college, I can attest to the fact that many of the students who need the learning environment they provide Not every high school graduate, especially if from a small town, is ready for the large classes and often impersonal students who attend universities or Kansas State, and many desire a liberal arts background rather than the more general introductory courses offered at junior colleges. In some cases, students must be well-versed in college and transfer later to a state university. Mara, John Stuart Milt. Signum Freud, *The Conflict of the Eyes*, Elison. Students are required to come to grips with the conflicting opinions of these writers by writing several essays on their Berman also seems to be ignoring the fact that many of the small colleges in Kansas provide jobs for graduates of state-supporters, all of whom would not remain. A few cases, spouses of faculty or staff members of state universities have found positions in independent colleges. At a time when two-career families are increasing, these options often did result in the ability of state schools to attract or retain valuable employees. I believe our senator and others who agree with him on the tuition grant program should take another look at the need for and the contributions of the small independent colleges in Kansas. They not only provide an important role for young people, but also play an important role in the economy of the state and the lives of many individual Kansans. Carol Dinsdale Worth Lawrence graduate student and Assistant professor, Baker University Views in editorial need more maturity In reviewing your editorial of March 19 titled "Paraphernalia plight," I would like to make a suggestion. To the Editor: Why don't you put the editorial in abeyance for about 10 to 15 years, at which time you can review it with the benefit of more maturity and experience. I would venture a guess that at that time you probably won't think that I am so ignorant. Ed Carter Lawrence City Commissioner THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN USS 648 (44) published at the University of Kansas daily August through Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second class postage paid at Lawrence. Third class postage by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Duquesne County and $4 for six month or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $12 fee, passed through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send change of address to the University Daily Kanan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS58904 Editor James Anthony Fitts Editorial Editor Brenda Watson The stone steps leading to Spooner's main entrance are roughly patched with cement. The terra cotta columns of Spooner's entryway are crumbing. Inside, the building, a few offices of the Museum of Anthropology have been terminated and the one day the museum's permanent home-if additional funds are ever obtained for Spooner's renovation, that is. KU students gaped in wonder at the building's electric lighting system. And with good reason. The incandescent lamp only had been discovered 15 years earlier. It would be warm if it would become a cheap, widely used means of illumination. Spooner Hall hasn't always been in such sad shape. When it opened in 1884, it was a gem of a building, complete with a fireplace and staircase. It was one of the most THE NEWFWANGLED incandescent bulbs shined on the theater stage in Kansas City. Badroom room for 80,000 more volumes and KU administrators were confident that the building would safely hold the growing library for many years. Funds for Spooner's construction had been provided through a private gift, William Spooner of Boston, uncle of then Chancellor Frank Snow, provided money for all construction costs as part of a $90,000 bequest. Spooner Hall, a faded owner of the 19th century, sits imposingly along joykaw Boulevard, not far from the main entrance. The building's façade Henry Van Brunt designed the building, drawing from the Richardsonian Romanesque style that was then in vogue. The original building, which replaced the buildings of Van Brunt's buildings have escaped demolition. Spooner has been changed little since it was completed, and it is now a museum. Business Manager Vincent Coultas Spooner worthv of renovation funds IN SPITE OF ITS assets, Spooner's life as KU's library was short. The University's book collection outgrew Spooner's capacity 20 years after the building's completion, a library, Watson, was constructed in 1924 to take its place. bob COLUMNIST pittman Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins Spooner sat empty until 1926, when it was reopened a Spooner-Thayer Art Museum. It was abandoned again in 1978 when the University's expanding art collection became more important for it. It has been empty, again, for the last two years. Today, workmen with power tools climb Spooner's massive oak double stairways. Sandwiches are served in the open cupboard. In the rear of the building, the gallery is lined with scaffolding and tools instead of the books and artwork that once filled the room. Incessant hammering and sawing is heard in the Museum of Anthropology offices on the first floor. But completion of the museum's expansion is pending. Managing Editor Dana Miller A PROJECT TO REPLACE the building's roof is almost finished, and the building's windows are slowly being replaced. General Manager Rick Mason About $30,000 has already been spent on the renovation. After other projects are completed, such as replacement of Spooner a quantitated heating and cooling system, the total renovation could easily stand at more than $1,000,000. when both projects are completed, years may pass until more important aspects of the renovation can be tackled, according to Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning. Spooner Hall Renovation Renovating Project Contractor: Wilmington, Pennsylvania Incorporated Repairing, General Funding: Window Reinforcement Project Contractor: B. K. Warner, South to No. Lancaster County Funding: June 14, 2003 Wilson Reinforcement Fund and Park Ridge Conversion Appropriations. The money sources have simply dried up. The national Historical Preservation Foundation, which provided nearly half of the renovation money has, cut off funds for renovation of college buildings. And the Kansas museum, which provided the other half, has short-sightedly refused to allocate more money for the renovation. Spooner's future remains in joparpy. Unless necessary repairs are made soon, more money and time will be required to restore the building to its original condition. Spooner has one of the lowest monetary problems is common to past KU renovation efforts. Spooner's sister building, Dyche Hall, survived troubled times in the 1930s but just barely. FIFTEEN YEARS AGO, KU lost old Fraser Hall because University officials had deemed its renovation too expensive. Faculty in the minds of many Ku professors and alumnae, Fraser Hall was victim of the KU wrecking ball. Its massive towers, sweeping stairways and Victorian ornamentation have been replaced by another Fraser, a forgettable shoebox of a Dyche's architectural surgery went on for nine years, until it was responded in 1941 with a new interior and design. in 1932 and was closed by the state architect. Because the building's floors were made of weakly reinforced concrete, they swayed slightly. University officials also feared that the tower might collapse. Dyche, with its gargoyles and tower, was declared unsafe AS WITH SPONDER, the Dyche renovation was marred by financial problems. But the Dyche renovation, ironically depressed by the public work projects, was Depressed Money for public works projects was available in 1980s and KU took advantage of it to save Dyche. The Public Works Administration provided some of the money needed for the project—nearly $10,000 and the Legislature put up $9,000 more. KU officials still hope to obtain the money needed to Spooner's renovation. Wiechert says, but they expect it to be a draw-out process. If future work progresses as work continues, now it could be 10 years before the project is completed. MEANWILE, CONSTRUCTION and labor costs will continue to increase and Spooner will continue to deteriorate. KU planners hope to be successful next year for Spooner's signature for additional grants for Spooner's renovation. "Whoever Findeth Wisdom Findeth Life," is inscribed on terra cotta banks above Spooner's main entrance. Perhaps the inscription will become prophetic and next for the complete renovation of Spooner Hall. KU's oldest building deserves to stand for another 100 years. Americans still blind to foreign policy To the wider public, which must bear the costs, the turmoil abroad and even our own diplomacy are still largely shrouded in mystery and myth, a foreign policy too foreign to predict. The judgment and authority as in no other area of our democracy. SANTA FE, N.M.-Behind the cheerless unity of our national fraternity, the hostages in Tehran and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan have shown again how dangerously we obscure international affairs remain for most Americans. In the daily din of crisis it has been easy to forget how little we knew before, or understand still of what has happened. The embassy seizure broke over much of the country in 2015 and brought unseen, its course wild and menacing. Perhaps it could not have been otherwise in a society where most newspapers usually apportion only 15 percent of news coverage to government officials and journalists their readers both to look at that remnant anyway; when television customarily shrivels the world to a collage of 90-second summaries and photogenic symptoms; where as many as one-third of Americans polled by SALT cannot recognize a hostage being held in Tehran, the president's commission on foreign language and international studies was deploring the "most mentality" in which foreign students are being handed from the requirements or aspirations of American students. Bv ROGER MORRIS New York Times Special Features We were not able, it turns out, to videotape the social and political aspects of the community convaded by forced modernization, the medieval THE PAROCHALISM drove some people into the streets to pummel Iranian students, while most other Americans have been in relatively quiet places in the face of what seems the impenetrable domenia of the ayatollah or the implacable evil and efficacy of the Kremlin. After 50 years of power world and with far-flung alliances, Iran has become the slave of the rest of the planet only a distracted, fleeting glance. MCAELY PERCUSION NEW LOCATION @PERCUSIONCLOUDTONE xenobioha embedded in Persian politics, the decay of the feudal Alafan dictatorships successively patronized by the feudal aristocracy, the recent coup and invasion. For purposes of informing, these are crises without history, and as a result, the public does not know how to respond, it lacks a sense of what the problem should be and how to prevent similar tragedies in the future. ALMOST EVERYWHERE in public affairs, however tangled the issues—from sexual discrimination on the job to the sizing of nuclear power plants—Americans have come to feel entitled and able to lobby, ligate and boisterously ASIDE FROM THE shedding of a handful of figures too badlyainted by Vietnam, no other field of American endeavor over the last two decades has been so little revived that it has become an almost national security establishment. No other copy of government so meagrely reflects the rich diversity and creativity of the nation as a still predominantly white, male Foreign Service, its professional sensibility about the world of business. Its international success since lost to bureaucratic conformity and superannuation. WORSE STILL IS our heedlessness of the people unaccompanied to which we have relinquished foreign policy in Washington, the sanctum of national security from which dour, mostly anonymous men emerge from time to time to announce discreetly some fresh disaster. Incredibly, the fate of these men with fateful decisions made about the Middle East and South Asia by many of the same bureauxateurs who have helped shape our policy toward the region since the close of the 1950s. Yet no other public institutions so continuously escape accountability, retain such mystical immunity to the spreading democracy of our era. Some of these officials trace careers along a trail of smokering embassies and shattered American interests from Laby across Iraq to Turkey, captains with a record of too many collapsed tunnels and timbers, would at least be an inquiry, and some question about having them in charge for the next desert. How we doin', Cy? We continue to monitor the situation very closely and although I would hesitate to characterize the degree of progress I believe that I can safely say that were in one hell of a mess. challenge the old regime's business as usual. By harsh experience, we have learned not to delegate, not to trust blindly, not to assume and accept that we are somehow reliant on our betters—learned, that is, except in foreign policy. Now, that policy is coming home with a staggering price. In a world making us pay our own way, stagnal diplomacy and doomed clients and distorted intelligence reports are rising in importance and demand. Our institution-club gentlemen. They are manifest, for millions of people, in fuel shortages and inflation, higher interest rates, rising health care costs, falls most savagely on the majority of Americans with incomes under $20,000, the people whose pocketbooks do the paying and whose sons tend to do the dying for foreign affairs. NO OCCULT FORCES block reform of the system. The lethal fault with American foreign policy is a matter of interest, because it is often associated with servative conspiracy, but rather a relatively banal-bipartisan mediciology and bankruptcy of management. A loss of competence more than a loss of nerve, it is not all bad. If you are a government commission or school board, a deceptive computer railroad; or an expiring automobile manufacturer like Chrysler—or those most of us feel competent to criticize and overhaul. Nor is our turbulent post-imperial nation of nations so unfathomable. The mysteries of foreign affairs will yield to much the same diligence, imagination, sensitivity and self-knowledge we have brought to successful citizen reform from environmental protection to civil rights to the women's movement. That meaningful change is more complex than it seems, and a complex for broader public participation is one of the most brutal, anti-democratic myths of American politics. YET NO RESCUE is likely from above. A capricious, ever-nervous Congress currently practices its foreign policy peregrine by a principle of devise and repent—has devised sensible restraints on the executive when it fails to govern appropriately. With intelligence Agency scandals of the mid-1970s, it now repeats its bold intrusion into national security. For its part most of journalism continues to treat foreign affairs alternately as circus and afterthought, and to keep in Washington the most un investigated reporters, correspondents incurably domestic amid the co-option and self-imporfance of the beat. No Democratic or Republican presidential challenger portends more than a slight establishment shuffle of officers—involving, almost certainly, the return of former senators from the old Senate and the public. (Before his current decline, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was privately and periodically briefed by an accommodating group of Carter administration assistant secretaries, men who had been charged with illegal loyalty.) No white papers issue from that earnest Carter administration to explain how we got to this awful pass, there being far too many holdovers even to begin to blame him for the loss of that position. The salvation even harder, no best-sellers describe our erroneous zones in Foggy Bottom, advise how to make and improve our own foreign policy or warn to us prepare for Meanwhile, as we relegate life-and-death diplomacy to the pursuit of clerks, and as we surrender what may be our most vital democratic sovereignty to them, other countries can take their place. We have different creeds—in Arabia, in the Philippines, Indonesia or Korea, in South Africa, in Latin America and even Mexico. To a policy that remains too foreign, we will Roger Morris served as a senior assistant on the National Security Council staff from 1879 to 1898 and later as a Thursdav. March 27. 1980 University Daily Kansan 5 Residents voice mixed reactions to jitney service BY LYNN ANDERSON Staff Reporter A newly licensed jitney service for Lawrence is bringing applause from some residents and signs of despair from others. The bus service in transportation is saddened on every body's lips. The jitney service, approved at Tuesday's city commission meeting, will provide on-call van service for the handcapped and elderly at $1.50 a ride. The designer of the jitney, Ward Thompson, has stressed that the service would be less expensive than cab fare, would be available on 30 minutes notice, and would operate all night. LAWRENCE'S CITY MANAGER, Buford Watson, said yesterday that because it would not be economical for the city to have a "fixed-rate" bus service, the hivejay "The city can't afford buses under our present tax structure." Watson said. "Someone always pays—the riders or the taxpayers." Watson said federal grants were available for public transportation equipment but not for operation, and that a full-scale public transit system would have to be subsidized. Watson also pointed to recent reports that federal regulations were making public buses inefficient in energy and economy. The report noted that the climate control and wheelchair lifts had made buses heavy and expensive, and that contractors no longer wanted to hid on them. THE STUDY RECOMMENDED that the city concentrate on special groups such as the aged and handicapped, he said. Watson said the city investigated public transit a year and a half ago with a study of Lawrence's transportation needs. Latin Week program focusus on women Tradition, coupled with the rapid urbanization of Latin America, has kept lower class Latin American women oppressed. A study right at a Laux week program in Wescue Hall. The speakers were Elizabeth Kurnesoff, visiting assistant professor of history, and Robert Oppenheimer, assistant professor of physics. The program, called "The Double Day," also made up the program, sponsored by the Latin American Studies Association and the office of unity affairs. "The Double Day" referred to two jobs a working woman in Latin America must hold down the jobs of a worker and a home- owner. She is a mother (Jen) explored the desires of poor ladh women to be themselves and to find jobs of their own instead of being more appendages. Kuzes of the migration of poor rural people to the cities forced lower class women into jobs such as seamstresses, prostitutes and domestic workers. Increased technology in factories has also reduced the number of jobs available to women, she said. "In fact, a very large percentage of the women in the service sector are domestic workers," she said. And, she said, domestic work is a deadend job, with marriage as the only escape. Oppenheimer said that the trend toward urban dwellings was causing massive unemployment for lower class males as well as females. He said the problem would be difficult to resolve. "The cities are growing, so it's not going to get better. It's going to get worse," he said. "You'd have to institute complete and total reversals of society," he said. "I don't know that there is any single way that can be done." Attention! Corr. Secretary Rec. Secretary President Schumm said that although he supported a public transportation plan-to be implemented in an emergency or a gasoline station, it is not here" for public transit in Lawrence. Commissioner Bob Schumm agreed that "the jitney has to be a step in the right direction." Vice-President The Black Student Union is now taking nominations for the offices of: He said the city had used that approach, supporting the bus services of the Council on the Aging and the Cottenwood facility for the handicapped. "Three dollars for a round trip don't sound like much," Kathy Wallace, a member of the board of directors of the company, said. "But if you are on a fixed income, it is." "It's easy to say the city ought to do it, but maybe the city does I want to raise taxes to do it," Schumann said. "We've tried to do what we can and to let private enterprise handle what it," Watson said. Many low- to moderate-income residents, however, are saying that the jitney plan has severe limitations. For more information, call THE MAIN DRAWBACK, they say, is its cost. Parliamentarian Those interested can sign up at the BSU office, B113 Kansas Union. The deadline is Thursday March 27, 1980. BSU office: 864-3984 Treasurer Wallace said it would cost her as much to take her daughter on the jitney as it would to hire a baby-sitter for her. Wallace said far East Lawrence residents bused and walked to the city, route and bus planed to approach the city, too. If both efforts failed, she said, residents were considering filing a suit to force the city to increase bus service. But he said, "There still needs to be a lower-priced service available to citizens in the near future." "THE JITNEY SEEMS to be the city's alternative to a bus service," Wallace said. "But I don't think it's going to meet the needs." Paul Winn, administrative assistant to the Human Relations Commission, said he could not say whether the jitney would meet all residents' needs. The cost of the jitney service concerns residents of Edgewood, Lawrence's public housing development, according to Debrah She said she had heard that the jitney operator also planned to charge extra for bags of groceries that passengers carried on the van. "I think some city officials are open to the idea, but nobody's pushing it," Treaster said. "It's a real shame." "We just want alternatives to walking; and the end of our lack of opportunities to find jobs," she said. Treaister said the possibility of a downtown mail made effective public transit important, to bring residents of out-lying areas in to the city. A MEMBER of the board of the East Lawrence Improvement Association, Steve Treater, he recognized the need of far East Lawrence residents for transportation. Butcher of the Edgewood Tenants Association. "I'm afraid that if the service is successful, they'll raise their rates," Butcher said. She said that 28 percent of Edgewood's residents were unemployed and that the lack of public transportation hindered their efforts to find work. "I don't care if it's trolleys or buses, just so it's mass transit," Treaster said. "It's time has come." T.G.I.R. Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $2.00 $4.20 Order any one-topping 16" pizza and get 3 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $2.00 $6.55 Pyramid Pizza 842-3232 FREE, Fast Delivery! ALLEY SAVE $2.00 midizza Open 'til 1:00 A.M. Every Night! We Pile It On! 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) FOR ONE WEEK ONLY!! WED., MARCH MARCH 26 THROUGH WED., APRIL 2 MISTER GUY OF LAWRENCE ANNOUNCES A SPRING SUIT SALE!! A Huge Selection of New Spri for; New Spring Suits Perfect for: a. interviews b. Spring Parties c. That New Career that Starts in June SALE SUITS INCLUDE SOLIDS, PINSTRIPES AND CHALK STRIPES d. Any Occasion that Requires a Traditional Suit in Naturally Blended Fabrics All vested in navies - greys - ink blues British tan All the classic business and dress suits with the famous Mister Guy fit. Alterations are free! Hours: Mon, Tues, Wed, Fri, Sat Thurs 10-9 Sun 1-5 MISTER GOW 920 Massachusetts 842-2700 The University of Kansas University Lecture Series Presents Allen H. Neuharth Allen H. Neuthart Chairman and President of Gannett Co., Inc. 8:00 p.m. Thursday Free and Open to March 27, 1960 the public Woodford Auditorium Kansas Union 1964 TUCAON CITIZEN STATESMAN PHILA GRAFAN NEW MEXICAN TENSACOLA NEWS Honolulu Star Bulletin THE NEW YORKER MAY 1, 2006 THE NEW YORKER MAY 1, 2006 The Burial The R Willa of Great RING The 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 27, 1980 AURH more influential now,president says By TOM TEDESCHI Staff Reporter Staff Reporter In the past year the Association of University Residence Hall has come into its own as an organization representing residence hall students on campus. Jay Simmons HR president, said in a recent interview, but there is still room for the movement. "We're not satisfied with where we are. There is in the feeling that NIU could do better, but they've been working in a residence hall than on cooking and sleeping, and that's what our programming has been Smith credits increased resident participation and better communication with other parts of the University, especially the administration for increasing AUHI research. "That was important—getting people to participate in AHRU he said. "Attendance must be low," he said. There was absolutely no respect for AHRU it was a joke. I think we spent two hours there. AN EXAMPLE of AURIS is increased role in residence hall affairs, Smith said, that all increases in residence hall contracts go to the administration. Increases also must go through the Residential Programs Advisory Board, which AURII also has a seat “As far as working with the administration,” he said, “we are the students’ only voice and I have to say that years ago we’ve been pretty successful. "In the long run, we raised it 10 percent and everyone raised hell about prices . . . yet we are not even meeting the inflation rate. Next year we are looking at cutting services. In fact, we want to have an increase of no more than 5 percent next year." A We're hopping into Easter with a huge selection of stuffed animals, cards,baskets,& party supplies Smith re-elected to AURH "People say we are powerless at the hands of contracts," he said, "but when the administration sits down to decide, we sit down with them. We have a strong voice. It's not reflected in the fact that contracts go up, but it is in the fact that we kept them." ZERCHER PHOTO Jay Smith, Greeners Junior, and Mark Fouts, Derby minor, won their second victory as vice president last night. Smith and Fouts won the election by 80 votes over the team of Larry Kolster, Warrensburg, Mo., and Scott Tempi, Wichita freshman. "Where Cards E Gifts Ahead" 191 IOWA 1107 MASS Dave Simmons, DeSoto freshman, won the treasurer post and Amy Handelman, Overland Park freshman, will be the secretary. Smith and Fouts, who won their positions last year unopposed, defeated Kolster and Tennapel 348-288, according to Shannon Murray. AUH election committee chairman. About 700 people voted in the first round, with higher turnover than last year. Murray said. "There are going to be some very direct changes in AURH next year," Smith said last night. "We're going to try to have a contract increase of no more than 5 percent. The contracts committee is going to be a live committee next year. I promise you that." Handelman ran unopposed and received more votes-517-than any other candidate in the election. "I was really excited," she said, "but that doesn't really mean anything. I know Godzilla got three and Bambi got one." Murray reported a number of votes for Zipvy the Pinhead as well. Three of the seven candidates for AUHR offices were allowed to register late because by filing deadline, only one candidate was eligible for confirmation. None of the latter candidates won. Simmons won his post by a margin of 373-178. The AURH officers will, with the committee chairmen, comprise the Executive board. Applications for committee chairs will be available in the AURH office. MONEY--NAMELY tight budgets—is a recurring problem for AUHR, Smith said, but he added that next year there would be some relief. "Next year there's going to be a big change because we will have the money to do things," he said. Next year the AURH fee will increase to $5 a student. "We have enough money that we will not our costs without cutting programs," he said. "We can pass the burden of pansion of all our programs. There should be twice as much programming next year, so we should." Smith said that the administration at first was pessimistic about the chances for an increase in the AURH fee. "It was just a matter of convincing them that it was worth the increase," he said. SMITH SAID that communication with administration broke down one time last week. The police were fleeing the fledgling Alpha Omicron Pi college in University housing until their house was "We were upset as an organization because we felt we should have been contacted," he said. "I really feel that was a mistake. "Records show it the decision) was at the student affairs level. It was a quick decision and advice was not solicited from AURH or Housing." Big Eight search making progress Phyllis Howlett, KU assistant athletic director and a committee member, said she would meet soon to review applications and recommend finalists to the selection While Big Eight Commissioner Charles Neinas can count his days left in office on one hand, a five-member search compartment toward naming Nenas's successor. Howlett declined to comment either when the meeting would be held or on who had applied for the position. Though officials do not expect a new commissioner to be named until at least June 1, Nenad will leave the job Tuesday. The college's former director of the College Football Association. William Baugh, committee chairman and dean of the graduate School of Business at the University of Colorado, was unavailable yesterday for comment. Kinko's Steve Hatchell, assisman commissioner, will serve as acting commissioner until a replacement is appointed during the transition. Howlett said When the search committee selects finalists, a new commissioner will be chosen by conference athletic directors, investigatives and the search committee. Serving with Howlett and Baughon on the search committee are: John P. Mahisteh, faculty representative at Iowa State University, athletic directors of Oklahoma State University of Nebraska and Wade Walker, of the University of Oklahoma. For Your Theses and Dissertations 25% Cotton paper We collate at no charge Hours 8-8 Mon-Thurs 8-6 Fri 904 Vermont MISS. STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS 10-5 Sat 12-5 Sum 843-8019 Wedding Reception? Cal The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL $1.50 reg. $2.00 Wed. thru Sun., March 26 to 30 Egypt Coke No coupons accepted with offer The Undergraduate Anthropology Assoc. "Natural Disaster Trends and Their Implications." a talk by Visiting Professor, Dr. Kinshaw Friday, March 28 3:30 p.m. Council Room of the Union with comments by Dr. Frayee and Dr. Yamamoto Movie; "The First Signs of Wasahoe" with comments by Dr. Fraye and Dr. Hamadeo Monday, March 31 3:30 p.m. Funded by Student Activity Fees Budweiser TASTEBUDS IN "THE CORN MUTINY" YOU KNOW THE ONLY THING WRONG WITH THESE ALL NIGHT WAR MOVIE FESTIVALS? YEAH, THIS TURKEY ALWAYS EATS HIS WEIGHT IN SALTY POPCORN! YOU CAN SAY THAT AGAIN! IM UP TO MY EARS IN ARIDITY! IF WE DON'T GET A BUDWEISER SOON, WE'LL BE EMBALMED ALIVE! QUICK, A COMMERCIAL! NOW IF WE CAN ONLY GET HIM TO TURN HIS EYES AROUND TO THE REFRIGERATOR!... HE SPOTTED IT: ALL AHEAD ONE THIRD... HE'S TAKEN OUT A SIX-PACK. PREPARE TO DIVE. BUDAWAY! WE WILL BUD THEM ON THE BEACHES WE WILL BUD THEM ON THE LANDING GROUNDS. WE SHALL BUD THEM WHY DO YOU THINK THEY CALL'EM TASTEBUDS ANYWAY! KU investments called improper Thursday, March 27.1980 By JUDITH LYNN HOWARD STAFF REPRESENT Staff Reporter The University of Kansas Endowment Association is aware that its investments in South Africa are "improper", an exiled South African journalist said last night. The journalist, Damisani S. K. Sumalu, spoke informally to 50 people at the 'South Africa Night' sponsored by the KU Committee on South Africa. "By the association's own statement, it is acting improperly in South Africa," he said after his speech. KUMALO WAS referring to a statement by the Endowment Association that its policy on divesment remained unchanged. The statement was made in response to the KU Committee on South Africa's request to meet with Endowment Association president Todd Seymour today to discuss divestiture of Endowment Association interests in American companies in South Africa. Seymour said yesterday that it was uncertain whether he would meet with the committee. The committee claims in its reports, which said that Endowment Association in investments in South Africa totaled **6.4 million** according to 1978 fiscal figures, that divestiture would not be financially harmful to the Endowment Association. The statement said the Endowment Association guaranteed the right for all donors to direct or request divestment of investments in American companies in South Africa. THE STATEMENT SAID "if anyone feels that the association is not acting properly under its legal responsibility, then such person must go to the court for a judgment ordering the Endowment Association to divest itself of all of their companies doing business in South Africa. Kumalo said that the Endowment Association's assertion that all donors had the right to direct their contribution was saying too much responsibility on the donor. As a university that believes in freedom, he said, it is incongruous that it would train students with "blood money." He said the Endowment Association's statement that, under Kansas law, it was not permitted to make investments based upon political or economic issues, was a IN HIS SPEECH, Kumalo described how investments in South Africa by American companies were integral parts of anthem. smoke screen for improper action in South Africa. "The U.S. corporations are supporting the South African government—period," he said Kumalo said that South African blacks were not fighting for equality with South African whites. "We are not fighting for the right to white toilets, buses. We are fighting for the power, the right to rule ourselves." he said. Kumalo said that American companies could not use the pretext of hurting black employees to avoid pulling out of South Africa. "Pays is not the issue. The issue is what the company does in controlling the movements of the black population in South Africa," he said. Kumalo described how apartheid began. The Africanans, originally called the Dutch people, were among the first to migrate to Africa in 1662. There were feuds with African nations, such as the Zulus, over their lands. gained control of South Africa through minority rule in a white election in 1948, apartheid was institutionalized in South Africa. Before World War II, the Africanans sent their sons to German and Italian schools where they learned about Nazism and the future leaders of South Africa, he said. HE SAID THAT after the Afrikaners University Daily Kansan In the early 50s, he said, blacks began organizing to pursue equality in South Africa. Kumalo became a journalist in 1965 and became involved in various organizations, such as the Black Consciousness Movement. He founded the Union of Black Journalists. THE BLACK CONSCIUSNESS Movement was banned in South Africa in October 1977. Kumufo lied South Africa in June of that year, he said. As a cub reporter, his editor told him that covering news on blacks victimized by apartheid was no longer news. Kumalo asked, "Why concentrate on South Africa when there are so many corvork countries around the world?" "The prime reason is that South Africa is the only country on earth that practices legalized and institutionalized racism." Bill redirects law fee By JON BLONGEWICZ Staff Reporter A bill before the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee could bring $60,000 to the University of Kansas School of Law. The bill, introduced March 19 as a committee bill, was supported by State Senator Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, and Senator R-Wichita, Wint Winter, R-Ottawa. The bill would channel a $50 per semester fee, which law students must pay in addition to in-state fees, directly to the University and Hess are RU Law school graduates. THE $ 50 FEE was added to law school tuition in the mid-1960s to subsidize faculty salary increases. This year law students challenged the $ 50 fee, saying money was not being used for faculty salaries or for any other law school expenses. The additional $50 goes into the University's general fee fund. But the proposed bill would require by law that students be used exclusively by the law school. THE BILL differs from the Budget- ary Committee's request to the KU administration late last semester. The committee had asked for, and had tentatively received, approval from KU officials to eliminate the $50 fee. Rosie O'Leary, Prairie Vulture inn- students. They originally had asked that the money be rechanneled into the law students were told that they would be more successful if they asked to have the additional tuition eliminated. O'Leary Rich Green, an aide for Winter, said the fee was not eliminated because state senators believed that the $50 fee could benefit the law school. "When the $40 differential was initiated in 1965, I believe, it was made with the express purpose of benefiting the law school above and beyond the law campus. Green said, "This bill is an attempt to have the spirit of the original idea maintained." GREEN SAID he was hopeful that the bill would be passed. The bill is to be discussed in the committee tomorrow, but it is on an agenda with five other bills concerning Regents schools. Green said the commission would have time to discuss the bill. --eleven west ninth The Crossing (Former Calfish) OPEN FOR LUNCH (Bigger) Serving Our Sub Sandwiches on Fresh Baked Bread Vegetarian MENU Ham & Cheese Italian Hoagie Meatball Tuna Bar & Kitchen Fausage V Kraut 11-12 midnight Whole $2.85 Half $1.50 American Turkey Roast Beef BLT Bottled Bees: Bud, Michelok, Miller, Miller Lite, Nat. Lite, Coors, Coors Lite, Lowenbrau, Lowenbrau Park. (Coors on Tap) Pops, Pops Lite, Spike. --eleven west ninth lemon tree sandwich, burger and yogurt shop featuring Famous Submarine Sandwiches Buy a full size submarine sandwich, Get a yogurt cone-FREE!! Offer good: Wed.-Sun. March 26-30 Presents sua films "A TANTALIZING TEASE... for adults who've done a little living...a delight in the watching." That Obscure Object Of Desire ("Cet Obscur Objet du Désir") Luis Buñuel's R English Subtitles AF-val Antibody Release 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 pm Friday & Saturday, March 28-29 - No Friday Matinee $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium —No refreshments allowed— TIME SWEDISH SHOP 25th & Iowa Scandinavian Imports Holiday Plaza GRAND OPENING Saturday, March 29 9:30-5:00 p.m. - Unique Imported Gifts - Crystal & Stainless Steel - Linens - Household Items - Kitchen Utensils - Coffee Warmers By Lofsko - Pewter Pendants from Sweden - Wooden Beaded Jewelry from Finland PLUS Thurs.—10 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun.—1 p.m.-5 p.m. Sat.—10 a.m.-3 p.m. ORIGINAL SWEDISH CLOGS FOR WOMEN-B STYLES "The store with a difference." M-W, Fri.—10 a.m.-6 p.m. TONIGHT! sua films JILL CLAYBURGH Luna. The love that keeps them together is tearing them apart. A Film By Bernardo Bertolouci Introduction Matthew Barry Vernonice Lazarus for Roberto Tomas Millan Screenplay by Giuseppe Bertolouci, Clare Peplo, Bernardo Bertolouci English Adaptation by George Malke- Director of Photography Vittorio Storaro (ACL) Produced by Giuseppe Malke and Sophie Gupta KPA R RESERVED Directed by Bernardo Bertolouci ELEVEN LAWRENCE PREMIERE! Tonight, March 27 8:00 pm $1.50 Special Showing in 35mm at Hoch Auditorium ASK THEM WHY MARIA MAYORAL SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARRUTTI- O'LEARY BEFORE APRIL 2, 1980. Ask a Peace Corps volunteer why he teaches business marketing techniques to vegetable farmers in Costa Rica. Ask a VISTA volunteer why she organizes the rural poor in Arizona to set-up food co-ops. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, be involved in social change, maybe travel, learn a new language or experience another culture. Ask them: PEACE C RPS VISTA The University of Kansas Office of Minority Affairs/ MECHA Presents Jerry Apodaca Former Governor of New Mexico THE FEDERAL BANK OF GREECE Outlook for the '80s A Hispanic Perspective 7:30 p.m., Friday, March 28, 1980 Forum Room, Kansas Union Free Admission Sponsored in Conjunction with the Statewide MECHA Conference/ March 28-29/ Kansas Union / The University of Kansas. L University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 27, 1980 Jewelry department tires of 'temporary' quarters By KEVIN MILLS Staff Reporter KU's jewellery department has been in limbo since the fall of 1977. That's when the new Visual Arts building located in Broadcasting Hall, were expected to take up residency in Fowler Hall, the old visual art building. Fowler Hall is adjacent But the new building had flaws. Money that would have enabled the jewery studios to move went for repairs instead. **THURY MONTHS later, jewelry students and staff still share Broadcasting Hall with radio station KANU. The move to Fowler is the result, as told, as soon as funds are available.** Olli Valanne, associate professor of design, is upset with the delay. "We moved into this building to stay one or two years until the new facilities opened," he said. "It's sort of been temporary now for five years." Valame teaches in Broadcasting Hall and the Visual Arts building. He said he had difficulty in gaining permission to move into room reserve for him in the new building. "I had to fight to get in there," he said. "A grad student could use my room for grading but I couldn't use it for teaching. "They said, 'You can be in there if the working crew has to come around and repair things.' I finally got it the day before when we were applied for the move six months earlier." PETER THOMPSON, associate dean of fine arts, said the jewelry studios would move into rooms in Fowler, but he didn't know when. "I'm not sure about the timetable," he said. "It all depends on when the funding is available." Fowler Hall is now vacant and without power. Part of the empty space will soon be occupied by architecture classes. Thompson estimated that it would require $100-150,000 for the jewelry department to move in. In the meantime, jewelry students and faculty have to contend with outmoded and dangerous studies, Valanne said. A ventilation system is needed in Broadcasting Hall, he said, to contend with toxic fumes emitted by the various acids used in jewelry work. He said that money had been allotted for a similar ventilation system in the new building. "It looks as if some people are very favored here," Valanne said. THOMPSON SAID he was not aware of a ventilation problem. "I don't know if anyone at the University knows if there is a ventilation problem," he said. Jon Havner, assistant professor of design, disagreed. An investigation was conducted by architectural Services, he said, that revealed that a ventilation system, as well as protective hoods for students, was needed. "One person might say yes, there is a problem, and somebody else may say no, then isn't," Havner said. "I guess it depends on where you're coming from." Haver said there have been instances of students feeling ill after working with a steel polishing compound. When used in great amounts, the compound can be very hard on the lungs, he said. He said that a ventilation system would probably benefit the faculty most, since they are exposed to the fumes more often. The building has other problems, too. Havwer said. "We've had to make other repairs that turned out to be illegal," he said. "But it had to be done." HOLIDAY PLAZA-2449 IOWA 841-8271 Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEM Cheese Emporium Hours: 11-9 Sun.-Thurs. 11-10 Fri. & Sat. "Things are really cramped for space here," Owens said. "We'd have more room in the new facility, and it would be cleaner, a lot of dust duggers around here." "This department is low on the University's list as far as status goes." Havner, however, said he didn't want to complain too much. "When the electricians came over, you could hear them saying, 'Man, this stuff is bad. I don't want to work on it." Weekend Specials Thursday through Sunday This weekend enjoy great sandwiches at great prices. I feel slighted, perhaps, in that they're very slow in developing a sound basic resource, he said. "But as long as things are moving ahead, I don't like to complain." FACULTY AND STUDENTS helped to repair ductwork, electrical systems and gas lines—all basic necessities that needed immediate attention, he said. Tuna Salad sandwich $1.59 Reg. $1.89 $2.50 Reg. $3.25 The Pure Pork fresh Tuna Salad served with lettuce & Tomato Ham, Canadian Bacon, Cappacola Ham, Lettuce, Tomato, Swiss Mozzarella Cheeses on Rye Bread $1.50 Reg. $2.29 Salami, Ham, Bologna, American and Swiss cheeses, Lettuce and Tomato on a Hoagie Bun $2.75 Reg. $3.50 The Big Boot 22.75 Reg. $3.50 Pepper Beef Corned Beef, Pastrami Kraut and Provolone Cheeses on an Origin Bell The Big Beef Submarine Pepper Beef, Corned Beef, Pastrami, Kraut and Provolone Cheeses on an Union Roll Fresh, Homemade Carrot Cake $75^{\circ}$ or Apple Pie $50^{\circ}$ CRAIG OWENS, Wichita junior, is not content with the studios in Broadcasting Hall. "The fire marshal our walls were unsafe because they weren't fireproof," Havner said. "Those are the kind of things that shouldn't be difficult to repair. "I rather be in this building," he said. "It's a nice department with a lot of room. Those are nice classrooms over there (in the classroom), but I have no quailms with this place." "I don't ever have any ill effects, but I guess there might be something that turns up in five years. It's really nothing immediate," he said. "But it's a good space here. It's workable." KU PUT POOLING IN YOUR SCHOOLING One student, who did not want to be identified, agreed. He said he was not concerned about the ventilation. jayhawk tower On the KU Campus, 803 W. MIDDLE LAWRENCE. SPECIAL SUMMER RATES —The Department of Corrections and the Kansas Adult Authority were sued by a former inmate of the Kansas State Prison. The conviction was held in prison beyond his parole date. Lawsuit... "The State of Kansas was sued by an employment manager after the misrepresented during a job interview with a state employee. The applicant said the interviewer told him he would be hired, and he was not." Fillmore said cases that have been filed include: From page one That case involved the city of Galena. Attorney General Robert Stephen filed a suit against the Galena City Council accusing it of violating the state's open meeting laws. The Galena city attorney accused the Galena County's office, but the suit was dismissed. brought against state agents or employees for negligence. ONLY ONE of the 18 cases filed has been resolved in court, Fillmore said. Filmore said that Kansas Supreme Court rulings had helped the Legislature pass the law allowing parents to sueParsons after city employees unintentionally cut down trees on her property. The Kansas Supreme Court ruled that a state could cause a action against the city. SUA and the Emily Taylor Womens Resource and Career Center present Dr. Rosabeth Moss Kanter on POWER & POWERLESSNESS in organizations Contributors: Office of Academic Affairs; Commission on the Status of Women - Dept. of Speech and Drama Capital Complex Center - Graduate Students Council - School of Business - Women's Studies - Anonymous Donors Capital Complex Center - Graduate Students Council March 28 7:30 PM 3139 Wescoe Free Admission MOONLITE MADNESS SALE Thursday March 27th Carousel Has Spring Fever! Doors Open 4-11 pm T shirts & Tanks 4.99 Reg. 12.00 Terry Rompers 9.99 Reg. to 20.00 Lace collared Blouses 9.99 Reg. 22.00 Skirts and Dresses 9.99 Reg. to 30.00 Tube Tops 2.99 Reg. 5.00 Table full of Goodies 99c Everything in the store is on Sale. Plus 10% off Regular Priced Merchandise One Day Only—Thursday March 27th 4-11 pm This is one sale you should not miss!!! carousel 23rd & La. Malls Shopping Center 1 Thursday, March 27, 1980 University Daily Kansan 9 Senate ... From page one suppress controversy? If you're not here to question why are you here at all?" Senate parlementarian Paul Buskirk said the provision would guarantee that both sides of an issue were heard. "If a group puts out pre-ERA material, it must put out an equal amount of anti-ERA material." Buskirk said. "Why should I support a point of view I don't agree with?" Bren Abbott, Finance and Auditing Committee chairman, said he had expected the provision to fail. The committee had held a hearing on the matter last Wednesday. Senate-funded organizations Tuesday night. "We knew it would be killed, but now at least everybody knows there is a problem." Abbott said. "We got the point across that something has to be done." The funding philosophy was developed to help committees consistently allocate funds during the budget hearings. Another key provision of the resolution, which would have required student-funded organizations to publish advertisements or announcements in English or translated into English, failed. However, the Senate did not prohibit the use of Senate funds for the express purpose of recruiting or granting scholarships. The Senate unlocked unallocated funds in another bill to grant increases to several line allocation organizations. Those in line were not interrupted but a quorum call interrupted the final vote. The funds, totalling $45,729 will not be released until Matt. July Davis, student body vice president, said he expected additional funds would total nearly $60,000 by July. The allocations were: *Recreational* *School Services* $1,135; *University Concert Series* $8,227 KU Bands, $8,681 KU Forensics, $1,465 Graduate and Graduate Student Council, $129. Vote on paraphernalia bill stalled A bill that would prohibit the display of drug-related paraphernalia in businesses to minors probably will not be acted on, openers told. Eleanor Pomeroy, R-Topke, said yesterday. After a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the bill, POMC endorsed the committee's resolution of similar nationality of a similar Overland Park ordinance was decided by the Kansas Court of Appeals. The ordinance, enacted last August and challenged by Kansas City paraphernalia lawmakers, passed the state Senate Reform of Marijuana Legislation, was upheld by the Johnson County District Court Neil Shortlidge, Overland Park assistant city attorney, said the main objection to both the ordinance and the bill was that items sold in shops could be used for reasons other than drunge use. Under the bill, introduced by State Rep. W. Edgar Moore, R-Olalte, determination of criminal action would be based on the intent of the seller. Pomeroy said that arguments against the bill were too vague and that a similar bill—based on proven intent of ownership of proxies or tools—had been ruled constitutional. Mark Williams, manager of Bokonon, a local paraphernalia shop, said he thought it was necessary to restrict not the display of paraphernalia but the order of purchases. "I think that's the only thing they can really do," Williams said. "People were making their own things before we started marketing them. "They're not going to keep the kids from doing it, if that's what they're intending the law to do. They're going to do it any way. It isn't a 'situation' a problem here in Lawrence." Ed Carter. Lawrence city commissioner, said he had proposed a local ordinance that would strengthen the state bill if it passed. "It might limit the accessibility of paraphernalia to kids," he said, "but it's not going to cure the problem." Carter said no action would be taken by the city commission to develop the ordinance until the state had decided on its bill. Eden ... though it is made from logs, but the logs are made of cement and limestone. From page one The longest "loo" is 27 feet. The entire house has 11 rooms plus a cave. The first floor and some of the walls are also made of cement. The house is furnished with items from the 1800s and early 1900s. Included are Dinsmore's clothes and handmade furniture, crank telephone and photographs Many of the furnishings are a permanent part of the house, such as a checkerboard that is cemented to the floor. THE PORCH ALSO has a bannister made of cement and its rails are actually jugs and bottles covered with cement. After Dinsmoor finished building his house, he began his art sculpture. Wolbert said. The first pieces he made were statues of elephants and deer. He then apple as a secrt perches on her head. Above the statues is the Garden of Eden sign, protected by a guardian angel in an apple tree made of cement. From this starting point you can walk around the yard and see the story of Cain and Abel with devils hovering in the background. There is also a cement flag, 20 feet in the air, which is built so that it turns with the direction of the wind. Nearby the flag are a number of nets to capture rain and a sermon of animals, huntsmen and soldiers. POST DELUXE 800-123-4567 PH 123-4567 The Kansas University School of Architecture and Urban Design is pleased to announce an Exhibition of Student Projects scheduled to be on display in the fall semester. Students will also as well pass student work (the earliest dating circa 1925) will represent the high degree of design excellence stressed within the School. Presentation drawings and scale models will be integrated in the show and the best of the School's pedagogic productions. 图解 A+ U D A+ U D A+ U D A+ U D MEISNER - MILSTEAD RETAIL LIQUOR UD EXHIBIT TREKKING VIN Some recreational vehicles are expensive. creational vehicles are expensive. Some aren't. The Bicycle. The RV of the 1980s. MOTORCYCLE MARKET NISHIKI. AZUKI. blockbum WINDSOR SIR Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts 842-3131 FEATURING FINE IMPORTED AND CALIFORNIA WINES AND 30 VARIETIES OF COLD BEER! FOR KEGS CALL 842-4499 Bicycle Riding IN HOLIDAY PLAZA (2 DOORS WEST OF KIEFE) MOTORCAVE M FRANCE Southern Designs SUA and Chris Cavarozzi Presents WINDOM plays "THURBER" 8pm April 14 Hoch Auditorium Tickets $5-6-7 $1 discount for students Tickets Available Friday at SUA Box Office, Gammons, and at the information desk in the lobby of the 1st National Bank of Topeka Mail Orders: SUA Kansas Union Lawrence Kansas 66045 Presents sua films PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather PART II Al Pacino Robert Duvall Diane Keaton Robert De Niro Talia Shire Morgana King John Cazale Mariana Hill Lee Strasberg Francis Ford Coppola ... Maria Pizza The Guildfather ... Marin Pizza Francis Ford Coppola ... Frederickcok... First Class Main Date Sunday, March 30 2:00 pm $1.50 Wooldruff Auditorium For refurbishments f1 francis hunts the fox, the fox hunts the bird and the bird hunts the worm. sporting goods sporing goods 843-4191 781 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 play ball! with the brand name winners in softball gloves At least one group of KU students visits he Garden each year, he said. Come, single 'em on... gloves and mitts from Wilson, Mizuno, Louisville, Resh, Walker, Rawlings, Nokona, MacGregor and Medalist. In more than 100 different styles, and most in both left and right hand models. Our unfappable equipment lives the groundwork for your slide into a winning season. "MR. DINSMOOR TOLD he wanted to how the ecology system worked—how animals killed one another in order to survive," Wolbert said. Phil Blackhurst, KU professor of art, said that the Garden was an example of folk art and that its eccentricity added interest to the work. Illustrated: Louisville Shsger 15-15 frozen's folder of top-grain cornbread its sleeve of cheese control attached "Shirpup T-shirt" Both regular and right hand $ ^{8} $ 8.95 to $ ^{8} $ 86.95 Many artists visit the Garden, Naegle said. ABOUT 10,000 PEOPLE come to the Garden of Eden each year and pay $1 for a tour. Nagee estimates that another 8,000 people in the Garden without coming into the yard. Suggested price 40.00—Our price'33.50. BLUEBELL MEDICAL MEDICAL MEDICAL MEDICAL MEDICAL HELLY HALL EAST HEALTH WELFARE TURNS "Sporty things for sporty people" all of the sculptures are made of steel covered with cement and were built by Larry Roberts in his Garden when he was in his 60s and didn't stop until he was hitled by cataracts when he was 19. 3.50. Dismoor remained alive until his death at age 89 in 1932. Woolart said his first wife, the 70-year-old, was a 20-year old woman. They had two children, the second born when Dismoor When Dinsmoor died, he was entombed in a cement coffin he had built into the wall of the mausoleum behind a sheet of glass. The coffin has a water jug next to it. The most obvious question when you see the Garden is, "Was Dinsmoor a genius or an eccentric old nut?" "It will beat a few drops from Lazarus fingers," Dinsmoor is quoted in a small pamphlet sold at the Garden. Dinsmoor's will said he planned to use it on Judgment Day in case he "has to go down below." Foreign & Domestic Parts DON CHICK AUTO PARTS -Part Stop 1209 East 23rd 841-2290 2nd Year Anniversary! Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints 2. $5 off on Perms and Bodywaves With This Coupon (Includes Shampoo, Cut & Blowdry) Plus, Free Shampoo & Blowdry With Every Prime Cut Prime Cut Hair Co. REDKEN 13 E. 8th 841-4488 Jan Sanders, Owner, Styler Joyce Mcauley, Stylist Monday-Saturday 9-8 (Advertisement) Day 4 March 27, Thursday Paddy Turns Up Mother Relieved Panama City, Panama. A man fitting the description of missing Sigma Alpha Brother Paddy Murphy reportedly landed in Panama today, bringing chaos and confusion with him. At the Customs Checkpoint the man slurred. "I heard (hijump) Jimmy Jones was throwing another party down here." He said 3:28 he got beer (you hijump) after a whirl. I also (hijump) have a sick friend (you hijump) check on (hijump). Authorities have unable to confirm the friend's identity. Gerry Murphy, Paddys mother, reminiscent today about her son, in Stardale, Miss. "Paddy was quarterback for the Rabbit County Unified School District Fighting Pellets. It was in his 5th or 6th year that he lettered. He'd go into the kitchen of our tenure before each game to put on his Fighting pellets, a few of the Pellet fight songs, and smoke a White Owl cigar. One time he was hit so drunk and singing so hard, he swallowed his lit cigar, whole." "Paddy's drinking never really was too much of a problem until he was about 16 years old," she said. "One night he had been doing shots of equina and chasing it with Bacardi 151 and he passed out by the pilot light in the back, blow up half the house. I glad he had found so and far from home. Anyone with any information about Paddy's location are asked to call the SAE House. No collect calls accepted. Patronize Kansan advertisers. Miss JANUARY JAIME LYN BAUER Young and the Centerfold Girls STARRING ALDO RAY TIPFANY BOLLING RAY DANTON JAMIE LYN BAUER ANDREW PRINE Two nights onlyl Fri. & Sat. 12:15 Doors open 12:00 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 27, 1980 Equipment. From page one of the senate when Dan Rohrbock, a McColum resident, discovered the equipment in storage and brought the issue before a senate meeting, Percival said. "I was a student in McColum in the spring of 1973 and I started to check into this stuff to see where it was." Rehbruck said. While working in the McCollum cafeteria in late 1978, he said, he discovered the equipment in a storeroom. "I knew it was around somewhere, but I wasn't looking for it at the time. I happened to stumble on it while looking for something else," he said. ROHRBACK SAID he had been collecting information on the equipment and its whereabouts for some time. He said that there was some interest in the senate when he brought the issue up but because he didn't have much information, the idea just died there. One reason for decreasing resident interest, he said, was that Housing moved the equipment. "It was moved immediately after I brought up the top in the senate," he said. "I happened to see where they moved it to." It was then that the slowly accumulating information on it." Robbread said he had recently gathered enough information to meet with Wilson, and discuss what would be done with the enquirer. "HE SEEMED WILLING to bring this equipment back out and use it, but that was conditional on development of a firm plan and funding," he said. Wilson said resurrecting the communications center was still a possibility. "I'm willing to continue, but the struggle would be how many students would be interested in this thing now. . . I still think it is worth trying to fly with the residents (in 1974)," he said. But according to Rohrback, the communications center was basically dead. "I don't think anybody here is seriously thinking of resurrecting the communications hall," he said. Munjak said the possibility was still there, but remained doubtful. "TTL PROBABLY be a white before you do," Ms. Sawyer said set up. If they do make and recommendations, we're practically broke, so we would be up to your next year's senate to allocate the funds. The costs involved could prove to be prohibitive. The costs of just rebursting the rooms could run into thousands of dollars, he said. "I would bet it would probably cost over $3,000," he said. "We would have to buy out the contracts for the weight room and some office space. That alone would be about $3,000." illustrations cartoons artwork logos creative illustrations lane—841-7650 phone----841-7650 CITY OF HOLLYWOOD Encare Copy Corps 842-2001 "We deliver" 3¢ copies (8½ x 11 regular) Now through April 5 We also do typing, editing and art work. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza TODAY! There will be a ROTARY DISTRICT CONFERENCE all day in the group. The GROUP will in the GROUP will in the Cork Room 2 in the Union. THE KU BLUE RIBON COMMITTEE on FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION will hold an open forum in the KU GROUP and the KU KREW team will meet in front of room 205 Robinson at 4 p.m. PL AI PHATHA THETA, initiation and a reception for new members at 4 p.m. in the Union. THE ECONOMICS CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower GENERAL ASSMILY meeting at 7:15 p.m. in the Council Room in the Union. Ohio affirmation American WEEK at 7:15 p.m. in the ashayk房 Room in the Union. THE SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. The KU COLLEGE MUSEUM WEEK at 7:30 p.m. Stewart Carter directors, will perform UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus SEMESTER AT SEA Plain a college semester at an abrupt the SCHOOL MEMBERRY GAMES. The credits are not required. A graduate or amongst College Angles, a Center of Long Island University, may be transferred. Cursus includes units to honors数目 from Maine to the Michigan Islands. HARRY GAMAGE is a 85-foot U.S. Coast Guard inspected auxiliary scouter. For curriculum, cost and schedule, write or call DIRIGO CRUISES 39 Waterside Lane, Clinton, CT 06413 Telephone: (203) 669-7068 BALANZA 2014 Ask Peace Corps volunteers they travel to Africa, Asia and Latin America to work with farmers, teachers, and trades people. Ask VISTA volunteers they work for a yearly organizing group in their American neighborhoods. They might also realise that they want to travel help people. We new places and different people. Ask someone who been there SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARPUTH-O LEARY BEFORE APRIL 2, 1980. ASK THEM WHY CORPS PEACE VISTA PRE-LAW? Then come to the Chancery Club the Pre-law Club-meeting Thursday, March 27, 7:30 p.m. Room 203 New Green Hal Keith Meyer, KU Criminal Law Professor - Enjoy informal discussions with: Mike Malone, District Attorney Colt Knutson, Lawrence City Attorney FREE After hearing March 28 — 7:30 p.m. — 3139 Wescoe Rosabeth Moss Kanter 'Power and Powerlessness in Organizations' Come listen to presentations and information regarding the participation of women in the workforce WOMEN AT WORK Conference Room, Satellite Ullman, University of Kansas, Lawrence 45 Saturday, March 29 10:00 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. S. Adriachi, Occupational Engagements J. Robinson, Work & Family Engagement M. Taylor, Careers and Family Interactions Center for Employment Opportunities, Akron University School Center, Emily Tayler Women's Research and Career Center, University of Wisconsin-Cor�nies and University, Corning Center (Leader Reserving CENTER) FREE - Whether Sophomore, Junior, or Senior, learn how you can prepare for law school admission and schooling. Everyone is welcome! Funded by Student Senate Room in the Union. There will be an OB- SERVATORY OPEN HOUSE at 7 p.m. in Lindley Hall. Bucky's introduces... CHEF'S SALAD Bucky's "Music of Shakespeare's Time" at 8 p.m. at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. Now at Bucky's, refreshing CHEF'S SALAD-crisp lettuce, tomatoes, and onion topped with ham, cheese, and eggs. We serve it up fresh with crackers and our own house dressing. It's a deal you can't afford to miss! THE WOMEN'S CENTER will have a lecture by Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Yale University. "Power and powerlessness in 7:30 p.m. in room 3129 Wescoe Hall. Power and powerlessness in 8:30 p.m. in room 3129 Wescoe Hall." CONCERT by the University Singers at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. The UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGIATE ATHLETICS FOR WOMEN TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIPS will be at the Allen Field House courts. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA ASSOCIATION will present "Natural Disaster Trends and their Implications," a talk by a visiting professor at 3:00 p.m. in the Council Room in the Union. THE HELEN WOMAN ASSOCIATION ART will hold a reception for Patrick Ireland at 3 p.m. THE BKU LOGO CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room in the Union. THE CHRISTIAN FELLOWShip will meet at 5 p.m. in the International Room in the Union. only The INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will have a book table in the 9:30-8:40, CANTERBURY HOUSE 12:30-9:30, Service from 12 to 12:30 in Dionanch Church. 96¢ TOMORROW: There will be a ROTARY DISTRICT CONFERENCE all day in the Union. The ARTS AND HUMANITIES Brushwork" and "the present 'Oriental Musical Instruments," at 9:30 a.m. in 303 Bailey Hall and 2:30 p.m. in the Lippincott Hall basement. THE ADULT LIFE meet at 10 a.m. at 13th and Oread streets. THE AEROSPACE ENGINEering COLLOQUIUM will present "DAST and HIMAT" at 3:30 p.m. in Room 314 Wesco. THE MINORITY AFFIRMITY will sponsor the meeting, for which the Keynote speaker "Outlook for the 8a." the Keynote speaker will be Jeropad Aero 7:30 in the Forum Second Sawing At Watermelon Juice "30 Seconds to the Inch" Thursday - March 27. 9 AM 31st Admission Lawrence Art Center 9AM + Vermont Retirement Sock Sale 30% off All Knee Socks Fri. & Sat. Only March 28th & 29th BAG SHOP Handbags, Jewelry Accessories Holiday Plaza ATTENTION! ATTENTION! Due to popular demand 20th Century-Fox presents the original... MAS-H Roar once again with the original movie cast... Donald Sutherland AKA DAVID Elliot Good AKA JO ANN Jo Ann Plug AKA ROBERT Robert Dowell AKA SALLY Sally Kellerman AKA JULIE 20th Century Fox presents MAS-H An Imps Preiser Production Color by DELUXE *PANAVISION* Re not recorded by FOX I'll just list them as they appear. Re released by XOXO FOX 20TH ANNIVERSARY FOX Midnight Delight! Show starts 12 midnight Fri. and Sat. Varsity Downtown 843-1065 sua films sua films Midnight Movies THE RAMONES in: Where the 3 R's stand for ROCK, RIOT and REBELLION! Rock 'n Roll High Starring P.J. SOLES • VINCENT VAN PATTEN • CLINT HOWARD • DEY YOUNG Executive Producer: ROGER CORMAN • Executive by RICHARD WHITLEY & RUSS BRUNCH Plus: A Short w/ Cheap Trick Friday & Saturday, March 28-29 12:00 Midnight $1.50 ROCK n ROLL SH Starting P.J. SOLIS • VICENT NAM PATTERN • CLINI HOWARD • DET YOUNG Lecture Series • BORN CENTER • CHRISTIAN WILLIAM & RUSSEW BUCKS Russey Beach Check-in Friday & Saturday, March 28-29 12:00 Midnight $1.50 —No refreshments allowed— University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 27, 1980 Kings drop third straight 11 OAKLAND (AP)—Phil Smith sent golden State ahead with two minutes remaining in the second half, after defensive plays as the Warriors held on for a 106-104 National Basketball Association victory. The Kansas City loss allowed Millwakee a tie, at least, for the Midwest division title. Smith broke a 100-190 tie by making a short jump shot and Sonny Parker made it 104-100 with a driving basket with 28 seconds left. The Warriors broke a four-game losing NAME CROSS COURSE pHison 59 30 Lct. GR Phillips 50 28 Lct. GR Penn State 28 41 Lct. GR New York 29 41 488 20% Washington 29 41 488 20% Oklahoma 31 46 418 20% Eastern Conference Atlantic Division streak and extended Kansas City's losing string to three games. A-Atlanta 30 48 628 San Antonio 40 39 628 19% San Diego 40 39 628 19% Cleveland 35 44 443 14% Indiana 35 44 443 14% Illinois 16 62 628 10% Y - Milwaukee 6 32 296 7 X - Kansas City 45 34 570 -- Denver 30 50 375 17] Colorado 28 50 375 17] Utah 28 50 375 24] Washington 28 50 375 24] Western Conference Midwest Division Pacific Division 6-1 *L-Los Angeles.* 34 25 722 64 *Y-San Diego.* 34 22 684 3 *San Antonio.* 32 25 684 3 *Portland.* 37 25 488 40 *San Diego.* 37 42 488 20 *San Diego.* 37 42 488 20 x-clinched division title y-clinched playoff berth KU women's track coach Teri Anderson hopes the Memphis State Invitation will have the same outcome as last year. Anderson and her team of 35 women will be out to defend their title this week against a game of predominantly southern schools. Last season KU edged Tennessee from the team title and Anderson said she expected a challenge from the team again this year. BUT KU SHOULD have an easier time in the sprints that it did during the indoor season. That's because Lori Green-Jones has been being out with a kidney infection this winter. "They've got a strong team," Anderson said. "They're especially strong in the sprints and will give us a hard time." Women out to defend meet title Last year at Memphis, Jones finished second in the 100-meter dash. She will be out to win that race this weekend along with the 200. She will also run on two relay running the 480-meter relay and running the third leg—200 meters of the sprint medley. "She is 100 percent healthy and definitely makes us a better team," Anderson said. ANDERSON SAID SHE also expected fine showings in the field events from Robin Small, Linda Newell and Shawn Doyle. The team was made Maureen Faunibin in the distance events. Small is entered in the shot put, discuss and javelin. Newell also will compete in the shot put and discus. Both competed in the AWD indoor championships this season. The University Daily Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES KANSAN WANT ADS Monday Thursday 2 p.m. Tuesday Friday 2 p.m. Wednesday Monday 2 p.m. Thursday 2 p.m. Friday Wednesday 2 p.m. one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one twenty three forty five sixty seven eight九十十二三十四五十六七十八十一十一十一十二十二十三十四五十六十七八十一十一十二十二十三四十五 AD DEADLINES ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE or charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the Kantan business office at 84-5488. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Eiffel Hall 764-4375 The Kannan 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. ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for fire trucks parked at 9th and Illinois streets. Be careful of the fire trucks and the (The Holt-to-Wall) Selling fresh fruits peanut in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available, Tuesday and Sunday. Also selling wood and topegrin. Rosalie's肌, the Oasis of the Bible Bells, is for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write; Harper, Kansas 76058. Nassan, Bahamah) Departing Wichita, May 24 & 31 Rates start at $49.00 per week; enjoy free tuesdays and the Luxurious Playboy Crawl Catered by The Lounge. Departing Wichita, Ky. 6702 (316) 263-4536. presents THE PASION CENTER For Men & Women—convert your fashionable wide ties into fashionable narrow ones. Eiffeltoys and limited leather ties are remarkable and only $2 for all the tie, and instructions you'll need. The P.O. Box 3474, Lawrence KS60044. The Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor is responsible for the Determination Heating Board for three year periods and the Board is to hear complaints of alleged violations. The Office will recommend to the Executive Vice Chancellor recommendations to the Executive Vice Chancellor for the development of the University community, including staff. Staffinations should be admitted to the Executive Vice Chancellor's office (R. 180). For additional information contact the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor, #2-28 of Affirmative Action. Applications are now being taken in 1981 Rock Chalk Revue Producer and Business Manager. Programs are available at the K-U Y offer, room noon on Wed., April 6th must be returned 4-8 pm on Wednesday. Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Unpaid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-975 or 842-1485. if FOR RENT SUMMER APT. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, a.c., dishwasher, new carpet, on bus route, x-large living room. Call 842-6232. 3-28 2 bedroom townhouse A C DW Appliances cable 1 box from the Union Call 84 579 9579 Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to campus. Beautifully equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-1485. $MAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. I interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of the day. tf COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student, cooperative located within a walkable distance of the kU Campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 842-9421. tf Jayhawk West Apt. 90s Renting: 1 & 2床 room furnished and unfurnished for $185. For appointment call 812-4448 or at $31 Fronter Road. Next door to Russell's East. tf Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, $321.92; Maa's. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 820-2044 or 803- HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING These: all now and contempary townees are available from our warehouse and downstreet! Starting at $250 a month. From there you can apply to applicants on your behalf, garage with groomer, applicant room, kitchen, garage with groomer, applicant room, bathroom, private young phone: 812-450 or 812-5252 for your private phone: 812-450 or 812-5252 CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & summer. Apply now. Call 842-2853 at 6:00 p.m. Staying in Lawrence this summer? Sublease w/ option for next year. One bedroom, furnished apartment on bus route. 841-7490. 3-27 Apartment 1 blk from Union 2 bedrooms. $235. Room 2 blk from Contact Stone Riverside 841-328- or 83-3114 Available for summer. Territory 4-12 bldm, townhouse right next to pool and tennis court 2. fully equipped kitchen, carpeted big hammock. Reasonable: 841-6462. 3-31 Lease Now For Fall At Special Events! On campus, 2 bdm apartments, with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th, 843-753, 3-28 Marie I & II ail. NOW RESETING FOR SUMMER March 12 - April 3, 2014. 2 bedrooms; 2 bathrooms; 7 days walk to, petit café, balconies, off direct parking, dishwasher, dishwasher, microwave, refrigerator for into- grips for into 842-903 at 105 Michigan St. Spiacius, two-bedroom, AVALON apt. available for June & July at a cost of $200/mi. all utilities included. Downtown Dishawaii. Air conditioner + open air bath. Installed. For information call 842-1356 any time. ARE YOU PED UP WITH THE HIGH COST OF housing? You can be found at an affordable price, busing room for up to 8 people, compre- sions with water & gas utilities and school 481-840 to determine your costs. Two-year-old two story house 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom. Family room, dining room. Kitchen with all main appliances. Central and South School district gardens. Cincinnati and South School district utilities. 40% deposit available on after April 15th. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 843-9579. tt A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-9579. tf Apts and roofs for rent. Furnished. Near University and downtown. No phones. P贝 815-5500 . ffe Must sublease 1 bedroom apt. AC, water pass- nec to pool and laundry room. Call 842-2215. Keep trying. 3-27 Summer sublease - one-bedroom apt 2 blocks from campus. Furnished, new with private. 3-28 WHY WAIT UNTIL LATER TO MAKE YOUR DECISION? The best option is a bedroom 1-bedroom apt. row, Walking distance to campus air-conditioned, fair new apartment and office building, off street parking Cali. B4-7668 or Santa Monica, off street parking Cali. B4-7668. 2 bedroom, living-dining area, kitchen, bath 3 bedroom, living-dining area, kitchen, bath Cambridge Applewood Brook 641-849-1898 or (641) 331-1518 Must sublease 3 bedroom furnished A/C and pool. Utilities paid except electric. $405 a month. Trailridge. 841-7063 or 843-7233. 3-28 Most submit 2 bdmr furnished apt. Next to Mint Rent $255. Will submit for $200. 4250 On campus. 2 br apartments furnished or un- furnished. all utilities paid. Jayhawker Towers Apartments. 1603 W. 15th. 843-4993. 3-28 3-4 birn. house, 2 baths on residential location on Kentucky. Possible rent reduction for mite. labor Evenings. Crap 81-185-341. Summer sublease: Furnished studio apt, air-cor- onable to swimminton at swimming pool. Call 814-6079. 3-28 Sublime house: Meadowbrook studio. Furnished and water paid. $190 mo. Call 841-1495. 4-1 Room large, semi-farmhill provide trig. and stove. All utilities paid, 130b and Mass $565 available now, 833-417-48. 4-1 Moving out of state - must submit: sharp Trial studio apartment. Unfurnished. water paid Pool, tennis court, laundry facilities. Call Trailbridge house 842-3132 or 842-3834 after 6 p.m. 1 bedroom furnished apart. for summer sublue or longer. A/C, laundry. parking 4812-419 4-109 Summer sublue 3 bedroom. 2 stories. 1 book from stadium. Cali 781-790. 4-2 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure to order these beforehand; 21 use them-1) At study guide, 2) preparation, 3) for exam preparation, "New York State History," 4) at Towne Catier, Mall Books店 and Oread Bookstore. SunSpecs--Sum glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5770. TF Alternator, starter and generator specialties MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-509-2000, 900 W, 6 hp. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-509-2000, 900 W, 6 hp. 76 Pinto Wagon, navy blue, MUG rack, air automobile rack, good MPG, like new, 39,000 km. 1968 Olds 98. Luxury Sedan Dependable for small budget. Smallbq 482-300 or 841-777, anytime Top quality PA excellent for rock band or institutional use. 2 are miles standing $1000 firm. 864-2277 at 6:00. Ask for Steve. 4-4 New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic mat Bedding and Furniture. 1209 New York St. B43-122D, Lefcourt. Furniture. 1209 New York St. B43-122D, Lefcourt. 10 Speed for sale. Motobanece Mirage in excellent condition. Copper metallic with Suntron Deralers. $110. 841-7168. 3-28 WATERBED MATTESTRES $59.8, 3 year guarant. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 843-138, TPC ROLLER SKATES Indoor, outdoor. $39.35 Nike Bike Shoes 1038 Vermont. 841-6442. tf www.nike.com Schwinn 5-speed girl's bike $55. Good condition. 12 string Yamaha guitar, $120. Floor casel, $115. 842-2180 3-1 Beautiful, rust-colored edcar lined trunk. Use for storage or as a table. 20" x 24" $35. 864-1276. 4-2 Cheap 1979 Grand Prix. White with red top and interior. 16,500 miles. Fully automatic. B42-7300. Brand launch new 1989 'Datum' 210-$479.95 Brand launch new 842-4444 ask for Bob Smith Tony's Datum 1964 Corvair Monza Coupe, near excellent condition, and an excellent low cost investment, $1400, negligible, #85-283. 4-3 Epiphone acoustic guitar and case. Excellent condition. Only $125. Call Mike at 841-7034. - 378 Small Mobile Home—near Sanctuary, needs own- er of one old graduates this May. Evenings 843-6258 Honda 50 (imputed) like new, has baskets, only 300 ml. $325, $42-7043. 3-27 Amplifier, mantzant, 75 watt per channel, excellent condition. Please call 841-225-5 after 5 $t^1$ CHEVELLE Malabu, 350 autounique, 12-3-0 $t^2$ CHEVELLE Malabu, 350 autounique, 12-3-0 For sale: 19" color TV, RCA-XL100, 3 years old. $200; Call 843-7831. 1973 Camara Lt. 350, auto. ns. nb. Good condition Must sell. B42-857. Mike 3-29 1968 NORTON 750 motorcycle. Recent engine overheat. Many spares. 850, 641-4813. 4a-3 overhaul. Many spares $550. 841-761-329 Cockatiels pair for sale. May be used for breeding. Bird cage装有。Call 842-828-329. 3-29 35 mm Zentil E, w /45 mm & 180 mm. Good Camera $50. Maletic Tripod for heavy Camera. $40/ Dynaex爬山绳. 14mm x 160, Rocker, harnesses,刀架. S7, Call 842-363-4-3 4-3 Mobile Home 1965S, 2 bedrooms, died-down, skipped, bred, $200 and/or 842-913S. 1974 Mazda RX4 Auto. Deluxe Interior Best Restorable. 1975 Honda CB750F Super Sport. Good shape, ready for spring. 842-292 for more info. 3-28 FOUND Senior class key. To claim call Linda at 864-2205. Saturday night, 3/22 on tennis court by Watkins' Hospital, tennis racket cover. Call Dreux at 864- 3747. 3-28 Men's gloves - 4th floor Wescoe, 4:00 p.m. Mon Call & identify, 841-0623 3-28 Found. One tool kit tool kit near Spooner. Call George. 843-8153, dirisce case and documents. Call Friday. Small female tan dog with collie markings. In Mallia area Call 840-6900 - 382 Found -prescription sunglasses. Found in front of room. Won't call Night & identify in. 008. Keep trying. 3-28 In the vicinity of the Chi-O Foundation about 20 pair of exotic Ladies Lingerie. May be retrieved Thursday night at the Phl Lake. Must identify to claim. PS. We've fired up hope you are too. HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDER ORDERS- LILL) Will you share your work experiences with Olif Olsen, a Nurse Practitioner at Olif Olsen consumer organization for Nurses for America. You will provide input and input on nursing home condition and care. Participate in the conditi- tions. All names and correspondence must be mailed (between nine and five) or written by KINHL 927; if not, send to KINHL 927. Now taking applications for door/floor and wait- room. 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, W, 7th, after 6pm, Aik, for Shelley, CUSHIPSES/SAILING EXPEDITIONS/SAILING AMPS. No experience. Good pay summer amounts. Please refer to application for APPLICATION INFO REFERRALS to CRUISERWorld Box 0129. Sacramento Position open-residential facility for development open-entry housing. Position in a residential manager. Degree in human services area is required. Resume should be forwarded to MCDS. Box 68, McKinney, Pennsylvania 15032. Position open-small community facility serving the developmentally disabled is seeking the full-time service of a licensed social worker. Retrain for position on MCDS. Box 86, 32-17, Kansas, DAK. COMPUTER SERVICES AGENCY needs Keys Operator to paint and data lab for system support. The Keys operat-ion of operation of unit record equipment, equip. some office functions of the agency. Office Adm. Center Ln. 74a-8224-EOE. Office Adm. Center Ln. 74a-8224-EOE. Summer Paint Crew. Approx. 12 positions available. Minimum age. 18. Personnel will begin work May 27. Apply at Personnel Office, Adm. Center, 2017 La. 842-822E EOE. KANAS APPLIED REMOTE PROGRAMmed media graduate or upper division student weeks; May 15-August 15, 1989 with possibility of post-graduation. Camera photography, remote sensing, mapping or field work is preferred, but not required. Application forms available in Room 267, Newhal Hall, 400 W. 35th Street, New York, NY 10017. Families with well-adjusted adolescent boys to participate in brief research. Family members will be paid for their participation. For more information call Brian or Catran at 864-358-327 OVERSEAS JOBS - SUMMER year-round, Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All Idle, Bills: $100 monthly,费用贴身, paid tightening. Free March, Ca., $25. IOC, Box BK-KA. Coordinate. Mar, Ca., $25. ACTING COORDINATOR: UNIVERSITY INFORMATION MANAGEMENT SYSTEM. Beginning May 1, 2018, and ending December 17, 2018, the position will require a no later than June 30, 2018. Responsible for the management of university information system providing a 24 hour telephone information, referral, and Lawrence community including the coordinating the University office community agencies, and agency information retrieval sources; the administration formation retrieval sources; the administration training of the staff of student employees. Recruiting and evaluating students of Student Affairs' counseling skills. Salary of $19,500 for the 19th final year. Earned salary of $23,500 for the 19th final year. Earned salary of $19 Bursafat of Child R.S. Research, Achievement Place has a mobile phone number 802-493-7561 and position available. Salaries range from $250 per month to $350 per month. Duties are to conduct telephone interviews with parents of children who have special needs. Must have private phone and must be capable of performing various job duties. Personally skills essential Application deadline January 16, 2014. Contact Mildred Jilly, 312-775-8352. INSTRUCTORS—Human, Relations Instructors needed ptf full time. Conduct seminars, Tring. program in KANSAS CITY. April 25-27. Call any time Free Ticket F 802-397-9008 X 326- 238 THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER is located at 200 S. Fifth Avenue, near the position, April 15th and a pool of applicants will also be in selected Applicants available from University of Kansas in an Equity Opportunity Program. The University of Kansas is anEqual Opportunity Institution. Sales Help. Set your own hours. Part-time and during the summer. Phone 841-454. 4-11 Manager & skilled needed for 12琴 Jazz and group. Call 841-600 or Open for bookings. Computer Programmer. Grad student only, to be accepted by faculty in computer science or years of experience in writing programs, portable applications or required courses. Are required. Should be able to communicate effectively with students throughout summer. College Prof. Walt Schultz. (Fitch Bank) This KU-LY is a student organization dedicated to providing students with social interaction and other social contexts of the day. We are committed to a 100% academic year. This position begins in the 1980's and 1981st academic year. This position begins on a contract on a very basis is possible upon request. The students board *Qualification Confirmation*. Strong research experience on an undergraduate degree in patient preparation, some experience in patient consultation, familiarity with current social issues, familiarity with Traacy KSU-Ly, two letters of recommendation to Traacy KSU-Ly, K-6645 *Job Descriptions are available at 1105 Lexington Ave., Suite 230*, Atlanta, GA 30310. *Affirmative Action Equitable Opportunity Employer* Teachers wanted: Elementary and secondary West and other places. Placement time: 1960-2007 Southwest Teachers Agency PO Box 4327 Albany, Nueva York 87106. Nokia 87106. 4-24 SUMMER JOB FOR STUDENT COUPLE. I am a tutor for 6-8 year olds with baskin-ring & matrastretch, of my own design. You will have to provide me with providing you. Provides. Your own private furnished room, swimming, boulder mountain climbing, and hiking. Bureau of Child Residency Achievement Place for Development. Students must obtain a position position available. Salary ranges from $18,000 to $26,000 plus benefits and qualification. Duties are to conduct health care and education for pre-adolescent and adolescence youth. Must have own transportation to and from job site. Must complete a detailed interpersonal skills essential apprenticeship is an equal opportunity employment. Contact information is www.bureauofchildresidentplace.org. LOST In 1st floor Women's restroom-silver wedding band with turtle design on it. PLEASE return. Reward. 841-2396. 4-1 My big, friendly Aireadle. No collar, male, needs medicine. Please call Diana at 864-4281 days. I have message. 4-1 MISCELLANEOUS ... BACKGAMMON second for successful play. Opening movies, game shapes, backgammon mathematics. Sent 3205. Guaranteed. 1810 Barham,包1298, Dodge City,KS 67801. TAYOR SLIED ... PERSONAL VOYAGERS- Fellowship -Christian Alternative Christian Association of New York 2415 W 22d, Sq. 9:30 a.m., 848-713-6471, Hfhr Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 845-564-564. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abnurs up to 17 Pregnant pregnancy. Treating. Birth Control. Counseling. Rumption in PU (PM 92). Appointment. Birth Hospital. PM (92). 480-311 10th St., Overland Park, KS. The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cold beer, pool, binhail and unique lattes. Color TV and stereo for when the Hawkins are away. You can also find the Harbour Lite in 1031 Mass. A first-class dive XXXXXXXXXXXXXX NEED CASH? WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR GOLD, DIAMONDS, CLASS RINGS, WEDDING BANDS, WATCHES. CALL NOW! Celebrate EASTER with ASTA singing telegrams. Baskets delivered daily. 842-8741. 4-4 842-9737 or 841-7476 GAY COUNSELING REFERENCES through Headquarters: 814-245-245 and KU info: 864-206-506. Dial 864-202-300 for Copy Odyssey. 4-5 Best Price and High Rate Calling. PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843-4 4821 Girls: I need a date* for a formal 4/12. Call Jim at 843-0743. 3-28 ADOPT AN ATLITE-Help keep a student in school and support KU athletics. I'm looking for a house coach or apt, to house it or rest cheaply. I would love to track athletic abilities. 81-741-327 3-27 mar 23 YACHT PARTY Kappa Sigma Want to spend the 1st night of Passover-Monday, March 31st at a Family Seder? Call Hillel at 864-3438. 3-27 Last chance to ski! Still a few spots open on SUA's Vail ski trip. Call 861-3477 3-28 Headquarters is a community of people willing to want to talk, or call or drop by. We can help with needs, provide assistance, offer training, intervention problems, other personal issues, and help with your social life. Talk about. We can also help you get in contact with our staff and/or by drop by 1854. Anything. Call 841-2345 or by drop by 1854. Anything. We are United Fund Dg Co. and private donors. Puppies-free; half German shepherd, half labrador. Ten to choose from. Call Dave at 813-3383. 3-27 Looking for people to lend each other heart on Scaraldie Medical Diet Lynda. 6742 3-28 7424 3-28 TENNIS PLAYERS: Spring and warm weather, then turn to the cold. Your greatest challenge is hitting 84-66-32-66. You need a strong stringer. Sinus rays and a stringer K. U.Variety. Very reasonable rates on good strings grips. Alpha Phi—Dupte scorekeepers two "point" alpha that kept you out of OT, with courage and character you left in peace. You're the true champs. 3-28 Q. What is bisexuality? Opening for one or two teaching assistant post- missions in English II (1st fall semester) and ATLan Languages & Cultures, 218th Wenches 804- 300. An Equual Opportunity, Affirmative Action - But quality is the capacity to be attracted to students by their work. To improve this by increasing the diversity of our students, to apply studies by Kimsey and others in different disciplines and to inspire young people who openly acknowledge their biography and gay and non-gay identities. It is important that students know who they are and what they value. Thi's Information Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. 3-27 Dixie Skating Pats! Party, March 30th. 7-9 p.m. at Wheels of Fun, 2128 Iowa. All welcome. admission FREE Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. 3-28 Anyone who can offer information concerning summer jobs in Lake Tahoe you have been there or are planning on going) call Tier 42, 842-4570 after 5 p.m. 6-1 Anilizations are now being taken for 1891 Rock Chalk Reviver Producer and Business Manager. Forms are available at th: K-U-V! e-rroom. office on Wednesday. to be returned by return- March on Wednesday, Apr. 9th I have a small quantity of the Summer Olympics Stamps including airmail that were recalled by the Postmaster General. Group of 6 stamps $10.00. 842-7158. Wondring how to spend your summer! You can spend 2 months in England and Scotland and up to 8 awards in History, English History or Arts at Media. Study Abroad Office (432) 674-2190. **Pre-After Hearing March 28, 7:30 p.m.** *Powerswiches in Organizations* Confer listen to presentations and information regarding the grant, which will be presented at the WOICE Conference, room, Sagittarius Union, Chicago, IL. **Cape Cod Educational Support Group** *K. Jaspersen & T. LaHaye Family Life Centers* Campus Career Information provided by Life Resource Center, Emily Young Building, Placement Center and University Counseling and Assessment Center, Campus Career Information SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING MATH 100-92 to listen 187-583. MATH 115-700. MATH 824-3541. STATISTICS (call courses) MATH 843-9086. CIS 100-600 to call courses MATH 843-9086. ENGLISH (if needed) MATH 843-7077. ENGLISH (if needed) and SPANISH MATH 843-7077. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uhmer Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday to Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 88 MW. Massage Therapy - women at the Serendipity Shop in the Marketplace (8th & New Hampshire) call for app. 841-8629 or 841-7198. 3-27 Tidy of paying high store costs for good quality clothes and alterations. Excellent seamless clothing or home or office leatherable prices. For information call 811-296- after 4, 3-28 ends. IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES Professional Tutoring: Math 000-115. 864-2375. 3-28 TYPING DENVER FOOTball LEAGUE 861-2735 For legal assistance, including Montreal court work. Call 861-2735 or visit www.denverfootballleague.com. Suit 3, Dellorto Resolution call Free Calls at 861-2735. Do not call Thursday morning as we are available Monday through Friday. For help with your problems in Math 002, 102, 115-117, Call Tom at 843-9389. 4-3 Acecurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Solicite. Call center: 842-724-8724. if PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, TF I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF MASTERMINES professional typing, Fast, accu- rals, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. 11f DISCOUNT TYPING: 841-4980 Experienced typist, tph-lenses, dissertations, term studies. Send resume to correcting elector, Bai After 5 m., p. 842-810 Experienced KU typist. IBM Geering Solicitive Quality work. References available. Sandy, eve- ting & weekends 748-818-91. Typist,Editor, IBM Pica/Ela, Quality work, rasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welcome; edit/layout, Call Join 842-9127 TF Experienced Tytl-st-term papers, Lorenzo, elric IBM Slectic, Proreading, spelling corrected. 843-0554, Mrs. Wright. tt Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing. Self-correcting electronic. Cllr Elian Jeannam. 841-2727 5-5 Dial 842-2001 for a typing Odyssey. 4-5 Word processing exclusively at Encore-Copy Corpus, 842-2001, 35th and Iowa. 4-5 I'm your type: for thesis, dissertations; etc, je Jo Ann 863-3819 or after 5- 863-3032 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, 418-correct Solemetric. Call El- n or Jianann. 841-2122 5-5 Excellent tp Experienced Tystist Will do any form of typing. Phone 842-3203 4-9 I'm your type . . . for thesis, dissertations, term narratives, etc. Joan H84 3819 or after 5:00 at 841- 8055 Encore is Tip Top at Typing! 842-2001. (f) WANTED Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, $100. 1'/ utilities, private room, washer, dryer, dish- washer, 482-5859 Female rooms for spacious roomseven quiet neighborhood. Fireplace, garage, non-smoker $810 plus 1.3 utilities 842-6496. trying. 3-27 WANTED TO RENT Journalism graduate student TUM to RT 31 Demberville, Military offices and wives have 2 children but no pets. Require plenty of room for primary education school. Phone 1-862-4872 or 1-862-4874. PSychiatric AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICES WORKERS WANTED by Topanga State Hospital, 721 W. 5th St., Topanga, KS. Phone: (913) 263-8303. Male encouragers to apply. An equal opportunity Malt: roommate want:d immediately to share a space two-bedroom apartment with one other mail through the month of May $125 plus mall fee. Call: 641-748-3000 or lark for Larry. I am looking for a student married couple to summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. I would like to have a summer home on Lake Champlain, NY. This family would stay for four weeks. Provided your own private facilities for swimming, tennis, mountain climbing or to drive名 people of local personal who can provide you with the necessary 1000 Student Drives. Lawrence K: 60044 Two Greek conservative females looking out or a third to share summer house. HI13 plus utilities included. Ask for: Julie Gibbons B113-3019 or Cynas Meader. Familial room wanted, summer only, own broom and bathroom, pool, low utilitarian; Heather- wood Valley apartments. Call Debbie or Holly by April 3rd at 841-514 4-1 FORMER 82340 STUDENTS; Would like to buy workbook that goes with accounting text book. Call 842-4611. 4-2 Graduates looking for training at car pool from Toledo or Lawrence beginning May 19th and continuing through August 26th for participation @82-CDK keep timing 3-28 Wanted hatchdress at the Huston. Must be 28. Job location: Toledo, OH. --- KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DONT. SELL IT! If you've got it, Kana Classified sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint to figure costs. Now you've get it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Tuesday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm Write ad here: ___ CLASSIFIED HEADING; --- 1 time $2.25 .02 RATES: 15 words or less 3 times $2.75 .04 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 3 times 4 times 5 times $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 .04 .05 .06 DATES TO RUN: 5 times $3.25 .06 NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: PHONE: *MANSAN CLASSIFIEDS--EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD* 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 27, 1980 Men's track team running short for outdoor opener By MATT SEELEY Snorts Writer both Timmons is no gambler, but when his men's track team opens its outdoor season this week, he know he'll be caught without a The Jayhawks travel to the LSU Invitational at Baton Rouge, La., to kickoff the outdoor campaign, but many of KU's indoor winners "Missing some people will have an effect, but we're going down there to do the best we can and not worry about it." Timmons said. Mike Rucks, NCAA indoor winner of the 600-yard run two weeks into the season is scheduled for Friday. ag, will remain in Lawrence to take a test on Friday. * Sanna Owolabi, the NCAA indoor triple jump champion, has a - Sanya Owolabi, the NCAA indoor triple jump champion, has a shuttle hanging pull. sign lightning path * Stan Whitaker, part of KU's mile relay squad, is "healthy, but we're going to hold him back a week," according to assistant coach Roger Brown. - deft Buckingham, defending Big Eight outdoor pole vault champion, will star to work on academics and his vault. Garner from the NCAA team, was then sent to Wilshire, on his way to capturing fourth place in the long jump at the NCAA indoor championships, broke ankle and is out of school. DESPITE THE misfortune of the injuries, Bowen said the outdoor opener is a stepping stone for future meets. "We are not too worried at the team scores," Bowie said. "Our goal is to go down more and qualify, athletics for the nation's and get the win." KU's strength in the running events will come from Lester Mickens, who will join Rodney Bullock in the 400-meter dash. The third KU entry in the 60-meter run will be Deen Hogan, who finished first in the qualifying race, including two individual titles in the Big Eight Championships. HOGAN, A DETROIT sophomore, did not end his indoor campaign as well as he planned, suffering a hamstring pull before the mile. He was out for the day. "I'm healthy and feeling pretty good," Hogan said. "I've been practicing hard and I'm really glad to get outdoors." "I'm definitely not an indoor runner," Hogan said. "I'm too big to be running on a wood-banked track with those light curves." in a spring events, the 100 and 200-meter, the Jayhawks will rely on freshman Anthony Polk and tim Senior Tim Jones. KU was thought to have All-American jump Jimmy Little as part of the sprint corps, but he decided not to go out for track. He THE MIDDLE-DISTANCE and distance events feature line-ups similar to the indoor campaign. in the 1,500-meters, Rice Enzs, KU's most consistent indoor arena, and freshman Tim Gumdy will compete. Enzs has a best time of 29.46 seconds. In the 800, KU will send three-fourths of its two-mile relay team. Freshmen Leonard Martin and NaMarks will join senior Tiem Kim. In the field events, Randy Howard will get the nod in the pole vault, taking over for Buckingham as KU's prime threat. Joel Light, circling off a disappointing finish at the NCAA Indoor, will be at full strength and should rate as a favorite to capture the THE LONG JUMP will feature KU's Mark Hanson and Jay Bearden the best outdoor outwear at 24°10'. while Reardon's bearden was at 24°10'. The meet will be a team-scoring contest featuring Southern Cal, Brigham Young, Rice, Baylor, Minnesota and Kansas State. Without the services of Owolabi, the 'Hawk jumps hirce jumps with Steve Combs. The Birmingham, Ala., junior's best league is 12-9. KC All-Star demands trade or pay FORT MYERS, Flu. (AIP)—All-Star second baseman Frank White wants either to renegotiate his contract with the Kansas City Royals or be traded to a team that will pay him more. "I like to be traded." White said yesterday. "The next four years might be the most important of my baseball career. It is important to me to make what I want. I would need a lot of money, three years at the salary I'm making and say I'd be happy." two years ago White signed a six-year contract that runs through the 1983 season. WHITE HASN won Gold Glove awards the past three seasons and has been selected to the All-Star team the last two years. He said his salary did not reflect his accomplishments. "I just want to make about what they are making at the Whitehouse and if I don't feel it being gay." White said four second basement made $300,000 a year and others made $200,000. "I'm not even close," White said. "Those are the guys I want to be there with. If they are not willing to take care of me, I'm going to have to leave." The Royals, however, have not renegotiated contracts in the nast. "CLUB POLICIES are there for a reason, but it could change." White said. If he was traced, White said he could bargain for a higher salary. He said many teams were raising salaries, rather than increasing wages. said. “I’ve been here since 1973 and we’ve finished too the only one time we’ve won a team, yet our team has not won any games.” especially for their oppressors. "I'm not the only one on the bail club unhappy." White White said he hoped the Royals were sympathetic and would offer to renegotiate his contract. "I'd like for them to come to me," he said. "I figured I gave Kansas City, seven years of service and they've been." White will be 33 when his current contract expires. first time this year, had only one hit in the final four innings. "THEN IT WOULDn't be worth a nickel, "White said. "I'm as strong as I'm going to be. It would be to my advantage." White had one of his more productive seasons offensively in 1979, despite missing a month with a broken right hand. He hit 10 home runs and 26 doubles, scored 73 runs and had 184 total bases and 28 stolen bases. Blue Jays baffle Kansas City Larry Gura, the losing pitcher, has given up three home runs in four spring games. FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI)- Five U.S. cities will host the Kansas City Royals on six bikes yesterday. Rico Carty added a two-run game for the Blue Jays to a 24-inning in辜黎 (UPI). The Blue Jays raised their record to 8-5 while the Royals dropped their third straight and fell to 1-6. Indoor drills prepare footballers Under the watchful eyes of the KU football coaching staff, spring drills opened last week in Allen Field House. Two weeks of conditioning will end when outdoor practices start Monday. According to strength and conditioning coach Keith Kephart, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays are devoted to agility training to improve quickness. Tuesdays and Thursdays are concentrated on building endurance through sprints and middle-distance running. "This is fun and games," Kephart said. "Most of these guys are in pretty good shape, considering they just came back from spring break." derwent surgery last week on his ankle to remove bone chips, will miss spring mills. McNorton injured his knee to undergo surgery to underg surgery repair torn cartilage. Linebacker Kyle McNorton, who un- Five players are missing the two-week conditioning period because of injuries or surgery recuperation. linebacker Dave Mayer, will miss the drills because of knee injuries. Defensive tackle Jeff Fox, center Ed Bruce, offensive guard Bill Griffith and Paul Mirabella worked the first five innings for the Blue Jays and picked up the victory. The Royals, shut out for the Kephart said that students not on the team could have enrolled in the conditioning drills, but that the class was predominantly women. The only other 3 is daily. Outdoor drills begin Monday. ... Over 15 years in the business Where economy comes first 843-2931 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 Alabama Lawrence, Kansas 66044 843-2931 Rentals start at $7.95 a day plus mileage A PRO-LIFE SOLUTION TO THE ABORTION PROBLEM - A choice of any of these economy minded cars 2. Little Miss Marker PG Starting Walker Mathau and Julie Andrews Eve 7.20 and 9.30 CURT YOUNG CHRISTIAN ACTION COUNCIL 1. All That Jazz Standing Roy Schreider live 7:30 and 9:40 WILL HOLD A LECTURE-DISCUSSION ON PRO-LIFE VIEW OF ABORTION EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR TO IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS • Pier 1 738 MASS. 9:30-8:00 M-S Thurs., ill 8:30 p.m. 3-4 P.M. 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1980 COUNCIL ROOM 4th Floor KANSAS UNION --programs free of charge and hope you will learn something useful while we all have a little fun! Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 More than one million winners! Win exciting food prizes and $5 Wendy's Gift Certificates just to give you a chance to win. Juicy Sweetpakes plays cards and coming up with a match. You could even become one of our guests at the annual Grand Prize automatically entered in our big $25,000 Grand Prize Drawing. Wendy's OLD FASHIONED HAMBURGERS 3. Kramer vs. Kramer Starring Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep. Eve, 7:30 and 9:40 Place a Kanson want ad Call 864-4358 523 West 23rd St.,Lawrence THE BEST NEW WALTZWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downstown. 843-5788 Coal Miner's Daughter Staring John Spence Eve 7:15 and 9:30 Varsity Downstown. 843-1085 Hero At Large Staring John Spence Eve 7:30 and 9:30 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa. 842-8400 1. Chapter Two Staring John Mason and James Casn Eve 7:45 and 9:50 2. Little Darlings Staring Taupo O'Neal and Kristy McNichol Eve 7:45 and 9:50 YOU CAN $25,000 BE AN INSTANT WINNER! WIN $100 CASH! PLAY WENDY'S hot n juicy Sweepstakes 5c BEER at MY BROTHER'S MOUSTACHE 5c BEER 5c BEER RESTAURANT 10th & Mass. Mustache Symbol 842-2001 "We deliver" IT TECHNOLOGY COMMUNICATIONS Encore Copy Corps Offer good through March & April. As many nickel beers as you can drink when you buy a sandwich. 99¢/page Typing 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza ($1.10 elite) "One Stop Thesis Shop" *Hair Designing *Fashion Forecasting *Make-Up & Skin Care Information •Hair And Skin Analysis •Hair Care Tips •Heat-Styling Lessons •Long Hair Designs If your group of IO or more would like to have Headmasters' staff provide a program covering one or more of the above topics, just give us a call. (ask for Paula) We are happy to provide these CAROLINE & MARY headmasters 809 Vermont 843-8808 Trombone Player Jazz Up! Paul Gray's Jazz Place A private club upstairs at 926 Mass. A private club upstairs at 926 Mass. Tonight: John Lomas . . . No Cover! Friday: Skip DeVol and Ray Ehrhart Saturday: The Gaslight Gang Happy Hour—2 for 1 drinks 5:30 : 7:00 every day Call 843-2644 For Reservations 1960 Lloyd Lyons Inc. Inc. 925 Iowa 841-8848 G. P. LOYD'S WEST presents T.G.I. ROCK The best in LIVE ROCK & ROLL! THE REGULAR GUYS Don't miss this Rock & Roll Night TONITE AT G. P. LOYD'S WEST OPEN HOUSE meado Sun. March 30 1-5 pm Sat. March 29 1-5 pm Sun, March 30 1-5 p.m Because we know that Meadowbrook living is enjoyable . . . because we know we have a unit designed for you and your lifestyle . . . because we'd like to have you living in Meadowbrook, we're having an OPEN HOUSE! See a studio, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom apartment. meadowbrook Located 3 blocks west of Iowa on 15th, North 1 block on crestline . . . Phone 842-4200 --- --effect on the amount of federal and state funding the city receives, Loyd said. S. C. G. B. N. W. M. A. S. P. R. E. T. M. D. S. E. A. R. W. H. T. S. E. A. R. W. H. T. S. E. A. R. W. H. T. S. E. A. R. Academic angle This week's damp weather has kept many students indoors. These two keep dry in Watson Library as the gray sky drops drizzle on fewer students on the way to the field. Students encouraged to complete census Staff Reporter By KATHY BRUSSELL KU students will come to their census April 1-or at least the U.S. government bases they will. That day marks the official start of the nation's 20th Decennial Census of Population and Housing, conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. Completing the head count will be a formidable feat because the bureau must contact an estimated 222 million Americans. ALL KU STUDENTS living in Lawrence April 1 will be entered into the city's population count, and the local census data will be updated in seeing that all students are reached. "It's extremely important that students realize they should be counted where they are living on April 1, not in their home community, nor in city management analysis said sageydata. Lawrence officials want to obtain an accurate count of University students for several reasons. Students make up about one-third of the city's population and thus have a dramatic Complete population figures also are valuable to the city for planning purposes, he said. THE CENSUS STORM that students will be asked to fill out is much shorter and simpler than the ones given to family households, Loyd said. It is available in more than 20 languages, and all foreign students living in countries where a semester should fill out a form he said. Students living off campus should receive their census forms in the mail. They will be asked to complete the forms and mail them to the Census Bureau within a few days. Forms will be hand-delivered to multiple dwellings, such as residence halls, scholarship halls, fraternities and sororites, and also will be picked up. The hand distribution is not expected to take place until the second week in April. The Census Bureau will mail out its forms on March 27 and 28. THE GOAL of the census has not changed Sec.CENSUS.gov.1 Friday, March 28. 1980 KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Vol. 90, No.118 By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Error clouds Kansas voter poll Staff Reporter TOPEKA-Presidential poll loses considerable PEDKEA this week after major upsets in New York and Los Angeles. But a Kansas presidential survey conducted by the KU Center found that 47 percent of the red in the face was the state's political makeup. President Carter and Ronald Reagan were the overwhelming favorites of Kansas voters in the poll, but Results of the survey, released yesterday, presented no clear projections on the outcome of Kansas' first presidential primary because pollsters overlooked the fact that unaffiliated voters can vote in the primary. More than a third of the state's registered voters are unaffiliated. CENTER OFFICIALS became aware their mistake during a press conference about the poll yesterday at the About $6,000 was spent on the project, officials said. Eight foldout interviewers were hired for the job. it was just one of the overtures we had at the time we put the poll together," Demis Palumbo, director of the Unaffiliated Kansas voters can vote in whichever party they choose to hold a party affiliation the political election day. April Pollsters asked Republicans, Democrats and independents who they favored in each of the primary races. However, they failed to ask independents who they preferred among all candidates. As a result, the poll's findings are inconclusive in relation to the primary. THE POLL is based on responses from 400 randomly selected employees interviewed by telephone from March 16 to March 23. Among those interviewed who said they were Republican, 55 percent were for Reagan, 13 percent for Illinois Rep. John B. Anderson and 8 percent for former CIA director George Bush. Carter was the favorite of 64 percent those who said "I want to be a doctor." And backpack Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. The president finished strongest among candidates of both parties. The poll also indicated that Kansans would select Carter over any other current candidate in November. Kennedy was one of the biggest losers in the survey, as only 23 percent of the respondents had a favorable im pression of him. Only California Gov. Jerry Brown and Illinois Rep. Phil Crane finished lower than Kennedy. FURTIMOREME, 74 percent thought Chaquppadick an intriguing Kennedy campaign, 30 percent having it weaved "were" into his message. One of the sidelines of the poll was the reaction of Kansen to S. Bole Doble *f*-lated bid for the presidency. The poll was taken before Kennedy's surprise victories in New York and Connecticut. New York and Connecticut. One of the sidebights in the poll was the reaction of New Yorkers to a bid for the presidency Dole and former president Gerald Ford were included in the poll until they pulled out of the presidential race. Only a percent of those questioned thought刀 had a serious contender for the presidency. And more persons reacted unfavorably to him—43 percent—than favorably—33 percent. Ford made a favorable impression on more Kansans than any other candidate -- 58 percent reacting favorably. Many of the 66 questions on the poll were unrelated to the presidential race. Wolf Creek preparing safety plan IN OTHER issues, Kansans painted a pessimistic view of the future, about 57 percent saying the coming years would be more bleak than they were in the past. Uncertainty about the economy was widespread with 76 percent saying they thought a recession was likely in the next year. 23 By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Renorter It is the first anniversary of the accident in Mie. Mie island nuclear plant in Hiroshima was the meritorious metal nuclear disaster is one year past and the completion of the first atomic plant in Mie. Some Americans believe nuclear power is neither safe nor economically feasible, while others say it is the only bright spot in the future of alternative energy sources. Despite efforts of the nuclear industry to convince the public and Nuclear Regulatory Commission that there is no risk of a fire at one at three Mile Island is unlikely, not one of the companies licensed since the accident on December 28, 1973. Sixty-seven nuclear plants are now operating in the United States, with 90 additional plants under construction and headed for completion by 1990. JOHN JINKS/Kansan Staff U. S. ENERGY Department officials say U.S. plants could have been operating by the year 2000, producing up to 30 percent of the nation's energy. In spite of the stagnant environment of nuclear construction, however, work on the Wolf Creek power plant near Burlington is proceeding as scheduled. Barring unfresheed difficulties, the plant should be completed in April 1983, according to its builders, Kansas City Power and Light Co. and Kansas Gas and Electric Co. The NRC has made some change in the safety standards required of nuclear plants as a result of Three Mile Island, Robert Rives, KG&E official, said yesterday. But the changes have had only a minor impact on the plans for the Wolf Creek plant, because its plans are relatively new, he said. WHAT MAY affect the future of the plant, Rives said, is the licensing slow-down on the part of the NRC. The builders must still apply for and receive an authorization before the plant can go into production. That could take some time, given the backlog of licensing requests now before the The construction permit for the plant was issued in May of 1977, and work began the same month. According to Victor Poirier, manager of community affairs for KCPL, public opinion concerning the Wolf Creek plant is not very different than it was a year ago. "On the national level, we experienced a short term, yet significant dip in the support of nuclear power immediately following Three Mite Island," Poirier said. The dip began to august of last year, the level of public support had returned to normal. SURPRISEINGLY ENOUGH, the only formal study done in Wolf Creek's Foey County since last April indicated public concern over attacks among campus residents. Rives said. Three thousand workers are employed on the Wolf Creek site, and the plant is more than 50 percent completed. Several major components have been installed since December, including a reactor vessel and four steam generators. As the completion date for the plant approaches, government workers are developing plans for a beefed-up safety program in the area. Since Three Mile Island, both the utilities facing nuclear facilities and the government are considering to questions concerning consideration to questions concerning public response as those dealing with siting safety features, according to Leon Mannell, an administrator in the Kansas Division of MANNELL SHELL that special efforts to help the injured are radius aside the Wolf Creek park "Our primary concern is to warn and alert them of the shortest possible time" in the event of any damage. Warning systems that could be used for this purpose include sires, radio announcements and personal paging systems, he said. In addition, detailed arrangements for quick evacuation of all residents in the area will be worked out. The majority of the residents have access to a vehicle of some sort, and school buses are used for transportation. The evacuation of nursing homes, hospitals and related facilities will be assisted by local emergency services. AFTER THE alert and evacuation plans are finalized, they will be reviewed and tested to make sure they are realistic and prepare an emergency situation, Manuel said. All residents will receive information about the programs at least six months before the opening of the plant, he said. Increased safety precautions have been one positive outcome of Three Mile Island, and utility companies deserve credit for the safety improvements and emergency proceedings, Mannell said. "It's sad, but we learn by our mistakes," he said. "The lessons learned at Three Mile Island are paying off already." Gannett boss decries Burger Court rulings By JON BLONGEWICZ Staff Reporter The media should force the public to recognize how "Big Government" and the larger Supreme Court are infringing on the individual freedoms guaranteed by law. "When the Supreme Court puts restrictions on, we press the flag," he said. "That is not enough. We need to wave the First Amendment flag. We in the press must tell and sell to the public that the First Amendment is more than freedom of the press." Neathar, chairman and president of the nation's largest newspaper chain, the Gannett Co., told 500 people in the Kansas Union that it was time for the Nearthward, whose newspaper chain has a daily circulation of 3.5 million, referred to recent attempts by the Supreme Court to bar the press and the public from some trials and pre-trial hearings. He said that the press and the public were victimized by Chief Justice Warren Burger and the "burger majority." CALLING THE Burger court a Nixon court, Neatharth said. "It has a vendetta against the press because it was the press that pointed out what Nixon was doing." *When they put restrictions on the press it is not just the press, but the public. The right of each American to speak out as he or she wishes without government control is protected.* Neatharb's company, Gannett, which owns and operates 78 daily newspapers, seven television stations and 12 radio stations in 36 states, Canada, the Virgin Islands and Guam, is in the middle of a fight with the Supreme Court and the issue is restrictions on the freedom of the press. ON JULY 3, 1979, Gannett lost a Supreme Court case, Gannet vs. Despause, that allowed judges to close pre-trial hearings to the press. Neuthard said Gannett spent $300,000 in legal fees knowing that it was going to lose the case. But, he said that Gannett wanted to focus public attention on the "erosion of First Nearthnath said Gamett, whose gross revenues in 1979 exceeded $1 billion, would continue to fight restrictions on the property and legal and financial resources of the company. "We have U.S. AFTRIP 411 and 412." TOMMY JOHNSON Allen Neuharth Initial Senate budget cuts made As Student Senate committees deflated student organization students with questions and calculators last night, the Finance and Budget committee cut the Senate's internal budget. The Senate's budget was cut back by $3,819.20 to $42,845 for fiscal 1981. The funding decrease will take effect this July. "I think Student Senate has to tighten its budget as much as it can. We are estimating that the budget will be about $2 million treasurer," said. "Next year we'll tighten our belts because we're on a tighter funding budget." With three months remaining in fiscal 1980, which ends June 30, the Senate has spent only $31,241.80 of its $46,644.24 allocation. The committee voted to add $50 to the Student Senate Executive Committee Chairman Robin McClellan's salary of $100 a month after McClellan addressed the Although the committee cut the total Senate budget from last year, Senate executive salaries were increased by $270. MCCLELLAN SAID her position was budgeted for a 10-hour work week but she had worked 12 hours, and the job really required 15 hours of work. The Senate Academic Affairs committee heard nine budget requests and made three preliminary budget cuts. Ron McDowell, committee member, said that if one salary increase was to be scrutinized, all executive officers should have the opportunity to ask for an increase. The organizations and their requests were: the School of Architecture and Urban design, $89; the Coalition of Student Social Work, $89; the Coalition of Social Work, $14.16; $14.60; $89.53; Bio-Chemistry Club, $24.90; BAsar Bar Association, $2.450; Society for the Combined Health and Law at Law, $1.139; KU Model UN, $1.385 The SACHS budget won preliminary approval. Other preliminary cuts were: the School of Architecture and Urban Design, the Psychology Club, RB $32; BUSA 4540 A $38; The Sports Committee voted not to fund the KU Tae Kwon DO Club because they said the instructor, Choon Lee of Shawnee, seemed to be running the club as part of his Lee operates Tae Kwoo D schools in Shawnee and Kansas City and recognizes the club as a branch school when testing club members for degrees. BUT THE KU club is not part of Lee's business, according to the club's treasurer, Dave Duquette. MEMBERS OF the Cultural Affairs Other Sports Committee budget recou- ment is $34,900. #15, Cricket, #11, Fencing $24.60; Lacrosse, $14.20; Frisbee, $8.80; Rugby, $12.00; Field Hockey, $10.00; Rugby, $7.85. The Tae Kwon Do Club was funded $120 advertising during supplementary materials for the program. The opportunity to receive funding when t Committee heard three budget requests and made preliminary cuts in one. But they refused to disclose the amount of the cuts and suggested that other groups' budgets from previous hearings. Co-Chairman J贺 Wudler said that some of the groups' requests were not specific about the types of magazines, special publications and travel expenses that they listed. The Thai Association requested $1,643; the organization of Arab Students, $1,070; and the University Theatre, $34,802. THE COMMITTEE accepted the University Daily Kansas' line allocation of $7,080, to be paid for by student activity fees of $2 per student. The Communications Committee accepted three budgets and made preliminary cuts in one last night. The committee accepted the proposed budget for KJHK and added money from its own funds to meet its requirements. KJHK's request and its line allocation and Senate unallocated funds. KJHK requested The committee cut the budget request for Blacks in Communications from $4,281.64 to $4,210.84. The Student Services Committee heard budget requests from six organizations: Volunteer Clearinghouse, which requested $1,640; the KU Ecology Club, $1,133; Almapha Omega, $799.42; the Men's Coalition, $684; and the Women's Coalition. This story was written by Susan Schneen-maker, Katy Kaye, Brian Von Bevern and Jeff Kious. 2 Friday, March 28, 1980 University Daily Kansan NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Volcano erupting in Washington VANCOUVER. Wash. — Mount St. Helena, dormant for a century, erupted with smoke and ash yesterday after a week of earthquake swarms that rattled the city. The U.S. Forest Service began evacuating a handful of people at the Spirit lake area at the base of the mountain and in other sparsely populated areas on Tuesday as part of an emergency response. At 1:15 p.m. a crack was spotted at the 7,000-foot level on the north side," said Rhonda Brooks of the Washington state Department of Emergency Services. "It is apparent that the north and west sides of the mountain are collapsing," she said. The U.S. Forest Service and sea scientists at the University of Washington also confirmed the eruption of the mountain, about 40 miles northeast of Por- 2 more months of captivity seen The U.S. Embassy hostages will probably languish in their Tehran imam or at least two more months, possibly into the summer, a member of the U.N. int’l delegation and a representative of the U.N. in Washington, the State Department indicated that new measures were being prepared to win release of the hostages. Ronald Reagan called for "ex-termination" of the hostages. Revolutionary leader Ayatollah Rubalh Kuhlmati has said the new Iranian Parliament must decide the hostages' fate. But new delays disclosed Wednesday indicated that the elections of the Parliament, or Majlis, probably would not be completed until sometime in May. Some Iranian leaders threatened again this week to put the hostages on trial as alleged U.S. agues, but Foreign Minister Sadegh Gahgadi said after a hearing in Tehran that he had been asked to pay $10 million. Wage, price controls ruled out WASHINGTON—Treasury Secretary G. William Miller said yesterday that President Carter's new budget, the latest move in the battle against inflation, would be followed by additional measures, but that they wouldn't include wage and price controls. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., has advocated wage and price controls to counter the nation's high inflation rate, and an AP-NBC news said that this was a factor in Kennedy's surprise victories over Carter in the New York and Connecticut presidential primaries Tuesday. The administration's economic policy was condemned by Arthur Burns, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, who said it would have little effect on inflation but would make the coming recession more severe. He said that it would be given the Federal Reserve Board "dictatorial powers" and should be stopped. Miller said it should be possible to reduce inflation to below 10 percent in 1981, barring certain adverse developments, such as another increase in oil prices. Just a few hours before Miller spoke at the National Press Club, it was less than $250 per barrel of its oil by 10 percent and that Iran planned to increase the price of its oil April 11. Vance defends foreign policy WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Cyrus Vance insisted yesterday that American foreign policy was on the right road, even though it was a long and Vance defended the Carter administration's record in response to the opening of a broad inquiry into the American position in the world by the Senate Foreign "What the American people want to know," said Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, committee chairman, "is where we are going to work and how we in- dustrialize." Vance responded with a 60-page statement, from which he read for slightly more than an hour in the Senate Caucus Room. The hearing was broadcast The statement broke new ground on only one issue. He said the United States' offer of aid to Pakistan was dependent, "both on Pakistan's assessment of its own capacity and ability." Senate passes "windfall" oil tax WASHINGTON - The Senate gave final approval yesterday to a bill that imposes a $27.7 billion "windfall" tax on the oil industry and earmarks most of its assets. The 66-31 final vote sent the measure to President Carter for his signature, 11 months after he proposed it as a cornerstone of his energy policy. The tax is only about 80 percent as tough as the president wanted, but Carter was enthusiastic about its approval. "This is good news for the country and, I think, good news for the whole world," the president said after the Senate vote. He said the measure will help combat inflation and ease U.S. dependence on foreign oil. The tax cost will be paid by about 12,000 oil producers and the estimated 1 million royalty-owners who lease their lands for oil production. The money will come out of the estimated $1 trillion that consumers are expected to pay in the form of Carter's decision to end federal control on the price of U.S. crude oil. Time says Kansas has moved MISSION — While census trends show the country's population moving toward the south and west, Time magazine has the entire state of Kansas moving to the north. "Of course I know where Kansas is located," said Debra Wells, a cartographer for Time in New York. "That where Dorothy lives." Bill in its March 31 issue, the magazine produced a map of the United States—with the states and the 60 states since 1979—with Kansas satin on top of Nebraska, rather than Colorado. on a top, and then below it. The magazine had a simple explanation for the mix-up. The magazine had a simple explanation for the mix-up. "We just made an error," said Wells, who did the research for the map for artist Paul J. Puglisse. She said the error was made in the overlay, not the actual drawing of the map. On the map, the state labeled Karasaw looked like Nebraska and the one labeled Alaska. Panel OKs beer restrictions **TOPEKA - A full aim at illegal consumption of 3.2 percent by persons under 18 years of age was approved yesterday for introduction by the Federal Court of Justice.** The bill also would prohibit consumption of 3.2 beer by anyone upon streets or highways or in vehicles on public thoroughfares. Chairman Neal Whitaker, R-Wichita, said the bill implements a compromise between persons supporting and opposing an increase in the minimum legal age for consumption of 3.2 beer from 18 to 21. The committee killed the age bill earlier. Present law makes it illegal for persons under 18 years of age to be permitted to buy or drink 3.2 milk in or about a place selling the beverage. The person this would make fit for a person under 18 to consume, purchase or give in some way to the person. This would be punishable under the juvenile law the person is or guardian. This would be punishable under the juvenile law the person is or guardian. This would be punished Correction... Weather... In yesterday's Kansan, Orosie Riley, Prairie Village law student, was incorrectly quoted in a story about law school tuition. She said that the difference between the bill before the Senate Ways and Means Committee and another proposal did not bother law students, not the extra $60 fee. Today will be cloud with showers, possibly thunderbushers, throughout the day, to the KU Weather Service. The high will be in the low 50s with Tonight will be cloudy with a good chance for more rain. Temperatures should be in the upper 30s. For the rest of the weekend, the rain should stop tomorrow with the high around 50. Sunday should be cloudy again with a high in the low 50s. Carter aides foresee tough battle WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite the long odds against either John Anderson or Edward M. Kennedy receiving their party's presidential nomination, the two men were seen yesterday as clear symbols that the president was an equal to Ronald Reagan or any other Republican. While Carter's political adhesions adored the voters at the New York and Connecticut were only a "dip on the road to the nomination," they clearly did not believe about what the losses pertained for the candidate. "Carter ought to be more concerned about it than us," said Frank Donatez, Midwest representative of the National Center for the effect of an independent candidacy by a really can't see where he would take action." And if Kennedy's victories demonstrated Carter's political vulnerability, that made the possibility of a third-party candidacy by Anderson even more troubling. WHILE NEITHER their party nor Reagan have clinched their party's nomination, they hold substantial leads that would be difficult for any of their rivals to overcome. Anderson has refused to rule out a third-party candidacy in the general election. It would take an unusual political collapse by either man to lose the nomination. But it as been an unusual political year and no one is quite ready to rule out the possibility Patrick Caddell, chief pollinator for the Carter campaign, theorized that the bees are more primaries reflected, in part, a belief that he no longer was a serious race in the race and that votes for Kennedy were more an anti-Carter protest vote than a shift in the favor. Before New York and Connecticut, Kennedy was being written off as a viable challenger to Carter. The Massachusetts has been beaten the president only in his home state. "It was as if Kennedy disappeared from the race," said Cadellide of his New York polling. "... People were no longer making sense on who they wanted in the White House." CADDELLE SAID he expected the sentiment to shift back to Carter in提前primaries now that Kennedy once again was appearing as a viable alternative. The nomination fight is delaying a fundraising drive by the Democratic National Committee to raise $20 million for telephone bank registration drives for the general election. It also means that Kennedy would continue traveling around the country criticizing Carter's handling of domestic and foreign policy. Vander Jagt, R-Mich., chairman of the Republican congressional campaign committee. "I want to keep Kennedy's campaign alive as long as I can," said Rep. Guy "He makes a lot of comments about the ineptness of the Carter administration that get more play than any Republican can get." Kansas Senate approves Pickert for Regents board TOPEKA (AP) — James W. Pickert of Emporia was confirmed yesterday by the Kansas Senate to a four-year term on the Kansas Board of Regents. Pickert, a Democrat, was named to the post by Gov. John Carlin in January. He owns and operates a real estate brokerage business in Emoryia. Pickert's confirmation was unproposed in the Senate, although four senators, including Senate Democratic Minority Leader Bernie Sanders, refused to vote on the appointment. Pickert, 45, is a native of Hoisington and has served in the U.S. Navy. Jazz Up At Paul Gray's Jazz Place Up At Paul Gray's Jazz Place A Private Club upstairs at 926 Mass. Special Tonight Skip DeVol The worlds greatest banjo player and Admission only $5.00 Members and Ray Ehrhart Guests only Great old time New Orleans pianist Saturday: The Gaslight Gang Dixieland band Call 843-2644 For Reservations SUA and the Emily Taylor Womens Resource and Career Center present Dr. Rosabeth Moss Kanter on POWER & POWERLESSNESS in organizations Contributors to Academic Affairs. Commission on the Status of Women. Dept. of Speech and Drama Capitol Complex Center. Graduate School Council. School of Business - Women's Studies. Anonymous Donors Capital Complex Center. Graduate School Council. March 28 7:30 PM 3139 Wescoe Free Admission He earned a bachelor of science degree in business from Emporia State University in 1961 and a master of science in business from that institution in 1974. Pickert was a member of the Lyon County Commission from 1967 to 1970, Emporia city commissioner from 171 to 177 and mayor of Emporia in 1972 and 1975. sua films Friday & Saturday, March 28-29 THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE . . . . . . (1972) Dir. Lui Burun, with Fernando Rey, Carole Bouquet, Angeline Molina. A man in his fifteens fails mady in love with a woman, played by two different actresses, spurs his affections with an equal to his own passion. A woman is also aged 19. LA GÈME AND BELLE DE JOUR. Francisubtitles. - No Friday matinee Midnight Movies ROCK 'N' ROLL HIGH SCHOOL Di Alan Akkur, with P, J. Soles, The Ramones, New Wave rockers The Ramones play a high school rock and roll, band who are ostracised by their critics. They reigns. Lots of fun and loud music. Plus: a short prom film with Cheap Sunday, March 30 THE GODFATHER, PART II Dir. Francis Droff, Copla with, Pacino, Robert DeNisner, Durant Duvall, Sargent and Stasberg, John Cazale, Excellent story of the life of the Cezanne family. Monday, March 31 Bergman: MONIKA (1852) Dir. Ingr. Bergman. One of Bergman's earliest and is an erotic story of a young girl coming to age. Swedishusibisets. Tuesday, April 1 ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. (1989) Dr. Sergio Lele, with Henry Fonda, Jason Roberts, Charles Bronson, Michael Jaffe, and Eric Gillen epic with Fonda playing the nastiest heroes who suffers no pains of conscience after killing an entire family. By the end of 2014, she and THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R films are $1.00 and start at 7:30; weekday film lists are $2.50, Monday and Midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday; tickets available at the GSA Union, Union 5th Level or smoking or refreshments allowed. AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION MEETING NOTICE The 3rd Annual General Meeting of the African Students Association is scheduled for 6 p.m. Saturday, March 29th,1980 at the Council Room, Kansas Union. Agenda 1. ) Minutes of last meeting. 2. ) President's speech. 4. ) Finance. 3. ) Probe Panel Report. 5. ) Miscellaneous. Please attend, African Students, with your great ideas. Paid for by KU International Club. Thanks. Apollo Dimbo General Secretary, ASA Friday, March 28, 1980 3 Younger Winter to seek House seat By SCOTT C. FAUST Staff Reporter Lawrence attorney Wint Winter Jr., a recently announced Republican candidate for the 40th District Kansas House seat, said yesterday that he supported as big a faculty salary increase for Kansas Board of Schools as state resources would allow. Winter, the 26-year-old son of State Rep. Winter, P.O. Ottawa, and a 1978 U.S. representative who served as representative he would work on behalf of the University of Kansas and all public colleges. "My personal feeling," he said, "is that government's first priority is education. That corresponds with the best interests of the district." WINTER SAID that he had not been in on the budgetary process but that he supported the full 10 percent faculty投入, which led to the Senate Ways and Means Committee. He said he would work to get funding for all areas of the University, including student assistance, to "continue high quality programs." The 44th District seat now is held by State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, a Democrat, who was chosen by Democrats to replace him after he resigned in December, 1979. University Daily Kansan Winter and Republican Jackson Armstrong, Douglas County Sheriff's office and the north district. The district is bounded by the city on the west, sixth Street, the north, ninth, south, seventh Massachusetts on the east. Naisht Drive is the eastern boundary from 11th Street to The district's boundaries were shifted by a major reaportionment this year. Charlton cannot run for re-election for the seat because she lives in the 43rd District, Winter said. Winter now lives at 2226 New Hampshire, which also is in the 43rd District, but he has bought a house at 2229 West Drive, in the 44th District. about my running." Winter said. "I think he thinks it's OK." BEING THE SON of a representative had no effect on his decision to run, Winter said. "I talked to my father, among others, He said he chose to run because he had a strong vision of government" and a feeling that people who thought they could contribute to society would have an institution to get involved. "I have a desire to find out what people want and what their concerns are. I also have the experience and know-how to work with them to accomplish those things." Winter said. CONCERNING controversial issues in this year's session, Winter said that he was opposed to the death penalty and the torture used against him. He favored a "sending limit of some kind." He said he opposed any spending lids constitutional amendment. Any lid needs safety mechanisms to ensure that lands are not trapped under the binds, he said. Winter said his campaign for the August 5 primary would be built largely on door-to-door canvassing of his district, possibly by using aerials as well as mailings and media coverage. Efficiency key to firehouse plans By RENE BELL Staff Reporter A computer study on Lawrence fire protection has given the city ideas for a new firehouse that would improve fire efficiency and have half the cost of a conventional firehouse. The Lawrence City Commission Tuesday gave the Lawrence Fire Department permission to go ahead with a plan to build a station at 21st and Lawrence streets. According to Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McBain, the group developed a system that determine the best way for the fire department to meet the city's firefighting needs. UNDER THIS SYSTEM every area in Lawrence was placed in one of five zones, according to the potential amount of life and damage that would occur. The highest priority, contained such places as The plans are a result of the recommendations by Public Technology Incorporated, which began its 18-month study in September 1978. PTI is a non-profit, public interest organization that develops and applies technology to the problems and needs of local government. hospitals, residence halls and shopping centers. The lowest priority was the rural fire zone. In deciding which combination of fire stations best covered all of the zones, a target time was developed for each zone. A target time was developed for zones for one to six局时 for five zone. These times were based on seven factors in each area: danger to life, value of property, construction type, built-in facilities, department facilities and public expectation. USING THIS material and 192 points chosen through the city, PIT ran 19 combinations of possible fire station locations through a computer. The outcome was a recommendation for a new fire station at 23rd and Lawrence streets. According to the PTI's report, this would create a 15 percent increase in the fire department's effectiveness. With the new station, the percentage chance of the fire department responding to a call in one zone area in the target time of 29.7 percent or above decreased from 29.7 percent to 42.2 percent. Any fire within the Lawrence city limits could be reached by a four-person crew within five minutes, McSwain said. THE LOCATION OF the firehouse would also resolve a problem which surfaced in early 1978. In March and April of that year, firefighters from Flickers' Local 1586 issued statements saying that the southwest part of town was unprotected. They accused the city of negligence, saying that someone would have been in a fire before a new station would be built. Another recommendation made by PTI which the city is adapting to its purposes is that of a home-style firehouse. The PTI is a firehouse, a house and convert it into a fireplace. McSwain said it was more feasible for the city to build a house in the area than to find someone to sell one. A house fire station would cost much less than a conventional one. Lawrence's two newest fire stations cost $250,000 each 14 months. The company only builds $125,000 for the construction of a house. THE FURTHERMORE, it would better fit the neighborhood and would be usable as a home if the station had to be relocated. NEW YORKER PERNO ITALIAN PIZZA $2.00 OFF Any Large or Medium Pizza Wed-Sun, March 26-30 No coupons accepted with offer Fresh Coke MATH-SCIENCE CAROLA DE MAYORAL As a Peace Corps volunteer she teaches math and ask general science to high school students in Liberia, West Africa. As a Peace Corps intern she tutors physics in the Pacific Islands. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, travel, form a team, and teach English. PEACE C RPS SICK UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARNRITH O'LEAPE 3EFORE APRIL 2, 1980. The Aulos Ensemble BETTLEY HILL myron Lutzke – baroque cello Linda Quan – baroque violin UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES Saturday, March 29 — 8:00 p.m. Sunday, March 30 — 3:30 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall Swarthout Recital Hall Tickets available at Murphy Hall Box Office SUA Special events Contemporary, JAM and New West present THE WALKING DEAD UTOPIA -with- Todd Rundgren Roger Powell Kasim Sulton John Wilcox Tomorrow Hoch Auditorium University of Kansas 8:00 p.m. Tickets: $8.50 and $7.50 Available at SUR Box Office, Kieff's and all Capital outlets. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanas editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the authors. March 28,1980 TMI—One year later One year ago today, the worst nuclear accident in the history of American commercial nuclear energy has been caused by Three Mile Island near Harriburg, Pa. Seventy-two hours ago, General Public Utilities Corp. filed a $500 million negligence suit in a New York City federal court against Babcock and Wilcox, the manufacturer of the Three Mile Island reactor. And 48 hours ago, Republican presidential candidate, Rep. John B. Anderson, R-III, told an audience of more than 4,000 people in Hoch Auditorium that he would not support further licensing and construction of the facilities on plans until strict regulations had been passed and implemented. One year later, the TMI power plant still remains crippled and dormant although cleanup operations have begun. One year later, residents from the Harrisburg community are still pleading with Nuclear Regulatory Commissioners to permanently dispel fears of latent radioactivity, future side-effects and disastrous replays. One year later, all that really stands between TMI and another nuclear power plant accident elsewhere is a set of proposals made by the NRC and hollow reassurances by nuclear in- dusty officials that their plants are much safer since TMI. The oil wells of the Middle East are running dry—at least those that feed the pipelines previously directed toward the United States—or are becoming so costly to tap that they are no longer an economical energy source for the United States. The millions of American dollars that are being pumped into foreign coffers should be pumped into other energy sources, developing or renewable energy sources and making safe to the core those energy sources, such as nuclear reactors, that already have served the nation well. In the energy power struggle, the United States nuclear energy industry is trying to tame an atomic ion at feeble whip-and-chair cosmetic techniques, but content that these standards provide adequate protection for innocent power users. Atomic energy can be used to combat the sludge of dirty oil politics and the United States' pathetic dependency on foreign energy sources. It can be used complacently or carelessly. Three Mile Island was the last warning. 1. an expert recently said, "Three Mile Island was the salvation of nuclear energy IF nuclear energy can survive Three Mile Island." Focus on sun's uses destroys its mystery BY JOHN'S COLE ork Times Special Features By JOHN J. COLE New York Times Special Features BRUNSWICK, MIA – During the 2013 solar eclipse, on earth, the sun has seldom been seen solely in its current modes; as a fusion phenomenon to be duplicated, or an energy source to be captured and exploited. It has, instead, become a powerful dimension of wonder, of reverence, of mysticism, magic, worship, gratitude, artistic inspiration, and an awareness of the great mystery of vividly absent from today's perceptions. Yes, we have astronomers, we have physicists, we have more knowledge of the sun than ever before. But in a paradox, the sun's knowledge has increased, the sun's metaphysical significance has decreased and the data of its vital statistics Just as we shall never be governed best leaders choose only for their height, not for their intellect. We do not establish a good and true relationship with the sun until we re-explore its contents and retrieve its own utilities with its mysteries and reinvent it with the full measure of meaning for humanity! just the sun has acquired cease to be our sole source of life on this earth millions of years ago. THE WONDER IS that a force as pervasive as the sun's could have been as minimized as it has since been the start of the Industrial Age. One has only to consider the relationship with this planet to comprehend the totality of its effects on our lives. The sun provides heat and light; wonders it, we would indeed freeze in the dark. It is the parent of the wind, the progenitor of clouds, the creator of rain, the sprouter of mountains, the source of sunlight on our sun's arc in the heavens. Our surises and sunsets are to witness its daily passage—a journey that moves a perpetual dawn around the globe, inspiring bird songs in a place from meridian to meridian there is never enough when this earth is without natural music. THE SUN TAMES glaciers, is the alchemist that draws life-giving oxygen from the plants of land and sea, and is the massive gravitational force that holds each celestial sphere of our galaxy in its proper orbit. Without the sun, humanity would long since have been lost in space. Echoes of that knowledge reverberate within us, unconsciously, whenever we awaken to a bright dawn. We say we 'feel great' in the clear sunshine of a new spring, and then we feel our way around us we are feeling is the sun's own reawareness that the natural order of things is in place. We say "it came to me in a flash" when a camera, like a microscope or imagery is one of interior illumination, of a light within the mind, of a small sunburn flashing within the cellular satellites our eyes are fixed on. THE PARALELLES are no accident; the electromagnetic energy that allows brain-cell communication is a duplicate of the sun's radiations. Although this earth captures but a fraction of that energy (the magnetically unfastened on our sister planets and the moon), it is, on balance, more than enough, not only for our survival, but for our flourishing. We can comprehend, and have proved, the mathematics of the solar energy equation. What we have been unable to do in recent years is to acknowledge the sun as our primary natural presence—metaphysicality. We cannot accept that we would not view the future with anxiety but with the certainty that it could be lived fulfillingly, in harmony with the natural. WE MUST BEGIN to see the sun for its wonder as well as its warmth; for its history as a living entity and its relationship to the individual as well as its relation to earth. Only by reinvesting the sun with these dimensions can we hope it as a besign and primary energy source. The sun has, after all, been around for 4,000 million years, and we (are in agreement) that it can be at least 5,000 million more. It behaves us—energy crisis or no energy crisis—to get to know it in its fascinating aspects, not only because of the technological imbalances of this, our generation, that we could have been led so far from the sun. Our solar balance needs John J. Cole is writing a book about the sun. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--684-4510 Business Office--684-4238 15298-6246-546 Published at the University of Kalypso daily August through May and Monday and Thursday at 10:30 am; Friday and Saturday at 11:30 am. All copies must be returned by mail or are £5 for each month or £4 a year to Daunding University and £6 for each month or £5 a year to Massey University. All donations must be made to the provided address. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kan- aise, KS 6905 Editor James Anthony Pitts Masaging Editor Dana Miller Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Editorial Editor Brenda Watson Carol Beer Justin Wooldridge Brenda Walson Campus Editor *Associate Campus Editor* Carol Beer Judith Weedon Business Manager Vincent Coultis Retail Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins General Manager Rick Musser Coming recession will curb inflation New York times special TIME LEXINGTON, Mass. — Septicism has greeted President Carter's proposed anti- inflation program. Bv OTTO ECKSTEIN Are the budget cuts real? Is the program just a political play to pre-empt Reagan territory, or to be followed by renewed easi-come, easy-to-wollicies? In this misma of doubt, we may fail to see that a historical turning point may be at hand. The budget's heavy tax burden will win down up purchase power. His high tariffs will stop the private credit explosion. Energy conservation will be reinforced by that political will. The government is willing to run a recession. And a recession will become almost inevitable because of current interest rates, balancing the budget, and the need for more power arising from paying the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' bill. ECOONISTS' IDEAS, public attitudes and political needs will change, not just for 1980, but for the indefinite future. Once the budget is balanced, politicians would find it difficult to run deficits again. The Federal Reserve has also learned its lesson, and it is would repeat its traditional误用 of excessive ease in the first years of recovery. Will the new policies reverse the 15-year deterioration in our core inflation rate? The new problem is not the 18-year price increase, but the figure exacerbated by OPEC price increases and the Consumer Price Index mismeasured housing costs. The rubber and capital costs, moving near 20% of OPEC cannot double its prices so soon and mortgage rates will peak. Recession will get rid of the demand pull on prices. So temporary abatement of inflation does lie ahead. BUT A RETURN to normal economic progress becomes possible only if traditional growth of productivity resumes and we become less dependent on PPEC. The president's import surcharge of 10 cents a gallon on gasoline will gradually reduce consumption by 200,000 barrels a day. The enormous price increases of OPEC plus domestic decontrol will also elicit conservation. Realistically, the 1890's prospect for imports remains unchanged in a dry-land day regime. With Japan and other high-growth countries headed for larger imports and the Soviet Union Fading away, the United States remains in turnover. Thus, OPEC will retain the ability to strike an occurrance price WE HAVE SUFFERED at the hands of OPEC, but the United States has not had to妨炎 of gasoline rationing, mass unemployeeing of gasoline worsening inflation induced by OPEC. There is time to reduce imports by manpower and equipment for convert electric plants to coal, renew nuclear power expansion or exhaust our depleted oil and gas reservoir by a quicker injection. The recovery of productivity poses a further set of complex tasks and choices. It is generally accepted that routine business-tax incentives can produce an improved capital-labor ratio. That is, tax incentives can provide a rate of increasing machinery and that one-third of the recent loss in productivity, rather than should provide the resources for such tax increases. TO MAKE FURTHER progress on productivity, the U.S. must improve its international trade performance so our industry would benefit from extra market access to raw materials. Germany crowd us out of world markets, our manufacturing productivity will suffer. No one asserts that the Carter program is the whole answer. But the president has, after decades of policy and encouraged the Federal budget to control credit growth. The coming recession will give us time and opportunity to be prepared to go back again. This could be the turning point. Otte Ketstein, a member of President Lyndon B. Johnson's Council of Economic Advisors, is president of the economics at Harvard University and specializes in formulating consult firm that specializes in formulating consult firm. Cruelty, injustice alive in institutions Such sadness there is in this world, such cruelty, such neglect and ignorance. In the laws and institutions created to give protection there is much to be ashamed of Recent news stories have revealed thousands of sterilizations performed on patients in mental institutions, wagers on the deaths in hospital patients, hospitals that are liable for the poor, and the need for a law to protect people who give aid to accident victims. Frightening information that seems only to prove we not bettered our care of the indigent, incompetent or unfortunate. Sterilizations of the mentally ill, retarded and imprisoned is a practice out of Nazi Germany. Yet, a Virginia newspaper has found that the involuntary sterilization of children in the German army in many states. At least one, Virginia, was sterilizing patients in the early 1970s. MARIONO The practice of sterilization of the institutionalized is just one of the ways normal people have discriminated against the forensically trained public because reasoning behind the practice was to kate pound COLUMNIST prevent persons considered incompetent from producing 'genetically defective' offspring. The sterilization procedures were often done without the knowledge of the "Apperectodiumes" were, in reality, hydrotherapy, vasectomies and ectavations. STERILIZATIONS CONTINUED, were even encouraged by laws, long after scientists realized that mental illness, as the name implies, is not necessarily genetic traits. Legislators and institution administrators allowed the sterilizations to go on, following the dictates of an ignorant and bigoted public. The "normal" citizens of this country were those who are not different. They refuse to know the facts about the handicapped. Mental illness is rarely genetically caused. As many cases of mental retardation have been reported as abuse by genetics. Epilepsy is rarely passed from parent to child. A tendency for criminal activity is usually environmentally uncontaminated. Mental illness, physical handicaps and epilepsy are not contagious; they are not the living and working with them. BUT LAWS HAVE condoned the belief Laws have also allowed hospitals to "dump" indigent patients on state- or county-run medical care, in the Kansas City, Mo. Medical Center, in Kansas City, Mo., regularly has to shuffle patients to fit in at hospitals where the hospitals who are not able to pay medical bills to treat a person on the basis of income and level of insurance coverage. Discrimination against indigent persons is signed and inhuman as any Jim Crow law. that people who deviate from what is accepted as normal cannot function in our society. Laws forbade the marriage of epileptics and the retarded. They allowed retarded children and the poor aged to be included in institutional hells. Laws permitted the indefinite hospitalization, without treatment, of those deemed incompetent. HOSPITALS ARE MEANT to give aid to the hospitals filled with hope and charity. Plus example of charity, turning away those who most need help, though, is to give them food and warmth. Staff members of a Las Vegas hospital made wagers on the times of death of intensive care patients, and may have sped or delayed death, according to several newspaper reports. Gambing on death, and trying to persevere life made the final pain of his game. Good god, didn't that kind of h贪昏恶感 ill-advised with Adolf Hofler? The greatest irony of all is that laws must be passed to protect the Good Samaritan who aids the injured. In an era in which it is hard to be sure someone, anyone other than a licensed doctor physician, nurse or paramedic can be sued for giving aid at the scene of an accident. NAIVE GOODY-TWO-SHOES types accept help accidented people. Precise help please. If those sly people don't persist in helping others, they would never be sued for everything they did. Sad, isn't it, that charity and concern go unappreciated, and are even discouraged, while abuse, neglect, bigotry and ignorance are allowed by law to exist. What is frightening, though, is that the people who enact those laws, abuse their power and take control of the indigent and ill very likely commit their upstanding citizens doing their Christian duty. As though those were the ex-convicts in Nuremberg at the war crimes trials in Nuremberg. Grad students want loan rights back To the Editor: In two Kansas articles, Feb. 28 and March 3, Cliff Kaha, director of the circulation treatment of the KU library system, made some sense to the administration of extended loan privileges for graduate students" would like to elaborate on this topic from under-exposure or further obfuscation. Until mid-October of last year, graduate students, with a letter signed by their thesis authors, received the library card from the science libraries an extended loan card (a "green card") that entitled them to check out books for four weeks. This policy was in effect for the science collection because the material in these collections dominated by journals, serials and periodicals. Then, with little or no warning to the head librarians of the science libraries, the green curriculum of the private privileges would be given to anyone except faculty. Ph.D. candidates who had passed their comprehensible exams, and employees of the research and Biological Surveys. In a failure attempt to get an explanation, I went to the Reference Department of Wichita State University where his chairman stated why I should be an extension of my green card privileges. This cure-all was recommended by the combined science libraries, Richard Johnson. I was told that no further green cards were forthcoming because "... they have been issued to freely and indiscriminantly ..." I can only marvel at this explanation Haka attempted to smooth ruffled feathers by stating that the loan policy had been changed to standardize loan privileges for members of the class. He went on to pooh-pooh the idea that any patron (let alone a graduate student!) would really need to check out a book for their class. Haka heard it for "standardized libraries." You have forgotten one thing however: the collections in the various libraries are not more evident than in the science libraries. In a statement to the press, Haka attempted to ally fears of a vendetta against master's students by saying that the ex-convict was not the only person because of "abuses" of the policy. Unfortunately, when Haka went on to cite those abuses, he listed only overdue fines and criminal charges against members. It should be noted that the very segment of the libraries' constituentity who are apparently the biggest offenders are apparently the highest judges under the extended loan policy. because it was, in fact, the head librarian at each one of the science libraries who gave final approval, by signature, for the issuance of a green card. The KU library would issue the card to conduct an index description (or incompetence?) within its own ranks by penalizing its patrons. I agree four months is a long time to keep a book out of circulation. But I do not agree overnight is long enough to allow my use of bound journals. My work (and the work of others) must be kept in reference to journals and serials. I do not have an infinite amount of free time to Ron McDowell St. Borocebel, Wis., graduate student My tuition and taxes go to maintain my KU library system. I assume that it is maintained to be used, not just serve as a resource for the university, but also as loan policy is hampering my research and, in is, short, preventing me from making full use of the resources of the library system. I am most satisfied with the opinions of those patients who would be most affected were solicited by the library system before the extended loan政策 changed. In short, I want my extended loan students to have access to my students. I resent being singled out as a "whipping boy" because of the incompetence of the libraries' own staff, or as a sacrifice to the standardization." spend in the library abstracting such material. Nor do I have unlimited funds to photocopy such material. To the Editor: Freedom of choice unquestionable right My thoughts on some topics that have received much column space but little adequate discussion lately: On registration and the draft: A person should volunteer to be shot at. Similarly, a person should volunteer to kill. The sanctity of life rests on an allail that will not desecrate On raising the drinking age: The age of majority (voting rights, property rights, etc.) is 18. The 18-bar scene is a gross social activity, and beer sold to 18-year-olds is a factor in auto accidents. But so is liquor sold to middle-aged state legislators. What we are talking about here is freedom. All persecutors must be freed the freedom to choose their entertainment, be it beer, liquor, or wrecking their car. On women's rights: It's high time everyone realized that the male/female distinction is not social, or behavioral or discursive social or behavioral distinctions that might be observed exist only because we've been exposed many years that they. They are not real. Russ Ham Kansas City, Kan., senior Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor and guest opinions that present different points of view. The letter must be typeed, double-spaced and no longer than 500 words. The Kansan reserves the right to edit all letters and comments. The writer must include the writer's address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include the University, the letter should include home or faculty or staff position. University Daily Kansan Friday, March 28.1980 KU student assails foreign policy By DAVID WEED Staff Reporter The United States needs to end its "political myop" about revolution and independence. The United States is third world countries, according to a KU professor in the same country, recently returned from a month's visit to New York. Harley Wagler, Partridge graduate student, said this week that the U.S. government needed to look at the individual student in order to do such as Necargura, its notional intellectual label. Last July, a revolution led by Sandinista guerrillas overthrew the U.S.-supported government of Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somoza. A United States senator said after the Nicaraguan revolution that the United States should not send aid to the country because of its communist government, wacler said. But Wagler said that socialist and communist governments varied in their political views, and that the United States should not be intimidated by labels. Nicaragua has been in a fragile situation since its revolution, he said, and its people are uncertain about what direction the social structure of the country will follow. "It depends on foreign aid," he said, "because they need money to rebuild their country. Much depends on who will help them." WAGLER SAID that Somoza was one of the most "repressive, brutal dictators of Latin America." The feeling in Nicaragua is that the United States supported Somoza for four decades and "now they squawk about giving us $75 million to rebuild a decimated country," Wagler said. "Nicaraguas don't dislike the people of the United States, but they don't want the United States to determine their government." THE NEW socialist regime has a five-man junta and a nine-man council, Wagler said. He said the United States should understand self-determination, "because, after all, that's what the American Revolution was about." Only a few of Somoa's supporters were killed by the new government, he said, and the revolutionaries who executed them were now being tried for murder. Nicaraigans compare their trials of Sonozna's government to the Nuremberg trials after World War II "without seafolds," Wagler said. The maximum sentence for a guilty verdict has been set at 30 years, he said. Report shows smoking hurts non-smokers, too Non-smokers who complain that breathing someone else's smoke is damaging their lungs may finally have the scientific evidence to support their claims. By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter Researchers at the University of California at San Diego reported in the New England Journal of Medicine this week that they studied 2,700 people and the effects of inhaled smoke coming from their cigarettes, cigares, pipes and cigars. Their report concluded that the smoke did cause actual damage to the tiny air tubes and sacs that line the interior of the lungs. These small passageways were damaged and irreparably damaged by constant exposure to smoke in the report said. "For years, people have said that yes, there probably was damage from seismic events. We then needed program director for the Lang Association." "Others have shown that it can make the carbon dioxide level in air rise more quickly at the first to show physiological damage." BERNDSEN SAID, however, that the Kansas Lung Association would make no endorsement of the report until it could study the findings in greater detail. The report did not contend that the lung damage caused by second hand smoke necessarily led to more serious problems, such as emphysema. Serious problems are often preceded by damage of the air tubes, however, researchers said. "More research has been done on cigarettes as a possible disease-producing agent than on any other subject known to man," Berdsen said. "You can even begin to speculate on the number of research projects that have been done." A problem with nearly all the previous research, he said, has been the way the studies have been performed. IN THE recent study's control group, at least 10 percent of the air tubes and were damaged by long-term prolonged smoke. It said that persons around smoke continually, but who did not actually smoke themselves, could still be the same air passage damage as those who smoked up to 10 cigarettes a day. Athletic Director Bob Marcum sane yesterday that he and other officials would meet Monday with Chancellor Archie R. Keeves next year's athletic department budget. Dykes to look over 1981 KUAC budget Marcum said he was not sure who would be at the meeting in addition to himself, Susan Wachter, intern athletic department and Comptroller Craig McCoy. Student members of the board have criticized Marcum's meeting with Dykes unnecessarily because the board was required to make recommendations to Dykes. However, Marcum said the meeting was needed to discuss certain parts of the budget for the board meeting and for Dykes to indicate which would like board recommendations on. TGIF at THE HAWK For hire $25 per hour SUNY NYC ENCORE COPY CORPS 842-2001 "We deliver" 99¢/page Typing (pica) ($1.10 elite) "One Stop Thesis Shop" 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza ENCORE COPY CORPS 842-2001 "We deliver" 99¢/page Typing (pica) ($1.10 elite) "One Stop Thesis Shop" 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza THE BEST FOOT HOLLOW HOUSE COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-8788 Coalition's Daughter PG Starring Boyes Space EV. 7:15 and 3:00 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:20 Varsity Downtown 1043-1085 Serial PG Starring Martin Multi and Tuesday Wad EV. 7:20 and 9:00 Sat. and Sun. mat. Hillcrest 8th & 843-8900 1. Chapter Two PG Academy Award Nomination for Best Academic Starring Marin Mason and James Caan EV. 7:15 and 3:00 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:00 2. Little Darlings R Starring Taimo O'Neal and Katy McChi洛 EV. 7:20 and 9:00 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:00 3. Kramer vs. Kramer PG Academy Award Nomination for Best Musical Starring Mary Sleep EV. 7:20 and 9:00 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:15 Cinemia Twins 3114 & 843-8400 1. A Talk That Jazz R Academy Award Nomination! Starring Boye Space EV. 7:15 and 3:00 Sat. and Sun. mat. 2:30 2. Little Miss Marker PG Starring Walter Mathis and John Andrews EV. 7:20 and 9:00 Sat. and Sun. mat. 1:45 Sunset Sunset Drive-in - NOW OPEN! FRI. SAT. SUN. Pinnochio (Adult Version) Halloween Cinderella 2000 Raised R Snowball at dusk Movie Information AB'S MOBIL DISCO Sound and Light Show for all kinds of parties embert 9am-5pm at 1-682-7575 ENCORE COPY CORPS 842-2001 "We deliver" 99¢/page Typing (pica) ($1.10 elite) "One Stop Thesis Shop" 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Coal Miner's Daughter PG Starring Silky Spook Eve 7:19 and 9:30, Sat and Sun mat 2:30 Varsity Downtown 843-1085 Serial PG Starring Martin Multi and Tuesday Weld Eve 7:30 and 9:30, Sat and Sun mat. Hillcrest Stores 843-8400 1. Chapter Two PG Academy Award nomination for Best Acadventure Starring Martha Mason and James Caan Eve 7:19 and 9:45, Sat and Sun mat 2:00 2. Little Darlings Starring Tatum O'Neal and Kristin McNichol Eve 7:30 and 9:40, Sat and Sun mat 2:00 3. Kramer vs. Kramer PG 9th Academy Award nominations Starring Duxton Hoffman and Mary Shreeves Eve 7:30 and 9:30, Sat and Sun mat 2:15 Cinema Twain Stores 842-8400 1. All That Jazz R Academy Award nominations Starring Ray Scheder Eve 7:30 and 9:40, Sat and Sun mat 1:30 2. Little Miss Marker Starring Walter Matthau and John Andrew Eve 7:30 and 9:30, Sat and Sun mat 1:45 Sunset Theater Sunset Drive-in—NOW OPEN! FRI. SAT. SUN. Pinnchio (Adult Version) plus Cinderella 2000 Rude Rush Shows start at dusk Movie Information "Honor thy wife, and everyone else's." SERIAL PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A SIDNEY BECKERMAN PRODUCTION MARTIN MULL TUESDAY WELD SALLY KELLERMAN CHRISTOPHER LEE BILL MACY PETER BONERZ AND TOM SMOTHERS AS SPIKE "SERIAL" MUSIC BY LALO SCIFIRIN LYRICS BY NORMAN GIMBEL SCREENPLAY BY RICH EUSTIS & MICHAEL ELAS PRODUced by SIDNEY BECKERMAN DIRECTED BY BILL PERSKY A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Starts Today! Evenings at 7:30 and 9:30 Sat. and Sun. matinee 2:00 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 PRESENT THY WIFE, AND EVERYONE ELSE! SERIAL PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS. A SIDNEY BECKERMAN PRODUCTION MARTIN MULL TUESDAY WELD, SALLY KELLERMAN CHRISTOPHER LEE, BILL MACY PETER BONERZ AND TOM SMOTHERS AS SPIKE " SERIAL " MUSIC BY LALO SCHIFRIN LYRICS BY NORMAN GIMBEL SCREENPLAY BY RICH EUSTIS & MICHAEL ELIAS PRODUCED BY SIDNEY BECKERMAN DIRECTED BY BILL PERSKY AND THE BEST SELLING DOCUMENTARY BESTROYED MOVIE AT BRUCE GARRETT TALE BY RICK GIMBEL A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Copyright © 1986 MCMJKX by Paramount Pictures Corporation At Rights Reserves A BARBIE IN A BOTTLE OF BUBBLES Due to the recent fire at THE SMOKEHOUSE RESTAURANT FADS and FASHIONS is having a SMOKE DAMAGE SALE "BBQ" T-shirts $3.50 "SMOKEY JOE" Jeans & Baggies $8.00-$16.00 "RIB" Overalls $8.00 "TATER CURL FRY" Blouses $3.50 Levi's "LOG SANDWICH" Jean Skirts $13.50 "COMBO" Coordinate group $6.50-$14.50 "WHEEL SANDWICH" Rompers & Short Sets $10.00-$15.50 A LA CARTE ITEMS . . . ● Gloria Vanderbelt blazers $28.00 ● Cole of California swimsuits $14.00-$19.00 ● Levi's plaid & solid blouses $7.50-$11.50 ● Jelly Bean rain slickers $4.00 717 Mass. 842-9988 market change 6 Friday, March 28, 1980 University Daily Kansan Weekly bike tours offered The Mount Oread Bicycle club will start weekly tours for beginning, leisure and advanced riders beginning Saturday April 5, the day said. Chairman of the club, said yesterday. "We are planning tours for beginners riders throughout the spring and summer," Gridley said. "Anybody in the whole world can be a beginner, whether they are nine or 99 years old." The beginning tours leave the South Park Gazebo at 1 p.m., every Saturday. The bikers ride from 10 to 28 miles, he said. Possible classes are Clinton College and Dam Dwells Overlook. For more advanced riders, Gridley said, Wednesday evening leisure tours would be offered. The leisure tours, beginning April 16, range from 15 to 25 miles. club, said Sunday training rides would be offered for cyclists interested in racing. He said training rides were for the serious rider and could be 40 to 80 miles long. David Conrad, racing chairman of the The racing team, sponsored by the Autro-Daimler Bicycle Co., runs early season training rides that leave daily from Strong Hall, Cord said. "We rode 50 miles yesterday," he said, "and if the weather cooperates, we'll ride 75 miles in the future." Conrad said the biggest racing event of the season was scheduled to be would be April 19 to 20. The Aroin-Damier team is preparing for the race, which has status as an Olympic development race, he said. Conrad said a development race was a race for seniors that gave points for placing the racer on the national team. Army officer to discuss Soviets The international history honor society, Phi Alpha Theta, will hold its regional meeting tomorrow at the Kansas Union, but with topics of discussion will be less than routine. Wedding Reception? Call The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 Major Robert Ulin of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College will speak on "Examining the Soviet Threat in Afghanistan" Gulf at 2 p.m. in the Room of the Union The meeting, which is open to the public, will run from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday in the Union. A number of papers, including some by KU students, also will be presented at the meeting. The paper includes women's history, border warfare and international conflict and neutrality. A Lawrence property owner has filed a petition in Douglas County District Court for an injunction to keep the city from damaging his land for a new city hall parking lot. Property owner will fight city hall "I see it as an abuse of imminent domain," Bryan Anderson, owner of the property across from the hall to尔厅 and Massachusetts streets, said yesterday. Anderson's petition says that because the building, which he uses for his toy-building business, is in good condition, the city has no right to condemn it. However, assistant city manager Mike Wilden said the city needed to prove only that the land was intended for public use. Anderson also contends that the condemnation process violated his constitutional rights because Kansas law requires property owners of its intent to condemn. "You can't help but alienate the public when you keep everything secret and leave only a court battle," he said. But city manager Buford Watson said his office had informed Anderson of its intent. Watson also said he thought this was the first time a property owner had tried to stop the condensation proceedings with an injunction against the city. LOOF LIRPA Come join the April Fools fun, with the Non-traditional Student Organization, April 1 at 7 pm Trail Rm., Kansas Union NTSO Partially funded by Student Senate Vanessa Redgrave's critically acclaimed "THE PALESTINEAN" The movie that caused an uproar at the Academy Awards SHOWING FRIDAY, MARCH 28th HOCH AUDITORIUM 7:30 P.M. SHOWING Muslim Students Association - Kansas University $1.00 Donation at the door (Children under 7 not allowed) Babysitting provided Council wants videotaping stopped By BILL MENEZES Staff Reporter A report recommending the discontinuation of videotaping of University events was endorsed by the University Council yesterday. The report, prepared by the Human Relations Committee of the University Senate, said that videotaping at athletic events, invited speakers and demonstrators should be discontinued, except for those events where a potential violence existed. chief and the student body president would determine whether the potential ' for violence warranted video taping. For these demonstrations, the report said, a committee comprised of the executive vice chancellor, the University Senate and the University General Counsel, the KU police. The Council will forward the report, with its endorsement, to Chancellor Archie R. Dikes for his approval. The report said videotaping under any circumstances should occur only on the suggestion of this committee. The University currently is operating under a set of interim videotaping guidelines adopted last fall. IN OTHER business, the Council endorsed and forwarded to the Chancellor an amended report of the Parking and Traffic Board. The Council voted not to accept the Board's proposal to change the time limit for payment of parking fines from 14 days to seven days. Parking fines currently must be paid by the police. If the fines are appended, The Council also rejected the Board's proposal to reduce the time allowed for appeal from 14 days to 7 days. CLARK BRICKER, chairman of the Parking and Traffic Board, presented the report and told the Council that because of the large number of faculty and staff members with outstanding parkings a fine of $150,000 was ordered for making it impossible for faculty and staff with outstanding fines to receive parking permits or reassignments. Aulos Ensemble to give baroque concert The Aulos Ensemble will perform a concert of barque chamber music Saturday and Sunday, March 29 and 30, in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murbury Hall. Founded in 1973 by six Jullard School of Music graduates, the ensemble plays instruments from the Baroque era of the 17th and early 18th centuries. The Saturday concert, at 8 p.m., and the Sunday performance at 3:30 p.m., are part of the University of Kansas Chamber Music Series. musica largely intended for one instrument per part." Politiske said," and also music intended as entertainment for at home and at court." "The Aulos Ensemble will be playing Daniel Politkose, associate professor of music history, said baroque chamber music was written as a recreational outlet for musicians and "who-were to listen." Members of the ensemble are: Anne Burke, Barbara Sternberg, Barbary, baroque cello; Linda Qan, baroque violin; James Richman, harpist/chord; Marc Schuchman, baroque oboe; and Richard Shankland. Politiska said a flauto travestro resembled a modern flute and was played across the lips. The viva de gamba, he said, actually played on the fretboard, and is held between the legs while eluded. At KU, the ensemble will play works under the theme of "Music at Varsalès: A Royal Entertainment." The selection includes Deuxe Recreation de Musique, opus & by Jean-Marie Lecarl; Premier Exhibition de la Musique; Francis Currier; Trio in d Major in Mayer and continue with Jacques Hottetter en continue, by Jacques Hottetter en Roman; Sonneri de St. Geneve du Mont de Paris, by Marin Marianne, and Concerto No. 2, *L'Allure*, by Michel Corrette. Tickets for the two performances are on at the Murphy Hall浴室 Office. All桌位 are reserved for $2 public; for KU students and $3 for other observations can be made by calling 843-3842. OPEN HOUSE meadr Sat. March 29 1-5 pm Sun. March 30 1-5 pm Because we know that Meadowbrook living is enjoyable . . . because we know we have a unit designed for you and your lifestyle . . . because we'd like to have you living in Meadowbrook, we're having an OPEN HOUSE! See a studio, one-bedroom, and two bedroom apartment. meadowbrook Located 3 blocks west of Iowa on 15th, North 1 block on crestline . . . Phone 842-4200 Sperry Top Siders royal college shop eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255 I am not sure if I should include this in the text or just use it as a placeholder. It looks like a fashion illustration of two people walking together. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 It was not Iilun Ccaesar who wrote: "All Gaul is divided into three parts?" And was it not the late Wil Rogers who said that American History was divided into three parts: 1, the ancient period; 2, passing of the iandians; and the modern period. The passages are There is raging, rotting, rape, ruin, rebellion, crime, lessness, and anarchy just about all over the global internet. You don't have to believe you or you ever think of your own responsibility in the matter, or do you almost involuntarily "pass the buck" to someone important enough to be President, The Senate, The House, The Supreme Court, Governors, Legislators, or maybe the KluKui? But never once does the thought enter your mind that your own company is going to play a crucial role in the harvest of such abominable conditions that are dangerous to your own home and loved ones, your means, your government, your liberty and ever life itself. Do we not set ourselves up as more rightful than the Holy God Himself when regardless of how mean and low they are? Do we not be touched by the stroke of strap or white! I thank God that I had parents and a schoolteacher that did not touch me. At times my kids so please be on it that "At times my 'laws were boxed.' and at others there "Withhold not correction from the child; for if thou beatest him with the rod, he shall not die. Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and shall deliver his soul from hell." Proverbs 23:13 and 14. That comes very near to just plainness. It is clear that the Lord should strap and strap and lash used in "The Fear of The Lord" would be a short time cut young and old folks deliquency to a minimum. But no, no, this generation knows better, and the Bands and Cast Away The Cords" of the Almighty. was applied "behind" the brush, the strap, and the switch. If I had been deprived of that healthy medicine that I needed fear I would be a lot sorrier than have turned out to be fearful. I could obey God's fifth Command: "Honor thy father and my mother, to thank God for such parents and to "rise up in kings, and lords." Hear 'The Word of God, the King of kings, and lords.' This is the Easter season. Likely we will hear in narrations and may see imagine pictures of Christ being resurrected, and give him his substitute, and that "with His stipes we are healed." Yet we take the position that it is Unchristian to whip a man or child for the purpose of correction and to stop evil. Another most consistent the devil can make so-called Christians to be! P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 Friday, March 28, 1980 7 Advice for shy offered KU students who experience shyness may want to attend a workshop next month titled "Overcoming Shyness," sponsored by Adult Life Resource Centers. The workshop will be from 7 to 10 p.m. April 15 and 22 in the Cincinnati 862 BSA aisle. Information will focus on understanding and overcoming shyness, including the use of a substitute for an substitute studying for social contact, according to Arthur Thomas, associate professor of counseling. Some students cope with shyness by just being good students and studying a lot," he said. "Some students cope with shyness by just being good students and studying a lot," he said. "Instead of socially interacting, they just study." Thomas, who heads the workshop, said that those sthy students who substitute excessive studying for social interaction during their education would suffer later. "After school they will not have demands for studying," he said. "Because they haven't experienced social interaction they will encounter anxiety." Thomas said also that some students encountered anxiety because they had had few dates. "Some KU students have never had a date," he said. "They are usually too shy to ask a person out, so they just postpone a one form of self-defeating behavior." THOMAS SAID that shyness, which could be successfully overcome by individuals who wished to do so. Shyness affects 85 million Americans, Thomas Situational shyness, according to Thomas, is anxiety that a person experiences just before he encounters an unfamiliar situation. "I think 100 percent of the American public would admit to situational shyness at one time or another," he said, "but for some it is more traumatic." The results of an investigation into alleged irregularities in the research practices of KU anthropology professor Michael Crawford might be released in late April. Edward Lehman, executive director of the American Association for Socialward, said yesterday. Anthropology group looks into Crawford allegations Lehman said the investigation, the work of his team, was being completed. The findings arrived in his office about two weeks ago, he said, and were circulated to all parties involved in the investigation so they could be ready for the conclusion. The executive board of the Association, which meets on April 28, will consider what action to take on the report, he said. "They will decide whether to accept it, reject it, and whether to make it public," Lehman said. The Association is investigating charges stemming from a 1976 research project headed by Crawford in Belize in Central America. A research assistant for the project alleged that Crawford used improper research University Daily Kansan methods in his taking of blood samples from humans for studies on sickle-cell anemia trait, and that he mishandled federal grant money. An investigation by the U.S. Inspector's office did not prove enough evidence that the officer correcording to U.S. Attorney James Buckle, but Buckle said there was strong evidence of a crime. An investigation into Crawford's research methods by the KU vice chancellor of research and graduate studies at the time found no evidence to support the findings. Police Beat UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Compiled by Mark Pittman and Jennifer Roblez Lawrence police arrested a juvenile early this morning after he allegedly tried to break into three cars parked along the 1800 block of New Hampshire Street. The juvenile, originally charged as an adult, was charged with interference with the duties of a police officer, disorderly behavior, and mischief. She resisted arrest and attempted auto theft. The suspect is awaiting his first appearance in district court in the county jail. HONORING 842-2001 "We deliver" ENCORE COPY CORPS $3^{¢}$ copies (8½ x 11 regular) On Now through April 5 We also do typing, editing and art work. 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza VIN MEISNER - MILSTEAD RETAIL LIQUOR FEATURING FINE IMPORTED AND CALIFORNIA WINES AND 30 VARIETIES OF COLD BEER! IN HOLIDAY PLAZA (2 DOORS WEST OF KIEF'S) FOR KEGS CALL 842-4499 ADIDAS! free toto bag wheel skates roller skates Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH-PHOENIX-AUSTRALIA-DAMLIER City police fired a burglary at the TGVF Family Center, 711 W. 2nd St. at 5 a.m. yesterday when they answered a silent alarm. THE MOUSE THAT ROARED Police said they found Joe Cameron, 21, a student at Haskell Indian Junior College, inside the building. Cameron was arrested on suspicion and is in county jail with bid set at $150. Sat, March 29 at 2.7, & 9:30 pm COMMUTATES ADIDAS We Service All Bikes 841-6642 RICK'S BIKE SHOP DYCHE AUDITORIUM $1.25 and 75* for kids under 12 presented by KU Science Fiction & Fantasy Ass'n Fri, March 28 at 7 & 9:30 pm J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! We Scr. All Bik... 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence KS (405) Partially funded by Student Senate TIME OUT Discover one of Lawrence's great Bars Spend Friday Evenings with Us Happy Hour 5 - 7 p.m. Mon. - Fri. take TIME OUT 2408 IOWA KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" DAN FOGELBERG PHONIX including Phonix The Last To Know Wishing On The Moon Lover Read the Fire Columbia mfg. price 2,98 Kief's $5^{49} heart bebé le strange including Even it It Strange Night Rockin Heaven Down/Break/Down On Me mfg. price £98 Kief's $5⁴⁹ mfg. price 7.98 Kief's $4^{59}$ STEVE WALSH SCEMER-DREAMER including: Get Too Up Every Step Of The Way So Many Nights You Think You Got It Made Wait Until Tomorrow RACHEL SWEET PROTECT THE INNOCENT including Jealous Baby, Let's Play House Youth Gold For Kids I've Got A Reason mfg. price 7.98 Kief's $ ^{4} ^{5 9} $ Jane Oliver The Best Side of Goodbye including Manchild Lelitay The Best Side Of Goodbye Vagabond Don’t Let Go Of Me Love This Time mfg. price 7.98 Kief's $4^{59} 2 RECORD SET PINK FLOYD THE WALL including: Rant Like Hell/Coinless Yams Another Block In The Wall (Part II) Young Lust/Nobody Home mfg. price 13.98 Kief's $8^99 THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. 8 Friday, March 28, 1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN the arts 'Jazz's' Broadway works on big screen By TIM DOOLITTLE Contributing Reviewer What can you say about a movie that nine Academy award nominations, including Best Picture, don't already say? Do you seek out new ways of saying "terrific," "excellent" or "great" Well, no, you just want to watch "Jazz," the movie that celebrates life and business on Broadway, will be running quite a while. AS THE TITLE suggests, "All That Jazz" is about improvisation, not especially with regard to music. The imminent release of the "beautiful day-to-day performance of Joe (Roy Scheider), a successful Broadway writer" will adapts every aspect of his life to perform. His creed, he states every morning as he looks into the mirror, is simply, "Showtime! He's alive, he's on. From that moment he knows he belongs to the roles he plays during his busy days—choreographer, comedian, lover and father-at a moment's notice. He creates, putting in as much time as possible, and his body feels, though satisfying, wears him down. Scheier has come a long way since "Jaws," and his outstanding portrait of Joe has earned him a nomination for Best Director. He is also one of the most excellent supporting actors, as well. THOUGH THE MUSIC and dance highlight "All That Jazz," the script and characters are refreshing, unpredictable and wonderfully contemporary. Those who do not take a kiting to musicals should also be able to watch them on screen into the music and dance, and Joe's choreography often expresses the story of his feelings. Unlike other musicals, there is little here that does not reflect the major theme in the script, which is death and its opposition to Joe's life on the stage. Joe's subconscious awareness of death is mimicked by intermittent film cuts of a comedian making jokes about the five dead women in his life, in scene which Joe talks objectively to Lady Death about his life, is often revisited, in Death, in the form of an attractive woman, whose death he sees. Joe gives Joe consultation and therapy for his problems. Nevertheless death is backstage, and Joe wants to be alive, out front where she lives, in life is more admirable in the face of death. RESIDES OFFERING music, dance, a good script and insights into death, "All That Jazzy" features some imaginative and innovative film techniques. Quick scene shifts provide a contrasting mixture of dark and light that mirrors Joe's conception of his life. And in the opening scene—in which the stage is crowded with sweaty auditioning actors, a group of them gathers at Benson's "On Broadway" contracts with the struggle going on to make the production happen. Sometimes, but not often, the contrasts between background music and action seem too strange. It is a credit to the filming that it takes up enough space to be astonishingly successful on the screen. Whether or not you can think of anything more favorable to say about "All That Jazzy!" is hard. And it doesn't mind for quite a while. Not because it sentimental, but because it is, well, great. spare time Recital Hall THEATRE: 'O Santo Inquento' 8 o m i. Tree Theatre MUSIC: John Mayall with Used Parts, 8 p.m. Lawrence Opera House, 7th and Massachusetts Spring Concert, University Singers, 8 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall. SATURDAY FRIDAY THEATRE : O Santo Inquero; 8 p.m. Inge Theatre MUSIC : 0000 and The Rockets; 10 a.m. MUSIC: 999 and the Dickies, 8 p.m. Lawrence Opera House, 79th and Massachusetts, Ubopia, featuring Todd Rundgren, 8 p.m. Hoch Audi- The Anuze Assembly, Chamber Music, 8 p.m. torium Ensemble, Ensemble, Chamber Music, 8 p.m. Swartouth Recital Hall. HALI Hall THEATRE: "Santo Inigo Hito" 8 p.m. Imano Theatre SUNDAY MUSIC: The Aulos Ensemble, Chamber Music, 3:30 p.m. Swarathout Realtal Hall. Swarthorf Recital Hall Carnation Recital, Albert Aiken, 3-6 m. Memorial Cairn Carnation Recital, Albert Aiken, Exhibit West Gallery, Laerence Arts Center, 3rd and Vermont. Photography by Lionell Off; East Gallery, Lawrence Arts holography by Lionell Orff, East Gallery, Lawrence Arts 8th and Vermont. MONDAY MUSIC: Student Recital, Mary Allor, percussion, and Jonathan Lewis, trumpet, 8 p.m. Swathrout Recital Hall TUESDAY MUSIC: Faculty Recital, Anne Miller, oboe, and Alan Hawkins, bassoon, 8 p.m. Swathrout Recital Hall WEDNESDAY MUSIC: Lecture on Musicoiology, Harold Brown. 2.30 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall HURSDAY MUSIC: Spring Concert, KU. Concert Band, band. Michael Thornton, tuba. 8:30 m Kansas Union Ballroom I will not provide any personal information about the person in the image. The content of the image is likely from a concert or public event, given the stage setting and microphone usage. Please contact the organization responsible for the image to obtain further details. DAVE KRAUS Kansan staff Pop Possessed Iggy rocks wild fans eggy Pop, godfather of punk, during a relatively normal moment in his show at Lawrence Opera House Wednesday night. When James Osterberg steps out onto the stage and becomes Iggy Pop, he becomes a man possessed, hellbent on delivering an hour of blistering rock the way only he can deliver it. Kansan Reviewer By RICK HELLMAN The show open lamentally enough with a set by the new Janet Jameson band. Jameson is, of course, the former vocalist of Cole Tuckey who now pursuits from a rock band. Her new material does not show off her voice to its best advantage and her stage moves were painfully contrived. There no doubt that Jameson is a strong fronter from a rock band, but this attempt at rocking out on a rock band, and the crowd let her know. They came to see Iggy. Iggy might have turned out to be another Sid Vicious, but he's too smart for that. After a period of drug abuse and inactivity in the mid-70s, Iggy has got his act together once again, and just might be better than ever. Iggy, the man behind imbibes like 'Raw Power' and "Last for Life" open his show by reciting the Lord's Prayer to recorded symphonic backing. With that the baton of the rogue of the roughest rock'n'roll this side of the Sex Sipstis. WHAT HIS FOUR-AM back up band lacked in finesse, they made up for in spirit and volume. Ivan Kral, on leave from the Patti Smith group, added some new material to his boards, but the star of the show was Iggy and no one else. The set started with a song from lggy's most recent album "Soldiers." The new material came off well in concert with leaping in the stage, crashing into the drum kit and generally exciting the crowd. He also incited the crowd, insulting members of the audience, who laced it up. A nice version of "Sister Midnight" slowed things down and put the back right pick up back with it on the Bide Side. Dock Food By this time, Iggy had stripped off his shirt and really got down to business. He is a master showman. The crowd was in the palm of his hand from the word "Go" and worked them up like a musician plays his instrument. But today's lggs is under control, directing the band a decade later at Lawrence Wheeler to their muscle they have learned from him. They brought with him lived up to the spirit of the original Stoopes, bashing away their instruments for all the time. His stage moves are certainly unique. They seem most awkward at times, but our characters (the narrator and the other, teering along the edge as if he were ready to leap out into the audience) which he has been known to do. WHITE-HOT VERSIONS of "Five foot one" and "Lust for Life" closed the all set too. Iggy is a true original. The entire punk/wake school might never have occurred with the glue to blaze the trail. And now he's back on top, taking his rightful place among the few innovators in the rock genre. A short encore brought the total length of the show to just over an hour, but what an hour! Gomes play denounces oppression 600 fans went away happy. Why weren't you there? + Staff Renorter Bv KEVIN MILLS Cross Purposes After viewing "O Santo Inguero, the Inge Theatre Series 'latest production, some theatre-goers may feel they have witnessed an anti-Goldic ploy. But they won't have, director Iron J. Reed Jr., who graduated student, said yesterday. Actually, playwright Alfredo Dias Gomes wrote the play as a metaphorat denouncing universal racism. A scene from the play, "O Santo Inquertio," which is showing at the Inge Theatre through March 31. The play is directed by "O Santo Inquere (The Holy Office)," "opens at 8 tonight in the William Ike Theatre in Murphy Hall. It will play nightly until March 29. Gomes' 1966 play is based on a true incident that happened in Brazil in 1750. A young girl, Branca Dias, saws a Jesuit priest from drowning by giving him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. The priest falls in love with her and then accuses her of being a Christian. The Jesuit is frieed, convised and burned at the stake at the hands of the Holy Roman emperor. BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff "It is a very simple plot," Rodríguez said. "The author is criticizing the lack of individual freedom in a coercive society, the freedom to think and to act." Irion Nolasco Rodrigues, Porto Alegre, Brazil, graduate student. "Some people may think this is something against the Catholic church, but it isn't really. It can be related to any oppression. I consider this a political blaw." RODRIQUES SAID the play had been banned at various times in Brazil, along with other plays, popular music and books. He also wrote a science fiction actor since the revolution in 1984, he said. "Since then, it has been difficult to talk openly," he said, "so the author found a metaphor to express his thoughts. "All of Gomes' plays are about social problems. He never writes something just for entertainment." "It took three months," he said. "I was This is the first staging of "O Santo Inquero" in the United States. Rodríguez said he received the playwright's permission to translate the play into English. TRANSLATION WAS difficult because of the subtleties of both languages, he said. Proper names in the play remain in PORTE, because there were no English equivalents. translating the second version of the play when the author sent me a third. I could almost have killed him. "I'm using English as a tool to help me achieve other goals. I had a native speaker help me to make the English proper." RODRIGUES STAGED the play with the rituals of the Catholic church in mind. Much of the blocking is based on scenes in religious paintings, he said. "The actors are very important," he said. "I'm not approaching this play realistically." The actors are on stage at all times, he said, and change roles during the play. The stage is barren and no props are used. Percussion instruments are played by the actors, and the music is patterned after Catholic hymns, he said. Rodríguez should the message of individual freedom should be accessible to anyone, despite the play's 18th century setting. "You can relate this to the time of McCarthy in your own country," she said. "This play is about a time of fear and suspicion spread in all countries at one time another." Rodríguez said the Brazilian ruler recently claimed that he would restore democratic rights to Brazilians. "But the people don't think it will happen," he said. "It's hard to live in a place where a sudden someone can come into your home and be under suspicion, and then take you away." "The 1964 revolution in Brazil was supported by the CIA, just like the situation with Allende in Chile. I don't think the American people know this, but they should." "I don't want to sound too hard. I'm a person, not a pamphlet. But I see a contradiction: the American people on one side, and the government on the other." ROODRIGUES SAID that freedom in America was abridged by a lack of complete information from other nations. If a "revolution occurs somewhere, you do not really know about it unless some person says so." When someone selects the information you receive, it is a subtle way to keep things the truth. Rodriguez has been in America for one and a half years. He has a degree in theater from the University of California, Grande de Sal. He directed several plays in Brazil, including Tennessee Williams"s "A Midsummer Night's Dream." sua films Presents "A TANTALIZING TEASE... for adults who've done a little living...a delight in the watching." Luis Buñuel's That Obscure Object Of Desire ("Cet Obscur Objet du Désir") R English Subtitles AFISAL Public Release Friday & Saturday, March 28-29 - No Friday Matinee 3:30, 7:00 & 9:30 pm $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium —No refreshments allowed— THOE SWEDISH SHOP Scandinavian Imports Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa GRAND OPENING - Unique Imported Gifts - Household Items Saturday, March 29 9:30-5:00 p.m. - Linens - Kitchen Utensils - Crystal & Stainless Steel - Wooden Beaded Jewelry from Finland - Pewter Pendants from Sweden from Finland - Coffee Warmers PLUS ORIGINAL SWEDISH CLOGS FOR WOMEN—8 STYLES By Lofsko M-W, Fri.—10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat.—10 a.m.-3 p.m. Thurs.—10 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun.—1 p.m.-5 p.m. "The store with a difference." sua films Midnight Movies CONTROL Will your school be NEXT? Rock'n'Roll High School featuring music by teaching music by Paul McCarthy and Winge & Minge - Mike Albin - Alice Cooper - Chuck Berry Ted Rustoff McCarthy - MC3 - Lee Jin - Alice Cooper - Bob Patterson - Santana - Fats Boy Mike Lowe - Leo Van - Kate Van - Bad Company - Beavis Allen - Drew Nelson Hunting P. J. ROSS • BEST SELLER • SHORT AND FAT PATTY • SLANT BOMBO • GET YOUR TREATS (THE NEW SERIES) OF THE HUNTING P. J. ROSS & CO. • 80% OFF ON EVERYTHING (EXCLUSIVE FROM STORE OR SUBSCRIPTION) • FREE POSTAGE TO USA • FAST DELIVERY • MULTIPLE CATEGORIES AVAILABLE Friday & Saturday, March 28-29 12:00 Midnight $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium —No refurbishments allowed --- 1 Friday, March 28, 1980 9 Divestiture tug of war continues University Daily Kansan By JUDITH LYNN HOWARD and DAVID WEED Staff Renorters For nearly two years, it has been a tug of war between the Kansas University Endowment and the North Carolina committee on South Africa. The Committee has sough a discussion on divestiture of the Association's investments in South African companies. The Association has refused. Yesterday, it was another standoff. The Committee attempted to speak with the Endowment Association president, Todd Seymour, to discuss divestiture and the future of the year 1978 investments by the Association. The Committee was told that Seymour was unavailable. "I had another important appointment," Seymour said. While the Committee tried to arrange an appointment with Seymour, the KU police were called to the Endowment Association office on West Campus. The Committee was accompanied by an exiled South African journalist, Dumanssa N. Mkushenga, who fled the United States and never had been accosted by police when to talk to university trustees "This reflects the attitude we're up against," he said. SEYMOUR SAID that the Association called the KU police to keep the peace and because of trespassing on private property Anita Chan, Committee member, said that the Committee would try again to meet with the Association. Seymour said it was unlikely that the Association would meet with the committee. Wednesday the Association issued a statement saying that it guaranteed the protection of its investments. If anyone wished to bring the Association policy to court, the statement THE ASSOCIATION issued a similar statement last year. Seymour said fear of lawsuits was preventing the Endowment Association from divesting its holdings in American companies in South Africa. Donors in the Endowment Association, Seymour said, could sue them for "jeopardizing maximum yield and security in investments." Seymour said he thought someone probably would sue if the Association were to divest. A REPORT on the Endowment Association's investments released this week by the KU Committee on South Africa and funded by the endowment from companies involved in South Afrika were lower than yields from other companies. The study said that the Association's average yield from stocks from companies involved in South Africa was 5.5 percent and the average yield from stocks from companies involved in South Africa was 5.9 percent. For bonds, the report said, the figures were a 7.8 percent yield from those involved and 8.9 percent from those not involved. These figures were for fiscal year 1978, which ended June 30, 1978. Bok King, member of KUY's report research committee, said KUY asked the Internal Revenue Service for figure for the amount of money spent months ago, but not yet received a reply. SEYMOUR DECLINED to comment on KU-Y report. The report also showed that 30 percent of the Endowment Association's corporate stocks and bonds were invested in companies with factories in South Africa. The association has $8.1 million invested in companies involved in South Africa, the United States and Europe in the International Business Machines Corp., $80,000 in the Exxon Corp., $725,000 in Phillips Petroleum Co. and $300,000 in the International Telephone and Telegraph公司. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus TODAY: There will be a ROTARY DISTRICT CONFERENCE all day in the ARTS AND HUMANITIES FILM SERIES "The River" brushwork" and "Chinese Music and Musical Instruments" at 9:30 a.m. in 303 Bailey Hall and at 2:30 p.m. in the IAP. Meet with our teachers from RESOURCES CENTER JOB CLUB will meet at 10 a.m. at 13th and Oread. BUROPACE ENGINEERING BUROPACE HIMAT" at 3:30 p.m. in Room 314 Wesco THE KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF IN-WORKERS AND THE WOMEN'S TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIPS will be at the Allen Field House courts. The UNDERGRADEMAT ANTHROPOLOGY COLLEGE and the WOMEN'S TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIPS Disaster Trends and Their Implications, a talk by a visiting professor, at 3:38 p.m. in FORRESMAN SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART will hold a reception for Patrick Ireland at 3 p.m. The BKU BOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room in TONIGHT: Keynote speaker for the Area Conference of MECHA will be JERRY APODCDA 8:17:30 in the Forum Room in the Union. There will be an OBSERVATORY on the Women's Center in Jindal Hall The WOMEN'S center is located in Rosenbeth Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Yale University, on "Power and Powerlessness in Organization" at 230 Room 1138 Westborough University Singers will be at 8 a.m in Saworth Bay University Singers will be at 8 a.m in CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will be part of it in the International Room in the Union. The performance of "O Santo Inquorio (The Songs of Life)" will start at 8 a.m in the William Jae Theatre. TOMORROW: Auditions for the RUTHERFORD REPERTERY THEATRE summer camp. Presented by University Theatre. A conference on "Women at Work." sponsored by the Adult Life Resource Center and the KU Women's Conference Room of the Satellite Union. An ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA Convention will be held in REGIONAL CONFERENCE OF PLI ALPHA THETA, a holiday honor society, continues all day in the union. The KU BASELBAL TEAM plays North Dakota State University at that starts at 1 p.m. at Quietley Field. Cancer checkup advice updated The American Cancer Society has recently changed its guidelines for cancer checkups, recommending less request tests, and changing the director for the society in Kansas City, Kan. The director, Sidney Karr, said the society had recommended a cancer-related health checkup for persons over 20 three years, but the new guidelines were divided into different age groups and diseases—cervical, breast, color-recal and lung. The guidelines for checking for cancer of the cervix call for women under 40 to have a Pap test. Women over 30 should take three years after first having a negative test two consecutive years. Women older than 40 should have a Pap test. Women should have one baseline mammogram between 35 and 40. Women between 20 and 40 should have a breast examination. Women should conduct a self-examination monthly. Men and women older than 50 should have a guaiac slide and a sigmoidoscopic examination every three to five years to check for cancer of the colon. Karr said American Cancer Society made no specific recommendations on how often people should be tested for lung cancer. CRAFTING WORKSHOP New Additions zipalone® Let us help you get your art materials organized. Now you can own your own zipatone storage system when you purchase zipatone products. For details, contact your zipatone dealer; open 9-5:30 Mon-Sat master charge massive charge pen&,inc. art supplies 623 vermont 841-1777 V754 Presenting Corn's Studio of Beauty Linda Specializes in Haircuts for both Men & Women Specials cut, shampoo, blow dry Reg. $15™ NOW $9¥ We carry REDKEN hair and skin products 9th & Vermont manicure Reg. $5^{50}$ NOW $3^{50}$ sua films Present PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather PART II Al Pacino Robert Duvall Diane Keaton Robert De Niro Talia Shire Margana King John Cazale Mariana Hill Lee Strasberg Francis Ford Coppola Marie Pizza 'The Guildfather' Maria Puzzle Francis Ford Coppola Erick Friderickson Fred Rose Nina Date Sunday, March 30 2:00 pm - 5:00 Woodruff Auditorium No refreshments allowed illustrations cartoons artwork logos creative illustrations phone—841-7650 S Seafood Platter $2.75 Delicate Flavored Seafood and Fish complimented with Homemade French Fries & Cole Slaw CITY OF BARRIE Served Each Friday, 5 PM - 9:30 PM 23rd & Iowa Holiday Inn Bucky's Bucky's introduces . . . CHEF'S SALAD Now at Bucky's, refreshing CHEF'S SALAD-crisp lettuce, tomatoes, and onion topped with ham, cheese, and eggs. We serve it up fresh with crackers and our own house dressing. It's a deal you can't afford to miss! only 96¢ FREE After hearing March 28 - 7:30 p.m. - 3199 Wescoe Rosabeth Moss Kanter Power and Liveness in Organization FREE After Hearing March 28 - 7:30 p.m. - 3139 Wescoe Rosabeth Moss Kanter "Power and Powerlessness in Organizations" Come listen to presentations and information regarding the participation of women in the workforce WOMEN AT WORK Conference Room, Satellite Union University of Kansas Lawrence, KS Saturday, March 29 Wednesday, 8:30 a.m. b. Albright-Oggettman Segregation c. Baruch Sheehan-Labor Force Participation d. Murray Linden-Letterism e. Robert Cuney-information Desk by Adah Lee Re f. Nicole Cunei-Female Women, Women Engage g. and Universities-Counseling Center h. Career Resources Center FREE Saturday, March 29 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. S. Atticus' Occupational Negotiation / Bristol Career Centre for Employers / Career Centre for Employers / Career Centre for Employers Carrier Centre for Employers by Adrian Lee Use the Free Fee to attend the Career Centre University Placement Center and Career Centre University Placement Center and Career Centre University Placement Center FREE Tonight Only Opera House Productions Presents In Concert FEDERAL BANDS John Mayall with Lawrence's own USED PARTS Tickets available at the door ★★★ Tomorrow Night Polydor recording artists 999 with A&M recording artists THE DICKIES Tickets available at the door only 999 **Coming Soon** March 29--999 & the Dickens April New York Erotic Film Festival 4-5 'PAT'S BLUE RIDIM BAND' 6-8 KY102 Air Car 8-12 KY102 Air Car 9-12 Opera House Fund Raiser feature 10 USED PARTS, PBR, PUR, USED PARTS, Jazz etc. 11 "An exercise in poor taste" PINK FILM BLUES AT THE TWELVE TROUBLES 12 "THE SECRETS" 13 "RIVERED AT THE WHEEL/w" 14 "RIVERED AT THE WHEEL/w" 15—LONNIE BROOKS BLUES BAND $4.75 gen $3.50 students & members Where else but the . . . Lawrenceville Opera house Call for contact: 811.430.5252 --- 10 Friday, March 28, 1980 University Daly Kansan Kansas quakes are on the rise By DON MUNDAY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Despite a drop in the number of earthquake events last year, Kansas followed a trend set by the rest of the nation to lift its average quake activity in 1979 over the previous year. "There were a few more in Kansas last year," said Don Steeple of the Kansas Geological Survey, which has been building up of seismic stations across the state. EIGHTEN EARTHIQUAKEES in Kansas last year, compared with 10 in 1978. But part of the increase could be due to an improvement in recording stations in Kansas. Steeples said. The strongest quake was recorded on June 30 and occurred near the Tuttle Creek Reservoir near Manhattan. At 3.1 on Saturday, a magnitude 7.5 earthquake in Kansas in more than two years, Steeple said. It was also probably the only one felt by Kansans last year. "It's got to get up to about a magnitude 3 in a populated area before you start getting reports," he said. "A 3 in a populated area will generally be felt." A magnitude 3 quake will rattle dishes and windows and can be noticed indoors. Below magnitude 2, it usually takes sensitive instruments to pick up the tremors. “Still, there was a last year that was felt by some people in Nebraska, and one in southern Oklahoma once was noticed and it was only a 1.3,” he said. Eight quakes of magnitude 2 or higher were pinpointed in Kansas, nearly all occurring in June, July and August. The 31st day one was followed the next day by a quake. MOST OF THE recorded earthquakes occurred in the northern half of the state, with almost none occurring west of Great The Kansas stations also recorded a number of minor quakes occurring in September 1978. On one day, five quakes, ranging from 1 to 2.7, occurred just north of Norton and Decatur Depth of the Kansas quakes ranged from less than half a mile below the surface to more than 11 miles underground. Almost all occurred within three miles of the surface. Worldwide, there were 58 quakes at magnitudes over 6.5 last year, four fewer than in 1978, according to a 1979 U.S. Geological Survey report. The number of earthquake-related deaths across the globe plumbed from more than 15,000 in 1978 to only 1479 last year. No data was available for other years in the United States during 1978, however. THE STRONEGEST QUAKE recorded in the world last year hit Indonesia in September and measured 8.1. The highest death toll from an earthquake last year occurred in December when at least 600 were killed along the coast of Columbia and Ecuador. Alaska and California had the strongest earthquakes that hit California in Imperial Valley was the worst earthquake in the continental United States since the San Fernando, Calif., quake in 2014. The worst quake ever reported in Kansas happened near Manhattan in 1867 and has been estimated at a magnitude 3. That same quake was comparable for smaller quakes for more than 100 years. The increased number of earthquakes recorded in Kansas last year, however, can be traced in part to several more earthquakes already been added to the network, Stepsley said. In early 1978 the survey had six Kansas stations reporting, and from mid-1978 until early March 1979 it had nine. Now, he said, there are 13 stations checking seismic activity in Kansas, four of them in the western part of the state. More recently, he said, as funding becomes available. 50¢ 50¢ Just one sandwich...it's that good! Schlotzsky's 23rd & Iowa 843-3700 SANDWICH SHOPS Phone in and carry out 11-9 Mon.-Thurs. 50¢ OFF on a Schlotzsky 11-11 Fri.Sat. 12-9 Sun. Present This Coupon at Time of Purchase Expires 4/4/80 Schlotzsky's Schlotzsky's 23rd & Iowa SANDWICH SHOPS 11-9 Mon., Thurs. 50' OFF on a Schlotzsky 11-41 Fri., Sat. 12-9 Sun. Present This Coupon at Time of Purchase 843-3700 Phone in and carry out Expires 4/4/80 The Undergraduate Anthropology Assoc. presents "Natural Disaster Trends and Their Implications." a talk by Visiting Professor, Dr. Kinshaw Friday, March 28 3:30 p.m. Council Room of the Union Movie: "The First Signs of Washoe." with comments by Dr. Frayee and Dr. Yamamoto Monday, March 31 3:30 p.m. Council Room of the Union Funded by Student Activity Fees. Weaver's Inc. Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857 ENTIRE STOCK DESIGNER JEANS 20% OFF One Day Only! Saturday, March 29th • Gloria Vanderbilt • Calvin Klein • Diane Von Furstenberg • High Fashion Styling • A Superb Fit • Denims, Cords, Twills • Denim blue, White, Pastels • Sizes 4 to 16. Sportswear—1st Floor [9TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS] Weaver's Inc. Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857 ENTIRE STOCK DESIGNER JEANS 20% OFF One Day Only! Saturday, March 29th • Gloria Vanderbilt • Calvin Klein • Diane Von Furstenberg • High Fashion Styling • A Superb Fit • Denims, Cords, Twills • Denim blue, White, Pastels • Sizes 4 to 16. Sportswear—1st Floor * Sizes 4 to 16. Sportswear—1st Floor ATTENTION! ATTENTION! Due to popular demand 20th Century-Fox presents the original... MASH Roar once again with the original movie cast... Donald Sutherland Elliott Doull Jo Ann Phigl Robert Davall Sally Killerman MASH An Ingo Pringer Production Re returned by Color by DELUXE "PANAVISION" Donald Sutherland Elliott Gould Jo Ann Flug Robert Dowley Salty Kellerman Be released by MUTUAL FOX 20TH YEAR NEVER FOX Midnight Delight! Show starts 12 midnight Fri. and Sat. Varsity Downtown 843-1065 W.C. & Me Pizza 544 W.23rd St. 841-6181 Winston Churchill We sell no Pizza before it's time. W.C. says "It's Now time for the whole wheat deep dish pizza." A truly delectable delicacy. The "Deepest" in town. Miss JANUARY Miss JANUARY JAIME LYN BAUER is Young and Restless in the Centerfold Girls STARRING ALDO RAY TIFANY BOLLING RAY DANTON JAME LYN BAUER ANDREW PRINE Two nights only! Fri. & Sat. 12:15 Doors open 12:00 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 Custodians reject AMS removal plan By GREG SACKUVICH Staff Reporter A University of Kansas Medical Center plan to phase out American Management Services from its housekeeping department. The university has been rejected by the custodians' union. A second plan that would phase out AMS over a six-month period also has been mentioned to Mike McCready, the team leader, that plan also was rejected by McCready. "We aren't buying it," Francis Jacobs, president of the Public Service Employees Union, said yesterday. "I can't see why they have to take so long to get back on the job, especially since they knew five months ago they weren't going to renew AMS." The plans would remove six persons from the Med Center housekeeping department—three supervisors, the management director and two assistant directors. These six people are all employees of AMS, not the Med Center. Jacobs said. UNDER THE PLAN, the Med Center would assume direct control of its housekeeping department after AMS is phased out. Jacobs said. There have been complaints of alleged AMS harassment of the custodians, he said, and the Union would like the Med to remove AMS as soon as possible. "We don't actually approve the contents of the contract, but we do have to ok them," Mr. Alma said. "There are problems on one side, we try to see the other side aware of the problems." AMS had a housekeeping contract with KU on the Lawrence campus, but it was not renewed when it expired last November. If there is an impasse in the negotiations between the Med Center and the American Medical Association, and Reports may become a mediator, Patrick Hurley, secretary of ad-hoc committees at the Med Center, may become a mediator. (Advertisement) Dav 5 Fridav. March 28 Paddy Murphy Dies on Panamanian Operating Table The Men of Sigma Alpha Epialsonaily report the tragic death of Paddy Morphy in Panama. Paddy had been missing all week, his whereabouts unknown. Investigations have revealed that Paddy went to Panama to donate his spleen to an unidentified, ailing Iranian government official. Dr. J. Cameroonio Arnoldo at the PECRA Hospital confirmed the report, "Si senior, Padley showed up and volunteered his organ. He even brought his own anesthesia, a gallion of 30 ml, to help with the blood transfusion needed by a blood transfusion halfway through. One of the nurses forgot to use the blood hot water. It was a tragic mistake, but it may be for the purpose of purge into his system killed him. It was a tragic mistake, but it may be for the purpose of purge into his system killed him. The Men of Sigma Alpha Epion request that all donations be sent to the Institute for the Morally Depraved. A special service will be held Saturday evening prior to the intern meeting. --- francis 1. 343-4191 731 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 66044 sporting goods DUDLEY softballs play balll with ASA official To lay down your groundwork of unfloppable team gear, leaf *ASA approved specifications * molded cork core * life, shape and firmness guarantee - top-grade leather covers *ASA approved specifications off with Dudley softballs, a solid hit toward a winning season. - red stitched nite and day colors $4.25 eoch $48.00 dozen ORIGINAL Russell Wright ROTTICAL SUPPONDED ASA "Sporty things for sporty people" FOR LEADERS ONLY The Associated Students of Kansas, the statewide student lobby organization, has an opening for CAMPUS DIRECTOR at KU. Only students with an interest in politics and with organizational and leadership abilities need apply. The Campus Director, paid by ASK, is responsible for organizing and coordinating all lobbying activities at KU. Applicants should have a knowledge of campus and state issues. Lobbying experience would be helpful. Applications and more information about ASK are available at the Student Senate Office, 105B in the Kansas Union. Return applications to the Senate Office by 5p.m. Monday, Mar. 31. The Associated Students of Kansas ask ask Students Working for Students --- Friday, March 28, 1984 11 Labor Force Summary TOTAL 34,300 35,100 32,700 32,900 34,000 31,500 University Daily Kansan TOTAL 34,300 35,100 32,700 EMPLOYED 32,900 34,000 31,500 FARM 600 600 600 NONFARM 32,300 33,400 30,900 UNEMPLOYED 1,400 1,100 1,200 RATE 4.1 3.1 3.7 Jan. 1980 Jan. 1979 Dec. 1979 Figures are for Douglas County. EMPLOYED 32,900 34,000 31,500 FARM 600 600 600 NONFARM 32,300 33,400 30,900 Where economy comes first 843-2931 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 Alabama 650-775-4344 - Rentals start at $7.95 a day plus mileage * Free pick-up and delivery * A choice of any three economy modeled Toyotes Chevettes Firebirds LTD Wagons Mazdas Pintos Cutlass Trucks Contrib to the national trend, unemployment and crime. Lawrence in particular, is on the rise, according to figures released by the Kansas Department of Human Resources last year. Unemployment rising in area --available." He said with an aroused public the Supreme Court might reverse its 5-4 decision in the DePasquale case. In the February edition of the monthly Labor Market Review, the department reported that total employment in Lawrence had shipped 2 percent from December 1797 to January 1808. However, the department figures are up 4 percent from a year ago. National unemployment figures have remained at 6.1 per cent for about a year. The largest drop in employment occurred in construction. Completion of several major projects in Lawrence caused the construction industry to experience a job Service Center, said yesterday. "The employment figures fluctuate and depend on the economy," Mills said. "Much of it is seasonal. Our unemployment will go up in spring, and more of graduating students into the iok market." "Employment in the construction field in the summer, and the completion of major projects. Right now there are no major projects to take the place of completed ones." Construction at the University is fairly steady, Mills said, but most other workwork on the city water plant, the new city hall, the bridges over the Kansas River, is a local chemical plant and work at area shopping centers—is nearly finished. "The money is not the important thing." Neuthar said. "The issue is." Neuharth communities which did not have the power and money to fight back. He said many judges across the country were taking a cue from the Supreme Court and barring the press and public from pretrial hearings. He called it a "terrible mistake" in that the danger was not necessarily for big companies like Gannett, but for papers in small HE SAID much his concern came from attending the recent First Amendment Congress in Philadelphia. At the Congress, George Gallup, public opinion analyst, asked that 75 percent of Americans did not know what was contained in the First Amendment. who, after the Communist Revolution in Russia, said that the press should be limited and that it should not criticize inherited that is about the Critique. Neatha that said 60 percent of the world followed Lenin's philosophy of a limitedness. "There are many in the system and in the government that would choose to ignore Jefferson's idea." he said. Neutharth also drew two contrasting views on freedom of the press. He quoted Thomas Jefferson as saying that freedom of the press is essential to a free society. Neutharth said this in contrast to Lenin, From page one NEUUARTH CALLED for the people and the press to guard First Amendment freedoms every day from "the front page to the classroom to the closing of the classroom." Census ... 2406 Iowa In return, the law assures that all answers to census questions remain confidential. From nage one In the modern bureaucratic era, census data also provide guidelines for the distribution of federal funds to state and local governments and for the disbursement Federal law requires that all U.S. residents respond to the census, and failure to comply may result in fines ranging from $100 to $500. Service Board and the Department of Immigration and Naturalization, has access to individual census forms. They may only receive reports of area totals compiled by Friday and Saturday STUDENTS SHOULD be truthful in filling out their census forms. Lovd said. No city, state or federal office, including the Internal Revenue Service. the Selective OFFICIALS BLAUMED complex questionnaires and poor supervision of census takers for the serious undercount of minorities during the 1970 census. The population that it missed 24 percent of the population in that year, or about 5.3 million people. since its conception by the delegates to the Constitutional Convention in 1787; to provide the basis for fair apportionment of seats in the House of Respectives. The city only is interested in getting the most accurate census count possible, Loyd said. "Students could be living 20 to a room and violating a housing code," he said. "But the information won't get into the hands of the people who could do something about it." The U.S. Census Bureau has faced attacks in the past for its failure to obtain complete census figures. DO'S DELUXE BOSTON MAXX BH-22314 In 1970, the year of the last national census, Lawrence had 45,698 residents. An update last year showed that the population had increased to 58,561. PINA COLADA SPECIAL HEADQUARTERS FOR THESIS BINDING COPYING This is our Fifteenth Year of helping K.U. students with their Thesis copying and binding Please let us help you! 10% DISCOUNT ON THE THESIS BINDING WHEN WE DO THE COPYING With This Coupon Expires April 7, 1980 — We Meet OR Beat The Deadline — HOUSE OF USHER 838 MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • (913)842-3610 cuddle at THE HUDDLE THE HUDDLE Lawrence's MOST INTIMATE PRIVATE Club Enjoy Friendly Atmosphere and Great Drinks New Members Welcome lemon tree eleven west ninth sandwich, burger and yogurt shop featuring Famous Submarine Sandwiches Buy a full size submarine sandwich, Get a yogurt cone-FREE!! Offer good: Wed.-Sun. March 26-30 A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD The Kansas University School of Architecture and Urban Design is pleased to announce an Exhibition of Student Projects scheduled to be on display in the fall semester 2015. Students as well as past student work (the earliest dating circa 1925) will represent the high degree of design excellence stressed within the School. Presentation drawings and scale models will be integrated in the show to create the best of the School's pedagogic productions. 经络 EXHIBIT The University of Kansas KANSAS REPERTORY THEATRE announces its 1980 SUMMER THEATRE AUDITIONS Company Auditions 10:30 a.m. Saturday, March 29 University Theatre Community Auditions: 12:30 p.m. Sunday, March 30 University Theatre Callbacks 7:00 p.m. nightly Summer Season: THE MUSIC MAN/HOTEL PARADISO/UANN HAMPTON LAVERTY OBERLANDER A summer company of 28-35 students will be selected Company auditions open to all KU students About 10-20 community & KU staff people will be selected to perform in THE MUSIC MAN Accompanist will be provided for musical Cold reading material will be provided For further information, call the University Theatre, 864-3981 FREE GAS Purchase ANYTHING over $100 on sale or otherwise, and we will credit you $7.50 to pay for your gas. This amount represents the average cost of fuel round trip from Lawrence to Kansas City. Offer ends April 30th. ONE COUPON PER PERSON PER DAY KANSAS CITY, MO. 5402 N.E. ANTIOCH RD. 452-3282 INDEPENDENCE, MO. 4309 S.E. NOLAND RD. 373-7030 OVERLAND PARK, KS. 8787 METCALF RD. 341-1787 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 2756 O ST. 475-7484 OMAHA, NEBRASKA 8014 W.DOODGE RD. 392-0360 YOU'RE ALL INVITED TO A PARTY 5402 N.E. Antioch Rd. Kansas City North, Mo. GRAND OPENING Come and see our big new store and help us celebrate. While you're there see all the new and exciting stereo equipment. SUNDAY NOON TILL 9 PM SUNDAY NOON TILL 9 PM - FREE T-SHIRTS TO THE FIRST 500 CUSTOMERS. DOORS OPEN NOON SUNDAY. - FREE PEPSI FOR ALL. - FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES. - FREE LITERATURE. TM - SUPER SALE PRICES. AudioProfessionals 12 Friday, March 28.1980 University Daily Kansan Javhawks face hectic schedule By KEN DAVIS Sports Writer What do you do when you're scheduled to play eight games in four days with only a seven-member pitching staff? While panic builds, the team is determined. Kansas baseball coach, has found another Temple eliminated two games from the hectic KU schedule. The Jayhawks were slated for double-headers tomorrow, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Tempel's new schedule has KU slated for only six games, less if the weather doesn't cooperate. The Jayhawks begin their Quigley Field diamond marathon at 1 p.m. tomorrow, facing North Dakota State in a doubleheader. KU will host Kearney State at 1 p.m. on Sunday in one nine-inning game. The Jayhawkers will oppose Missouri Western in a 1:3 p.m. double-header on Monday. The Emporia State game rounds up with Missouri at 5 p.m. on Tuesday with another single game. "When I made the schedule up I had nine pitchers in mind—not seven." Temple said yesterday. "But I decided we couldn't play that many games. I just didn't want to help them, so I took a break season, you don't want to hurt them by bringing them back without rest." TEMPLE SAID that Mike Watt, 1-2, and David Hicks, 1-0, would hit the mound for KU tomorrow if the games aren't can- If plants aren't spoiled by inclement weather, Temple he said he would start Randy McIntosh, 34; and Clayton Fleenor, 12; on Monday and Jim Philips, 54; on Tuesday. called because of rain. Kurt Kaifes, 2-0, will open the Sunday game. Temple will be left with only Mitch Lubin for bulpen duty. Lubin had been scheduled for an earlier start this week, but rain had curbed the cancellation of KU's (twin) wash in shoulder. "If you have a 10- or 12-man pitching staff, you can 'dam' dawn near every day," she added. "The couple of games with risk an injury. We're already flirting with disaster at our other WITH AN 18-man roster, KU can't afford many injuries. Several players have minor injuries already. Temple's main concern recently has been Juan Ramon, a catcher. Ramon pulled a hamstring last week but is ready to return to action. Temple said. Ramon is leading Community College transfer, is leading the Averyhawks in hitting with a 439 average. Wet field conditions this week have forced the Jayhawks' worksouts to be held inside Allen Field House, a situation that Temple isn't happy with. "it's going to hurt us if we have to stay in here very long." Terme said. Kansas, 134, will put a seven-game winning streak on the line. McRae's home run lifts KC past Cards ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)—Hal Mcae raced a two-homer in the sixth innings and Dennis Leonard, Gary Buehrle combined to pick a five-hitter to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 2-1 exhibition win over the St. Louis Cardinals yesterday. Mrae connected for his home run after a lead doubled by the Royal's U.L. Washington off St. Louis right-hander in a split, each pitched six innings, as did Leonard. The Cards' lone run came in the bottom of the sixth. Ken Oberkellf singled with two men out and then circled the bases on Keith Hernandez* double to left-center. But Leonard fanned Ted Simmons to end the uprising. Christensen came in and pitched two scorers innings, and mislead the final of five F. Louis hits in the 8th. MMcRae had three of the Royals nine hits. They improved their exhibition record to 7.6. The Cards are now 7-8. Boznango sheds pounds, gains confidence By PATTI ARNOLD Sports Writer Time has changed Gay Boznango, the catcher on the KU softball team. Three years ago, Bonnango, or Bosz, was born in New York. He was a hardy cutter who was 48 with joy. Bonnango is still 5-2, but since her first year she has shed more than 25 pounds and only a few hours a day. "WHEN I WAS a freshman, I didn't even know when I was on the bus! I tasted of fat when I sat down on it contributing all I could to the team. Once I lost the weight I felt better. I have more energy. I feel better." "Now I don't feel like I would ever be too tired to catch. They have to drag me out before I would say I was too tired to play." Not only has Boznango's attitude about playing changed, her catching skills have improved also. Last year Bozmango did not allow a passable ball and had a 1,000 fielding average. But that glossy statistic wasn't always that high. During Bozonga's freshman year, Paula Woolworth was KU's catatcher. But on the annual spring swing South, Woolworth hurt her ankles and Bozango was forced into action. “WHEN PAILA GOT HURT, the first two innings I never even caught the ball, it just kept falling out of my glove.” Borrando was so excited. “I got there times and never even touched the ball.” it seemed Boznango wasn't a threat at the plate last year, unless she was behind it Bronnago's batting average was 167 in the 41 games she played last year, and Stannoff used a designated hitter for her right-handed pitching. She put the bat back in Bronnago's hands, and she has hit .216 through the first two weeks of this season. In addition to her improved batting average, Boznango has proved she can ease the tension of a tuff game with a woke. "I JOKE A lot," she said. "That's the reason I play, to have fun. We're close we can say. 'Boy, what a power hitter, when we hit a little dribler. If I'm down, I want this for me. Usually it the way I play, it's something wrong, everybody barks at me." Catchers often lead the team, but Boznango sees her job as directing cutoff throws from the outfield and pitching pitches. "The pitcher has to work hard enough to make each pitch work," she said. "My job is to get the pitch out of the air and I have to diagnose the hitter and decide what pitch would get her out of ground, pop it and throw it." Norman, Okla., has been a place where KU players have been constantly injured. Stanickt said earlier this week that he was glad KU got out of the Sooner tournament last year and ended the last year. Stanickt had to leave his catcher in a Norman hospital with a conclusion. BOZNANGO, HOWEVER, remembers nothing about it. "If I ever get hit or hurt, someone will ask me, 'Where are you?', but I don't remember that whole tournament," she said. But the team remembered, and a rivalry developed between KU and Oklahoma State, whose player collided with Bozomango. But Boznango said she felt no animosity toward the plaver. "I found out she was really gun-shy about sliding," Boz said. "She had hurt her leg and that's why she crashed into me." Being 5-2 and playing catcher, Borrango is subject to injury. But she insisted she was not worried about bigger players coming into home. "I THINK ABOUT it more now that I've lost weight," she said. "I used to sit back and dare anybody to blow me back off the plate. I've got the advantage on them with what I've gotten. When I'm down and they're in danger, all of us have their腿 and I can block them out." Boznango is a carefree person who is at KU to have a good time as well as to get her degree in Occupational Therapy. As a memoirist of softball team, she is getting KANSAS Gay Boznango The Library Sunday Brunch Buffet 11 am to 2 pm Level 2 $4.50 Includes Beverages! Make Sunday Special! LEVEL 2 KANSAS UNION U THE KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE The University of Kansas Office of Minority Affairs/ MECHA Presents Jerry Apodaca I 7:30 p.m., Friday, March 28, 1980 Forum Room, Kansas Union Former Governor of New Mexico Outlook for the '80s A Hispanic Perspective Soccer club hosts eight-team tourney Free Admission Sponsored in Conjuption with the Statewide MECHA Conference/ March 28-29/ Kansas Union/ The University of Kansas. Memorial Stadium will switch sports on Saturday in football and track in springtime, the stadium will host the Jayhawk Invitational soccer tournament tomorrow. The games tomorrow will be divisional round robin, with each team playing two teams from each division will advance to a four team single-elimination tournament on Sunday. The game is at 1:39 p.m. and the finals at 3. Kansas State, Valley Soccer Club of Des Moines, Iowa, and the Wichita Wheathaws. KU's squad will play its first game of the tournage at 10 a.m. tomorrow against Rockhurst. The Jayhawks will play again at noon and 4 p.m. The tourney will begin at 8 a.m. and will continue with 10 games tomorrow and six more, including the finals, on Sunday. The eight-team field will be divided into two divisions. Division one will include Central Missouri State, Colorado State, and Indiana Division two will include Iowa State, Goldnecker Optical 742 Massachusetts • 842-5208 blowing up the '70's ALL 1979 PRESCRIPTION EYEGLASS STYLES 30% off our regular low price ASK THEM WHY Ask a Peace Corps volunteer why he teaches business Akase APA Corps volunteer why he teaches business marketing techniques to vegetable farmers in Costa Rica. Ask a VISTA volunteer why she organizes the rural poor in Arkansas to set-up food co-ops. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, be involved in social change, may travel, learn a new language or experience another culture. Ask them. SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CARPENTI- LEARY BEFORE APRIL 2, 1980. PEACE RPS VISTA Women golfers rained out John Weltner, assistant sports information director, said yesterday that he The women's golf season got off to a fast start in Texas. The women traveled south to compete in the Sam Houston Invitational, but the first round of competition was rained was unsure as to whether the teams would make up the round or if the tournament would be cut short. Coach Sandy Bahan said she was unsure how her team would fare in the tournament. "Texas golf is a whole different game because of the hard-pan courses," she said. "We'll have to really be on our short game." Dam run tomorrow All participants will run at the same time, with those entered in the short race dropping out at the 6.5 mile mark. The hearter runners will run 13 miles. There are four Some will wear old tennis shoes and some will wear running shoes, but all will be ready to run tomorrow in the KU Recreational Services' second annual Dam Run. The race will begin at 7 a.m. on Monday. TGIF at THE HAWK Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints IMPORTS • IMPORTS • IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS • IMPORTS 738 MASS. 9:30-8:00 M-S Thurs. ill 8:30 p.m. Interest in the race has grown since last year, Irene Gershoff, director of individual events for Rec Services, said. divisions, men and women's 39-and-under and men and women's 40-and-older. The top three runners in each group will receive the all participants will receive a T-shirt. "Last there were 180 runners, but this year we have already registered 250 and expect more than 300 with late registration," she said. Anyone interested in registering late may drop their day from the list to be fetched at $7. Please also register last registrants. Early entrants paid $4. Businesses will contribute giftes and businesses will contribute giftes. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS Part Size 1209 East 12nd 841-2900 For Easter A Small Leather Clutch Spring Colors $18.00 Open Evenings & Sunday Holiday Plaza BAG SHOP MASS. STREET DELI 901 MASSACHUSETTS MISS. STREET DELI OAK MASSACHUSETTS HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL $1.50 reg. $2.00 Wed. thru Sun., March 26 to 30 Enjoy Coke No coupons accepted with this offer Eatin Coke No coupons accepted with this offer ( Friday, March 28.1980 University Daily Kansan 11 Labor Force Summary EMPLOYED 32,900 34,000 31,500 TOTAL 34,300 35,100 32,700 EMPLOYED 32,900 34,000 31,500 FARM 600 600 600 NONFARM 32,300 33,400 30,900 UNEMPLOYED 1,400 1,100 1,200 RATE 4.1 3.1 3.7 Jan. 1980 Jan. 1979 Dec. 1979 Figures are for Douglas County. - Over 15 years in the business Where economy comes first 843-2931 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 Alabama Lawrence, Kansas 66044 - Rentals start at $75 a day plus mileage * * Free pick-up and delivery * * A choice of any of these economi minded cars Toyotas Chevettes Firebirds LTD Wagons Mazdas Pintos Curtiss Trucks Contrary to the national trend, unemployment rates have risen in Lawrence in particular, is on the rise, according to figures released by the Kansas Department of Human Resources last week. --who, after the Communist Revolution in Russia, said that the press should be limited and that it should not criticize. Unemployment rising in area In the February edition of the monthly Labor Market Review, the department reported that total employment in Lawrence had slipped 2 percent from January 1980 to January 1980. However, January 1980 employment figures are up 4 percent from a year ago. National unemployment figures have remained at 6.1 percent for about a year. The largest drop in employment occurred in construction. Completion of several projects in Lawrence caused the law firm to leave Lawrence Job Service Center, said yesterday. "The employment figures fluctuate and depend on the economy," Mills said. "Much of it is seasonality. Our unemployment will go up with graduation of graduating students into the job market." "Employment in the construction field in the area is dependent upon the factors the season presents for completion of major projects. Right now there are no major projects to take the place of completed ones." Construction at the University is fairly steady, Mills said, but most other work hall on the city water plant, the new city bridge, the bridges over the Kansas River, at a local chemical plant and work at area shopping centers—is nearly finished. communities which did not have the power and money to fight back. Neutharth said 60 percent of the world followed Lenin's philosophy of a limited press. available." He said that with an aroused public the Supreme Court might reverse its 5-4 decision in the DePasquale case. HE SAID much of his concern came from attending the recent First Amendment Congress in Philadelphia. At the Congress, George Gallup, public opinion analyst, said that 75 percent of Americans did not know what was contained in the First Amendment. "There are many in the system and in the government that would choose to ignore Jefferson's idea," he said. He said many judges across the country were taking a cue from the Supreme Court and barring the press and public from pretrial hearing. He called it a 'terrible mistake'. But that danger was not necessarily for big companies like Gannett, but for papers in small "The money is not the important thing," Neuharth said. "The issue is." NEUHARA CALLED for the people and the press to guard First Amendment freedoms every day from "the front page to the bottom" in the classroom to the closing of the classroom." Neuharth ... 2406 Iowa From page one Neuthar also drew two contrasting vies—on freedom of the press. He quoted Thomas Washington, who accused the教室 of not pressed could not be limited while Neuthar said this was in contrast to Lenin. Friday and Saturday cuddle at PINA COLADA SPECIAL Census ... In return, the law assures that all answers to census questions remain confidential. THE HUDDLE The U.S. Census Bureau has faced attacks in the past for its failure to obtain complete census figures. In the modern bureaucratic era, census data also provide guidelines for the distribution of federal funds to state and local governments and for the disbursement of state revenue. The city only is interested in getting the most accurate census count possible, Loyd said. No city, state or federal office, including the Internal Revenue Service, the Selective OFFICIALS BLAEMED complex questionaires and poor supervision of census takers for the serious undercount of minorities during the 1970 census. The population that it missed 2.5 percent of the population in that year, or about 3.8 million people. Service Board and the Department of Immigration and Naturalization, has access to individual census forms. The may only be accessed at area totals compiled by the Census Bureau. From page one Federal law requires that all U.S. residents respond to the census, and failure to comply may result in fines ranging from $100 to $200. STUDENTS SHOULD be truthful in filling out their census forms. Loved said. DO'S DELUXE BOCA 14 FAMILY 8PM-2:20PM "Students could be living 20 to a room and violating a housing code," he said. "But the information won't get into the hands of the people who could do something about it." since its conception by the delegates to the Constitutional Convention in 1787; to provide the basis for fair apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives. In 1970, the year of the last national census, Lawrence had 45,698 residents. An update last year showed that the population had increased to 58,561. Enjoy Friendly Atmosphere and Great Drinks THE HUDDLE HEADQUARTERS FOR THEISM BINDING COPYING This is our Fifteenth Year of helping K.U. students with their Thesis copying and binding Please let us help you! 10% DISCOUNT ON THEISM BINDING WHEN WE DO THE COPYING With This Coupon — Expires April 7, 1980 We Meet OR Beat The Deadline HOUSE OF USHER 538 MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60044 • (913) 842-3610 Lawrence's MOST INTIMATE PRIVATE Club New Members Welcome lemon tree eleven west ninth sandwich, burger and yogurt shop featuring Famous Submarine Sandwiches 1cm Buy a full size submarine sandwich, Get a yogurt cone-FREE!! Offer good: Wed.-Sun. March 26-30 A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD A+ UD 营销 The Kansas University School of Architecture and Urban Design is pleased to announce an Exhibition of Student Projects scheduled to be on display in the fall semester. The projects will be as well as past student work (the earliest dating circa 1925) will represent the high degree of design excellence stressed within the School. Presentation drawings and scale models will be integrated in the show to create the best of the School's pedagogic productions. EXHIBIT The University of Kansas KANSAS REPERTORY THEATRE announces its 1980 SUMMER THEATRE AUDITIONS Company Auditions 10:30 a.m. Saturday, March 29 University Theatre Community Auditions: 12:30 p.m. Sunday, March 30 University Theatre Callbacks 7:00 p.m. nightly THE MUSIC MAN/HOTEL PARADISO/LUANN HAMPTON LAYERITY OVERLAND A summer company of 28-35 students will be selected Company auditions open to all KU students About 10-20 community & KU staff people will be selected to perform in THE MUSIC MAN Accompanist will be provided for musical Cold reading material will be provided For further information, call the University Theatre, 864-3981 FREE GAS Purchase ANYTHING over $100 on sale or otherwise, and we will credit you $7.50 to pay for your gas. This amount represents the average cost of fuel round trip from Lawrence to Kansas City. Offer ends April 30th. ONE COUPON PER PERSON PER DAY YOU'RE ALL INVITED TO A PARTY 5402 N.E. Antioch Rd. Kansas City North, Mo. KANSAS CITY, MO. 5402 N.E. ANTIOC RD 452-3282 INDEPENDENCE, MO. 4309 N.OLAND RD 373-7030 OVERLAND PARK, KS. 8787 METCALF AVE. 341-1787 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 2756 O ST. 475-7484 OMAHA, NEBRASKA 8014 W.DOODGE RD. 392-0380 GRAND OPENING Come and see our big new store and help us celebrate. While you're there see all the new and exciting stereo equipment SUNDAY NOON TILL 9 PM - FREE T-SHIRTS TO THE FIRST 500 CUSTOMERS. DOORS OPEN NOON SUNDAY. - FREE PEPSI FOR ALL. - FREE LITERATURE. - FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES. - SUPER SALE PRICES. TM AudioProfessionals Friday, March 28, 1988 University Daily Kansan 13 Softball coach disgusted with poll By PATTI ARNOLD Sports Writer When the national softball poll came out this week, KU coach Bob Stanclift was not pleased. Sports Writer His Jiahawk, 13, 64, were not mentioned in the collegiate coach's poll, although they had a 5-14 record against three of the teams that were. "It's pretty disgusting." Stancliff said. It $19保费贬替,“Stancliff said, but to which LU 42 in the New Mexico State tournament during spring break. Oklahoma and New Mexico are tied for 10th place. KU has beaten OU both times the teams have won a 21-record against New Mexico. But KU might get a chance to make it into that poll this weekend if the Hawks fare well against some more top 10 teams in the Women's Tournament in Denton, Texas. TOP 10 RANKED teams in the tournament are No. 2 Northern Colorado, No. 4 Texas A&M and No. 9 Southwest Missouri State. The tourney begins this morning with OKLAHOMA playing in an 11:30 game against Oklahoma State. Southwest Missouri State is next at 2:30 and the Jayhawks face West AT least at 7 tionn. Tomorrow murder OKLAHOMA at 7 tionn. Tomorrow tournament finals begin at 2 m. tomorrow. The top two teams in each of the four pools will advance to the final round, and Stancliff said he expected his team to be in that round, along with OSL from the pool play. Texas Woman's, ranked fifth, is the defending national champion and is favored to win the journey. So far this year, the Pioneers have a 13-5 record. The Hawks placed third in the TWU tourney last year and finished ninth in the College World Series. KU HAS FACED Oklahoma State in every tournament this season, something Stanciflissn't too easy about. "I know now how Marian (Washington) feels about playing KState, she feels about playing KState so much. But if we beat them enough times, we can have a psychological advantage over them." KU and OSU have played three times this season. KU has won two of those games. Stanclift said the pitching would be the best KU has faced this season. Although the Kansas bats did not sizzle last week, they did the week before, and Stancliff hopes his team starts hitting the ball again. "Texas A&M, Texas Woman's and Southwest Texas State have elite pitchers," Stancill said. "We'll be验." LEFT FIELDER Rose Rader is leading the 'Hawks with a 424 batting average as the leadoff jitter, LaAnn Stanwik follows with a 57 mark. Hijeone KUBER, Kou's center fielder, has a 34 average, despite playing last weekend with a strained elbow. Defensively, the Jayhawks have a 651 team fielding average. Rader hasn't made an error in left field and catcher Gay Boznango also has a 1,000 fielding average. Stancliff said his lineup was set with the exception of first base and shortstop. He platoonning players at the two positions until someone takes charge. Trye Estates and Pam Cox have been sharing time at shortstop with Etsing putting in a good showing last week in Oklahoma. She has helped Kari Wallerberg have been playing at first. THE PITCHING for KU is getting stronger as the women get experience, Staniel said. Samkwas has taken control as he and will start and will start the first game today. Women netters aim to quiet WSU coach Louderback, head coach at Wichita State University, said in a press release this week that the Kansas girls would not be selected to play football for the State tennis Championship in Lawrence. The KU women's tennis team will be out to prove Jay Louderback wrong this weekend. "I got a laugh out of that," KU coach Mark Hosking said Wednesday. "We beat Wichita State 8-1 last fall and we won the first round, two opponent in the tournament) 7-1." Hosking is confident about his team's chances this weekend. He has decided to sit out two of the team's top players, Mary Staaffor and Maureen Guilfoil. "I want to give some of the other girls on the team a chance to get some competition," Hosking said. "We will still have a strong team, though. I wouldn't do it if I thought we couldn't win." Corie Nason and Lissa Leonard will be added to KU's line up to replace Guilfoil and Stauffer. Marc Erisy, who started her first match at the No. 1 singles spot last week against Iowa State, will again compete in the top sport for KU. Sharif Shriner, who won the NCAA title last year, No. 4, and Leonard and Nasson at No. 5, and 6 round out the Kansas lineau. The KU men's team will be in Carbondale, Ill. this weekend for matches with Southern Illinois, Illinois State, and Murray State. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven十十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三十二十四五十六七十八十九十一十二十二十三十四十五六十六十七十八十九二十二十三十四十五六十六十七八十九十一十 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Tuesday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm The Kansan 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 in person or simply by calling the Kranbach business office at 843-138. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Elm Holl 864-4750 ANNOUNCEMENTS Watch for truck parked at 9th and Illinois St. The Hole (the Hollow-Beam), Selling fresh fruit peanuts in the shell Fifteen varieties of dry peanuts are available. Also selling wood- peanuts. Herb Altenburger. THREE MILE ISLAND ONE YEAR LATER Saturday, March 26th, 12-3 PM Balloon Reaction, Sox Box TV Ch. 11 Nuclear Debate Radioactive Free Pamphlet (KP) No Smoking Rosalea's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Bell, for perceptive individuals and free spirits. No phone, for information, write: Harper, Kansas 67038. 4-4 Nassau, Bahamas) Departing Wichita, May 24 & 31 Rates starting at $49.7k per person. Free enjoy golf, tennis and the luxurious Playboy Cairo Cave. Tournament registration Wichita, Ks 820-265-4358. TGIF MAGAZINE Persons interested in working on a magazine dedicated to the Kansas student's life are invited to an informal meeting on Tuesday. April 1st at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. The Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor is the Director of the University's Distention Hearing Board for three year terms. The Board is to hear complaints of alleged violations of the Board's policies and recommendations to the Executive Vice Chancellor, who will review the sections of the University community, including students, staff, and faculty. Nonformations should be submitted to the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor (R. 1980). For additional information contact the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor or the Office of Alfamative Action. Applications are now being taken for 1841 Rock Chai Revive Producers and Business Manager. Programs are available at the K.U.Y. office, room 602, Monday through Thursday; it will return on noon on Wed., April 9th. It must be returned by April 15th. BANDS RECORD DEMO TAPES. Marik Productions 841-0923 2-31 ENTERTAINMENT FOR RENT NASMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. Interested contact business office at #83-659 any time of the day. Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 842-3579 or 842-4185. tf CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & summer. Apply now. Call 842-2583 at 6:00 p.m. 4-11 SUMMER APT. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, a.c., dishwasher, new carpet, on bus route, x-large living area. Call 842-6623 3-28 Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt. next to new 3 br. townhouse and apt. next to premium pcc. Trial B453-929 or B448-1485. New 2 bedroom townhouse A/C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call B453- 929. COOPERATIVE LIVING an established student residence for the University of Kentucky and downstream Lawrence. For registration, visit www.kopec.edu or jayhawk West Apt. New Bentling: 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Call 800-425-3676 or email call425@sas.edu at SAS 24Hour Service Call #425@sas.edu at SAS 24Hour Service Call #425@sas.edu Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 923* Mass. The inner offices can be changed to fit needs. Upper and/or lower floors 728 sq. ft. or 800 sq. ft. Contact 8243-0143 or 8037-077 HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING These all new and contemporary tynemaster are designed for the home of all ages. Save $26 per month. Harvette Place offers a bedroom suite with master suite, all appliance room, window and entertainment room. Price includes a phone call: 815-4451 or 81-4225. Privacy code: 41-14. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union. Phone 843-9579. tt A studio apartment partially furnished near campus. Utilities paid. Call 845-9579. tf Available for summer. Turtle-4-58 bed, townhouse right to pool and tennis court 2 full bathrooms. Condo for rent. Reasonable. 814-4622 3-31 --- Apartment 1 bk. from Union. 2 bedrooms, $235/ mo. plus utilities. Contact Steve Rhudy 841-4075 @ 943-314-31. 3-28 Release Now For Fall At Special Rates On campus, 2 bdm apartments, with all utilities paid. Furnished or unfurnished. Jayhawk Towers 1603 1603 W. 15th, Wd. 1438-9. 3-28 Mark I & II apt. NOW RENTING for SUMMER Maxix 1 & 2 bedrooms, a bedroom 2, 8床睡房, 3 bedrooms, 7床睡房, 9床睡房, 10床睡房, babies balcony, off street parking, dishwasher, dresser for info. @824-9035 at 105 Michigan drug store for info. @824-9035 at 105 Michigan Spacius, two-bedroom, AVALON apt. available for June & July at a cost of $298/mi all utilities required. In-house lavatory, Air conditioning and open-air hailey included. Contact call 842-1358 anytime. 3-28 A YOU FED UP WITH THE HIGH COST OF housing? You can be found at an affordable price, housing can be found at an affordable price, with water & gas utilities paid. Comfortable bedrooms & bathrooms are available with B&B-810 to determine your eligibility. 3-28 Two-year-old two story house, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Family room, dining room, kitchen with all main furnishings and South School district, $135/month and South School district, after April 4. Lease required. #85-0072. WHY WAIT UNTIL LATER TO MAKE YOUR DEVICES BEEP? Ask about a bedroom i-phone apn, new Walking distance camera, 20-inch touchscreen far new apartment coco lift, 30-inch walkway, off-board airline parking. Call Mia 164-768 for details. Summer mulesable: one-bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus. Furnished, new, with private parking. 842-1119. 3-28 2 bedroom, living-dining area, kitchen, bath + dressroom room. 2-4 people - Meadowbrook Apts. Call 645-893 or (895) 331-1538 3-28 3-4 bdm. house. 2 baths on residential location on Kentucky. Possible rent reduction for miz- labor. Eveninga. Crag 841-8454. - 31 On campus. 2 br apartments furnished or un- furnished, all utilities paid. Jaywalker Towers Apartments 1603 W. 15th. 843-4933. 3-28 Moving out of state - must-usetl. sharp Trial studio apartment. Unfurnished, water paid. Pool, tennis court laundry facilities. Call Trail Studio. 843-723-3482 or 843-324-3834 after six months. Submarine subbase: Furnished studio apt, air-conditioning, patio, close to swimming pool & tennis courts. Call 841-6079. 3-28 Must substitute 3 bedroom furnished A/C and furnished B/R with 4045 sq ft Trailridge 814-605-002 or 843-733-330 3-28 Must sublet. 2 bdrm furnished apt. Next to stadium. Rent $255. Will submit for $200. 841- $200. FOR SALE 1 bedroom furnished, apt. for summer sublease or longer. A/L, laundry, 842-419-4. 1- 0 Sublease now: Meadowbrook studio. Furnished. and water paid. $196 mo. Call 814-1495. 4-1 Room-large, semifurious, private frig. and Room-small, semi-furious, private Mass 105, available now, 843-4178 New carriage house. 2 bedroom, all appliances. Court yard & entrance. 4-17 9458 or 843 - 6470 Summer sublease. 3 bedroom. 2 stories. 1 block from stadium. Call 841-7890. 4-2 Alternator, starter and generator specialist Parts, service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTEIVE MATERIALS. 845-909-3900, 900 W. 6th. WATERBED MATERIALS. 788 3rd year war Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make use of these materials to use them-1) As study guide, 2) For class analysis, 3) For the analysis of Western civilization, available at Town Creek, Mall Bookstore and Great Bookstore. SUMMER SUBLEASE. Very nice furnished one bedroom apartment. Only one block from campus. Rent $185. Call 842-7606. 4-4 ROLLER SKATES, Indoor, outdoor, from £95.95 Rides Bike Shop 1033 Vermont 841-642-664 SunSpees—Sun glasses are our specialty. Non- specified. 1021 Mast. 841-757-2101 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mats and pillows. Bedroom Furniture 100. New York State St. B42-3828. U.S. $6,995. Brand spanking new 1980's Datsun 210—$4,279 + tax delivered. Call 842-0444 ask for Bob Smith at Tony's Dog. Datsun 5-5 Top quality PA excellent for rock band or institution use. 2 sure mikes stands $1000 firm. 864-2827 after 8 a.m. Ask for Steve. 4-4 1986 Olds 98. Luxury Sedan. Dependable car for small budget. Call 842-3000 or 841-777, anytime 10 Speed for sale; Motobene Mirage in excellent condition. Copper metallic with Suntour Dernailers. $110. 841-7168. 3-28 Epiphone acoustic guitar and case. Excellent condition. Only $125. Call Mike at 841-703-1. 3-28 76 Pinio Wagon, navy blue, luggage rack, ari- automatic, radio, good MPG, like new, 39,000 mL. $1700. 843-4086. 4-11 Cheap 1979 Grand Prix. White with red top and interior. 16,500 miles. Fully automatic. 842-7930. 1964 Convair Monza Coupe, near excellent condition, and an excellent low cost investment. $1400, negligible. #85-2633. 4-3 Schwinn 5-speed girl's bike $15. Good condition. Yamaha Vapor guitar $120. Floor case $18. 423-3160. Beautiful, rust-colored cedar clad trunk. Use 1276, or as a table, x 24" x 85", 84" 1276. Small Mobile Home—near Sanctuary, needs owner after old one graduates this May. Evenings 843-6256 4-1 Amplifier, mklarer, 75 wat t servant to channel, excelent condition. Please call 841-225-1255 3-288 For sale: '19' color TV, RCA-XL100, 3 years old 3-28 Call 803-7451 833 '71 CHEVELLE Malabu. 350 automatic, air conditioner, call Richard Duercken. at843.1227-3.313 1973 Camaro Lt. 350, auto, ps, pb. Good condi- tion! Mint. sell, mast. $3,000. 1968 NORTON 750 motorcycle. Recent engine overhaul. Many shares $501-841. 4.3 25 mm Zeil E- w/ j45 & 190 mm Jaeo. Good Condition $10. Majestic Tripod for heavy Camera. $40 / Dynaforce Climbing Rope 149mm 10 Rock-hammers, etc.resses. £75. Call #623-8592. Cockatiel—tame pair for sale. May be used for breeding. Bird case included. B42-8249-3, 3-29 Mobile Home: 10x55, 2 bedroom, tied-down, kitted, shed, $200 and best offer. 842-913-41-1 1974 Manda BXA, Auto, Deluxe Interior, Best of Call: 842-913-41-1 1975 Honda CB750F Super Sport. Good shape, ready for spring. 842-297 for more info. 3-28 Saturday night, 3/22 on tennis court by Watkins' Hospital, tennis racket cover. Call Dreux at 864- 5747. 78 Camara Silver automatic. Less than 22,300 miles. Radio am/fm. 6 cylinder. Excellent condition, very cheap. 863-0544. 4-3 TEAC 4 track with simul-sync, great for recording live music. Call Mark, 841-0923. 4-3 FOUND Men's men's—4th floor Wescoe, 4:00 p.m. Mon. Call & identify, 841-6023. 3-28 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDEN, ORDER: (416) 530-2777 as a public service worker to assist residents who are unable to work in their home or apartment. Improve of Nursing Home Administration, Kannai. Or Improve of Nurse Home nursing home conditions and your opinion on the nursing home conditions and correspondence will be kept confidential by the office and KNII, KNII St., M. & L. Washington, MA 212-877-9222. Found—prescription sunglasses. Found in front of Union Saturday night. Call & identify, 841-0008. Keep trying. 3-28 Found Friday. Small female tan dog will win with markings. In Malls area. Call 603-649-328 Set of two Ford keys on glow-in-the-dark key in Trailhare parking lot. Call 6032 0532 Found. One auto tool kit near Spooner. Call George, 843-8153, describe case and numbers. 3-28 CURSUSHIPPS/SAILING EXPEDITIONES/SALI- ENCE/SAILING GOLD Good summer Pay- ment career NATIONWIDE NATIONWIDE FOR APPLICATION REFERENCES to APPLICATION WORK BOX 00129, Sacramento 95480. ACTING COORDINATOR. UNIVERSITY INFORMATION MANAGER, May 19, 2018, and ending December 14, 2018. Req. bachelor's degree in humanities or related field, plus 6 months of experience no later than January 30, 2018. Respondible for the position by April 15, 2018. Will be responsible for providing a 24 hour telephone information, referral and training for new students enrolled in Now taking applications for door/floor and wall- treatment. W 7th after $80 p.m. Ask IA: iff KANSAIS APPLIED REMOTE SCHOOL PROGRAM needs graduate or upper division undergraduates (weekly). May 15-August 14, with possibility of photography, retrosite sampling, mapping or field photography, retrosite sampling, mapping or field photography will be accepted through April 14, 2019. Applicants may apply in Room 627, Nihali Hall, U.S.A., Room 832, Northfield College, Ill. OVERSEAS 20SJ - SUMMER year-round, Europe, S. America. Australia, Asia, etc. All fees $250. Expenses include expenses paid. Free information. I.C. Bex 24K, CA. Bex 24K, CA. Mar. Ca, 92553 THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER is located in the Dumbo Building at 195 South Park Avenue, position start April 19, 1989, and a pool of applicants will be announced by May 20. Applicants in 165 Strong Hall. Deadline is 5 o'clock per March. Resumes to Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer (123) 456-7890 or Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer (123) 456-7890. Duties. Utilize 16 are conduct telephone interview for potential applicants. Must have fluency in English. Must have fluency schedule for interviews and conduct job interview. Personal skills essential Application dreading personal skills essential Application dreading opportunities employment Contact Mollie Jolly, 113 800-722-1459 contactmolliejolly.com Computer Programmer. Grad student only, to be admitted in the statistical methods at least 3 years experience in writing efficient pertinent, and some computer-based applications. Statistical studies are required. Should be able to communicate effectively to 50 to 75 percent, with salaries and hours provided by Call Prof. Whitely, Whitey, 4131, for 4/8-80. Manager & pianist needed for 12 piece Jazz and Soul group. Call 864-1067 or 6. Open for book- ings. 3-28 The KLIY - is a student organization dedicated to, among other things, social engagement and other social concerns of the day. We are located in the 1980's 1981 academic year. This position begins in August 2004 with the initial mentorship of the coordinate and KLIY communication and organizational skills expert in funding, program planning ability, knowledge of fund-raising, program planning ability, knowledge of current social issues agencies, familiarity with Teachers wanted. Elementary and secondary. West and other states. Placement sent: 1946; Southwest Teachers Agency PO Box 4337-Al- borquerque, New Mexico 87196. SUMMER JOB FOR STUDENT COOPLE, I am a senior tutor in our school with housekeeping & maintenance at my summer camp. I will be assigned a 24-hour weekly couple program for your team (18 weeks) Surgeon of Child Research Achievement Place of Excellence. Receive a position available. Salary ranges from $120,000 to $165,000 plus qualification and qualifications. Duties are to conduct best practice research on adolescence youth. Must have own transportation. Knowledge of child development skills is required. Excellent interpersonal skills in the job. Child research is an equal opportunity employment. Contact resume at ChildResearchPlaceOfExcellence.com. Outgoing, ambitious sales person for mornings, e. in Jeans store. Rang Tgg 842-1059. 3-31 In 1st floor Women's restroom--silver banding with turtle design on it. PLEASE RETURN. Reward. 841-2296. 4-1 My big, friendly Aireadle. No collar, male, needs medicine. Please call Diana at 864-4381 days 4-1 leave message. NOTICE Lott: Calculator. If you found my call 71-59 in room 2es on Les Thurn, March 30, to call 842-285-285. Active, bold and derivative leadership and a deeply devoted peace for Kennedy. Please PRESIDENT: To volunteer call: 841-8872. Paid for by Kenney For President Committee. 3-28 PERSONAL VOYAGERS—Fellowship—Christian Alternative for Single Adults—First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. Sidney, Sunday, 9:30 a.m., 843-4171, tf Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-554-166. If FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--updates up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling. Post appointment. Foxton AM to 5 PM (KS). 460-481 ST 91. Overland Park, KS. The Harbour Lite is where it's at for cold fores, pool, pinnail and unique hardbacks. Color TV and stereo for the Hawks are away. You can see it on the Harbour Lite, 103 Man. A first-class class with GAY COUNSELING REPEALERS through Head- quarter 81-2345 and KU info. 864-356-106. **DOWNLOAD** http://www.gayco.com/repealers *NON-ISOFLOY* *Ours only* *JobyJoyly* PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 485-140 *SALMON BEEF* *BEEF BEEF* TENNIS PLAYERS: Spring and warm weather tennis players. Call David M. 842-6268; Member/Professional Stringers Asa, and stinger K-U.V. Various. Very reasonable on good strings and wickets. Celebrate EASTER with ASTA singing telegrams. Baskets delivered daily: 842-8741. 4-4 Looking for people to lend each other moral knowledge on Scandared Medical Diet. Lynda- 443 0742 Alba Phi-Despite worseners point two "mint point" that kept you out of OT, with courage and character you left in peace. You're the time champs. 3-28 Headquarters is a community of people willing to want to talk, take care or do by lay. We can help with visitation planning, travel arrangements, training, interview problems, other personal issues and talk about. We can also help you get in contact with our staff and/or by drop by 1635 Mass. HI-914-2544 or by drop by 1635 Mass. anytime. We are located at United Fund Dug, Cd. and private headquarters, United Fund Dug, Cd. and private headquarters. Dee Shaiking Parties; Sunday, March 30th, 9 a.m. at Wines of Fun, Punjab 1204, all welcome. admission FREE. Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. 3-28 Last chance to ski! Still a few spots open on SUA's Vail ski trip. Call 864-3477 3-28 Anyone who can offer information concerning summer jobs in Lake Tahoe (you've been there or are planning on going) call Tier. 842-670 after 8 p.m. 4-1 Applications are now being taken for 1981 Rocki Clark Reuse Producer and Business Manager. Fields are available at the K-U-F office, room 450. Work should be returned on moon on Wed., Apr. 9th. I have a small quantity of the Summer Olympics Stamps in airmaid that were recalled by the Postmaster Group. Group of 6 stamps $10.00, 842-7158, 3-28 Wording how to spend your summer? You can spend 2 months in England and Scotland and earn up 6 credits in History, History-Hist. or Art. Dlts. Studies at Above Office (840) 3742-4842. **Fri** After Hiring March 28, 7:30 p.m. **Mon** Before Hiring May 15, 7:30 p.m. Powerwisers in Organizations: Come listen to information regarding the granting of powerwisers in Organizations. Comen Alpha Phi: Thanks a lot for being such good friend. You're reminiscent? You've got it. 20:38 time. Evermendy. 10:26 Tofu Teddy live at Quantrillis. March 28-29. $1 at the door. 3-28 POT LICK DINNER—Gay Services of Kansas pot. luck. Lawrence Community Building, 11th floor. 3 p.m. am 4 p.m. Come join us before the roller skates! Friends & have fun! 3-28 OK. avd. partners. We know that you're out there! Maybe you were too fired to respond last time. Here's your chance, if you're not in Topka where are they? ___ 3-28 SERVICES OFFERED **EXPERT TUTORING:** MATH: 000-102 call 847-5785. MATH: 115-709 call 847-5785. STATISTICS: 847-5785. PHYSICS: 847-5785. PHYSICS: 100-509 call 847-5785. ENGLISH and SPANISH call 847-7057. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAY is available with Alice at the House of User Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from A to 5 M on Friday to 9, A to 1 on Saturday to 838 Max. Tiring of paying high store costs for good quality clothes and alterations? Excellent seamless machines will for women or men. Reasonable price. Need information: 814-396-104 and 4 after 6 weeks. info IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES Professional Tutoring: MATH 000-115. 864-2375. 3-28 For legal assistance, including Municipal court legal assistance, call 321-645-8011; East 2nd fall return tax returns consult Dawn & Laster; 197 East 2nd fall return tax returns consult Dawn & Laster; 383 collct call 845-6015 late eavesdropping. Office 电话 845-6015 Monday through Friday, ice w/ masters credit Matter Change For h-ip with your problems in Math 002, 102, 115-117, Call Tom At 943-9389 4-3 TYPING Accelerate, experienced typist, IBM correcting Selectrite, Call Donna. 842-2744. **tf** Why cues about typing? Experienced elitv service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer. 842-6697 after 5:30 p.m. and on weekends. tt MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. tt I do darned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. TF TPit Editor, IBm. Pixel Price. Eilea work, reasonable rates. These, dissertation welcome, editing/layout. Joan Call. 842-8127. TF PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICING 841-490-789. TF Experienced typist-dues, dissensions tablem, paern; IBM correcting selebr. battery. For a p月: 842-210. Battery. Experiented Typeit -term paper, tests, mats, experience of 843-6554, Ms. Wright. 843-6554, Ms. Wright. Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selective Quality work. References available. Sandy, even & weekends. 748-9818. DEPOSITION NUMBER 211 0039 Word processing exclusively at Encore-Copy Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms Publications, research correcting, elective Gs, Essen Jeannum 641-2127 I'm your type ... for thesis, dissertations term papers, etc. Jo Ann 864-3819 or after 5.00 at 841-8055. 4-18 I'm your type ... for thesis, dissertations, term canfers, etc. Joan E048-3619 or after 5.00 at LSU Reports, distortions, resumes, legal form, graphics, editing and correct references. Call 800-235-1144. I'm your type . . . for thesis, term papers,等. Jeo Ann 864-389) or so. at 8:48 a.m. Excellent Experienced Typist: Will do any form of typing. Phone 842-3203 4-4 Encourage is Tiny Man at Toptal 842-3201 Encore is Tip Top at Typing! 842-2001. WANTED Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house. $100 Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, dryer,洗衣机, $425 washer, 842-659-098 PSCYHIATRIC ADES AND HEALTH SERVICE Staff Dept. 13, St. Mary's State Hospital, State Hospital, St. Mary's, NY. Depo for Peggy Harrington, W 215 W. 10th St. Topka, KS. Phoner: (412) 393-2800; Apply to an Appl. equal opportunity employer. I am looking for a student married couple to participate in summer home on lake Akamat, NY. I will teach swimming and beach hockey for couple. Provided: Your own private residence, pool or tennis court, mountain climbing kitten for swimming, tent, outdoor furniture for giveaway of local person who can provide the necessary equipment 100° Sun Drift Lawrence, KA 60041 Female roommate wanted, summer only, own broom and bedroom, bath, pool, low utilities, Heather- wood Valley apartments. Call Debbie or Holly at April 3rd at 811-514. 4-1 FORMER B240 STUDENTS; Would like to buy workbook that goes with accounting text book Call 882-4451 4-2 Two Greek conservative females looking for a third to share summer house. 117 plus utilities included. Ask for: Julie Gibbs 843-3018 or Chrysa Meador. Graduate student looking for car pool from Topeka to Lawrence beginning May 19th and running through the summer. Have a car available for participation. 842-800-7699. keep-32. Wanted: bartender at The Huddle. Must be 21. Call Terry at 843-1022 after 2 p.m. 3-29 A Summer in China. Sponsored by the people's welfare agency of the People's Republic one month of study in Chinese language and culture at $2,500. Dreadful for application in April 19, 1988. Attendance at the summer camp in Palm Bay, FL. Pennsylvania, PA (412) 712-2630. Roommate Wanted-Kansas City city young stockbroker looking for roommate. Good location #18 at Mall in Overland Park. 200. Call days 15-31, 3-28. Nozeff. Jeep. Gay male K.U. student to share furnished home, summer 18/2014. term. Wm; w/d/shower; pool and more. $120 per month plus room rental.宿舍mate P-4-301, Lawrence. Ks. K6044. O KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! If you've got it, Kana Classifieds sells it. Just mall in this form with check or money order to 111 Flinn or figure costs. Now you ve got i Selling Power! RATES: 15 words or less 1 time $2.25 -ds 0.02 time $2.50 0.03 时间 $2.75 0.04 时间 $3.00 0.05 时间 $3.25 0.06 times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times times AD DEADLINES to run: Monday ... Thursday 5 pm Tuesday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Monday 5 pm Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch • $3.75 to DATES TO RUN: NAME: ___ ADDRESS: ___ PHONE: ___ PHONE: KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD everything that comes to you. --- 14 Friday, March 28, 1980 University Daily Kansan THE JAYHAWK INVITATIONAL SOCCER TOURNAMENT Saturday & Sunday, March 29 & 30 KANSAS MEMORIAL STADIUM PARTICIPATING TEAMS 1. University of Kansas Soccer Club 2. Kansas State University 5. Rockhurst College 3. University of Nebraska 4. Iowa State University 6. Central Missouri State University 7. The Wichita Wheathawks UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU SOCCER 8. Valley Soccer Club TEAM ROSTER: Coach: Jay Yoffe Goalkeepers: Bill Evans and Rich Ramos Midfield: Alfredo Villalobos, Pete Nelson, Brad Bakula, and Jay Yoffe Attackers: Bengt Olson, Fred Barton, Francisco Santos, Robert Altomare, Steve Kupka, Paul Bahbout, and Kai Voepel Defense: Kent Sanders, Scott Hanson, Pat Cassidy, Bryan Barr, Brian Harris, Kim Hunt, Mitch Mueller, Andres Vega and Greg Cornelius SCHEDULE OF MATCHES Saturday, March 29,1980 8:00 a.m. CMSU vs. Rockhurst 9:00 a.m. Iowa State vs. K State 10:00 a.m. Rockhurst vs. KU 11:00 a.m. Iowa State vs. Wichita Wheathawks 12:00 Noon CMSU vs. KU 1:00 p.m. K State vs. Wichita Wheathawks 2:00 p.m. Rockhurst vs. Nebraska 4:00 p.m. KU vs. Nebraska 3:00 p.m. Iowa State vs. Valley S.C. 5:00 p.m. K State vs. Valley S.C. Sunday, March 30,1980 8:00 a.m. Valley S.C. vs. Wichita Wheathawks 9:00 a.m. CMSU vs. Nebraska Sunday, March 30, 1980 10:30 a.m. 2nd round play begins 1:00 p.m. 3rd and 4th place finals 3:00 p.m. Championship FREE ADMISSION COME AND SUPPORT KU SOCCER!! ALL SOCCER LOVERS AS WELL AS THOSE WHOWOULD LIKE TO LEARN THE GAME ARE INVITED TO JOIN US. The Jayhawk Invitational Soccer Tournament is supported by the local distributor of COORS BEER, Lapeka Inc. Proposal could allow forced fine payments By SCOTT C. FAUST Staff Reporter A bill before the Kansas State make may KU faculty and staff members more hestant to teach up University parking tickets, but according to Lewis McKinney, professor of history, the same bill also may require that students be taken to court by irate faculty members. The bill, which allows the Board of Regents to set rules for school employee wages to be used for overdue parking and library fines, received unanimous approval Friday from the state legislature. Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, said yesterday that as of Feb. 14, outstanding parking fees at KU amounted to $460.00. Von Ende said about $12,000 was owed by 692 current employees of the University. LIBRARY FINES for current employees. Von Ende said, are "probably on the order of $3,000." He estimated the figures were for all outstanding parking lines in the past three or four years. "If the bill were in effect," Von Ende said, "It could reduce accounts receivable at KU by $13,000 to $15,000." But McKinney, who has sent letters expressing his opposition to the bill to Chan Yun, said he was not a "businessman." President Ross Doyen, R-Corbondale, said it was "nothing but a scheme to make money from China." Mckinney said it would further erole faculty buying power "at a time when our salaries are being increased 8 percent, with inflation close to 10 percent." "We have plenty of laws on the books now (to force payment)," McKinney said. "Why in the world hurt faculty members by arraigning them with deducting money from their paychecks?" "It's OK for the student to not be allowed to enroll, to not be able to his transcript" McKinney said, "but not for the faculty." McKinney said the bill gave no alternative to employees, not even total refusal to pay, if a ticket or library fine were considered wrong. BECAUSE THEY WOULD be left without an option, McKimey said, some faculty members might sue the University or even out. "If this thing causes some people to leave," McKinney asked, "is it all going to be worthwhile?" McKinsey said he had no parking or library fines outstanding. He criticized Dykes for supporting the bill and said it would not help ease tensions between legislators and faculty. Von Ende acknowledged that faculty reaction could be negative if the bill passed. According to Do Kerns, director of parking, methods currently available to the University for obtaining faculty parking fines are limited to not issuing parking tickets, or requiring unpaid fines, and after unpaid tickets, issuing an impounding order for their cars, issuing "WE FIND QUITE a few of them," Kearns said, "but once we send out a letter, the first thing they do is park on city streets." They never come back on campus. They are some of examples. Kearns said recovery of money lost to unpaid fines could prevent raises in faculty parking permit fees. Unpaid student fines are retrieved by the college, and the student choices not to enroll, by bank scripts, which are needed for both enrollment other schools and applications Cliff Haka, director of library circulation, said methods of overdue book fine retrieval were the same for both students and employees. Since a new lending code was instituted last August, Haka said, library borrowing privileges are suspended for anyone not returnin an overdue book. PRIVILEGES ARE RETURNED as soon as the book is returned, and the borrowers may request a delay on paying the fine. However, he said, if an individual accumulates $50 in fines, borrowing privileges are permanently revoked. Because faculty have four months to return books, plus a 30-day grace period, Haka said, all five lines have accumulated since the five months after the new code went into effect. He said it might be too early to tell the extent of the problem because before the new lending code, no fines were assigned to faculty members. Fines for unreturned recall books accumulate for 31 days, at which point the book is considered lost and a $5 charge is levied. IF THE BOOK is never found, the individual who checked out the book last must pay for its renalment. John Conard, executive director of the Regents, which has endorsed the bill, said the proposal had been discussed for a number of years. Conard said that if the bill passed, it would not go into effect until after the July 1 statute publication date. Monday, March 31. 1980 Drafting of the Regents all policy, and a decision on whether all or part of wages were to be withheld, would be completed by that time. Conard said. KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Vol. 90, No. 119 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas By MARK SPENCER Staff Writer Anderson leading in student poll Republican presidential candidate John Anderson appears to have built a strong base of support in the state, receiving the support of 34 percent of university Daly County poll conducted by University Dalton Kane. President Jimmy Carter finished second with 21 percent, followed by Republican Ronald Reagan with 13 percent. Anderson's "new coalition" of Republicans, independents and disaffected Democrats captured the largest share of KANSAN Analysis Although the poll was of only KU students and does not attempt to predict the outcome of Kansas' first presidential primary, it did allow some voters both votes and volunteers in Lawrence. THE LOCAL KENNEDY campaign had been hoping for a strong showing among Democrats. District Democratic Central Committee, County Democratic Central Committee, had predicted -based on the The poll indicates that Sen. Edward Ackman, a Republican from disaster here tomorrow, Kennedy received the support of only 5 percent of KU students overall and 13 percent who said they were worried. Anderson's popularity and name-recognition was undoubtedly buoyed by his appearance on campus last Wednesday, when he an overflow audience at Hoe Auditorium. independent voters—38 percent—as well as 35 percent of those who said they were Republicans and 25 percent of those who said they were Democrats. IN THE REPUBLICAN race, Anderson won by Reagan, who received 20 percent and Ronald Reagan, who received 91 percent said that although they were Republicans, they supported Carter. Eight percent said that although they were Democrats, they supported Obama. traditional liberal vote in Lawrence—that Kennedy could possibly defeat Carter in the county. The student vote, however, appears to have been dominated by Anderson's new coalition politics. "Pols can tell you a tread," Berkwitz said. "If your poll is accurate—well I don't think he could lose the student vote and win in Douglas County." Although Kansas voters registered under a party affiliation cannot cross over and vote in another party's primary, it appears that voting by mail is not an affiliation so they can vote for Anderson. "A lot of registered Democrats have changed their registration," Berkowitz said. "Most, but not all, have changed to vote for Anderson." Sue Estes, state coordinator for the Kennedy campaign, said the results of the poll did not surprise her. She attributed More primary coverage page five Kennedy's poor showing to college students being "by bry and large more conservative today than they were before," and questions about Anderson's stands on issues. Anderson's state campaign coordinator, Mary Lou Humphrey, said Anderson's school district has a strong energy had attracted student support. she said students made up a large percentage of the district's population. SHE AGREED, however, that much of Anderson's support was generated from factors unrelated to specific issues. "I think the students believe in Anderson's honesty," she said. "They think he is more intelligent and articulate than on the issues. He is a wonderful orator." Students also were asked during the interviews what they considered to be the most important problem facing the country. Forty-one percent said inflation was the most important problem and 21 percent said it was the least. Forty-eight percent said the energy crisis was the main problem and even percent said it was the worst. Anderson received the largest percentage of the vote from those who said the economy, inflation or the energy crisis was foreign and domestic policies of President Carter when he spoke Saturday at the Glenwood Manor Motel in Overland Park. the major problem—apparent reflecting support for his 50-cent-a-gallon gasoline tax. The Carter campaign is not as worried as the Democrat's, strong showing. Dave Docke, Carter's state coordinator, said Kennedy campgrounds had been concentrating on the Democratic According to the poll, however, Anderson could threaten Carter's share of the student vote in the future. Carter scored best among those wh thought the Iranian crisis was the most important problem. Students were asked about possible match-ups between Republicans and Democrats in the November general election. Carter beat Reagan 67 percent to 27 percent, with 6 percent undecided, and defeated Bush 61 percent to 29 percent, with 10 percent undecided. George Bush, Republican candidate for president, criticized both AGAINST ANDERSON, however, Carter was 40 to 14 mointain, with the remainder under 35. Carter, Reagan and Anderson, Anderson from 52 percent to 39 percent and Anderson from 62 percent. "Anderson is an attractive candidate. He's seen as a moderate." Dook said, "but we have to remember that Kennedy was doing well against Cartier in the poll until he died." Kennedy also faired poorly in the poll in the November match-ups. Anderson received 74 percent to Kennedy's 15 percent. Kennedy's senior loss led to Reagan by a 84-43 margin. KANSAN ELECTION POLL Primary push George Bush FOR PRESIDE Anderson 34% Carter 21% Reagan 13% Kennedy 5% Bush 4% The Kansas interviewed 280 randomly selected students last Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The poll has a confidence level of 95 and a margin for error of plus or minus six points, which means 95 chances of 100 are accurate within 6 percent. In the first two cases, the reviewers reviewed said they were undecided and 4 percent mentioned other minor candidates. Candidates stump through Kansas to build last-minute voter support From Kansan staff and wire reports OVERLAND PARK--AKE salesman made final pitch for a contract, three front-running presidential candidates made swings through Kansas over the weekend. Kansas' first-ever presidential primary is tomorrow. Republican front-runner Ronald Reagan stumped at the Glenwood Manor hotel last night, repeating for the enthusiastic debate, that he has with him be used in 11 previous primary states. ON SATURDAY, another Republican, former CIA director George Bush, spoke at a rally here while Democratic challenger Sen. Edward M. Kennedy--makes his second stop in the state—stumped in Kansas City, and Wichita. All three took turns lambasting President Carter on various issues, including inflation, foreign affairs and energy. Carter campaign officials, who had all but unporsed the state before Kennedy's upset in 1968, said they would join Congress and Connecticut, had scheduled brief talks today in Kansas City and Wichita for Vice President Bush. "When the president was inaugurated, he said we were faced with two minor problems—infusion and energy," Teagan said. "Now we are faced with two major issues." More than 2,000 people—most of them standing—lammed the Convention Hall to hear Reagan's 20-minute speech. He is expected to take most of the state's 32 delegates tomorrow. "Each time the president talks it's like someone else has been in office the last three years." Reagan said. "Each time it sounds like he had nothing to do with it." THE CROWD was no doubt pro-Reagan. Many wadden posters and more waddle buttons. The governor's late arrival, California governor's late arrival, the restless crowd chanted "We want Reagan." See PRIMARY page seven Polling places Polling places for the Kansas Presidential Preference Primary will open tomorrow at 7 a.m. (1-1) Pinckney School, 81 W. 6th St. (1-2) Plymouth Congregational Church, 300 N. 49th St. METHODIST Church, 1501 Massachusetts Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St.; (1-4) Woodlawn School, 308 Elm St; (2-1) Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.; (2-2) South Park Riverfront, 506 West Ridge St. ; (2-3) Cordley School, 185 Vermont; (2-4) Babcock Place, 1700 Massachusetts St.; (2-5) Judicial Law Enforcement Building, 11th and Massachusetts streets; (2-6) Douglas St.; (2-7) Kentucky Street; (3-2) Hollinschool, 1045 Hilton Dr. (3-3) Lawrence High Administration Center, 2017 Louisiana St. (3-4) East Hartford College, 2015 National Guard Armory, 200 Iowa St. (4-2) Allen Field House, Nusmar Dr. and Irving Hill Road. (4-3) Centennial Park, 2016 Kennedy School, 1985 Davis Road. (5-1) Dearer School, RFD 410 I N. Lawrence Ave.; (5-2) West Junior High School, 2700 Harvard Rd.; (5-3) Rusty's Food Center, 2700 and Louisiana streets; (5-4) Sunset Hill School, 910 Schwarz Road; (5-5) Schneider School, 2700 Ousblad St. Student Senate axes budget amid protests (7-2) American Legion, 408 W. 6th St. (7-3) South Junior High School, 2734 Louisiana St. (7-2) First Presbyterian Hospital Care Home, 1125 Ridges Court, Valley View Care Home, 2125 Ridges Court. BvSUSAN SCHOENMAKER AND KATHY KASI Staff Reporters The organization, the Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating and Educating Minority Engineers, had requested $6,000. The committee made a preliminary cut of $5,035 in the SCORMEBE budget. With an eye on its expenses, the Student Senate Academic Affairs Committee sheared about $10,000 from organizational budget requests Saturday, but the senate also drew session dress protests from at least one organization. AT HEART of the conflict was the committee's decision not to fund SCORMEB's annual engineering symposium at Kansas City's Crown Center. The school and college students with industry representatives. Some committee members had suggested that SCOMEBE set up a booth at KU's engineering fair as an alternative to the symposium. SCOMEBE's request for the symposium was $2,650. "We were being railroaded," Michael Brady, a SCOMEEE member and Minority Business Council member, said. "Some of the questions thrown at us were like, 'Why do we want to be dressed up?' or 'let's stump them, let's make them look ridiculous.'" "I think you can get at someone's budget with a different circle of questions." "The symposium is a mammoth operation." Brady said. "There are 75 to 80 companies who participate and the committee was dealing with it like it was some two-bit operation $C_MRMEBE$, was truing to null off." However, committee members said that SQRMEBem had underspent the past Senate allocations, and that the committee was short on funds this year. According to Senate financial records, SQRMEB has not spent $2.162 of its $2.825 allocation for this fiscal year, which ends June 30. ACCORDING TO Senate records, CoFMEB has not spent any of theSenate令其最标题记 for this year's The committee agreed to reconsider SCofMEBet "night" night because Leen Bradley, the SCofMEBet adviser, was Jay said giving SCRMEBE the nearly $3,000 requested for his symposium would "really throw us However, Brad Jay, chairman of the Academic Affairs Committee, said the SCoMIBE budget cut would After cutting organizational requests from about $3,000 to just under $3,000 the committee still $6,000 out. SENATE COMMITTEE budgetary decisions can be changed by a full Senate vote. Committee budgets will be considered by the Senate April 8, 9 and 10. However, the committee does not have remote, according to Matt Davis, Senate Vice President, "The Senate would literally have to cut money from other people's budgets to give to you, knowing that you had understated their budget but more than $2,000," Davis told SGMMEE treasurer Keith Kung. "This year we've had a colossal problem because groups are not responsible for money, and we've had a huge excess in unallocated funds." IN OTHER BUSINESS, the following preliminary cuts were made: Minority Business Student Council, $823; KU Ad Club $1,940.12; Women in Law $190; Student Bar Association, $652; Women Engineers $195.; Counseling Unit, $79.60; Medical Staff $2,427.40; Undergraduate Anthropology, $133.50; Student American Pharmaceutical Association, $13.40. LINE TEEM ALLOCATIONS are structured into the senate budget because they are considered more important. KU German Club, $895; Astronomy Association, $6.85; KU Psychology Club, $104; College of Student Social Workers, $797; Psychology Club, $8.60; Organization of Black Architect Students America, Organization of Black Architect Students America, The committee made two preliminary line item allocation changes. A preliminary cut was made in the Architecture and Urban Design line item allocation of 2 line items. In the Student Council, granted a 6-cent line item increase in Senate last week, was held to a new line item allocation of 3 cents, nearly a 1-cent additional increment next year. The committee made two preliminary budget approvals—the Engineering Student Council's request of $2,150 and the School of Education Student Advisory Board's request of $400. "He said that if we wanted to stick to our budget as it stands, when it goes before Senate, they it all." "I got a call from Matt (Davis) and he said that that's going to have to be our preliminary budget," Judy wrote in the letter. "There isn't the money in unallocated this year to do that, plus the fact that they have to suspend the rules because of it." Senate Cultural Affairs Committee members left Senate hearing Saturday afternoon thinking they had completed final deliberations. But because the committee has already finished its work, 100, they will have to amend to cast the $59.96 fee. DAVID SAIB the misunderstanding about submitting papers from past years when the Senate had dipened into a more formal mode. But according to Werder, the Cultural Affairs Committee went over budget because organizations needed items necessary for operation, such as typewriters, costumes and recording tapes. However, as deliberations progressed Saturday, a budgeting philosophy that would make organizations more self-sufficient was developed. Dues and fundraising programs were designed for clubs that reliably fed on Senate funding. Organization that were less self-sufficient received more funding this year than those who were. Weder said the practice of rewarding organizations more dependent on Senate bothered her. That she only two organizations—the Organization of Arab Students and the Islamic Society of receiving money from sources other than Senate. "IN THE FUTURE, organizations will have to start proving themselves in fund-raising before we can consider them a success and give them more money." Werder said. Preliminary budget recommendations were: African Student Association, $85; 40. KU Polk Dance Club, $280. Hellenic Club, $500; International Club, $1,875. Iranian Student Association, $486; Latin American Club, $545. Organized Arts Club, $350; Tan Sigma Dance Association, $442; Association, $850. University Dance Company, $94.07 The committee did not consider budget requests from the KU India Club, Chinese Students Association and Operation Friendship because the organizations' members were submitted by the Senate's March 10 deadline. --- 2 Monday, March 31, 1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services Iran insists Carter apoloaized Iranian officials insisted yesterday that they had received two conciliatory messages from President Carter admitting mistakes in previous U.S. policy toward Iran and said the White House disclaimed them because of domestic political problems. Foreign Minister Sadeq Ghobzadze claimed the messages said an international panel should be formed to resolve issues between the two countries, but that the panel should not meet before the 50 American hostages were freed. The United Nations' 14th day yesterday as captives inside the occupied U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Swiss Foreign Ministry spokesman Hansjörger Renk said a Swiss Embassy facial in Tehran had 'transmitted a message from President Carsten to Bani- li'. Presidential spokesman Jody Powell, speaking to reporters in Milwaukee, invited that Swiss diplomat had conveyed messages from Carter to Iranian leaders in response to the assault. He said the Swiss ambassador in Tehran, Erkl Rong, delivered a second letter to Bain-Sath theft. Henk and the Swiss government did not know the cause. It was revealed by Danish sources in Copenhagen that the nine nations of the European Common Market sent letters over the weekend to the Iranian authorities. The Danish sources would not say if the letters were linked to the alleged Carter messages. Bain-Sad told reporters the alleged message from Carter had prompted the U.S. Revolutionary Council to make new decisions in the hostage crisis, but he did not. Khomeini to allow Vatican visit KUWAIT—Iranian Revolutionary leader Ayatollah Rubbilah Khomeini, in a Tehran television broadcast monitored here yesterday, said he would help a Vatican representative to visit the 50 Americans held hostage in the occupied U.S. Embassy in Tehran. It could not be determined if the program had been filmed in the past day to two or even months ago and was just being rebroadcast. Vatican sources could not be reached immediately to say whether the telecast was a new development. Khomeini made the remark to the papal nuncio based in Tehran, who told him Pope John Paul II hoped the hostages were being treated well. He said the pope also sufficed success for the Iranian revolution which topped Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in February 1979. "If the pope wants to be reassured about the condition of the hostages, he may send an envoy to come and see," Khomeini said. - outside visitor has seen all the bastages that the embassy takeover Nov. 3 • three American clergymen and they saw 45 of them during Christmas • 20 people were killed in the attack The telecast, in which President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr acted as interpreter, was monitored in Kuwait. Violence mars bishop's funeral SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—An explosion and gunfire ignited panic among an estimated 50,000 persons gathered for an outdoor funeral Mass for the victims. At least 40 persons were killed, most of them crushed in the fleeing crowd, but witnesses at least seven suffered wound wounds. Medical sources said at "There was total panic," said the Rev. Ricardo Uriste, acting archbishop of San Salvador. Several cars in the downtown area were overturned and burned, and gunshots, bomb explosions and automatic weapon fire could be heard as a new emergency was declared. A military bulletin broadcast last night over a national radio and television network said their army was being dispatched to "restore order." Like other security forces, army troops had been on alert but confined to barracks yesterday by the ruling civil-military junta. A spokesman for the Salvadoran Human Rights Commission told United Press International that the shooting began when right-wing extremists posted in the National Palace adjacent to the plaza three "fragmentation grenades" on Wednesday, the officers of the leftist Revolutionary Coordinator of Masses who came to the funeral. Guerrillas free two hostaaes BOGGTA, Colombia (AP)-Guerillas holding hostages in the Dominican republic Emission released yesterday two of their 29 captives seized in the city. Among the 27 still held in the embassy is U.S. Ambassador Diego Asencio. The two freed are not diplomats. A Foreign Ministry source identified them as Simon Mordigues, an official from the Cindamara region, and Jorge Patiño, a diplomat from Colombia. They were taken by police to a military hospital for examination. The men came around the corner at the head of the dead end street leading to a large field where a bunch of yellow-dyed away said the man were pushing a red Volkswagen that had been parked on the street. The two men went inside a command post near the embassy and then entered another car parked outside and were driven away. Farmers granted spring loans - ASHINGTON - President Carter signed a bill yesterday to provide $2 million in loans to farmers who need money to plant spring crops. The operating credit that farmers need to plant their spring crops is extensive. Carl said in a statement "The need renew and extend this program is critical." The capital will go to the Farmers Home Administration's depleted economic emergency loan program. Carter said he had directed Agriculture Secretary Bob Gerland to ensure the loans are used primarily for operating expenses for farmers who need them the most. Nuclear parts found defective In a period of overall fiscal restraint and economic sacrifice, it is important that we not allow the economic viability of our agricultural sector to be undermined. KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Key parts manufactured at a factory for nuclear plants in Paola had serious defects that could have prevented the plants from shutting down properly in an emergency, the Kansas City Star said in a copyright story yesterday. all of the parts, caused preassembly formations, had been installed at the plants before inspectors at Wolf Creek found the first signs of serious welding defects almost a year ago. Officials say it may be nine months before all of the defective units are repaired or replaced. Plant officials and officials of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which has been reviewing the problems since June, say the repair and replacement are safe. The plants served by the Paola factory are the Wolf Creek nuclear plant near Burlington, and the Callaway plant under construction near Fulton, Mo. The NRC and the utilities blame the problem on the manufacturer, Gulf and Western Taylor Forge Engineered Systems of Paola. Vietnamese leader Thang dies BANGKOK, Thailand—Ton Duc Thang, who became president of North Vietnam on the death of revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh in 1969 and later was the first and only president of a unified Vietnam, died yesterday. Radio Hanoi announced. It said Thang was 91. The cause of death was not given, but a Hanoi broadcast last week said Thang had been ill since August and his condition was "very grave." Weather... Kanter, a nationally known author and business consultant, spoke on "Power and Powerlessness in Organizations," in a presentation by Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Skiers will be cloudy today with the high in the mid 40s, according to the skiier weather service in Topeka. Winds will from the east southeast at 10 to 20 kph. Power is an intangible that people attribute to someone, not something that can be earned by sheer effort.皂摩Bess Moss is a crowd of about 280 Friday night at KU Power-gaining tools discussed by Kanter Tongt will be cloudy with the low in the upper 30s. Tomorrow will also be cloudy with a chance of rain and thunder showers. The high will be in the low to mid 30s. "The powerful people in societies and organizations tend to be well known," she said. "This is important, because power is attributed. It is not tangible." "People who are very, very powerful have to be careful sometimes what they say." Kanter said. The powerless, on the other hand, can be easily hypnased, she said. THE POWERFUL get more cooperation from people and so get more done easily, she said. Powerless people, on the other hand, have to be petty and enforce all rules to exercise some control over their domain. "The powerless are the people that people know don't have to be taken seriously," she said. She said powerful people have an advantage over others that they could afford to delegate power. "It's very easy for people who have that label to get things done and to look gracious at the same time," she said. Power, which she described as 'the capacity to arouse cooperation and to get "POWER GOES TO pioneers, to risk-takers, to the first who get something done." she said. Visibility is another method of acquiring power. the resources to get things done," can be accumulated in several ways through activities or through alliances. "People have to see what you're doing, and see that it's something extraordinary and larger than life for you to get recognition," she said. But she said visible actions also had to be relevant. ANOTHER METHOD of gaining power is through alliances with powerful people, she said. "It's possible to be odd and be noticed, and not know what's going on around here," she said. "It's who you know, who's connected to them, that gets you power," she said. "If I think you are connected to someone who is powerful, I think 'Aha! You must be powerful too.' " 'What they're really saying is 'they're not like me', '' she said. For that reason, the powerful tend to be anti-women or minorities. Another power-gaining technique is to look like people already in power, she said. As a result, she said, women and minorities may find it easier to gain power because they are already in the "spotlight" if they're not from the rest of the workers. A It's the end of the month and Jeff Chaplin has run out of money. Bill could revise state payroll Chapline, who works at the Kansas Union, has borrowed money three times this semester to pay for his expenses at the University. By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter But help may be in sight if the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee passes a bill that would allow state employees to work at employees bweekly instead of monthly. SEND YOUR HONEY A SINGING BUNNY!! ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS 842-8741 Basket delivered with each telegram "I could work my finances better if I had cash twice a week," Chapla, who is working his way through school, said yesterday. "I think I could better arrange or spending of it over a week or weeks rather than a whole month." REP, WILLIAM W. BUNTEN, R-Topeka, he said he sympathized with Chapine's situation but questioned possible effects of the bill. 4. Bunten, vice chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said the bill could have tremendous fiscal ramifications for the state. Big Eight Room "When employees have large amounts of dollars and the state doesn't," Bunten said, "that's money the state could be investing in other areas." 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 31 WOLF sponsored by Kansas Union Operation Friendship He said it was possible that only the Med Center would receive approval for bweeky payments. Mountain Spirit Dancers THE PROPOSAL HAS been taken up for "years and years," Bunten said, but the costs to the state have always been too high. The Ways and Means Committee is waiting for the fiscal report outlining these costs from the Kansas Secretary of Agriculture before voting on the bill today. White Mountain Apache Bunten said the bill was developed to make the University of Kansas Medical Center financially more attractive to prospective nurses. Applications are available in the Alumni office at the Student Union and must be returned to the Alumni Association or to a current society member no later than April 15. Owl Society OWL PASSAGE OF THE bill depends on the cost of changing current payroll policy and the loss of state income from increased taxation. It is also to a possible tax increase, Buten said. The Owl Society is a co-educational honorary society for juniors at The University of Kansas that recognizes outstanding grades and involvement. We are presently accepting applications for membership from current sophomores who will be academic juniors in the coming Fall semester. Chapleau said that it could be his lifestyle that caused his financial problems, but that it was hard to plan a strategy ahead of time to budget his finances. Bunten said he was sympathetic to employees who got paid only once a month and could see why they might want to receive a check more often. "In fact," he said. "I pay the people in my private business every week." DOS DELUXE Overland Photo 4x6 New 35mm Prints KJHK FM 91 Announcing A New Programming Approach In recognition of the passing of the 91st day of the year Listen in for details. Partially funded by Student Senate. W. H. W. W. C. & Me 841-6181 544 W. 23rd St. SPAGHETTI BONANZA Large serving of spaghetti with meat sauce and garlic bread. $1.98 Offer good Monday March 31st through Sunday April 6thl We would like to introduce Mark Fowlkes, specializing in the new "reconstruction" curl and relaxers. Only at ... hair loros styling for men and women 1017 1/2 Mass 841-8976 REDKEN open Mon. Thurs. til 9 by appointment: Fr. & Sat. 9 --- Monday, March 31, 1980 University Daily Kansan 2 Apodaca pushes pride By VANCE HINER Staff Reporter Ethnic pride and higher self-esteem are needed if Hispanics are to attain citizenship. The governor of Apodaca, former governor of New Mexico, said Friday night in the Kansas Opadaca, the keynote speaker at MECHA's (Hispanic student association) conference last week, was New Mexico's first Hispanic governor since 1918, cochairman of the 1976 Democratic Party and governor for a New Mexico U.S. Senate seat. It is difficult for many people to believe Hispanics can be successful in America without losing their culture, Apadaca told an audience more than 100 people. Apodaca, governor from 1974-78, said his political achievements had prompted some people to tell him he wasn't "a typical Mexican." OPODAC DESCRIBED an encounter with a Hispanic voter during his campaign tour for President Jimmy Carter in 1976. "To qualify in his judgment to be a Jewish Hispanic, you’ve got to be a failure if you are not from an Anglo counterpart. It came to me from a Mexican-American lawyer." Many people told him a Mexican would never never become governor, he said. "We'd been led to believe it was an office we didn't have a right to obtain," he said. "We don't deserve to be number one in anything if we don't really believe we are entitled to it." ADOPACA EXPRESSED his dissatisfaction with the Carter administration by relating a conversation he had with Carter last summer. "It's a national disgrace that in 200 years we haven't had an Hispanic in the nation's Cabinet," he quoted Carter as saying in a 1976 campaign speech. "I said, 'Mr. President, you've just added three years to that disgrace.' Apodaca said he hadn't decided whether to support Carter or Kennedy in the primaries this year. A GROWING HISPANIC voice in national politics should insure an Hispanic Cabinet member in next year's White House, he said. "We spent the 86s competing with each other," he said. "Maybe we spent the '78s worrying about what we should be called." Apodaca predicted that Hispanics probably would be the country's largest minority by the end of the 1890s. In preparation for the next decade, Apodaca encouraged fellow Hispanics to strive for financial independence and to prove their potential as citizens. "Show the people around us that we can perform and do a good job," he said. "The opportunity to change the environment in our world, well, you just can't measure it." By BILL MENEZES Staff Renorter FacEx to review Forer's case A letter sent to the Faculty Senate Executive committee from the American Association for the Advancement of Science University of Kansas chapter has asked FacEx to look into the specific facts of the Norman Foster case so the controversy may be resolved by the end of the semester. One proposed amendment to the Faculty Code of Conduct would give the University Judiciary jurisdiction over any cases in which there is a recommendation of "warning" or "restitution." The letter, which will be discussed this Friday at FaceEx, was sent to Gerhard Zuther. FacEx chairman on March 21 from the University president of the RU chapter of AAPU. THIS WOULD INVOKE amendments to and deletions from the Academic Rules and Regulations of the Faculty Bookhand to members who do not meet these obligations. The letter contains four proposed recommendations for consideration and possible action by FacEx. Included are recommendations for a study to determine whether faculty members were meeting their academic response to the changes in class design, including attending all assigned classes. The letter also recommend the revision a Kansas Board of Regents rule that students should not immediately suspend a faculty member, without a hearing, under certaincircumstances. SRINVASIA SANID the rule should be revised so that it was consistent with due process recommendations in AAUP's letter to FaxEx. **TODAY:** HILLEL will present "Holocaust," a photographic exhibit, in the Conference Room of the Satellite Union, WOMEN GEMINIAN STUDENTS will hold an exhibit at the Conference Room 1 in the Kansas Union at noon. K-MUSISEMU WESTERN BASEBALL DUBLE-HEADER will be at Quincy Field in front of room 265 in Robinson gymnasium. THE UNDERGRADuate ANTHROPOLOGY ASSOCIATION will present a movie, "The First Signs of Wake," with a presentation at 9:30 in the Council Room in the Union. In its meeting Friday, FaceEx met in a session with Chance Fryer, Dyked the professor of math. Rather said a report of the discussion would be presented to the University Council on Wednesday. TONIGHT: The KU MUSIC THERAPY Forer, associate professor of social stratics at the University strata in social welfare, were suspended without pay during their December trip to Iran in their unofficial attempt to help the American community. CLUB will meet at 7. Kathy Rose will speak on "The Inspirer's View of Rehabilitation." OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will sponsor a team of six students at 7:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Union. The KU COLLEGium MUSICUM will host a round table discussion commemorating the 1,500th anniversary of St. Benedict of Norcia at 7:30 in Spencer Auditorium. Roger S. Kenny will present New History of Japanese Prints, #8 in the Spencer Museum of Art. A STUDENT RECUTAL by Mary Allen percussion, and a Swarthout Twelfth Hall in Swarthout Twelfth Hall in Murphy Hall. The rule, instituted in June 1970, gives the chancellor the power to "immediately suspend any employee, faculty member, or student" of an institution who is "engaging in activities deliberately designed to, and with the intention of ordinary process of education and training." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus In Friday's meeting of the University Senate, the committee adopted an eligibility schedule for financial and was discussed. The schedule was submitted by the University Senate Committee on February 15. The proposed schedule would require first semester freshmen to achieve a 1.0 grade point average for 12 credits of work in order to maintain eligibility for federal financial aid. The original proposals were created in response to regulations requiring "reasonable academic progress" by students receiving federal financial aid. jogger roller skates from $55 Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Mass. 842-3131 The current standards for the University require a 1.2 grade point average for first semester freshmen but require a 1.5 grade point average only after nine semesters of work. Students would also be required to THESE PROPOSALS were made after earlier suggestions by the committee, proposing a minimum 1.25 grade point average from first semester freshmen and a maximum of 1.50 after four semesters, were rejected by the University Council as being too tingling. achieve a 2.0 cumulative grade point average after 60 credits, or five semesters, of work in order to keep their eligibility. Leban said he would try to find another setting for the hearing. "It's not neutral ground," he said. "It's not proper to meet in the office of the chancellor's lawyer." The hearing is scheduled to take place Friday morning in the University General Counsel's office, but Leban said yesterday that he told the Judiciary he would not meet On March 3, Leban filed a petition with the University Judiciary alleging that Dykes violated his rights and the rights of all University students, faculty and staff members in his handing of Norman Force and Clarence Dillingham during their December trip to Iran. Carl Leban, associate professor of East Michigan State University, will locate a University hearing jury to determine whether his charges against Chancellor Archie R. Dykes may be on hold. Monaay Cladness!! Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $2.00 $4.20 Order any one-topping 16" pizza and get 3 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $2.00 $6.55 Pyramid Pizza 842-3232 FREE, Fast Deliveryll Open 'til 1:00 A.M. Every Night! We Pile It On! 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) .55 ramid Pizza Hearing location objected Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and Dillingham, instructor in education, spent several days during their trip. The two were part of a group making an unofficial attempt to help them. The hearing was scheduled after Associate General Counsel Vickey Thomas filed a motion, on behalf of Dykes, to have the tribunal adjourn without Lebanah no standing to file them. The motion said Leban had not personally been injured by the alleged rights violations by the chancellor, and therefore had no standing to file the charges. Hillel presents "HOLOCAUST" » a photographic exhibition March 31st through April 12 Satellite Union Conference Room LOOF LIRPA Come join the April Fools fun, with the Non-traditional Student Organization, Trail Rm., Kansas Union NTSO Partially funded by Student Senate 1st Annual Spring Green Bow Sale! 1 Day only Tuesday, 10:00-8:30 20% off Hundreds of Items with a Green Bow Every Style on Sale This Includes ALL Spring & Summer Merchandise Items Selected at Random 1 Day Only, Tuesday, April 1, 10:00-8:30 Try Your Luck with these Terrific Savings Clothes Encounter Holiday Plaza ~in step with your style 25th & Iowa UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorslals Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan writers. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers. March 31,1980 Lowering the boom If parking proposals discussed in the Parking and Traffic Board's annual report receive final approval from the Kansas Board of Regents, drivers on the University of Kansas campus not only have limited time for parking illegally but also would have to pay more for parking legally. The proposals include shortening the time limits for payment of parking fines from the current 14-day grace period to a seven-day period, unless the fines are appealed. Fines not paid after seven days would increase in varying amounts according to the parking violation. This regulation would apply to all University parking violations. The time limit to appeal parking violations also would be cut from 14 to seven days under the proposals. The time limit might be extended, and if the other specific circumstances and if the amount of the fine was posted as bond. Implementing these proposals probably would encourage drivers to pay fines more promptly, but not easily to promptly pay more fines. A resoundingly discouraging note in the report of proposals is the possible increase of parking permit prices for 1981.423. The increases are ostensibly aimed at reducing people driving on campus because of the high cost of gasoline. The administration apparently seeks to add insult to injury by penalizing a second time those who do drive—once at the pump and once at the parking lot. Even though none of these proposals is anything for drivers to cheer about, there is a hint of a proposal included in the report that is cause for rejoicing among student drivers. In response to this suggestion, and staff who had unpaid parking fines, the report said the traffic board was considering a proposal that would not allow faculty and staff members with unpaid fines to get parking permits or press assignments for 1980-81. Hurrah! Every student on campus will graduate the board with letters urging them to make just such a proposal. Outstanding fines for years have caused many students to suffer grievous consequences for their delinquency while just as delinquent faculty and staff members have continued to enjoy parking privileges. The board should be commended for finally considering a punishment one that would have punished collectively the guilty and the innocent. Feeding a meter or doling out dough for a parking permit or fine may not be enjoyable under any circumstances but it is more digestible and less galling when you know faculty and staff members are having to appease the same money-eating monster, with real fear of retribution. Give credit to coffee for the Renaissance New York Times Special Features By GEOFFREY COLVIN New York Times Special Features *NEW YORK- NEW* It looks as though a "NEW YORK-Her" ittoubs as though all the talk about itt "mullifying" your B vitamins, the caffeine, and something about cancer. I'm not saying that's bad, but I just don't want to see it happen with a certain little-known fact or two about the Western civilization being made public. As things stand today, what kind of choice as a thinking person face when it comes to coffee? On the minus side there is the acid, but on the plus side you cut out the b vitamins you probably have. The fact that it could help the formation in your stomach of nitrosamines, which cause cancer. On the plus side there is—what? The fact that it could help you heal. Tell that to your souvenir-eatings驴 And to the average person who reads the newspapers and cares nothing for art, he is a huge critic. That is where the argument ends. But it should be. There is something more that he wants. **IMAGINE GETTING up in the morning after a busy night's sleep on a pile of straw, suddenly feeling a throb shoot through your temple, and thinking back on the night before. We see her with revelry and roasted hares and eels and sucking pigs and peacocks and galantines, and then whirling about in dances with the rest of the village, all the while lifting the chant pretty hard. And now what are you going to do with this quivering package of quiet agony?** You could go outside for some water, which may or may not be ketel; you could have some more chenite (you shudder); you could have some meed; or you could have some meat; or you could have about eight proof by now. Some choice. But you need sure something and the mead actually might not be too bad, couldn't any harm. A tull, wakemafarm of meed, or like a ketchup or a mustard, would like just the thing. You pour one, drink it down—just the thing! —and pour another one. NOW AT THIS point do you say to your self, "Time's a-wasin', I never get the chance to say I'm busy back down and start working!" Or do you take the flag of蒙古 back to your pile of straw, say, "My head feels like a bombstone, and fall into a soft heap?" You know the answer. In Europe long ago there was an era during which this really happened all the time it lasted for hundreds of years. It was important that medieval men were considering, that medieval "artists" painted main stick figures in a few hackneyed poses; that medieval manuscripts were hard to do more than copy; that manuscripters; and that medieval "sculptors"; apparently in a certain condition those of their creations. IT MUST NOT have been a happy time. And, as we know, it came to an end. The question is, and has long been, why? I ask you to observe a few dates: 10th century A.D. -C. spreads from ethiopia to the Arabian Peninsula and the northwest coast of Africa in the Middle East; and the Turks in particular are enchanted by it and take it with them 1517–Kurtis intercept Italian trade routes; 1518–Titman paints "Assumption of the Lord" 1529–Suleiman the Magnificent the Magnificent 1530–Corregio, working a few leagues to the west in northern Italy paints "Aidation of the Sheepers"; 1518–Charles V returns from Algers, then held by Turks; is founded College, Cambridge, is inaugured. THERE ARE LITERALLY dozens more of such examples, all pointing to the same conclusion. The evidence is clear, straightness and overwhelming. It proves that it is only one more confidently state in the simplest, strongest terms: Coffee caused the Renaissance. But this is really one of those things that seems perfectly obvious once someone says, "I want to learn and demand or the universe being shaped like a saddle. Why do you suppose the universe was shaped like a saddle? Awakening in the first place!" It all seems right, it's strange no one made the con The point being that there's more to this coffee matter than you might have thought. It's probably not in the coffee short. Without it we might still be worshipping comets and giving each other Geoffrey Colvin is a reporter-researcher for Fortune magazine. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 11/08/2016 - Published at the University of Kansas Fall August through mid-August mom and son tour a new play by Joshua Bamberg. The play is about two brothers who were born in different states, one in Indiana for $450 and one in Kentucky for $500 each year outside the state. Samuel is also the author of the book. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, RS 6006 Managing Editor Dana Miller Editor James Anthony Fitts Editorial Editor Brenda Watson Business Manager Vincent Coults General Manager Rick Musser Advertising Manager Chuck Chowins Take Olympic protest to Soviets By JEFF KENNEDY Guest Columnist The national Olympic committee of 16 European nations unanimously rejected a boycott of the Moscow Games a week ago last Saturday. British Prime Minister David Cameron will committee for its vote and she would see that no English team went to Moscow. CONGRATULATIONS, COMRADRE---YOU JUST WON THE DEGATHLON HERE AT THE MOSCOW OLYMPICS! TO WHAT DO YOU ATTRIBUTE YOUR REMARKABLE PERFORMANCE? I THINK MY VICTORY WAS DUE IN LARGE PART TO THE FACT THAT I WAS THE ONLY ONE IN THE RACE! CONGRATULATIONS, COMRADE... YOU JUST WON THE DEGATHLON HERE AT THE MOSCOW OLYMPICS! TO WHAT DO YOU ATTRIBUTE YOUR REMARKABLE PERFORMANCE? Our European friends also stated that alternative games would never be acceptable to them and that their positions were broadly supported by their countrymen. So much for Western solidarity in support of Soviet expansionism in Afghanistan. Perhaps President Carter's call for a boycott is an ill-conceived idea. Other measures to protest the Russian military intervention have been weakly enforced while our athletes are required to sacrifice training for the highest honor in sports. I THINK MY VICTORY WAS DUE IN LARGE PART TO THE FACT THAT I WAS THE ONLY ONE IN THE RACE! Alternative games would be a poor substitute for the Olympics and the administration has offered no concrete plans for such events. As a further insult to our Olympians, administration budget cutters demand an annual million earmarked for amateur athletics. THAT WOULD create an interesting situation in many of the events. American athletes are among the best in all summer sports, particularly swimming, gymnastics THESE AHTLETES have refused to give up all of hope in participating in Moscow. A week ago Saturday, the Athletes Advisory Council to the U.S. Olympic Committee sent a letter to President Trump congratulating competition in the events with protests during key moments of the games. The council stated that they deplored the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and added that the United States will be the most visible, effective way to get the message to the Russian people and a worldwide television audience. Their proposal called for an American boycott of the closing ceremonies and refusal to participate in the medal presentation ceremonies. and track and field. If a Russia gets a bronze medal and the other winners are absent from the award ceremonies, the press will have a difficult time explaining what example this form of protest does not violate International Olympic Committee rules. This plan revives memories of the 1968 games in Mexico City. John Carlos and Tormie Smith raised their black-gloved hands in their heads during the award ceremonies and their disrespect during the national anthem outraged many Americans and the photograph of their protest was one of the memorable pictures of the Sixties. Regardless of that, they knew of that it set there was little doubt they clearly made their point. Would anyone remember them if they had chosen to protest American racism by not going to the rally? **THERE IS LITTLE doubt that a U.S. boycott of the Moscowumper would deal a real harm to Russia. It is also likely the Russians will use the boycott as a propaganda weapon saying we are against the Russian military.** seems the council's protest plan would be a more effective demonstration and give our athletes the chance to prove their skills. We have until May 24, the entry deadline, to persuade President Carter to allow our athletes to go to the games. His statement to him said, "It provides an extraordinary opportunity to stage a peaceful demonstration on Soyou side so that the entire country will Duke their play sense and trust the president will take a careful look at it. Jeff Kennedy is a Pratt senior majoring in public relations journalism. Anderson's stands, record conflict Steve Martin, a comedian who sometimes rabbits earn cash for Anderson, a comedian who has been in a beeh Auditorium's biggest drawing cards in recent memory. The two men, who have been married, Steve Martin, amusing as he can be sometimes, entertains millions by saying things anyone could say, while Anderson fools millions by doing the same thing. Steve's trademark is 'I'm a wild and crazy man' to give the American needle a new politics. Both have white hair. Both are cut figures and have established a remarkable rapport with college students. Both appeal to the American public with their crowds-pleasing skirts. But when it comes to measurable success, the similarities between the two end. Martin has been commercially successful. But so far, Anderson's bid for the head coach was unsuccessful. He beaten in his home state and has been beaten soundly in almost every primary. Nevertheless, Anderson continues to win the NCAA tournament extremely popular among college students. KU WAS NO exception. The reaction to Anderson Wednesday was not earth shaking, but the students were certainly receptive. Anderson received three standing ovations and was interrupted three dozen times by applause. Anderson's popularity among college students is not difficult to understand. Students simply do not want to support any COLUMNIST david lewis other candidate. Anderson is a fresh face, but despite what many say to the contrary, his political tactics are no more refreshing than any other candidate's. During a question-and-answer period after his speech, Anderson told KU students that the development of nuclear energy could be stopped until proper safety regulations could be adopted. This statement contradicts his actions in the House. In fact, Anderson's stands often are laughable, considering his Congressional record. Anderson's stand on nuclear energy is perhaps the most questionable. FIRST OF ALL, Anderson has been an avid provider of the Clinch River breeder reactor, an experimental breeder reactor in New Jersey. He worked against a bill that called for the evaluation of safety standards of nuclear reactors in countries where the United States has helped finance or construct them. Anderson also voted to authorize the interim licensing of nuclear reactors that had not yet filled out environmental impact reports. These actions speak well for a man who is urging the tightening of nuclear safety standards. Anderson also told KU students that the SALT II treaty should be ratified. But in Congress, Anderson developed the development the nautilus bomb and the B-1 bomber. KU STUDENTS REACTED most favorably to Anderson's stand on abortion. Anderson's pro-abortion stand elicited thundering appause of approval. Anderson, an avowed Christian, said he did not really believe the right to state should not have the right to decide. This catch-all stands is probation, despite what Anderson contends. But Anderson's pro-abortion statements lose credence in light of the fact that in 1973 he voted for an amendment to forbid poor women to abortions if a hospital refused to perform them. Anderson may be a fresh face, but he also is two-faced. He has a redeeming personality and his charisma has convinced students that a fresh face is better than a hard one. tired one. But his beliefs are those of a typical presidential candidate. ALTHOUGH ANDERSON'S opposition to the draft and the electoral college is appealing, students must realize that Anderson is not much different from any other candidate. His stands are not unique and his tactics resemble Juniny Carter's strategy for addition, every politician pledges to "shape a new public policy" in one way or another. Anderson says his stands are based on what you think they need to hear and ought to hear. Anderson likes people who people want to hear. During his campaign, however, Anderson has not lived up to his philosophy. He has changed his stands to that of the president, which is the only way to win the nomination. THAT NOMINATION will almost surely elude Anderson. Unfortunately, students get Anderson to say when Wednesday could not get Anderson to say when Wednesday could nomination from a third party if he did not win the Republic nomination. Anderson and Anderson, saying he had not given up on the Republican nomination, saying he had not given up on the Republican nomination. To be sure, Anderson's presence in the presidential race has made the campaign more than a game. If he ever comes to KU again, students should bring lighters for encrustes, not firearms. Law tuition ought to support school In reviewing Jon Blosseman's story on the bill before the Kansas Senate Way and School Board, we discussed the school institution. I found that I have misunderstood am referring to Blosseman's report that I said, the fee (t.e., higher law school fee). The bill says not what it said. I mean not what I said. Blosseman asked me if the bill before the Ways and Means Committee wants a bill to allow the ultimate aim is to help the law school. To the Editor: The extra fee paid by law students, as it now stands, bothers law students because we pay more tuition than any other school on campus, and get less back per student. We will assume that the University except the School of Law in this inequality can be solved in one of three ways: law school tuition can be cut, everyone else's tuition can be raised, or the tuition can remain where it is and the extra fee can be rechanneled into the law school. It is assumed that we would be accomplished by Senate Bill 837 and I would be quite satisfied with that result. Prairie Village second year law student Rosie O'Leary Women in combat would weaken U.S. To the Editor Things have changed since World War II when women in the armed forces were restricted to non-combat positions such as stenographers, clerks and air traffic controllers. Now we have those in and outside of them who want to drill women, supposedly for non-combat roles, but the evidence indicates that they will face combat. The Carter Administration has stated its intention to keep women out of combat. Looking closely, however, we find such a If these women were to make up a significant percentage of our armed forces, they would be obvious. The gal who can drive the truck, can hardly be relied upon to change its tire or to unload heavy ammunition is not likely to want desperately to carry half the stretcher proclamation declaiming at best. Under administration prodding, the definition of "combat" is being continually narrowed, so that, currently, low-altitude air defense is "combat," but high-altitude is not, and combat is only when you look through the skin of the enemy. The war, thus, all forms of indirect fire, delivered and received, are not "combat." Call it what you will, women are being trained for close interaction with the enemy. The U.S. Navy. The Army has been directed to load combat support and combat support service units with large percentage of female personnel in the engage in combat. Female West-Pointer boxing and use the lightweight M-16 rifles not the M-14s. The Marine Corps Parris Island boot camp exempts women from the obstacle courses and rugged infantry training that are required for men. The Air Force Academy has had to allow one full year of training to complete a two mile run in order to keep flunking 80 percent of them. Christianity changes lives; Bible proves To the Editor: UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN scheduled to graduate in June, have requested and received assignments in such specialties as artillery and helicopter aviation. Thus, for the administration say that women won't be put in combat is as campaign promise to balance the federal budget. There is good reason for keeping women out of combat. First, women are at a considerable disadvantage physically. The Defense Department, after years of study, has shown that only 3 percent of the muscle strength and 67 percent of the endurance of men. Men generally have much greater upper-body strength than women and have far more muscular endurance. Because of this the service academies, having been ordered to admit women cadets, had to institute separate (and lower) physical standards for women. At least 40 percent of women cadets are required to dexperm arm hangs—not chimpms, train in karate—not Rob Munvan In response to the letter to the editor on March 24, I certainly agree that it's better to read the Bible than to rely on what man says. I also believe that God should have advised. Had he really all of chapter three of the Gospel of John, he would have clearly seen that Christ didn't give the Pharisees authority over Jewish law (which the Pharisees believed in anyway—Acts 26:1-10). But repeatedly told Nicodemus to believe in Him, that is, not that Jesus was obvious, but "entrust his life to Jesus." Kim Mukaiyu Overland Park graduate student to help a buddy, but if he is a 200-pounder, forget it! In light of the intentions and approval of the Carter Administration to involve our women in combat, our Armed Forces will be trained and equipped if we allow women to be drafted. Inclusion in the services of women who are, on the average, weaker, shorter, lighter and slower than men leads us to another conclusion: women must be more temperate. It is that caused by men's immate tendency to protect the physically weaker sex. They found that using women in combat, whether in all-women or mixed units, was distractive for women and prompted psychological pressures under these conditions of stress, the male troops concentrated on protecting the women instead of on their military objective. As a result, casualties were sustained by the men. I agree that there's no mention of a "mystical" personality change in that chapter of John. However, other parts of the New Testament (1 Corinthians 6:9-11) as well as the example of every person in the Bible who committed his life to Christ make no one can ask the living God to be Lord and Savior of his life and remain unchanged. Randy Makin Lawrence graduate student Letters Policy The University Daily. Kanesan welcomes letters to the editor and guest opinions that present different points of view on campus matters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than 500 words. The Kanesan reserves the right to edit all letters and comments, and may also must include the writer's address and phone number if the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include a date and home and office or faculty staff position. 1 Monday, March 31, 1980 University Daily Kansan 5 Kansas' first presidential primary By BLAKE GUMPRECH' Staff Reporter A week ago, Kansas 'first ever presidential figured to be nothing more than a dull formality. President Carter was thrashing Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy with regularity and Republic Ronald Reagan was steadily pulling away from once-surprising challenger George Bush. But suddenly, in the wake of major upstays by Kennedy and Bush in New York and Connecticut, Connecticut's statehood was significant. Carter and Reagan had lost only one state prior to last week. "Despite what people want to believe," Mercy, who directed the star of the film, announced party, said last week that a big part of it was her. the first tests following last week's strange turn of events that shocked even the pollsters. The April 1 Kansas and Wisconsin primaries are "The telephone has been ringing off the wall around here," said Sue Horn Estes, Kennedy's Kanahan alum. "There is been considerably more interest than was before New York. Everybody likes a winner." EXPERTS, HOWEVER, insist that an outcome similar to the New York and Connecticut primary is unlikely here. Carter and Reagan are heavy favorites. Only California Gov. Jerry Brown and Illinois Rep. Prilane received lower marks than Kenney in a survey by the KU Center for Public Affairs survey. The poll also reported that 64 percent of the Democrats questioned preferred Carter while 27 percent supported him. KENNEDY IS the only Democratic candidate who has visited the state. He appeared in Topeka three days before the New Hampshire primary last week and made a last-minute campaign run here last weekend. State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, is among his supporters. The Carter campaign, meanwhile, had hardly bothered with Kansas until Vice President Walter Mondale scheduled less than two hours worth of appearances for today. But with endorsements from Gov. John Carlin and U.S. Rep. Dian Glickman, expected to be ON THE REPUBLICAN side, Reagan is expected to sweep most of the state's 32 Republican delegates despite apparently losing some of the farm vote during his first visit to the state last week. capture most of the state's 37 Democratic delegates. Parity is a formula used to measure current farm pressure against prices that farmers received prior to wheat harvest. In Wichita eight days ago, he confessed to more than 2,000 farmers gathered for a Salute to Agriculture that he was not totally familiar with the term 100 percent parity. Reagan, badly beaten in the state by incumbent Republican leader Richard Nixon, one percent of the Republicans questioned in the state. He also had the largest Republican percentage among independents. Unaffiliated voters can vote Rep. John B. Anderson of Illinois is expected to finish second in the GOP race, but probably will not give Reagan much of a challenge because much of his support is among Democrats. either wav in the primary. UNLIKE 16 primary states, Kansas does not permit crossover voting between parties. Kansas is the 36th state to have a presidential primary. The Legislature established the primary in 1978 on an experimental basis, at a cost of about $1.1 million. Kansas delegates, bound only on the first ballot, are committed to candidates in direct proportion to their rank. Republican candidates must receive at least 50 percent of the vote in the general election, while Democrats are required to win 15 percent. Write-in votes are not permitted. John Anderson A favorite among the college crowd, Rep. John B. Anderson of Illinois has never lost an election. He's a graduate of the University of Illinois and Harvard University Law School and was elected state's attorney for Winnipesaukee County, Ill., in 1864 after years as a foreign service officer in West Germany. Anderson, $s$, was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1980 and is now the second member of the House. OREIGN AFFAIRS SOVIET UNION: Supports U.S. grain embargo in reaction to the invasion of Afghanistan. Hopes that the United States will pertective coexistence, "said that 'war is not inevitable.' Favors ra钛ation of the SALT II IRAO: Inposed U. S. harboring of deposed sham, but supports government position on hostazes. DEFENSE: Supports development of neutron bomb, but opposes proposed MX missile system and the B-1 bomber. Calls for decreased defense spending. INFLATION: Has introduced legislation that require president to submit a balanced budget. budget and would limit federal spending to 20 per estimated gross national product. ECONOMY TAXES: Proposes major tax cuts while calling for a 50-cent-a-gallon gas tax. ENERGY HEALTH COSTS: Opposes comprehensive national health care plan because, he says, the cost would be more than any economy could bear. Supports catastrophic illness insurance. Opposes wage-pricel control and constitutional amendment to require a balanced budget OIL: Say his proposed 50-cent-a-gallon gas would reduce consumption by 5 to 10 percent. Supports deregulation of oil and gas prices, the state's tax and stand-by gas rationing authority. NUCLEAR POWER: Opposes new construction nuclear plants until safety and waste disposal policies are in place. DRAFT: Opposes peace-time registration but supports girls for women as well as men, in time of crisis. ABORTION: Pro-choice, calls right-to-life 'a reaction' callation of right wing ERA: Supports amendment and proposed extension of ratification deadline. George Bush earned his fortune as a Texas oil man. He earned prestige in the U.S. Senate, the CIA and as chairman of the Republican National Committee. Bush, 55, was elected to the House of Representatives in 1967. He lost two later lids for the Senate. He last eight years, he has served as United Nations ambassador; he is U.S. liaison office in Peking and chief of the CIA. George Bush Blames President Carter's "naivete and blame for creating an international power mompority for the American people." A native of Connecticut and a graduate of Yale University, Bush became the youngest commission pilot then in the Navy at age 18. He served with the aircraft until 30 years ago to enter the oil drilling business. SOVIET UNION: Demands a halt to "naked, brutal Soviet aggression" and insists that the Russian invasion of Afghanistan could have been prevented with stronger U. S. intelligence system. FOREIGN AFFAIRS IRAN: Says he would "tighten the economic noose" around Iran to speed up the release of the 50 hostages. Says Carter should have done more to strengthen shah's riteime. DEFENSE: Proposes immediate $6 to $8 billion ECONOMY hein the defense budget and supports efforts to hike in the CIA. U.S. could win a nuclear war. INFLATION: Promotes balanced budget, but opposes constitutional amendment requiring it. TAXES: Proposes $20 billion in tax cuts for individuals and families with the highest percent cut in the corporate rate for each of the next five years. HEALTH COSTS: Favors catastrophic health insurance only for those who cannot afford it. ENERGY OIL: Insists that federal regulatory agencies are "out of control" and supports immediate decontrol of oil and gas prices. He provides a windfall oil profits provision. OpposesKeepessy relaisting rope. NUCLEAR POWER: Promotes "safe" nuclear energy but says that steps must be taken to correct errors. OTHER ISSUES ERA: Supports amendment but opposes proposed extension of ratification deadline. M. S. M. ABORTION: Personally opposes it—except in cases of rage, incest and to save the life of the mother. However, against proposed constitutional amendment banning abortions. Ronald Reagan Ronald Reagan He's been in more than 50 full length movies, he has a sportscaster and a newspaper columnist and was California's governor for two terms. At 69, Reagan would be the oldest president ever. **SOVietet MONO:** Opposes approval of second SALA, which would give the U.S. SANITA to unite the U.S. withdraw from Afghanistan. Says that Russia "has one course and one course only," it is dedicated to the belief that it will never be able to support its allies. Born in Tampa, IL, he graduated from Eureka College, about 30 miles east of Peoria. III. After a film and television career spanning 39 years, he was elected governor, winning by nearly a million votes. FOREIGN AFFAIRS A Democrat-turned-Republican, he was reelected in 1970. This is his third bid for the presidency. DEFENSE: Favors increased defense spending. INFLATION: Saying tha' "government causes inflation and government can make it go away” he proposes major tax cuts and suggests that government turn over parts of the bureaucracy to local control. TAXES: Proposes a 30 percent reduction in income taxes over the next three years. OIL: Wants to end price controls and increase domestic production and insists that conservation is important. NUCLEAR POWER: a stunner supporter, saying it's time for the anti-nuclear people to take their place. HEALTH COSTS: Opposes national health care plan. ABORTION: Opposes it and supports an amendment banning it, saying: "What ever happened to that man?" OTHER ISSUES ENERGY DRAFT: Opposes registration and adds, "I don't want to belong to that drama that drafts women." HOMEXEUXIALITY: "I do not believe society can condone it, nor can I." MARUJANA: Calls it "probably the worst and most dangerous drug in America today." Jimmy Carter in his 1976 campaign, President Jimmy Carter emerged from relative anonymity as former governor of Georgia to the highest U.S. office. He was succeeded by after serving as a state senator from 1963 to 1967. Carter, 56, received an engineering degree in 1946 from the U.S. Naval Academy. Six years of active duty preceded his taking over the family's peanut farm and business in Plains, Ga. FOREIGN AFFAIRS Soviet Union: Stated policy is to "maintain nuclear equilibrium; reduce sharply in the future atomic weaponry, and then compete with the Soviets on a peaceful basis". Supports *SALT II*, but favors delay in nuclear development. Calling for boycott of Moscow Summer Olympics, Calline for trade embargo against Soviet Union and North Korea, the UN called recently *Afghanistan invasion* "potentially the most serious threat to world peace since World War II". IRAN: "We hold the government of Iran fully responsible for the well-being and the safe return of every single person," he says. Frustrated by failure of U.N. commission, DEFENSE: Suppresses 5 percent increase in defense spending, deployment of MX missile system, Rapid Deployment Force, establishment of U.S. naval forces undererstanding naval forces and strategic air force. **INFLATION:** Recently announced proposal for a $180,000 budget, with $14 billion in cuts and has acceded to 180 budget. Supports wage-price guidelines rather than concessions. Structural amendment requiring balancing budget. ECONOMY TAXES: Has proposed halt to general revenue sharing for the states. Opposes tax cut as inflationary but reserves right to propose one if economy worsens. Tax reform efforts stymied by --- HEALTH COSTS: Proposed limited national health insurance to be based on private insurance carriers, with mandatory hospital cost controls. ENERGY OLE: His gasoline conservation fee will add 10 dollars to his annual bill. He decided for domestic production. Support wind energy by declining the cost of柴油. NUCLEAR POWER: Pending full report on Three Mile Island, supports slow development of the facility. OTHER ISSUES DRAFT: Supports registration for men and women who are not called for and do not make calls for a doctor. ABORTION: Opposes constitutional amendment prohibiting abortions, but is personally opposed to the policy. ERA: Supports constitutional amendment and extension of ratification deadline Edward Kennedy FOREIGN AFFAIRS At 48, Kennedy has served 17 years in the U.S. Senate, is chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and is a member of the Labor and Public Welfare and Joint Economic Committees. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's rise to senate leadership and presidential candidacy has been a storybook one. After receiving a law degree from the University of Virginia and an undergraduate degree, he helped in helping in brother John's Senate and presidential campaigns and was a Massachusetts district attorney. SVIET UNION: A SALT II supporter, he says "the most fundamental human right remains freedom from war." He sees Carter's grain arm strategy as a greater threat than Soviet, but supports technology embargo. DEFENSE: Favors a 3 percent budget increase over inflation for fiscal year 1981. Suspicious of the MX missile system. Looks for an end to nuclear arms race. IRAN: Critical of Carter's handling of the hostage issue, saying the Shah ran "one of the most violent regimes in the history of mankind" and should not have been allowed in the country. INFLATION: Call for imposition of wage and benefits in 1982. America dream is really threatened in the 1980s. Says balanced budget will have wait until 1982 or 1983. Supports tying federal spending to GDP. TAXES: Wants better treatment of two-income families. Favors tax relief for those most hurt by inflation, but opposes an across-the-board cut as an inflationary move. HEALTH COSTS: The foremost advocate of a $34 billion national health insurance program, says with quality medical care should be available to all. State laws require that hospitals support by Congress. Support hospital cost containment. ENERGY OIL: Again decontrol of domestic prices. FAERS immediate rationing program as only "fair" bases are required. ALEXANDER KNOPF NUCLEAR: Calls for total phase-out of nuclear plants. OTHER ISSUES DRAFT: "I would rather do with less gas than shed an oilarm blood to defend OPEC pipelines," he says. See registration and draft as currently unpublished. Favors including women in any such proposal. ABORTION Personally imposes, but supports government funding in cases of incest, rape or to be used as a weapon. GUN CONTROL: Has introduced legislation to ban "Saturday night specials," but supports right of access for minors. ERA: Supports ERA and voted to extend the ratification deadline. Carter, Kennedy, Bush, Reagan and Anderson may be the big names on tomorrows' primary ballot, but the primary's relatively low $100 filing fee has attracted an other candidates to vie for Kansas primary votes. On the Republican ballot, the biggest of the little ones were Republican governors, one governor and Secretary of the Treasury, nine who bowed out of the race last week and endorsed Reagan, and Rep. Phil Crane, R-Illinois, who has yet won the election. Crane opposes reinstitution of the draft or registration unless reserves fall drastically, supports a constitutional amendment against abortion, opposes national health insurance and says the government should treat its wife with respect. Others on the list are: R. W. Yeager, a Norton contractor who wants to cut the Departments' Energy and Health and Welfare. - Benjamin Fernandez, Los Angeles businessman, no speaks for Mexican-Americans and wants to be involved.* - Harold Stassen, former Minnesota governor who has run in every election since the 1940s. - Alvin Carris, Pawnee Rock farmer, who says. "If we want to get anything done around here, we got to get up and do it ourselves." - William Carlson, Sebring. Fla. hardware retailer, who supports increased military strength, atomic energy, reform and is against gun control, abortion and national health insurance. - Ray Rollinson of New Jersey, who claims he won a electoral primaries for Vice President in the 1976 election, said that "they were very smart." - Donald Badgely, a retired insurance salesman from Poughkeepsie, N.Y., who has placed his hopes on the Kansas primary. He claims God told him in 1968 run for the county that he intends to use God's law to run the election if elected. Other Democrats who have filed in Kansas are: - Bob Maddox. of Hollywood. Fla - California Gov. Jerry Brown, who is a vehement opponent of nuclear power and opposes registration and the draft. He seeks to avoid confrontation abroad, favors a constitutional amendment to balance the budget, wants the president to have the authority to appoint the secretary of state as a nation's import authority to purchase foreign oil. - *Frank Ahern, of New Orleans, LA., whose proposals include turning Texas into a giant fish farm to provide - Cliff Finch of Jackson, Miss. Stories by Scott C. Faust and Blake Gumprecht Illustrations by Phil Thompson --- 6 Monday, March 31, 1980 University Daily Kansan New Additions CITY OF BIRMINGHAM Pantograph For copying to size, or enlarging and reducing drawings in exacting proportions. 21" long, enlargements or reductions up to 25 ratios. $12.95. matter change VISA master charge pen&,inc. art supplies 613 vermont 831-1777 open 9-5:30 M-S GO GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS Gentleman's Quarters has done precision haircuts for 6 years. For a cut designed just for you call 843- 38 just for you call 843-2138 to make an appointment. Our precision cuts are only $10.50 Holiday Plaza 2120 C W.25th Seniors! Find Your KU Connection 7 and win $50! Before you graduate, investigate KU. You could win $100 just enter the KU Connection Contest (see rules below). Here are some examples: 1. Stretch by strong Hall and take a peak, to see which way faces the lajahawk break 2. Walk by the Jimmy Green state and take a look, to find the student carrying how many books? 3. It doesn't matter when the bells peal, you'll always tick this inside the campfire. Find the answers to these and look for more clues in every Mon, and Tues. *Kansan* until April 14. Or get a list of all 11 clues plus the rules at the Alumni Association office. 403. Kansan Union. One $50 prize will be given to the winner at the Senior Open House Thurs., April 17 7-9 p.m. 403, Union live jazz band door prizes pop and beer soundtrack l.bawkshoe So, class movie ALUMNI ASSOCIATION 1. Company's name, address, phone number and KUBID number must accompany amounts 4. Confidence alone does not have to complete all the checks to be eligible to wait 4. Answers must be submitted to the Alamanda Association office anytime between Tuesday April 1 (land from Thursday, April 1). 2. Answers must be printed or typed legibly. 5. Conductants must be present at the Open House to visit 3. Only students graduating in May, 1980 are eligible to enter class to be eligible to win 7. Only one $50 prize will be awarded. Any tax will be broken by a drawing. - Members of Prot. Carr's 1-743 Campaign class are not eligible to enter The Alumni Association: your answer to the KU Connection Nuclear power foes hold wet TMI rally Nine drenched opponents of nuclear power withstood Saturday's rain to hold a rally in South Park, recalling the first anniversary of the accident at Three Mile Setting up signs for passing motorists to see, the group gathered to discuss the accident and the state of nuclear power in general. "People are out here standing in the rain to stress the concern that was widespread a year ago, but has decreased with time," said Curtis Beckwright of Wichita, who was on his way to an anti-nuclear rally in Kansas City. It became of bad weather. A LARGE SIGN reading "We Can't Af- fear and a picturing and a power plant power man are making the colors run. The group fought a seemingly fattle to keep the cloth drawn. Alan Nelson, a Lawrence resident, agreed. "We've got to keep public attention on it," Nelson said. "The more informed people are, the better off they'll be." Soapbox speeches had been planned, but the weather kept orations to informal, impromptu discussions about the hazards of nuclear energy. Pat Slick, Lawrence graduate student. "Nuclear power is causing people to turn to violence, 'Slick it down.' The Mile Island will be a place this summer to look for a lot of action." said he thought the Three Mile Island incident was far from over and that violence could be expected in the coming months in Harrisburg, Pa., the plant's site. The accident instilled fear in people across the nation, he said. THE NUCLEAR POWER plant, Wolf Creek, under construction near Burlington, frequently came up in the anti-nuclear discussions. "Every day that goes by, another million dollars is spent on that oil." Nick said. The passage of time would make stopping the project increasingly difficult, he said. the project increasingly difficult, he said. Lawrence president Jack Kinknett said he had come up with a theory why nuclear power had not yet been stopped. "Is not the real reason that the government sponsors commercial nuclear power plants because of the military need for them?" he said. The plutonium produced by the plants, he said, had a relationship with nuclear bombs manufactured by the military. "The military has billions to play with every year, and nobody knows where it's going," he said. The Undergraduate Anthropology Assoc. presents Movie: "The First Signs of Washoe." with comments by Dr. Frayer and Dr. Yamamoto Monday, March 31 3:30 p.m. Council Room of the Union Funded by Student Activity Fees. francis sporting goods 843-4191 781 Massachusetts Lawrenceo, Kansas 66044 play ball! with official softball bats by Louisville Slugger® Lay down a groundwork of solid team gear. Lead off with Louisville Slugger and gel your grip on a winnery. - large 2½-inch barrell, aluminum * 38-oz slow pitch weight, 34-inch length * welded knob with length markings Sports things for sports people '18.95 UTOPIA with Todd Rundgren, guitar; Roger Powell, keyboards; Kasim Sultin, bass; and John Wilex, drums. Utopia brings a vision of utopia By CYNDI HUGHES Kansan Reviewer The utopia that came to Lawrence the utopia that came to Lawrence minor show was a utopia with some minor flaws. It was in Hoch Auditorium experienced an amazing musical wonderland courtesy of Uttica. Utopia, led by the genius of Todd KANSAN Review Rundglen, presented its interpretation of utopia by putting on a tremendous show. The three-hour performance, something unusual in rock concerts, featured everything from good old rock-and-roll to mushy love songs and video shows. It will be a peek into the future of concerts, or at least Utopia's conception of the future. Technical problems, such as a disconnected microphone and bass, and poor mixing failed to dispel the electric atmosphere Utopia created. UTOPIA'S SHOW was very professional and entertaining, marked by the audience's attention of a member of the group. An exceptionally good light show enhanced the performance. The quality of the sound was excellent, although the mixing at first was faulty. The group's first set was mostly Utopia. Some die-hard Rundgren fans may have been disappointed by the THE SECOND SET stepped into the future with a recording of Ravel's "Bolero," an instrumental accompanied by a maxing whirl of surreal video images. Rundern charmed the audience with a medley of his love songs. He then directed the video for "Lady" alone at the piano, accompanied by a moving film of bag ladies on city streets. Uiopa turned out a masterly performance, which included Stephan Soudheim's "Something Coming." Wilco unleashed a mean synthesized drum solo which sounded like a song by Eddie Van Halen. Utopia then came on for the finale. This was a musical masterpiece that included the inspiring "Communication with the Sun," "The Seven Rays" and parts of "Hannah's Adventure." Keyboard process and Hundreds' flashy guitar work gestuated the fiddle. VISTA Wedding Reception? Cal The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. 843-1151 SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW IN CAPRATH- O'LEARY BEFORE APRL 2, 1980. Utopia's two encounters included a rousing performance of the Rundgren rocker, "Couldn't I Just Tell You" and "Rundgren finish. Just One Victory." It was a brief, but brilliant vision of utopia. Ask a VISTA volunteer why he works for a year organizing citizens to help ex-offenders find jobs. Ask other VISTA volunteers why they work for a year across America to change the injustices caused by poverty. VISTA: Volunteers in Service to America. Ask them: Utopia拥裹 cohesiveness with an excellent rendition of "Caravans" from the new album. This song outeshore group's catchy single, "Set Me Free." Over 15 years in the business emphasis on Utopia as a group but Rundren seems content to work within that structure. One of the highlights of the set was the classic Rundergun tune, "The Last Ride." Rundergun's wailing guitar solo was magnificent. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS -Part Stop 1208 East 23rd Ask Them Why TOMMY HILFIGER 843-2931 2540 Alabama rence, Kansas 66044 ADMIRAL AR DENTAL - A choice of any of these economy minded cars 841-2200 - Rentals start at $7 95 a day plus mileage * Free pickup and delivery Toyotas Chevettes Firebirds LTD Wagon Where economy comes first Mazdas Pintos Cutlass Tracks Citations Bobcats Monte Carlo Vans f THE HARBOUR LITES 5th Senior “Farewell to Bars” PARTY 8-12 p.m. all you can drink Tues., April 1, $1 from class members $2 from non-class members SPECIAL SPECIAL TRY SOMETHING NEW FOR LUNCH Join us for Lunch at The Crossing (formerly the Catfish) 618 W. 12th St. For the Finest Sandwiches & Beer in Lawrence. SPECIAL Also come and enjoy our Happy Hour from 4-6 pm with $1.50 pitchers Open 7 days a week at 11 a.m. Bread Baked Fresh Daily Call in Order 843-6660 Ready in 5 min. SPECIAL University Daily Kansan Monday, March 31, 1980 Professors and students to honor 1500th birthday of St. Benedict 7 By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter Staff Reporter KU students may recognize names such as Virgil, Gioco and SL Augustine, but try this one—St. Benedict of Norcia. St. Benedict is one of the people who made it possible for students of today to read texts by those other authors. He founded the religious order of Benedictine monks, who were responsible for copying and preserving the works of many ancient authors. Without the work of the monks, many secular and religious writings would have 'been lost to the modern world. A program commemorating the 150th birthday anniversary of St. Benedict will be held at 7:30 tonight in Spencer Auditorium. As PART OF a "Tabula Rotunda," four speakers will give short addresses on the various contributions of St. Benedict, and encourage students from students and faculty members. Sesto Prete, professor of classics. organized the program and will moderate the discussion. *S. Benedict is the father of Western civilization, in a way.* Prete said last week. "Had we not had the Benedictine order, the greater part of the text of ancient authors was disappeared. Anyone who is interested in this work should be acquainted with S. Benedict." Three KU professors and the Rev. Timothy Fry, editor of the American Beneficiate Review, will speak at the round table discussion. John Senior, professor of classics, will speak on "The Regula of St. Benedict." "My speech will focus on what St. Benedict would think of KU if he were alive today." Senior said. "I think he would be critical of today's University. We tend to value things on the basis of how much money they're worth. The deeper, ultimate meaning is often lost. KU has become almost a technical school; it was not as formal, which, we are back in the Middle Ages." Benedictines advocated a balance of prayer, work and study. During the Middle Ages, they were able to learn or art known to man, and they produced many of the books written before them. St. Benedict, who lived from about 480 to 547, is also known as the Father of Western Monasticism. He established the first monastery in Italy at Subiaco, about 40 miles east of Rome. In 529, he founded the famous monastery at Assino, as basilic, halfway between Rome and Montauk. Labora," or "Pray and Work," Prete said. THE MONTE CASSINO church has been destroyed three times, the last being by the Air Force War in 1944. The United States air force indicted indiscretely to the one previously on the site. St. Benedict also formulated the Holy Rule—regulations given more or less in the seventh century and was placed in the middle of the seventh century and remains the basis for Benedictine congregations all over the world. "I know from my own conversations with Gov. Reagan that he will bring to agricultural America a combination of faith, hope and parity." Dale said. campaign two weeks ago in Lawrence, officially endorsed Reuzan at the rally. The subject of 100 percent partly-a female topic came from an emblematic treatment for Reagan a week in Wichita~come up again last night, during a 20-minute question and answer session. Primary BUT LAST NIGHT. Reagan said he believed in achieving parity "through the marketplace." Parity is the formula used to measure current farm prices against the prices that farmers received before World War I. Addressing 2,000 farmers at a Salute to sacrifice in Wichita, he had confessed that he was not totally familiar with the term. "But I don't want to see the government become a partner in the business," he said. From page one "What the people are demanding is exactly what the Republican party is demanding," he said. On Saturday, Bush—making his first visit to the state-called for the severing of diplomatic ties with Iran, accusing Carter of "seeing the world as it wishes it were." "Today, if we were president," Bush told about 600 supporters. "I would break off diplomatic relations with Iran and I'd send their diplomatic personal home." Speaking for 20 minutes following an afternoon appearance in Topeka, Bush said he was "sick and tired of apologizing for the U.S." Bush said removal of "legal standing from an illegal regime" and economic pressure would have the best chance of 40 million hostages held since November. HE SAID CARTER had backed out of American commitments abroad too often. U.S. foreign policy should be based on human rights, he said, but it should also consider the strategic interests of the United States. Bush added that he would吹 up the CIA. He said his anti-inflation program would be based on cuts in federal spending, easing of government regulations, which he said were "killing off production, savings and investment in this country," and "investment-inventorated tax cut" of $3 billion. Bush also offered economic proposals. He said he was opposed to Rep. John B. Anderson's $20 cent-gallon gasoline, which he called "regressive taxation," and to Anderson's plan to rut defense spending. Anderson has supported a 3 percent increase in defense spending this year above inflation. a partner in the business," he said. Reagan also repeated calls for increased defense spending, a 30 percent tax cut over the years and a hiring freeze on federal employees. --one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven 1 week or fewer $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 Each additional word AT A CITY HALL, rally in Kansas City, for local officials and campaign workers. Kennedy renewed his attack on what he perceived as the failure to deal with economic problems. "It's time to say to Kansas and the rest of the country, 'enough is enough,'" he said. "It's time, my friends, to say to Mr. Carter that it's time to come out from the Rose Garden and to start talking to some the people in Kansas about their needs and concerns." "The presidency doesn't belong to Jimmy Carter. It belongs to the American people." The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday p.m. Tuesday Friday p.m. Wednesday Monday p.m. Thursday Friday p.m. Friday Wednesday p.m. ERRORS The Kansan 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 or charge at a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in servers or on solr, for example the K&R business owners at N498. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4258 ANNOUNCEMENTS Roahala's Hotel, the Oasis of the Bible Belt, for perceptive individuals and free spirts. No phone, for information; write: Harper, Kansas 67058 4-4 Watches for fish parked at 9th and Illinois, 10th and Jackson, 11th and The Inn (to the-Wall) Fresh sells fresh fruits and vegetables in the shell. Fifteen varieties of dry fruit are available: apricots, apples, and orchards. Every Sunday. Also selling woods and treasures. Persons interested in working on a moparam dedicated to the Kansas students life are invited to meet them on Tuesday. April 17 at 7 p.m. in the Pine Bowl of the Room. Persons interested in working on a magazine TGIF MAGAZINE ENTERTAINMENT Nassau, Bahamas) Departing Wichita, May 24 & 21. Rates starting at $39.00/kleen-person. Free golf fee and the luxurious PlayAway Club. Reservation required. Suite C-202, Wichita, Ks 67208 (312) 653-4536 Applications are now being taken for 1981 Rock Clue Replay Producer and Business Manager. Forms are available at the KU-Y office, room 420. They must be returned on noon on Wed, April 9th. BANDS RECORD DEMO TAPES. Marlick Productions. 841-0923 3-31 FOR RENT Small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilized painful. Quit and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 835-8579 or 842-1418. tt Lovely new 2 br. townhouse and apt, next to campus. Beautiful equipped kitchen. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-1835. ff New 2 bedroom townhouse A.C DW Appliances and cable 1 block from the Union. Call 843-3579. tt NAISMITH HALL has a couple of openings for the rest of the year. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 835-859 any time of the day. tf Jaghawk West Apt. 9, New Renting: 1 & 2 Bedroom wakework and unfurnished from $185. For Appointment only 842-444 or see at 234 Floor Road. Next door to Rustel's East. **tf** Available for summer. Terrife 4-5 bdm, town room right next to pool and tennis court. two balcony, fully equipped kitchen, carpeted, big basin. Reasonable. 811-4623. 3-33 Office space for rent now at the area 1 building, 322' Mast; The inner office can be changed to fit needs. Upper and lower floors 728 ft. qr. 800 sq. ft. Contact 82413 or 8043-0777. Rooms with private kitchens. Close to Union Phone 853-9579. New carriage house: 2 bedroom, all appliances, draperies, ca. private courtyard & entrance. 843- 0658 or 845-6709. 6-17 COOPERATIVE living an established student cooperative located within a walkable distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. For more information, evenings 842-9421. HANOVER PLACE NOW LEASING 3-4 dhm; buns; 2 baths on residential location for first shift. Residential location for fourth shift. Earnings $811,485 These all new and contemporary loafers are 3" Blacks from WU. We downstream at Sharp & Lynch from WU. We have sharp at Sharp and downtown at Sharp. We will have a popular wide range of wither, open wheelers, with wider storage with owner, with larger tires, with larger tires, with your private shoebox. 842-8452 or 841-8322 for your private phone. CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSING for this fall & summers apply Now Call 842-5838 at 6:00 p.m. Apts and rooms for rent. Furnished. Near University and downtown. No phone. Picture # 8145-1500 Made 1 & I all, now NOW RESTING for SUMMER Making Makes Me Feel Good! duxtix 1 & 2 bedrooms, age 7, walk to kitchen, balcony, off street parking, dibshear parking, dntur for info. $92.00 at 0153 Mesquite dntur for info. $92.00 at 0153 Mesquite Two-year-old two story house, 3 bedroom, bldg. Family room, kitchen, dining room, kitchen with all conservatory features. Room for 2 adults and South School district, $115. mw. After April 4, I. Lease required. #84-0722. WHY WAIT UNTIL LATER TO MAKE YOUR DEAL? WANT to rent a 1-bedroom apartment at a 3-bedroom apartment? iow. Walk-ins will welcome you to campus, air-conditioned, fair new apartment and office space; free parking; off-street parking; call 814-7664 or visit www.mit.edu/admissions. Sublease now. Moodbrown studio. Furnished and water paid. $196 mo. Call 841-1495. 4-1 Moving out of state—must sublet: sharp Trawler studio apartment. Unfurnished, water paid. Pool, tennis court, laundry facility. Call Trailer manager 842-733 and 842-836 for 6 p.m. Summer sublease. 3 bedroom. 2 stories. 1 block from stadium. Call 841-7890. 4-2 A studio apartment baffled. Titillated near campus. Utilities paid. Call 843-0579. tt Most multisite 3 bedroom furnished A/C and 800-square-foot $400 a month Trailridge 841-602 or 843-7333 4-4 Staving in Lawrence this summer? Sublabe w/ option for next year. One bedroom furnished apartment on bus route, 841-7480 Nerded a place this summer Share a house close to St. Bernard Or O. 424-872-86, or 81-845-7267 1 bedroom furnished apt, for summer subleases or longer. A/C, laundry, parking 842-4196- 4190 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale Make use of these materials to use them—1) As study guide, 2) For class assignments, 3) For study guide, 4) Available at Western Civilization available at Town Creek, Alam Bookstore and Oread Bookstore. Alternator, starter and generator specialists, MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-5069, 3900 W, 6th ht. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-5069, 3900 W, 6th ht. New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic mat- Furniture. 1200 New York St. #92483. Lebanon Furniture. 1200 New York St. #92483. 1968 Olds 88. Luxury Sedan. Dependable car for small budget. Buy 842-500-350 or 841-477, anytime 1964 Corvair Monza Coupe, near excellent condition, and an excellent low cost investment, $140, $160, and 833-269. 4-3 WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 1 year guard- WHITE LIGHT, 104 Mass, 843-1386. ROLLER SKATES. Indoor, outdoor, from $59.95 Ricks Bike Shop 103 Vermont. 841-6624. tf Small Mobile Home—near Sanctuary, needs owner after old one graduates this May. Evenings 840-256 4-1 SunSpres—Sun glasses are our specialty. notprescription only. Huge selection, reasonably priced. 1021 Mass. 841-5730. TF Top quality PA excellent for rock band or institutional use 2 sure mikes stands $1000 firm 864-2827 after 0.00k AIX for Steve 4-4 Brand sparking new 1980's; Datum 210-$47.29 + Tony's call at 842-5444 for Bob Smith + Tony's call at 842-5444 for Bob Smith + 35 mm Zentil w/ 145 mm & 180 mm.良 Condition $50. Majestic Triple for heavy camera. $50. Dynaflex Climbing Roe Hemel 160. Rock-hammer; harness etress 75. Call 843-6259. 4-3 Schwinn 5-speed girl's bike $55. Good condition 12 string Yamaha guitar, $120. Floor easel. $13. 843-3180 3-1 Beautiful, rust-colored cedar lined trunk. Use for storage or as a table. 20" x 24" $85, $85-$100. Available in a selection of colors. Cheap 1972 Grand Prix. White with red top and interior. 16,500 miles. Full automatic. #84-7303. '76 Pinto Wagon, navy blue, luggage rack, air, airplane, good MPC like, good 39.900 mph, 835 - 4036 - 8406 $ \mathbf{1} ^ {T} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{I} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{L} \mathbf{M} \mathbf{A} \mathbf{R} \mathbf{u} \mathbf{b}$, 350 autotax, or $ \mathbf{1} ^ {T} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{I} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{L} \mathbf{M} \mathbf{A} \mathbf{R} \mathbf{u} \mathbf{b} $ , 3: -3: -3: $ \mathbf{1} ^ {T} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{I} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{L} \mathbf{M} \mathbf{A} \mathbf{R} \mathbf{u} \mathbf{b} $ , 1: -1: -1: $ \mathbf{1} ^ {T} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{I} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{C} \mathbf{E} \mathbf{L} \mathbf{M} \mathbf{A} \mathbf{R} \mathbf{u} \mathbf{b} $ , 2: -2: -2: 1973 Camaro LT5, 350, asp. pb. Good condition. Must sell. B42-7857. Mike. 3-29 Cockatiels—tame pair for sale. May be used for breeding. Bird笼 included. Call 842-9268 3-29 1968 NORTON 750 motorcycle. Recent engine overhaul. Many sales毯 841+4813 4,3 1974 Mazda RXL. Auto. Deluxe interior. Best offer. Call 841-1356. 3-31 TEAC 4 track with simul-vync, great for recording live music. Call Mark. 841-0923. 4-3 78 Camaro, Silver automatic Less than 22,300 miles. Radio am/fm 6 cylinder. Excellent condition, very cheap 843-4544 4-3 1989 Chrcvloel C:10 6 cyl. 3 spd. Very dependable, good gas, cared for, good summer truck. $600 81-4134 4-3 71 Chevy Impala 2 dr., 300ec, 2 bbl. New (hattery carb, shock absorbers) Excellent mechanical condition 600 call 864-1190 4-4 We all sell kinds of parts for VW's at prices b-low local parts stores. Metie Motors, 841-500 19th and New Jersey. 1974 Chevrolet Carrier Convertible, maroon, full-size carrie and cruise model. Only 428. powerful, compact 0-12km/h - 0-15mph. Mobile Home 10×45, 2 bedroom, tired-down, skirted. house $2,000 or best price. 842-913-4, 4-1 FOUND Set of two Ford keys on glow-in-the-dark key chain. Found in Trailridge parking lot. Call 843- 6532 4-1 A gold bracelet in Priser Hall. 3-27. Call Kelly at 842-8752 to identify. A solid cross necklace. Found in Hashinger Girls bathroom. Call Mary, Church 861-5956. 4-2 TO STUDENT NURSING HOME ORGANIZATION (HSO) on a public service nursing home resident's behalf, as a public service nurse to nursing home residents; provide medical care for patients of Powhatan (KINI); need your help and input on nursing home condition and management; assist residents all名语; and correspondents will be contacted between nine and twelve or write in KINI, 9221. Now taking applications for floor/door and walt- door use at the Sanctuary, 1401 W. fifth after 8:30 AM A.M. Wednesday, 2021 KANSAIS APPLIED REMOTE SENSING PRO- GRAMMER graduate degree in Applied Sciences, Technology or Technology with 10 years of professional photography, retouching, mining, mapping or field work with an incurred license to use the KANSAIS software for $23, National Health Programmer ($45) OVERSEAS JOB-SUMMER WORLD warmer, Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields: $100- $130 monthly, exp. paid, siftingness. Free exp. Mail. Cars, bonds, BAX CO., Ariane Mar. Ca, 02925 Computerize Programmer Grad student only. In order to receive a job in the professional method, all A-level 8 years experience must be obtained. The required courses are required. Should be able to communicate effectively. Will be taught by summer caretaker. Tailor fit. Summer caretaker. Call Prof. Watson, 416-795-3200. Bronze of Child Care Research, Achievement Place has a Bachelor's degree in child care or an equivalent position available. Salaries range from $2,500 to $3,500 per year. Duties are to conduct telephone interviews with parents and children. Parents must have private phone and must be enrolled in personal skills essential. Application deadline is October 16. Contact Jennifer Jollie, 303-487-8011, jjellie@cbcr.org. SUMMER JOB FOR STUDENT COURSE, I am a summer tutor for 14 students with homeschooling & maintenance of my curriculum. I will teach 3 courses in English, Spanish and French. Provides: Your own private wkst班, swimming, bennie mountain climbing, and hiking. Salz Help. Set your own hours. Part-time now and during the summer. Phone 841-6254. 4-11 The KULV is a student organization dedicated to providing social and other social opportunities in the day. We are one of the first institutions of its kind, the 1980-1981 academic year. This position begins with the award of an honorary degree on this contract on a very brief basis upon completion of the course. The course Qualifications Strong Communication and Service Qualifications Strong Communication and Service Qualifications Fund-raising, program planning ability, knowledge of agencies, with current social issues agenda Teachers wanted. Elementary and secondary. West and other places. Placement: 19th, Southwest Teachers Agency PO Box 4337, Ail- quayeque. New York 87318. Bureau of Child Research. Achievement Place institution award. Available salary ranges from position to position. Are in condiant behavioral study, and have experience with multiple for some travel and have flexible schedule for any day. Excellent international skills essential day. Excellent interpersonal skills essential day. Excellent communication skills. Confidence mid-13th. JHU Admission. 10-15 hour per week research assist. position available in the Dept. of Human Development. Summerfield Aimex C between 12:30 and 3:00 Summerfield Aimex C between 12:30 and 3:00 Summerfield is an equal opportunity employer. INSTRUCTORS-Human Relations Instructras nardrd p/t full time. Conduct seminars. Tring. program in KANSAS CITY. April 25-27. T toll Fee Live 1 802-327-9089-X. 256. DATA PROCESSING PROJECT LEADER Outgoing, ambitious sales person for mornings, etc. In jeans store, Bag Tag 842-1059 3-31 The University of Hawaii (Lawrence Campus), Hawaii, is the leading institution for information systems professional to lead a project in an enterprise environment. The opportunities include analysis and design of command and information applications. The individual selects a position based on experience and interest in project development. Opportunity in this position will incl an IMS IVB with OSV or VSI, VMIs, and an IMS II with OSV. This position requires five or more years overall experience in the minimum of three years recent system analysis and problem solving abilities and communication skills are required for four year college or university, including or as a part of a graduate or systems analysis may be substituted for one or any of the required analysis and design. Submit resume to R. Alan O'Rear, Assistant Director, Office of Information Systems, University of P.O. Box 2034, Lawrence, Kansas 66045 660435 application deadline: 04/14/83; 5:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m. The Office of Information Systems is an equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified persons with an occupation, national origin, age or ancestry, status, national origin, age or ancestry. LOST In 1st floor Women's restroom-other wedding band with wurtle design on it. PLEASE return Reward. 841-2396. My big, friendly Alireadle. No collar, male, nec- medicine. Please call Diana at 864-4381 days. leave message. Lost? Calculator. If you found my T19 in room 207. Lea on Thursday, March 20, call 842-825-285. *** *The prompt asks to recognize text from a PDF file. The image provided is of a table with two columns and five rows.* NOTICE JEREY BROWN The Only Candidate Who Offers he Only Candidate Who Offer • A Nuclear Future • A Realistic Solution To Americas Energy Problems Think about it For more information call 842-9697 WHITE MOUNTAIN APACHE MOUNTAIN SPRIT DANCERS will perform at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas University Big Eight Room. by Operation Mission Big Eight. public Paid for by the Committee to Elect Brown PERSONAL WHITE MOUNTAIN APACHE MOUNTAIN SPIRIT DANCERS will perform tonight, 7-20 p.m. in the Kansas Urban Big Room. Spoonfall by operation Friendship. Open 3-31 Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 844-5564. If The Harbour Lines is where it's at for cool beer, pool, pinhole and unique lubrants. Color TV and stereo for when the Hawks are away. You can stay on the Harbour Lines. 1030 Mast. A first-class class boat. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment, Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Tissue Procedure. For appointment call (800) 324-9969. 4801 10th ST., Overland Park, KS. GAY COUNSELLING REFERALS through head- quarters. 812-245 and KU info, 864-3506. 1f Dial 842-2001 for Convuty Reply. 4-5 PREGNANT and need help? Call Birthright 843- 4821. 4-10 TENNIS PLAYERS: Spring and warm weather neat tennis season is in front of you. Your requests for soft strings, a stinger Stringers Rings, and a stinger K-Varity grip. Very reasonable rates on good strings 4-5 grips. Dial 842-2001 for Copy Odyssey. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Celebrate EASTER with ASTA singing telegrams. Baskets delivered daily. 842-8741. 4-4 VOYAGERS--Fellowship--Christian - Alternative church 2415 W. 22rd, Sunday, 9 a.m. 830-417-6331 2415 W. 22rd, Sunday, 9 a.m. 830-417-6331 Applications are now being taken for 1880 Rock Chalk Reve Producer and Business Manager. Forms are available at the K-U-Y office, room 6327. Forms must be returned by noon on Wednesday, Apr. 4th. Witsa Mawcht Thiwty Tiwst, Happy Birthday Wita Wynn Mawtiin—Love, Jeff. 3-31 Anyone who can offer information concerning summer jobs in Lake Tahoe (you've been there or are planning on going) call Terri. 842-4700 after 5 p.m. 4-1 Robin—if only you'd believe in miracles like 1 King, 2 Prince, Welcome to K岛 and K-31 like love, Miko, Love --but the . . . Wondering how to spend your year You can spend 2 months in England and Scotland and up to a credit in History, English History or Art at Academy Blair Office (432-3742). WE are here to bring long time THE BEST OF THE NEW YORK CITY FESTIVAL FILM FESTIVAL Where else One Night Only! Thurs. April 3 Film rolls at 8:30 & 10:30 Lawrence Opera House ★★★★★★★★★ PROTECT YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS! Join the NRA. Call John, 864-2023. 4-11 Happy Hour at The Crossing, 4-6 M-F Pitchers $1.25 Dress 35e 4-7 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUORING: MATH: 000-102 call 842-5785. MATHS: 115-740 call 8321. STATISTICS: 115-740 call 8321. STATISTICS: 106-400 call 8321. PHYSICS: 100-500 call 8321. ENGLISH: tf and SPAHNIC call 842-7507. PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uhour Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 AM to 5 PM on Friday, 9 AM to 1 PM on Saturday at 838 Mass. For legal assistance, including Municipal court requests for trial advice or bail. For legal aid, return tax returns dovall & Davis East 2nd Ballard 3rd Dyton) possesson fee. Call 811-745-6000. Balloard are over 60 years old. Monday through Friday 9am-5pm at Dyton. For help with your problems in Math 602, 102, 115-117, Call Tom at 843-9398 4-3 IMPROVE YOUR MATH GRADES. Professional Tutoring! Math 000-115. 864-2575. 4-4 TYPING Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Electronic. Call Donna, 842-724-784. tf Why cus about typing? Experienced civil service secretary does professional typing. Betty Grammer, 842-6097 after 5:30 p.m., and on weekends. MASTERMINDS professional typing. Fast, accurate, reliable. Spelling, grammar corrected. Call 841-3387. If Experienced Typist—typed papers, tissueMicroscopy, spelling, spelling effecct. 843-9544, Mrs. Wright. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICING 641-4890. TP Experienced typist, biased, disorientation, term paper,笔, IBM correcting seletch. Bur for 5 p.m., 842-310. U Uf DISCOUNT TYPING! 841-4980. Experienced KU typist. IBM Correcting Selectric. Quality work. References available. Sandy, evening & weekends. 785-9818 I damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4176. TF TYPit, Editor-Illipa. BPi Irena Pizza. Fire, reasonable reasons. Threes. disperses welcome: editing layout. Call Joan 842-9127. TF Dial 842-2001 for a typing Odyssey. 4-5 Word recognition capabilities. At Pressure Center. Reports, dissertations, legal forms, recommendations, correcting selective sleeps. Elinan Jejuan, 841-2172. Bernard P. DeLay, 841-2173. Word, processing exclusively at Encore-Copy Corne, 842-2001, 25th and Iowa 4-5 422-9001, 520h and iowa. I'm your type. for these, dissymptas, term papers, etc. Joe Ann 863-3819 or after 5:00 at 841-8055. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing correct Selective Cellar 2-5 841-721-2700 I'm your type . . . for thesis, dissertations, term canes. etJo Ann 864-3819 or after 5.09 at 841- 8055. 4-35 Excellent Experienced Ttyped; Will do any form of typing. Phone 842-3203. 4-9 Encore is Tip Top at Typing! 842-2001. WANTED. I am looking for a student married couple to roommate "home" summer home, lake, Champaign, NY. I will be available every week for two weeks weekly for couple. Provided Your own private residence for swimming, tennis, mountain climbing or for swimming, tennis, mountain climbing. To give名 of local people who can provide please phone. Occupant. 1000 Sunrise Drive. Please contact: Phone. Occupant. 1000 Sunrise Drive. Female roommate, age 23-30, trailer house, $100. Female roommate, house, washer, dryer, 4-13 washer, #84-5699 FORMER B240 STUDENTS; Would like to buy workbook that goes with accounting text book. Call 842-4451. 4-2 Female: roommate wanted, summer only, bedroom and bath, pool, low utilities, Heather-wood Valley apartments. Call Debbie or Hely by April 3rd at 841-514 PSYCHATIC AIDES AND HEALTH SERVICEM WORKERS WAKENED by Tupokea State Hospital 712 W. 6th St., Tupokea KS, Phone: (431) 296-3400 712 W. 6th St., Tupokea KS, Phone: (431) 296-3400 employer. An equal opportunity employer. Gay male KU student to share furnished home, summer 1898-41. term. room w/; room d/water; pool and more. $100 per month plus loan from Coach Lomande (roommate P-1-3 300, Lawrence. Ks 66044 A Summer in China. Sponsored by the people's agency, Yankee High School. One month of study in Chinese language and culture at $2,500. Deadline for application is April 18, 2006. Parkland, PA 19125. PATIUS 15212. (412) 782-3045 Roommate to share three bedroom mobile home Roommate to share three bedroom mobile home Call 845-9121 Call 845-9121 Roommate wanted—to live in a new four-bedroom house. Private bedroom $160, 4' utilitarian office $175 Cash for good used records. Exile Records, 15 W h. 842-3059 if LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint House, 2205 W. 43rd St. to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 pm Tuesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Monday 5 pm Friday Wednesday 5 pm CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write ad here: ___ RATES: 15 words or less 3 times $2.75 0/ 4 times $3.00 .05 DATES TO RUN: 5 times $3.25 .06 NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD --- 8 Monday, March 31. 1980 20 University Daily Kansan Owens-Oklahoma speculation creeps up yet again By GENE MYERS Associate Sports Editor Ted Owens has said he isn't interested. But the University of Oklahoma isn't convinced vet. The people leading Oklahoma's ongoing search for a head basketball coach say KU's Owens is still in the running. Richard Bell, the head of the Sooner selection committee and a former Sooner head coach for Owens' games, said yesterday that Owens was one of three finalists, even though Owens denied last week that he was a first-round pick. "The list now includes Joe Owerm of DePaul, Billy Tilbs of Lamar and Ted Owens of Kansas," Bell said. "Owens is still known to the public even though he decided to stay in Kansas." ONE WEEK AGO, Owens issued a press release that read: "I would like to put an end to speculation that I might leave the University of Kansas. I look forward to the challenge of next year." But the selection committee, Bell said, did not take that into consideration. By Friday, the committee had four finalists, Meyer, the chairman and John Thompson of Georgetown. Owens, who was in Las Vegas Saturday for the Pizza Hall All-Star Classic, was unavailable for comment yesterday. But in another day yesterday, he said he was not still interested. Over the weekend, Thompson was offered the Oklahoma job, which has been vacant since Dave Bliss resigned early this month. But Thompson refused the offer. Bell said Owens, who met with the committee three days before issuing his request for a reauthorization. Bell declined to rank the three remaining candidates but said the committee hoped to continue his work. IN BEAUMONT, Texas, Tubbs isn't saying much. Oklahoma athletic director, Wade Walker, call a press conference for tomorrow. "I just have to say no comment," he said, "Usually I try to be open, but it will have to be this way." "I don't remember saying those things," he said. "I guess the someone who said those things knows or thinks they know what I do." In Chicago, Meyer, an assistant coach and son of head coach Ray Meyer, was unavailable for comment. Tubbs, who recently turned down the head tabu at Tuissa University, denied published reports out of Norman, Okla, that base any decision on "the big money." IN LAWRENCE, the renewed speculation caught the KU basketball team and Athletic Director Bob Marcus by surprise. "I thought everything was settled even though I haven't talked with Coach Owens since he released his other statement," she said. "As far as I know, it's pure speculation." "I don't think Coach Owens will be taking the job, the president, Jan Warner, said. He is now a supported organization, the Tip-In Club, he supported Tubis since Owens bowed out. IN NORMAN, the president of the booster club that started the draft Owens movement doesn't expect him to be the new coach. Last week, Owens told his players that he would return for a 17th year as head coach. During his tenure, Owens, an Akabona alumnus, has compiled a 283-144 record. "I feel like Tubs will be a good choice," Warner said. "I think Meyer will go back to DePaul. Tubs will bring us more stability." It was Warner and the Tip-Ins who first began the speculation that Owens might go to Oklahoma. After Bliss resigned and the team withdrew from the club met and recommended Owens for the job, although Warner said no one had contacted him. That recommendation, along with a public support and the rumors started幻富! FINALLY, OWENS met with the selection committee March 21. But three days later, last Sunday, he released his non-interest message. "I have developed a deep love for KU over the last 20 years." Owens said then. This weekend, Owens was in Las Vegas to do the color commentary for CBS-TV's telecast of the Pizza Hut game. Sports Information Director Don Baker said Owens would be back by day. He also said he had been into the latest round of speculation. But reports yesterday quoted Owens as Kings drop Bulls, face Phoenix in playoffs By DAVE LEWIS Sports Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo. -For the Kansas City Kings, wins over the Chicago last night, king-size problems await under the sun. The Phoenix sun that is. Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Although the Reggie and Otis Show was NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Eastern Conference | | L | P/L | GR | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | y Boston | 61 | 21 | 280 | | y Philadelphia | 61 | 21 | 280 | | w Washington | 39 | 43 | 476 | 22 | | New York | 39 | 43 | 476 | 22 | | New Jersey | 39 | 43 | 476 | 22 | A-Allenla 50 42 610 B-Houston 50 41 900 C-Fort Lauderdale 37 45 900 Cleveland 37 45 421 Indiana 37 45 421 Illinois 37 46 150 Western Conference Midwest Division **Sports Teams** Milwaukee --- 47 | 35 | 398 | --| Kansas City --- 47 | 35 | 398 | --| Chicago --- 30 | 52 | 366 | 19| Cleveland --- 30 | 52 | 366 | 19| Ulana --- 30 | 52 | 366 | 19 Pacific Division * Los Angeles * 56 26 732 * 4 * Seattle * 56 26 683 * 4 * Phoenix * 55 27 611 * 4 * San Diego * 55 27 612 * 4 * San Francisco * 55 27 427 * 25 x-clinched division kit y-clinched playoff berth Yesterday's Games Philadelphia 148, Boston 110 Indiana 127, Ohio 106 Houston 127, Indiana 106 San Antonio 149, Derby 127 San Diego 149, Derby 127 Los Angeles 98, Golden State 58 Philadelphia 127, San Diego 104 Los Angeles 127, San Diego 104 REGULAR SEASON NEGLECTED SEASON NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS REGISTRATION/RECOGNITION MATERIALS FOR THE 1980-81 BCHOOL YEAR ARE AVAILABLE ONLY WITH ADDITIONAL STU ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES, 220 STRONG HALL. Materials must be on file with the Office of Student Organizations and Activities by May 5, 1980 to ensure availability of materials. the fall 1980 Faculty/Student /S Staff Directory enough to stifle the sagging Chicago bulls by a 141-110 score in the last regular season game, the Kings must face perennial defenses first round the NBA playoffs Wednesday. The best of three series will start on the Suns' home floor and end at the same place, should the series last three games. REGGIE KING controlled the first half of last night's game, tailing 15 points, and helped score 46 points, scoring 26 of his game-high 38 points. Artis Glimore played in 27 for the losers, who had 19. In Phoenix, the Kings will meet the team that has beaten them five out of six games this year. Last season, the Suns soundly defeated the Raptors and round of the playoffs, four games to one. The Kings' narrow victory over the Bulls illustrates the problems that have beset the team since last season. During this time, the Kings have been edged by the Midwest Division race by the Milwaukee Bucks. Celebrate Your Birthdays With Us . . . THE MUSEUM SHOP SPRING SALE April 1-8 Clothing • Scientific Toys • Animal Posters • Gifts Open: Mon-Sat 10:5 Sundays 1:30-5 Eye G Creative Illustrations ARTWORK ILLUSTRATIONS CARTOONS LOGOS " THE EYE CATCHING ILLUSTRATORS " WOODSKATES ADD DAS We Service All Bikes Despite Kansas City's recent tendency to foul early and lose substantial leads, Coach Cotton Fitzsimons insists his team is ready for the Suns. to play a team that has beaten us 12 of the last 15 games, but I think we'll beat Phoenix this time around." THE KINGS blew a 7-64 lead with 5-43. He could not win and he never would, whenever he had a suitable lead and never completely put Chicago in away. In fact, the Bulls pulled within two, 110-108, before the Knicks won a tie. The Kings certainly helped the Bulls' cause by sending them to the free-throw line early and often. The Bulls were in the bonus situation early in both of the final quarters. "I think we have been looking forward to playing Phoenix since they beat us in the playoffs last year," Fitzsimons said. "I know it may sound crazy for a coach to want TO BE SURE, Phil Ford will be more prepared for this season's playoffs. When he was a rookie, the Suns were successful in forcing Ford to take the outside shot—and miss. Ford discounted Phoenix's consistent success against the Kings. With 1/3 off prescription eyewear "A player should be scoring 40 or 50 points if he is left that wide open." Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH-PUCH-AUSTRO-DAIMLER CENTURION --free tote bag with all Adidas roller skates Ring in the 80's "Even though they beat us five times, almost all of the games were close," he said. 1031 VERMONT IN THE BAY BUILDING Cree Jackson Center Goldnecker Optics 942-536-1001 ADIDAS! Uppercut CENTURION All 1979 frames,including designer styles are available at this sale price. 841-4894 Featuring professional curling brushes and curling irons on sale! REDKEN* "OUR SUCCESS GOES TO YOUR HEAD" sale price good thru April 5th RICK'S BIKE SHOP only $9.50 reg. $15.OC IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS Pier 1 IMPORTS IMPORTS IMPORTS This is our Fifteenth Year of helping KU students with their Thesis copying and binding. HEADQUARTERS FOR THESIS BINDING COPYING 10% DISCOUNT ON THESE BINDINGS WHEN WE DO THE DON With This Coupon — Expires April 7, 1980 We Service All Bikes 841-6642 1033 Vermont - We Meet OR Beat The Deadline HOUSE OF USHE Roll On 838 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 (913)842-3610 738 MASS. 8:30-8:00 M-S Thurs, till 8:30 p.m. Served Monday-Friday, 11:30 am to 1:30 pm. LUNCH: Light?or Lively! Salad Bar $1.50 The right price on a light lunch..Build your own! The Buffet Line $2.50 Holiday Inn Choose from fried chicken or any of our lively entrees. Choose your own meal. 23rd & Iowa Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 843 - 9100 Hydrangea Diamond Lakefront THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Coal Miner's Daughter Staring Sissy Speak Eve 7.15 and 9.30 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Serial Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 Staring Martin Mull and Tuesday Weld Fri 7:30 and 9:30 1. Chapter Two Academy Award Nomination for Best tress! Starming Marsha Mason and James Caan Eve 7.15 and 9.45 2. Little Darlings Starring Talum O Neal and Kristy McH Eve. 7:45 and 9:40 3. Kramer vs. Kramer 9 Academy Award Nominations! Starring Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Street Eve. 7:30 and 9:40 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. All That Jazz 9 Academy Award Nominations! Starring Roy Scheider Eve. 7:30 and 9:40 2. Little Miss Marker Starring Walter Matthau and Julie Andrews Eve. 7:20 and 9:30 24 HOURS Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 NEW YORKER PRIMO·ITALIAN Tonite Featuring Homemade Ham & Mushroom Lasagne Lassagne noodles stacked high with layers of a finely chopped ham, sauteed onions, green peppers & mushrooms in a light wine sauce. $4.25 Dinner includes entree, garlic toast, crisp tossed green salad coffee or tea saying, "I made my statement a week ago. I'm not a candidate for the job." Special good tonite ONLY — 5:30-8:30 Also over the weekend, Thompson was offered a $122,000-a-year package deal from Oklahoma, more than twice his salary at Georgetown. But he said it would be in his pocket if he had to pay a higher price. Georgetown, despite conceding that he's "sick as hell about giving up the money." AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass. Downtown ENTER TODAY! J WIN 249 SONYS AUDIOTRONICS 238 Merc Downtown students with ples of assignments and resources they need. They contact us. Our research team uses time-saving resourcing tools to find the right order catalog — if you givery access to thousands of guarenteed research materials. Areas sent now have a virtual library in your fingertips in a few days or can be accessed by your specifications. All materials RESEARCH CUSTOM WRITING AUTHORS' RESEARCH SERVICES INC. Suite 600, 407 S. Dearborn St. Chicago, Ill. 60605 Endosed is $1.00 (to cover postage). Please rush my catalog. Name: Address State. Zip sua films Monday, March 31 Bergman: MONIKA Dir. Ingr Bergamot One of Bergamot's earliest and is an erotic story of a young girl coming to age Sweden.subtitles. (1952) Tuesday, April 1 ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST (1969) Dir. Sergio Leione, with Honey Fonda, Jason Roberts, Charles Bronson, Claudia Cardinale. A monumental character of his career, a murderer who suffers no pains of conscience after killing an entire family. By the director of A FISTUP OF DOLLARS, GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY Wednesday, April 2 Godard: CONTEMPT (1964) Dire. Jean-Luc Godard, with Brigitte Bardot, Jack Palance, Fitz Lanz, Godard. This is Godard's film of the making of films, especially in Hollywood. France:subtitules. Plus: "The Matter of the Shade" a short film by Werner Herzog. Thursday, April 3 DOCUMENTARY (1979) A feature-length compilation, with a focus on great documentaries. Spans the globe and the length of film history, including scenes from HARLEM TOWER, FORTY-FOUR NANOOK OF THE NORTH, and NANOOK OF THE WILLS, among many others. Unless otherwise noted: all lilies will be shown at Woodfruit Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-R lilies are $1.00 and Lilies are $1.50 and start at 8:30 a.m. and Midnight on Fri. & Sat, and at 2:00 on Sunday; tickets available at information--684-833-5000 Union 5th Level. information--684-833-5000 smoking or refreshed allowances.